Monday, November 21, 2011
Thanksgiving Week Minus the Turkey
It is so hard to believe that it is already Thanksgiving! From here it's a downhill slam into Christmas, New Year's and (for me) yet ANOTHER birthday (I'm turning 29 again). Before you know it - it will be the end of January!
It's weird not to have Thanksgiving protect Halloween from Christmas. They have had Christmas decor out in the stores here since about October 15th and I first heard 'Santa Baby' on October 20th. WEIRD!
Anyway, this year, I am bringing Thanksgiving to Piper's class. As the lone American family in her class, we are tasked with educating the children on our country's unique holidays. Never mind that this particular holiday is rooted in our strong desire to risk life and limb to cross an unknown ocean to get AWAY from the Church of England. I'm sure all those British folks won't mind that their kids come home talking about how every year, the Americans celebrate getting away from them. Hell, the Americans would rather hang out with Native Americans and sit on a big rock eating the driest meat America has to offer! On second thought, perhaps I should leave that part out instead focusing on the warm fuzzies Thanksgiving offers. Regardless, we will do a craft made in China (very American) and eat pumpkin muffins (kids better freakin' like them since I spent $6.50 a can for LIbby's canned pumpkin) and talk about what we are thankful for. All this will be done by 10:00 AM and I will be out of there and it will be just another day.
I look forward to many more Thanksgiving celebrations with my family in the coming years. This year will be odd (first time in 30+ years I haven't celebrated it) but that can be good too. Puts things into perspective and, in a way, makes me even more thankful for all I do have.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
I'm BACK!
Okay, so admittedly, I have been absent. Not only from this blog. I have just been absent, empty, depleted - DONE! With everything! I went through a VERY dark phase after moving here. Shock doesn't even begin to describe it. I lost my footing in life and once you lose it, it's hard to get back. But, I feel my feet hitting pavement a bit more these days. Plus, the crying has stopped (for the most part) so I must be coming out from underneath the dark cloud that has surrounded me for the past 8 weeks. So, that being said, I will start to share my experiences with you again on this blog. I plan to do a robust blog posting to catch you up on what has been happening here but for now I leave you with this. A little piece of Swiss life that you probably didn't know about. I know I didn't!
From the blog: One Big Yodel:
From the blog: One Big Yodel:
There are a lot of things that are a bit strange about living in Switzerland. The Frau does not pretend to know all of them, but here are three strange Swissisms she either has some personal experience with or knows someone who did:
Quiet Time
Flushing the toilet after 10 p.m. Forget Heidi, this is the real Swiss classic. The Frau does not believe this is an official Swiss law, but rather a clause that may be in your apartment rental contract. Many apartment buildings have strict quiet hours and these may include specific things a non-Swiss person may not typically associate with loud noise. Such as: not being allowed to flush a toilet after 10pm, not being allowed to do laundry on Sunday (or during the lunch hour—some buildings actually shut off electricity to the machines at this time...), or not being allowed to do gardening on Sunday.
Also on the quiet hour front: you can’t typically recycle glass bottles on weeknights or on Sundays without being yelled at for disturbing the peace. Never mind that yelling also disturbs the peace or the all night parties that go on right outside your window during Carnival or Badenfahrt…
Trash Talk
Make sure you get a copy of your city’s garbage calendar and try to understand it (for help, read this). If you put your garbage out too early (or in the wrong bag, oh my!) you may be subject to a fine. A friend of the Frau was once called to the police station where she actually had to identify her trash. She was then charged CHF 250 because she had set it out too early the night before.
Recycling paper (see photo) is another strange Swiss ritual. You let the paper pile up for at least six weeks at your apartment and then ceremoniously tie it up with strings in neat packages no higher than about six inches before putting it outside. Don’t slack and just think it would be easier to stick all that paper in a paper box or bag and put outside. It would be easier, but this does not matter. If you don’t do it correctly, your paper will not be picked up and it will be plastered with a sticker stating your error. If you’re like The Frau, you’ll then be tempted to just throw it in your regular trash rather than wait another six weeks to redeem yourself.
Transport Pitfalls
Speeding
Driving a car is expensive in Switzerland. If you go more than 5 kilometers over a speed limit, you’ll receive a CHF 40 fine in the mail for each offence. If you travel way, way over the speed limit, you will be charged a fine that’s a percentage of your salary.
Not paying the night ticket supplement
Typically beginning at 1 am, depending on the public transport network, you must buy a CHF 5 nighttime supplement in addition to your regular train ticket. If you don’t buy this and they check tickets, you will be fined as if you didn’t have a ticket at all.
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