Blog Description:

This blog is meant to document my experiences as a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Germany. I hope my writing will help people who are considering applying for a Fulbright, who want to learn more about daily life in Germany, who want to follow my journey, or anyone else who is interested! Disclaimer: This is not an official Fulbright Program site. The views expressed on this site are entirely mine and do not represent the views of the Fulbright Program, the U.S. Department of State or any of its partner organizations.

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Positive

    

Julia Rose Positive Coronavirus Test

    Scheiße.

    Well, the Rona finally got me.

    I managed to avoid it for so long that I was hoping to be one of the lucky ones who never catches it. At the very least, I wanted to be the last untouched member of my household, but that crown belongs to Mom. Congratulations Mom, you are the Sole Survivor of the Schneiders. Guess I'll have to settle for runner-up and maybe Sprint's Player of the Season.

    The physical symptoms are horrendous. My whole body is sore, even my bones. My head feels hot even though I don't have a fever. My nose is stuffed and my sinuses are dripping down onto my throat. I have a cough and my voice is weak and breathy. Worst of all is the headaches: whenever I change positions, like sit down, stand up, or simply roll over in bed, my head explodes in pain. In addition to all the medications, I'm constantly going through tissues, drinking hot tea, and sucking on cough drops. They are the only reasons my head feels okay enough to type this now.

    It sucks being alone, abroad, and sick. This week, I'm missing work, my first week of university classes, and my first choir rehearsal, and I had to cancel my upcoming trip to Berlin. More than before, I ruminate about home. I dreamt about being home the other night, about lying on the couch watching The Great British Baking Show with Dad, about petting Calvin, about just being with the people I love. It's hard, and being quarantined in a small apartment only exacerbates that.

    However, I've been pleasantly surprised by the outpouring of help and kindness I've received from my support system here. Upon hearing I was ill (before I tested positive), my two university buddies put together a goodie bag for me filled with tissues, tea, ibuprofen, a thermometer, and more. One of my partner teachers offered to pick up anything I needed from the grocery store. In addition to my requests for tissues and mandarin oranges (one of my favorite snacks), she also surprised me with Lebkuchen, delicious sugary ginger cookies traditionally eaten during Christmas time. One of my new friends, another American Fulbright Scholar in Erlangen, dropped off some snacks for me today, despite feeling a bit under the weather too. I've received messages from my fellow teachers and my friends here in Germany, which has comforted me and helps me feel less isolated.

    When I apologized for my illness and absences, my partner teacher reassured me, "Take your time getting better." She told me that there is no rush to return to work and that recovering is most important. I have experienced environments where I felt guilty taking even a single sick day, so it's nice to feel like my health is the priority.

    Even when we feel at our lowest, at our loneliest, at our sickest, people can be kind. I've been in Erlangen for less than two months and I've already found people who care about me.

    For now, I'll try to stay positive (heh heh) until I'm negative. Any words of encouragement, pictures of cats, or videos that made you laugh would be appreciated now. Thanks :)

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Foreign-Born

   
Julia Rose at the Capitol Building in Washington DC


    While this past month has been overwhelmingly positive, being a foreigner in Germany can be exhausting. Before I leave my apartment each day, I mentally prepare myself to communicate in my non-native language and sometimes practice phrases I might need. I always order food and buy groceries in German, but sometimes, if people realize I'm not a native speaker, they will switch to English and won't switch back, even if I continue to ask questions and respond in (imperfect) German. On the other hand, when someone says something I don't understand, especially if it's a question that requires a quick response, I feel embarrassed and incompetent. It takes significant mental energy to operate in a language besides your mother tongue, so I feel guilty for not being more proficient when speaking with colleagues or my German friends. If it's tiring for me to speak German, it must be tiring for them to speak English with me, so I either criticize myself for not being closer to fluent or I don't speak if I can't find a way to express my thoughts in German.

    On Monday October 3rd, I was sitting in the laundry room with my earbuds in, zoned out and minding my own business. Suddenly, I felt a tap on my shoulder and met eyes with a woman around my age rapidly speaking German. After mentally returning to this reality, I quickly understood she was having a problem with her dryer, so I followed her to it, still a bit discombobulated. I realized that the start button was so bent inwards from overuse that it wouldn't work, no matter how hard she pressed it. She also explained that she had already paid for this dryer and the other one was broken, so she couldn't move her clothes. My head felt frazzled, so I listened, nodded, and understood, but didn't respond. Finally, she pushed hard enough on the button that it managed to start, and we both breathed a sigh of relief and chuckled. She began to ask me another question that I cannot remember, and when I started to respond, she interrupted me and said, "Oh, you speak English?" "Yeah," I replied. Within the next minute, she had left the laundromat, clothes still tumbling. The shift from her friendly, talkative nature to suddenly cutting me off and leaving seemed abrupt, but the change probably came from her realizing a conversation with a stranger in the laundromat might not be as easy anymore.

    After touring the Würzburg Residenz, I took a stroll around the surrounding gardens. Inside the Residenz, photography was forbidden, so I wanted to capture at least one photo from the outside to remember the experience. I found a spot by a fountain with a nice view of the building, but quickly noticed I seemed to be the only person standing alone. I felt awkward and anxious amongst the large groups, families, and couples, until I finally worked up the courage to politely ask one of the men if he would take my picture. He looked at me and flatly said, "American or English?" A bit stunned, I sheepishly said, "American." He then accepted my phone and took my picture. When I thanked him afterwards, he said nothing. Now when I look at the photo, instead of recalling the art, the beauty, and the wonder I felt during the tour, all I can think about is how my stomach was twisting itself into a knot with shame. Why was that the only thing he said to me? I wish I hadn't asked him, why didn't I approach someone else? Why did it matter that I'm a foreigner? Why does it matter so much?

    If I'm just ordering a pizza, is it necessary for the shopkeeper to ask where I'm from and what I'm doing in Germany? It may be small talk, but it can also be grating. When an integral part of your identity is different from most people around you, and that difference is repeatedly noticed and highlighted, you might feel ostracized. "Where are you from?" begins to sound like "You're not from here," or "Why are you here?" or "You're not supposed to be here," or your fears even exacerbate it into "You don't belong here." I recognize that as a white English-speaker living in a predominantly European area who knows some German and is actively working to improve it, who also has significantly passport privilege and decent financial security, in many ways, I am playing life on easy mode. I have so much empathy for everyone else who experiences this at a much harsher level, and I can only imagine what it's like.

    Maybe the man I approached was just tired. Maybe the girl at the laundromat just had somewhere to go. Maybe nobody ever means any harm, but I do miss when nobody asked.