Ciao ciao!
As you know, I spent the past 5 days in Rome. It was so much fun! What amazed me the most was the difference between visiting the city as a tourist with all Americans compared to visiting the city with Italians who are originally from Rome. We still visited a lot of the major attractions and walked around like everyone else, but a lot of our time was also spent visiting friends, family, etc.
The first day we arrived around 5, got settled at the house, and then went to the center of the city and walked around til midnight. Rome at night is absolutely beautiful! Funny story: we were walking back to the car and I ran into another American AFS girl that lives in Rome! She's a year student, but I know her because she came to Aosta for exchange week (a week where you choose a different city and go live with a different family to get a taste of another part of the country). Considering the city is ridiculously big, it's pretty cool that that happened.
We started off the second day by going to meet my host dad's dad. He is 97 years old, but I never in a million years would have guessed so. He acts and looks like he is about 65 or 70! And he loves to talk...about everything. His favorite topics are 1. His time in World War 2, specifically the 2 years he spent in England which leads to 2. Saying anything to me in English that he can remember (which was an amazingly good amount) and lastly, 3. The Vitamin E pill ("from the United States of America!") he takes once a night, has for the past 27 years, and that he swears is the reason he is still alive. Meeting him might have been one of my favorite parts of the trip. After that visit, we toured the Catacombs, visited churches, walked around, and of course...ate tons. Every day was spent like this except Easter day. On Easter I slept in and then we went on a walk in a beautiful park before heading to Renato's (my host dad) sister's house. There we ate an unbelievable amount of food. Ridiculous. We sat at the table from 1-3:45 and the only moment there wasn't food on the table and people eating was the last 15 minutes which we spent talking and drinking coffee. After that the whole family went on another walk in a different, but equally beautiful, park. Another funny story: we were walking back to the car and we ran into Lemmy (the American AFS girl) AGAIN! On both the first and the last days...definitely a small world.
Yesterday, Monday, we had the 7 hour car ride home plus a stop in a small Tuscan town (Arezzo) to take a walk around and buy fresh bread, cheese, and prosciutto to make sandwiches later on for lunch. And yes, they were delicious in case you were wondering.
I absolutely loved visiting Rome, especially for more than a day this time, but I am also glad to be back in Aosta! I don't go back to school until Thursday and then on Friday I have a field trip to Torino with school. Studying and school work is really a top priority here in case you didn't notice already...
Besides my trip to Rome, there's not that much else to update! Language is still slowly getting better. I have 8 weeks of school left and then it will be summertime in Aosta and a nice vacation in Tuscany!!! I've been so busy here that I keep on forgetting that my birthday is in less than a month! Im pretty excited to be spending my birthday here, even though I will definitely miss all the people I have spent the last 16 years celebrating with. The time is going by too fast!
That's about all for now. Much love!
Xoxo, Emma
Emma,
ReplyDeleteWhat a great job on your Blog! I look forward to reading every post. I'm sure you are missed at home, but your experience there is priceless. Best regards.
-Uncle Scott