This Post is for UNISGers...
I've been meaning to post
recently about a recent anniversary – I’m about a week late - the one-year mark
of our graduation from UNISG. This time last year we were finishing our thesis
papers, returning from our internships, reuniting in The Pub of itsy-bitsy Colorno, and preparing to say our tearful
goodbye’s. Mum had arrived and we traveled, ate, and drank our way around Milan,
Verona, Bologna, Modena, Osteria Francescana, and Colorno. Then all of a sudden
we were in Ireland. I think, sometimes more than other things, it marks a time
when I have to stop saying, "I recently
graduated from..." Not so recently. It's kinda like wanting to say I'm 26,
two years too late.
The year of UNISG was over
and Real Life began.
Well.
A lot has happened since
then. I lived in Ireland. I worked in a pub. I witnessed and participated in
lambing and ewe culling. I went to Holland. My brother got married. I got a new
sister in-law. We celebrated our Bucknell 5-year reunion back in the cornfields
of Lewisburg, PA. I was in a considerable yet injury-free car crash. I
decided to stay in America. My dad turned sixty. I worked for a farm. My
friends got engaged. My friends got married. Mum and I went on a road trip. It
snowed in October. I decided to move to Australia. Made the most expensive
purchase of my life. Smoked hookah with my family. Moved back to Ireland. Celebrated
Christmas and New Years as well as charades, pub music, and intense wind in
Ireland. I turned 28. Went to Dublin.
Went to London. Cheers-ed life, friendship, and old age with Arina. Ate at
adored Ottolenghi. Visited Singapore for 13 hours. Moved to Australia. Spent a
month in summery Perth. Moved to the middle of nowhere 5 hours south.
Cried. Laughed.
Anticipated. Realized. Expected. Lived. Repeat. My, how time passes.
As March imminently approached,
I thought back to the year in Italy, as I often do, often as in on a daily
basis, and where we all are now, one year later. Many of us are back in our
countries of home; many of us are making new homes in new countries. Some of us
have figured out what to do with our lives with a relevant or not-so-relevant
Masters degree; some of us have an idea or two thousand; and some of us are still
trying to figure it all out. No matter what though, I know that we are all
continuing our paths toward greatness. And I know I, and we, regardless of
how caught up with it we may get, have no doubt about that greatness.
Coincidental or not given
the relative time frame, I have received many inspiring emails, quotes, and
texts that deepen my love and appreciation for the year abroad at UNISG in
Italy. When people ask me about the course academically, I have to rationalize
the "Italian" way of things and decipher the expansive level of
education we had, given the length of a year and varieties of visiting worldly
professors. But when I express the other side of it, once we realized how to
take advantage of this so-frustrating-it’s laughable learning system, but also
how beneficial it was to master life from each other
outside of the classroom, that's when my face starts to glow and I could go on
and on, telling story upon story.
Despite our “amusement”
over the frustration we initially felt, we learned a lot within the year; looking
back, it is more than we probably can comprehend. Regardless of the nutritional
facts we could rattle off, the debates we could argue about today's food
systems, what a wine wheel is, the descriptions that cheese ob-lig-ator-iall-y smells, the obvious facts of the
existence of terroir against NYU
protestations, the way the leaves of olive trees glistening in the sun, the
slow-painful-ways of food technology, the adorable enjoyments of cocktail
class, how to smell tinned asparagus in white wine even if you’ve never eaten
such a thing, the quick identification of wafting cured meat in the air, the
warmth of that-morning-milked sheep’s milk, what mussel farming looks like, describing
the palate of Illy coffee, the long history of pasta, the taste of just-made
cheese, the difficulties of organics and food policies, how the body feels
after tasting a 3-hour-class-worth of cured
meats/cheese/chocolates/wines/honeys/beers/olive oils, how to make cured
meat/cheese/coffee/balsamic vinegar/sherry/olive oil/beer/butcher meat/Spanish
cookies/corks/champagne/jarred red peppers/pasta, the right way to “tap that”
wheel of Parmigiano, how to style and photograph food correctly, the absurd
amounts of out-of-season and far-away food from ALMA, or even the way dancing on
the tables at the pub is supposed to be done while serving
American-Thanskgiving turkey.....despite all that, the real lessons we learned, the real memories we
will keep, are from each other, like: how to properly sing karaoke on a bus, the
real meaning of banana tsunami, how to dumpster dive before going on a stage, that wine isn’t made from
California grapes, the fact that you won’t die or get sick from sharing a
spoonful with 26 other people, the smug satisfaction of seeing 25 other cameras
pointing at food on a table, how to breath without an inhaler when having an
asthma attack, the importance of cooking as a class and celebrating Fourth of
July and Canada Day abroad, how to determine who you’re going to marry by
sticking seeds on your face, how to speak Spanish in Italy and Italian in
Spain, how to win over professors by inviting them to dinner, how to survive intense Italian summer heat, and even the way
dancing on the tables at the pub is supposed to be done on a Thursday afternoon.
And that’s just SOME of what we learned, in and out of the UNISG classroom.
One of the first times I
realized that I was too genuinely happy to take pictures (and everyone knows I
love to capture moments and take laborious notes) was in Friuli, in the
mountains, as we walked down the hills of the little cheese-making farm through
the wild flowers. Flowers necklaced my head like a Christmas tree. Our heads in
a circle trying to fit everyone in the picture as the warm northern sun
squinted our eyes as we smiled. It could not be captured enough, except in
our memories.
A year was enough. A year
was not enough.
Even as we (luckily) meet
up post-graduation, we continue to have the same-themed talks and conversations
we had when we were studying together. (studying? hmmm, that needs to be
re-phrased). We had high hopes and endless aspirations, we were unstoppable, we
dreamt the impossible. But for us, at those moments, it was not a
dream, the world was ours, and we were going to save it. Then we
part, and we go on, with the same optimistic goals, the
same knowledge, the same perseverance, but without the same in-person encouragement,
same I’m-with-you confidence, same unbaiting ability without each other.
“It may not
seem to you this way, yet, but these steps are leading you to greatness. Just
have faith in yourself. Each day is one step closer to that. You are taking big
risks to live and enjoy an unconventional life; big risks = big gains. "
I have received a couple
quotes from UNISG friends that I have posted, and other emails that I have
forwarded to share with my family to show them that I am not the only one who
has graduated with a Masters degree, spent a year in Italy hoping that it will
lead me in some direction, but yet still feels a bit lost even though I am
living with conviction that I will
find my way. I may be a bit odd, but I am sure of myself. Sometimes, my UNISG
classmates (re: friends) have similar thoughts about life and about ourselves and
these lead us to follow similar paths and actions. It's absolute SYNCRONICITY.
But I think, even after just one year, this shows where we came from, what we
were looking for, what UNISG offered us, where it took us, where it left us,
and where we are now. From these relationships made
over a year and post-graduation reassurances that we are not alone, I think
that UNISG left us all with a special bond, connection,
and spirit that we understand in each other.
We often feel as though we have to validate this feeling to ourselves and/or to others, whether it is just
thinking out-loud to prove
or verify it to ourselves, or actually trying to rationalize and describe it to
others. But, for us, we just get it. We get each other. There’s no attesting or
justification. Regardless of how much I learned, regardless of how much it
cost, regardless of the lack of textbooks, regardless of what we left behind at
home to try to figure it out abroad, what makes the year in Italy so worthwhile
is the friendships that I have in my life right now from that experience. It's
nice to know that I am not the only one feeling as I do: post-graduation, one
year later. It's nice to know that even though we may be on different paths of
sorts, despite our geographical locations and mind-boggling time zones of
communication, that we have each other. We get it. And when we are reunited in
person, these inspirational chitchats will resume, the laughter and familiarity
will fill the room, and that one year, or however long it will be next, will
feel as though we are back in Colorno – in the freezing classroom of the Napolean's Maria Louisa's Reggia or drinking prosecco outside on a bench at The Pub.
And really, let's be
honest. The truth of the matter is, no matter how much we really love to really
talk about food, we * sometimes * talk about other things too. Feelings.
Life. Reality. Gossip.
Because when it comes down
to it, it’s all about the Top Ten Quality Control.
So, what everyone needs to
do, a forceful recommendation from one of the best and not just to me, but wiseful
advice to everyone is: stand in the middle of an open, peaceful spot, close
your eyes and just listen to your surroundings. Send a heartfelt message up to
the sky, and then start running as fast as you can for a moment and jump as
high as you can. It is sure to leave you smiling :) – RR
3 comments:
Lovely. Truly lovely, my dear. And as you once wrote in your blog about me, you've summed up all my thoughts and feelings so well and so concisely, and so much better than I could at the moment, that i'd just like to copy and paste that :). I wish you all the greatness in the world and in life right back to you. And I have no doubt that you'll not only get it, but that you already have it right now in this moment. all my love!! XOXO p.s. my reply to your blog post on facebook was actually written before reading your blog...curious degree of synchronicity once again, just sayin'!
This was like a hug. A big, big hug. Thank you Shauna.
THANKS guys!! Thanks for the comments here and on facebook and all the feedback - I honestly didn't expect such a response, but I am so grateful for it, and love it. I am glad that it resonates so true to you as it does to me, because you know I mean it 100%!
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