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Annelise
Sandberg
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2009-10 Outbound to
Switzerland
Hometown:
Tarpon Springs, Florida
School:
Tarpon Springs HS
Sponsor:
Tarpon Springs Rotary Club, District 6950, Florida
Host:
Solothum Rotary Club, District 1980, Switzerland
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Bio
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September 23 Journal - "There is
ABSOLUTELY NO way on earth to explain these past few months,
to bring justice to what my life has become in this
country that’s too spectacular for words." |
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November 11 Journal - "With every new
person I meet, I realize how different everyone is, how different every
country is, and how amazing those differences can be when they come
together." |
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Annelise's Bio
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Hi, my name is Annelise Sandberg, I'm a sophomore at Tarpon
Springs High School. I've played soccer since I was practically the same size as
the ball, I'm in love with surfing, and the ocean! Every chance I can I'm at the
beach with my friends. Switzerland is definitely going to be the most culture
shock I've ever experienced in my short lifetime. The complete opposite of my
home, land-locked, cold, mountains, snow? And I couldn't be more excited.
I'm the youngest, and only girl out of six children. My
mom always told me I had a passion for life, that I go after everything with
full force, I sometimes put too much of myself into things. I believe I
still keep that philosophy for life. I don't let life happen to me. I look
for every passing chance I can take hold of and make a new memory, share a
new experience, live more life.
My life is a huge story, I'm more than excited to unravel
another chapter of it! I can't wait to experience another country,
especially one as beautiful as Switzerland!
I can't thank The Rotary Youth Exchange program enough for
this incredible opportunity, or my family for being so supportive! Life is
to be experienced, you have to anticipate starting a new adventure, in a new
place, at any time. I can't wait to start mine! |
September 23 Journal
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I’m going to start my first journal entry off by saying this:
I'M
FINALLY AN INBOUND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
AND there is
ABSOLUTELY NO way on earth I will be able to explain these past few months,
there is NO possible way to bring justice to what my life has become in this
country that’s too spectacular for words. I have been here for almost 2 months
now. I can understand mostly everything anyone says to me, I can communicate
what I need to say. I have been to so many parties, met so many people I can’t
remember the names of, made so many close friends I will carry in my heart for
the rest of my life, and have a place to stay in almost every country I’d want
to visit. Brazil, Italy, Mexico, Canada, Japan, California, Argentina, Romania,
Australia, and of course…Switzerland. I have many Swiss friends already. I’ve
started school and have absolutely NO idea what they’re saying in Math….Do you
know what a “durchmesser” is? Because I have Keine anhung!! (no clue)
So this is my experience of airport life: I woke up at
4.30am to drive to TIA and catch my plane that wouldn’t leave until 7.30am.
Still half asleep, my parents made me “find your own way to the check-in and
gate because you’re going to be on your own this year, no mommy and daddy to
help you.” (Like I wasn’t fully aware, and fully excited for this!?) So I
found it, checked my bags, and said goodbye to my family. First it was my
brother, then my step dad, then my mom, and then came my dad….my teary-eyed,
sniffling father…Yes, my dad is the one that brought me to tears. Very brief
tears that lasted until I got on the tram to get to security. Yeah I cried
for about 2 minutes as I said goodbye to my family for a year. Then I
thanked God that I was saying goodbye to my family for a year. (just
kidding, I love them….really.)
Security was easy, smooth, and quick. Got onto the plane
and set off for Detroit. Once in Detroit, I got a wonderful 6 hour layover.
Thanks Bokoff Kaplan. I walked around for two hours because I had nothing to
do. Then I found my gate. –Okay, so I know how ridiculously hideous, and hot
these lovely Rotary blazers are….But OH MY GOD, WEAR YOUR BLAZERS WHEN
YOU’RE TRAVELING. It’s one of THE best sights when you see someone wearing
one. Especially when you’re wandering around the glorious “Olten,
Switzerland” for half an hour trying to find the Inbound welcome meeting.
They are actually very amazing!!!!- So I wait in Detroit for 6 hours, and
make friends with girls from New Hampshire, Connecticut, and Texas. And
Emily from New Hampshire has ended up being my best friend here. So Detroit
was boring but painless. Then the 7 hour flight to Amsterdam….That was fun.
I watched some French movies for a while. I mostly slept. Then the most fun
part…Amsterdam International Airport. First of all…we had about half an hour
to catch our connecting flight into Zurich. Secondly, this airport is by far
the most confusing airport I’ve been too, especially when the signs are in
God knows what language. Thirdly, it took us about an hour to get through
passport checks, and customs…which Emily managed to leave her whole suitcase
at, and didn’t realize it until we got half way to our gate. Fourthly, NO
air-conditioning, and running, in huge hot blazers, and 50 thousand pounds
of luggage. SO MUCH FUN. The good part was after you’ve been on a plane for
7 hours, running feels good. And also an hour flight feels like 10 minutes.
Upon arrival in Zurich, I was greeted by two of my host
moms. They were waving furiously, trying to get my attention, trying to
hurry along the obnoxious process called “The Baggage Claim.” Finally found
all my bags and went to meet my family. They were both incredibly nice and
told me it was time to go to a party….really? I’ve been traveling for two
days, am completely jet-lagged, and we’re going to a party?! AWESOME. I fell
asleep sitting up at my counselor's house. It was a lot of fun though, I got
to meet my future host siblings, my counselor's sons, who I’ve gotten pretty
close with, and my host families.
My first night in Switzerland I got taken to some wild
crazy dance disco street party with my counselor's son and my two host
sisters. We danced until 3am, and finally came home. Now that stupid Black
Eyed Peas song “Tonight’s gonna be a good night…” will forever remind me and
my host sisters of my first night of the best year of my life.
My first Rotary meeting was a little intimidating. It was
3 days after I arrived, so I spoke little to no German whatsoever. Not that
that would’ve saved me anyways since they ALL spoke in Swiss-German, which
I’ve found is by far, the most annoying thing here. No matter how much
High-German you learn, you will still have no clue what they’re saying,
unless you ask them to speak “Hoch-Deutsch bitte?” Which they will for about
2 sentences, forget what they’re doing, and start all over again in Swiss.
In the end, the meeting was a success. My President asked me to come to his
house for dinner with his family; his son had just arrived back from Chicago
on Exchange so he could help me out and what not. His son Alex invited me to
another party the next weekend. All in all, I LOVE my Rotary president and
his family! Actually, in general I've found the Swiss to be incredibly
relaxed friendly people. As much as they keep telling us they're strict and
not friendly and work all the time. It seems to be a perfect balance of
"work hard, party hard."
My family here is AMAZING. I’ve gotten so close with all
of them, especially my mom since she speaks hardly any English at all, we’ve
made so much progress with learning each other's language. My host dad is
always sarcastic and making fun of my mom and sisters, so needless to say,
my house is always laughing about something. My sisters have been a really
big help to me also. Besides taking me to SO many parties, introducing me to
SO many people, and showing me around my HUGE school, taking me bridge
jumping into the FREEZING COLD river, they’ve been there for me if I’ve ever
had a problem. Same with my counselor too. She’s an amazing woman, she’s
helped me out with any little thing I need for school, she invites me to
lunch at her house all the time, and we have a really great relationship.
They all say they love me and I’m a million times better than their last
exchange student…I think he got sent home early actually. So I’d hope they
like me better!!!
The first day of school was amazing. We played Hockey in
PE, and Rugby. My class is all younger than I am, except one boy who is 18.
So they’re all REALLY immature, but sometimes it’s very relaxing to just let
the paper airplanes fly.
The stereotypes I get are really entertaining also. Like
for example, I come from Florida so I get “OH YOU COME FROM MIAMI!??!” and
“Is life in America just like American Pie?!?!” and “Are school lockers
really that big?!” and “So you go to California like every weekend right?!”
Those questions are always fun!!
As far as being homesick goes…I miss my car, and I miss
the beach. And…Nope, that’s all. I actually haven't even called my
parents....this whole 2 months...and I don't have Skype...so basically I've
emailed them a few times...
Like I said before, there are not enough words to explain
my experiences here so far. No one word can sum up these past 2 months of my
life. If I had to pick words to describe Switzerland they would be:
perfection, self-growth, unexplainable-beauty, and
“my-head-hurts-from-thinking-about-what-I-have-to-say-all-the-time” and I
couldn’t love this place anymore if I WANTED to! |
November 11 Journal
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I am in the 4th month out of 12.
I have been here almost 14
weeks.
I have been here almost 100 days.
I have seen some weird things.
I have
tasted some interesting food.
I have met some amazing friends.
I have
encountered some creepy train riders.
I have experienced the best 4 months, the
best 14 weeks, the best 100 days of my life.
In 3 weeks I'll be switching
families, I'll be moving to a new home.
AKA: I'm leaving my HOME.
Yes the world
"home" has taken on a whole new meaning.
And the phrase "home is where you make
it" has really started to apply to my life.
Because "home is where your heart
is" just doesn't work anymore.
My heart belongs to two different countries now.
My heart has been split down the middle.
On one half, I live in the sunshine, in
the sand, in the HUMIDITY;
I belong to innisbrook and starbucks everyday after
school;
I belong to driving my car, and going to work;
I belong to the little
Greek town with epiphany, and sponges, and family friends, and church, and fourth
of July parties, and Tarpon Springs High School;
I belong to fighting with my
brothers, and climbing on the roof when we aren't allowed to (sorry mom);
I
belong to surfing at honeymoon beach without a wetsuit in the winter and being
the only girl there;
I belong to checking surf report every single day hoping,
praying, wishing a swell would come so I could have a good excuse to skip
algebra 2;
I belong to my family, to my town, to my state, to my country.
I
belong to Tarpon springs, to Florida, to The United States of America.
On the
other half, my heart belongs to the Alps that stare at me through my bedroom
window,
I belong to the little train running through Solothurn;
I belong to the
rainsnow that stings your fingers when you're riding your bike down the giant
hill you have to take if you want to catch the train;
I belong to sprinting
furiously to CATCH that same train;
I belong to the Aare River, and the Jura
mountain;
I belong to bridge jumping, fondue eating, and cowbells;
I belong to
being used to not understanding a word people are saying around me, but finally
being able to understand a lot;
I belong to Kantonschule Solothurn, to playing
indoor hockey, and rugby in school;
I belong to weird Swiss keyboards that are
impossible to type on!!
I belong to learning 3 languages (German, Swiss-German,
French), and hoping I don't forget my mother tongue! (American....NOT English.
Americans do not speak English.);
I belong to two dogs always barking, and two
sisters always laughing;
I belong to my family, to my town, to my Kanton, to my
country.
I belong to Oberbipp, to Solothurn, To Switzerland.
I'm not on
vacation. I will not "come back home," I will not remain the same.
Change is the
only consistent thing in life, and that is what I'm counting on.
This is what has been going on in my home of Switzerland:
I've been in school for a while now...I'm in a math and science profile... I
HATE math and science.
Example 1:
Math teacher "I've noticed you are not very good at math?"
Me: "No. Not even in English."
Math Teacher: *smiles nicely and gives up hope for me...now he ignores me
everyday.*
Me: *thank God.*
Example 2 of how well school's going:
German Teacher: "Annelise, do you know what a prenommen is?"
Me: "No. Not even in English."
German Teacher: *Slightly annoyed at the stupid American and continues to
try to make me understand all of the insane German words I've never even
heard of that are coming out of his mouth*
Me: *wonderful...*
Example 3:
This is what kids in my class think is fun every day at lunch:
Let's play a card game and try to make Annelise understand the point, even
though there is no point, there are no rules, and we change the name of the
game every freaking day. (So yes, Rotary....when we had our orientation in
Florida, and you made us play a card game, and everyone had different rules
of how to play, and you told us this is what our exchange year would be
like....yes, you were absolutely correct.)
Example 4:
This is my English class: (we're talking about what we would do if we won
the lottery.)
Boy in my class: I would go to America!!
Teacher: WHY would you go to AMERICA?
Me: Why WOULDN'T he go to America?!
Teacher: oh...hah....Annelise....I forgot you....umm...America is a
beautiful country, lovely choice. (I skipped his class "on accident" the
next day. This was our next conversation:)
Teacher: Why weren't you here yesterday?
Me: You insulted my country, I couldn't come back. (we both laugh.)
Example 5:
This is my history class: (We're talking about the difference between the
North and South of the USA Mainly about slavery.)
Teacher: Annelise, where are you from again?
Me:.........Florida. (needless to say she didn't ask my opinion; bad timing
to be from the south; whole class laughs.)
Example 6:
This is a conversation I had with a group of kids in my class:
Me: School's over...why are you still here?
Them: Oh, we have a test in two weeks.
Me: so...why are you here?
Them: we're studying.
Me: oh. What are you doing Friday night?
Them: Studying together at Fabians house, would you like to come?
Me: ........I have a Rotary event, I'm sorry.
Them: Maybe next time!?
Me:.....sure.
Being an American High school student....I was confused. And needless to
say...I'm switching into an Art profile next week. (My math teacher advised
this of course)
So as you can see school's going wonderfully here!
Besides school I've been incredibly busy. A few weeks ago
a few exchange students decided we needed to have a Halloween party since
Halloween isn't really celebrated here. It consisted of this: Fondue, bread,
"hotdogs", weird Swiss candy, a tiara, some devil horns, a way too revealing
speedo on my guy friend, a movie about gay people, and my friend's host
parents insisting we drink the "orange juice"....it was NOT orange juice.
If our Thanksgiving goes anywhere near the same as
Halloween...well...I think I won't attend anymore make-shift American
holidays in Switzerland.
Not that much has been going on. Life's starting to become
completely normal now. Between school, learning German, hanging out with my
two best friends....it's going really well.
I don't think anyone could ask for a better exchange than
mine. I've met so many different people from different places. And with
every new person I meet, I realize how different everyone is, how different
every country is, and how amazing those differences can be when they come
together.
The fact is that we're all so completely different, and at
the same time, we couldn't be more alike. No one in the world can know how
we feel except each other. No one could possibly understand what we're going
through, and when something bad, good or indifferent happens here, they're
the ones there to hold your hand, and tell you everything's alright...even
if we don't speak the same language very well. Even though our skin isn't
the same color. Even though our clothes are a little different, and our
music isn't the same.
Everything gets stripped away when you're in a different
country. Everything that makes you comfortable is taken away, and you're
left to survive with only your mind, and your language skills. Everything
about you in this country is foreign. So when you meet another foreign
person, that automatic judging mechanism most people have...has completely
disintegrated and you're left to solely understand, and make friends with
that person. I now understand what Rotary was talking about when they said
the point of this exchange is to make cultural understanding. To create
peace between nations, as we live as an ambassador for our own country, we
learn the golden rule all over again. To treat people as you'd like to be
treated.
So next time there's someone that doesn't speak your
language, or is lost because they're unfamiliar with the country, or town,
instead of automatically judging... there will be automatic love and
understanding. One day you could very well find yourself in the same
situation. Someday, you could be that lost confused girl in the classroom,
and one person will smile, and give you a helping hand, and that will
completely make the difference and change your life. The best way to
understand is to live and experience. To keep an open mind, and shut down
judging at a glance.

Halloween party |

Host family in the Alps |

Again, in the Alps |

Famous statue in Luzern |
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