Posts

With Doors Wide Open

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  Ok so Argentina is definitely peak in many many aspects but there are some things that Argentina fails at every time. DOORS! Doors do not close ever, like not a single house I've been in has interior doors that line up with the door frame in a successful way. Usually the situation is such that the door is simply too big for the door frame and I'm beginning to believe that there is an environmental factor that causes houses to change sizes. Like you know how permafrost can unalign houses? I think maybe something like that happens here with doors, because I really don't understand how else no doors work properly. And the doors that do semi close never lock, so I've not locked a single bathroom door since I've been in Argentina, and I feel like that is standard practice. And actually now I'm just really accustomed to using bathrooms in which doors do not close at all. And to be clear this includes the public bathrooms at my school and at a cafe I went to, and eve...

Who Even Is An Exchange Student???

  I have been in Argentina for 100 days!! But I have not been an exchange student for 100 days.  Or at least in my opinion, because I became an exchange student on Friday December 27, 2024 at 12.24 AM, when I received an email telling me I'd officially been accepted into the Rotary International Youth Exchange Program. It was actually an incredibly underwhelming email, but nevertheless my exchange student journey had begun. But I'd been tirelessly working on my exchange application for much longer than my acceptance date, so did I not become an exchange student before I even submitted my application? Because just by submitting my first required document, just by opening the application portal I became more of an exchange student than any of my friends. And I actually was very hopeful and referred to myself as an exchange student around the time I submitted my application, about November 24, 2024. So I'm not really sure how long I've been an exchange because honestly I...

Some Thoughts From Living Abroad...

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     People love stereotypes, and I think it's because the less variety there is in the world the easier it is to understand. Or more so the easier it is in your false reality, which in fact lacks any kind of reality. I also think that many stereotypes individuals have of other people come from simply not knowing, but regardless, viewing humans through a narrow lens is really harmful and honestly really stupid. Because it's not difficult to educate yourself and it's not difficult to talk to people and it should not be difficult to be an open, loving person. And I believe that I am a very open, loving person, which is obviously why I wanted to do an exchange in the first place, so I think I  have some good perspectives that I want to share. Firstly, I, one thousand percent believe that being in a very diverse group of international people is the best thing that you could possibly do. And I can only advise that you find a way to surround yourself with more culture, a...

Sharing Is More Than Caring

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       On my first night in Argentina, when I arrived at my host family's house, my host sister made herself  drink, took a sip, and passed me the cup. And that, sharing a cup with a stranger, was very weird for me. The next day I asked if I could go to the store to buy shampoo, and my host mom asked, why? Do you not like the shampoo in the bathroom? Which surprised me, because to me, that was their shampoo, but she said it was mine too. But this is not just my family. The first time I went to a party, I didn't have any party clothes, but like four girls from my class brought bags of their party clothes for me to borrow. And this was before they knew me very well.   And at that same party I experienced the shared cup phenomenon again. Where there's ten girls, but only five drink cups, so everyone is passing the cup around and sharing. I think a part of this is that people do not really care about spreading germs, but regardless I think it's a really ...

In The End I Am Simply A Student

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  Lucky you get two posts in one day! In this one I really want to highlight the extreme differences in school, between Argentina and Alaska (and the rest of the US I think). For starters every school here is K-12, all mixed up into one school, and there are only one or two classes of about 25 students per grade. But I'm not entirely sure how the grade levels work, because the final grade here is 6, which is the equivalent of grade 12. So it is very common to go to the same school your whole life I think, and always go to the same school as your siblings. I don't think this is the best system personally because I would be really scared if I was 6 years old and there was a tatted up 19 year old in my school, but maybe that's just me. I can see how it's easier for parents to just shove all their kids in one school.  Something else that I think has disadvantages is that there are so many schools here, like I can think of over seven off the top of my head. So that means tha...

Compare And Wish You Were There

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       Comparison is the thief of joy. That is a very well known concept, that I've heard a million times, and yet I have always compared myself to others. But even though I do compare myself, I've never really felt profound jealousy for other people. I've always thought that I was quite cool,and  I think I have interesting hobbies and good friends. So before I became an exchange student, comparison did not thief my joy.  Because truly every other exchange student I've met is the most intelligent, well rounded, kindest person I've ever met. And not only that but everyone is also suspiciously gorgeous, in a way that's a little unnerving. And it gets worse because the vast majority of the students in my district are from Europe so they all have the thing I desire most, an EU passport. So imagine you're an average girl from the middle of nowhere and everyone else around you is insanely beautiful, speaks like five languages, and has a sexy little EU passport....

Ankle Socks and Radio

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Hola guys! I've been in Argentina 🇦🇷 just about a month and I have three more super interesting observations that you will definitely enjoy. 1) Ankle socks, literally everyone wear ankle socks all time. Old people, young people, all kinds of people always have their ankles out in the open. Which I think could have to do with the warmer weather here 🌞, but I'm not really sure. I won't say it's weird, but it was honestly very surprising and not a trend I really want to participate in, like when has anyone seen me in ankle socks??🧦 Never. 2) I will probably keep comparing Argentina to Israel because I haven't been many places and I do think there are many similarities, or at least more than with Alaska ☃️. So something else I've seen is that a lot of gas stations here have whole Cafes inside them, like in Israel they would have Aroma (if I remember correctly 🤞) in a gas station on the highway, it's the same here. Which I think is very cool, like way to b...