Sunday, August 25, 2013

Roman Holiday

Roman Holiday

Did I steal the name of this blog from the classic ‘Roman Holiday” staring Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn? Absolutely, and with zero shame. One of the toughest decisions I had to make on the trip was where I was going to be spending my longest free weekend. For the longest time I was switching between London and Rome. This decision weighed heavily upon me the past few weeks before finalizing my plans. I then decided to do both, only I am staying longer after the program to fit in London. Rome was spectacular and the experience was only amplified with the presence of my brother. I was initially going to be traveling there with the majority of the group but later found out that my brother was going to be meeting me while in Italy. It is only fitting that I get in a bro-trip to Rome when our parents had gotten in a trip without the two of us to Rome earlier this year. Our parents gave us both a host of recommendations of places to visit while Rome which we treated more as guidelines. When first meeting my brother there we decided to go out that night and he was getting ready to bring out his lap top and his travel guides in the room to see where to go when I threw the book to the ground and treated Rome like I do every other city here, with reckless abandon and adventure. Not quite sure if what I just said makes grammatical sense but you get the gist of it. Rome from night one was an adventure that after having spent a month traveling felt all to familiar. At this point with the conclusion of the trip it all feels the same. I forget whether pertinent things about the places I have visited and often times find myself waking up forgetting what I had done the previous day.  I think it means I am ready to go home. Especially when you are in the pantheon in Rome reading an article and leave realizing you have no idea what you just read, or even what it had regarded. All the dates blend together, you don’t remember if that church you just toured was supposed to be a model building showing gothic or baroque architecture being constructed in the 13th century ad or 300 bc. I am ready for home.
There are very few nice things that I can say about Italians and the Italian culture. Somehow they have mastered the art of being incredibly rude to you while taking your money. By this time in my trip you would think I would be used to this. I feel as though I have become numb to this treatment.  The service industry in America is something that I will never again take for granted. My brother not yet being used to this treatment was astounded that an economy being totally built on and dependent upon tourism could be as intolerable and biggity as they were.  Jon also did not know you could go to your local kiosk and buy water for 90cents rather than go and spend 3 to 4 euro for that same bottle of water but from a vender in front of the colloseum.
I have now finished venting on my feeling towards Italians and would like to take this moment to pay homage to and appreciate the history and things that I got to see in Rome. My favorite part of it by far was either the mosh that was the colloseum, palintine hill, and Roman Forum or the Vatican most notably St. Peter’s Basillica. Having been raised in the Catholic church and attending private school for 10 years of my life it was really important and special to me that I one day make a pilgrimage there. It did not disappoint to say the least. In the Vatican there are 4 rooms that were painted mostly by renowned artist Rapheal. To say that I could have spent 4 hours in these rooms (1 devoted to each room) would be an euphanism.  While in Rome I had the best Italian food to my recollection.  It’s gonna be hard to ever justify buying a 5 dollar hot and ready from little ceaser’s or even thinking about paying a visit to the local cici’s. While visiting these beautiful places I was decently perturbed to find that the student discounts to get into the museums only applied to EU residents while in Rome…. Ohh ya and they make you pay a city tax for even having been there.
In the end Rome is a must see for absolutely anyone form any nationality, religion, and sex. I had lots of fun with my brother and got a nice reprieve from the norm that I have gotten used to here in Europe. And now for the city that I am most excited for Berlin. Ich bin ein bear. 

Ich bin ein Berliner

I am a Berliner. The famous words in JFK’s speech at the wall. Coming here I was under the impression for the longest time that all German’s thought that he had called himself a jelly filled donut but was surprised to hear that is an American fabrication. Their reasoning is that when speaking in a formal tense, as in speeches and such, it is proper to use ‘ein’ while speaking when in normal instances you would simply say ich bin Berliner. I found that they hold JFK, Ronald Reagan, and George Bush Sr. in high regard.
 This week with the program will be an unforgettable one  to say the least. During our pre-departure meeting back in Bonn Olivia had actually warned us that we were going to either hate or love Berlin.  There was no middle ground here. I fell head over heels on the latter side in love Berlin. Unfortunately my brother was only able to stay for a mere 3 days, he got to see a lot. He visited the famed concentration camp Sachsenhausen, went on a guided historical city tour of Berlin, got an exclusive tour of the famous Reichstag (their parliamentary building), and had an opportunity to enjoy the local cuisine, something I think he was especially excited about.  On Thursday we decided to get away from the bustling city and take a trip to Leipzig, something I was not particularly excited about. As fun as it was that day, I had still wanted to stay in Berlin because of my love for the city. Our last day in Berlin was spent at an institute that is at the front of medical prosthetic research and development internationally. During my free time on that afternoon I made it a point to see as much of the city as I could and take it all in. I was also determined to visit a couple of the amazing museums on museum island while in Berlin and had the opportunity to see the Ishtar Gate which was definitely one of the highlights of the trip there, right behind getting to view the east wall of Berlin. That night we had our final dinner at this amazing restaurant. Although it was sad realizing that this was going to be our last time that we were all together, we were ready for it.

Unlike all of my fellow classmates who are probably writing this finishing blog back in the comfort of their homes in Texas, I am currently delayed at a train stop in Brussels on my way to Paris and then London.  I get to spend a single grand day at home before heading for the Promised Land known as college station. I’m ready for Texas but can already tell that I’ll probably be missing this and all that this entails more. Although school is literally just around the corner, starting on the Monday after I get back, it does not feel like it. That probably has to do something with the fact that I don’t know any of my schedule for this fall or anything of the like but hey that is what syllabus week is for anyways. 

Friday, August 23, 2013

Last Week- Berlin


I couldn’t have picked a better place to spend our last week in Germany. Olivia had said before we left for Berlin that it is a city that you either love or you hate and I definitely loved it. I’ve said it in previous blog posts but due to its intricate history and role during the Nazi period as well as the Cold War, it is a city like no other. Today Berlin is a melting pot of different cultures, views, opinions and stories that is held together by an extremely liberal and accepting attitude.
We started off the week on Monday afternoon with a Fat Tire Bike Tour led by my favorite tour guide we had all trip: Sion. He was incredibly funny, informative and had a great accent. We saw a lot of the city on the tour including the site of Check Point Charlie, a still existing wall guard tower, the Brandenburg Gate and the memorial to the Jews killed during the Nazi period. It was definitely my favorite bike tour of the three that we did during the program. Jessica even liked it so you knew it was good! Afterwards, a group of us that didn’t go to Munich ate at the Hofbrauhaus and ordered the obligatory liter beer that we had missed by not going to Bavaria.
On Tuesday morning we visited the Reichstag, which was really interesting even though our tour guide was rather harsh and dull. In the afternoon we visited the memorial site of the former Concentration Camp in Sachsenhausen. We spent all afternoon learning about the different parts of the camp and hearing stories of what had happened there but by the time we left I still couldn’t wrap my mind around it. I couldn’t believe the atrocities that had happened on the very ground where I was standing. I was shocked to learn that as Sachsenhausen was the model camp that all other camps were based off of, there were many foreign visitors who came to see how it was run. Journalists, academics, people involved in prisons in their own countries from Australia to the UK made trips to the camp and saw it in action. It was the commandant’s job to make the camp look like a harsh yet humane way of punishing criminals by having them give back to society in the form of working. What these foreigners didn’t know was the fact that to the guards these prisoners were not people but rather disposable details in a well-oiled machine and that many of the prisoners were not in the camp because they were criminals but because they were of a certain race or heritage seen as unfit in the vision of the domination of the Third Reich. As we were leaving I was thinking about how hard of a job it would be to give tours in such a depressing and atrocious place and that’s when Ryan told us about the anniversary for the survivors that they have every year on the day the camp was liberated by Soviet troops. He talked about how over the years the number of survivors that return has dwindled and very soon there won’t be any left. It is important that these stories are remembered and that every generation for the rest of time learns about what happened and hears the horrors so that nothing like the Holocaust ever happens again. So although the trip was emotionally draining and it was uncomfortable to be there. I am glad that we went and can be a part of remembering the victims and making sure humanity doesn’t repeat its mistakes.
The rest of the week continued with long days chock-full of activities. On Wednesday we went to the Charite Learning Center and got to see simulations of a patient with a hear murmur and one with a collapsed lung as well as try our hand at intubation and see what it is like to be elderly and have a tremor by putting on body weights and gloves attached to electrodes. It was interesting to hear about the curriculum from the medical students that were there working with us and I found it hard to believe that they don’t learn the anatomy of the arm until their last semester in school! The system is very different than in America and there are definitely pros and cons to both. Afterwards we went to the Charite museum and saw a lot of really interesting specimens like those we saw in Fools Tower in Vienna. Afterwards we went to the East Side Gallery which is the longest portion of the Berlin Wall still standing and is covered in murals featuring bizarre, colorful and poignant images and words. On Thursday we ventured out of the city and went to Leipzig. There we visited the KHF Kidney Center, the Apotheke museum and did a walking city tour. I didn’t realize that Leipzig was the epicenter of the peaceful revolution that eventually led to the Berlin Wall coming down and the freedom of Eastern Germans. It was really cool to see the church where the prayer services took place and the city where it all began. All of a sudden it was Friday and we had our last program event at the Otto Bock Center. The center focused on mobility and displayed some of the prosthetics that Otto Bock has developed and was full of interactive stations where you could test balance and reaction time, see how a mechanical arm rotates in comparison to a real arm and try out one of the wheelchairs developed by the company. It was a really cool place and I learned a lot about prosthetics that I hadn’t thought of or didn’t know before. After the tour we were basically done. We had the afternoon free to eat, shop and see Dr. Wasser as the “Jew in a box” at the Jewish museum and the program officially came to a close that evening with evaluations and our last group dinner at the Moroccan restaurant, Kasbah. It was very bittersweet to say bye to the country that had been my home for the last 5 weeks and to the people that had become my friends. As I sit on the plane flying back to Texas, I am anxious to try to slip back into everyday life. This experience has been like none other and was more than I imagined it could be. I learned so much about a small part of a big world that I feel so isolated from and ignorant about by living in the US. I also learned a lot about myself, people in general and had the time of my life while doing it all. I know that it isn’t goodbye forever (as we all live within a 10 mile radius of each other back in College Station) but it is the end of an awesome adventure. I am so thankful for the opportunity to study abroad and I know that this wasn’t my last trip. So until next time, Tschüss!!

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Blog 6.1: Berlin



This blog will be different than the other blogs I have previously completed, in that I will be focusing only on the parts that I thought were the most important about Berlin.

I honestly believe Berlin could possibly be my favorite city that the program visited. It has an extremely unique past, which has led to an even more inimitable present. With Berlin being split in half for over 30 years, the city could be comparable to identical twins being separated at birth and having two polar opposite upbringings, The Soviet Union in the East and Western influence in the West. Upon reunification, Berlin had to work to merge the polar opposite cultures they had been immersed in for decades. These differences can still be seen today with the changes of scenery and architecture in the East and West along with the East only having used trams while the West used the subways system. The entire city seemed to revolve around the younger generations and the city had more of an upbeat vibe. There were platz’s everywhere that had every type of food you could think of with live music and shows to help you enjoy your lunch or snacks. Also, Berlin is a museum paradise with as many different types of museums as you could possibly want! I think the highlights of the excursion are definitely the trip to Sachsenhausen, the guided city tour with Sion and also the tour of the KFH kidney center in Leipzig. I’ve grown up hearing and reading about concentration camps and the horrors that are associated with these camps. But, you do not fully understand the horrid conditions that these people lived in. You don’t get to see where 300 people had to sleep in an area not meant to hold more than 80 people. You don’t get to see the rooms where hundreds, possibly thousands, of human beings were experimented on and tortured. You don’t get to see the remains of the buildings where tens of thousands of humans walked through, tricked, murdered and burnt in a furnace to not have to “waste space” with mass graves. You don’t get to hear and read stories of captives going into the neutral zone and being shot without warning because the guards were being scared for their lives if you happen to escape. And you don’t get to walk through the gates that every person sent to Sachsenhausen had to walk through and read the Arbeit macht frei sign on that gate. This was an experience that will never be forgotten.

Blog 5.2: Rome



We left Thursday afternoon for our long weekend in Rome! We took a train to cologne where we then met our connection to the Frankfurt airport. Our flight got in to fiumicino airport which is outside of Rome at around 1130 and we then proceeded to find transportation for an hour until we decided to just use the taxi. When I finally got checked in and into my room, it was already about 1:45 am on Friday morning. We woke up on Friday at 8am to head out on our days' excursion to see as many basilicas as possible! One of sams friends was our tour guide and planned a great day for us! We saw St. Peter's basilica in the Vatican, St. John the laterns basilica, St. Paul's outside the wall and one other basilica. Of all the basilicas we saw, St. Peter's in the Vatican was by far the most massive and St. Paul's outside the wall was the most beautiful. After our long day, our tour guide had made us reservations at a very nice Italian restaurant. There was a possibility for a 4 course meal but I could only make it through 3 of the courses!

We were on our own for Saturday while a large chunk of our group went to Florence for the day. We started off by doing the cupola at the Vatican and climbing over 500 stairs to get an amazing and breathtaking view over all of Rome! After coming down, we went to the Vatican museum where we spent the next 4 hours of our lives looking at some of the greatest art from the roman time period. We went through over 18 different exhibits and ended up in Michael Angelo's greatest artwork, the Sistine chapel. It's amazing to think after seeing how massive the chapel is that one man labored for a few decades trying to perfect the artwork. Not only would this be tiring of showing up to the same place for decades each day, but he also painted the ceiling showing the history of man starting from exile from the garden of Eden. This must have been brutal painting this because of the awkward body positioning he must have been in.

On Sunday, the rest of our group joined back up while rock, who had already done the colosseum, pantheon and trevi fountain, decided to go to Naples for the day. We started off our day by going to the colosseum and basking in the history of gladiator wars and ancient entertainment. We then went and looked around at the Roman forum, which was where most of the trading and such took place in roman times. We then finished off the day with the trevi fountain and pantheon. We went back to our hostel and got dressed up and went and ate dinner and then decided to go back to the trevi fountain to take some great pictures at night and also throw some coins in the fountain for good luck.

Rome was an amazing architectural accomplishment of its time with a bunch of the world’s history being defined by the rise and fall of the Roman Empire. However, Rome was a rather dirty city with just way too many tourists everywhere you go. This leads to a large group of people called gypsies trying to steal your wallets and phones at every popular location and especially on the subways. This is why I think it’s a good idea to see Rome, but once every thirty years is probably good enough for me!

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

auf Wiedersehen!


I entered the last week of the program excited for Berlin, yet also a little depressed that the program was coming to an end so quickly. We had a direct flight into Berlin, which was nice. However it was a little hectic trying to get to the hotel from the airport. But it all worked out in the end, we dropped off our stuff and headed out for the bike tour! I was a little nervous going into the tour, because I had an image in my head of weaving in and out of tourists on sidewalks. However, it was much more relaxed than that. Sion was wonderful and really made everything very interesting! I thought the statue he showed us of the mother holding her dying son was extremely powerful. After the tour, some of us went and had an authentic German dinner (which we were all craving after a weekend full of Italian food). 
Tuesday, we started off in the Reichstag. I was a little intimidated by the security measures we had to go through, but it was worth it! I really liked the architecture of the buildings, the juxtaposition of old and modern styles. Then we went to Sachsenhausen, a former concentration camp. That was a really strange experience, to stand on that ground and imagine what all those people went through. It wasn't a pleasant experience, but I'm glad that I saw the camp. 
Wednesday, we went to the Charite learning center. We met with two current medical students, and they explained the program they participate in, where older students assist younger ones in learning important medical procedures. It sounds like a great program to me, and I believe it's really important to have hands on experience. The simulators they had were very interesting. We were able to experience hand tremors and what it feels like to be old, which i think would really help you sympathize with your patients. Then we auscultated a dummy and performed an intubation. As a 'House' fan, I have seen countless intubations before, so it was exciting to actually be able to perform one, even if it was just on a dummy. We then went to the Charite museum. It was pretty small, but the enthusiasm of our tour guide more than made up for that!
Thursday, we went to Leipzig, which might have been my least favorite place we visited as part of the program. The kidney center was interesting since our device design project for the previous semester had been to design an artificial kidney. Next we went to the pharmacy museum. I enjoyed getting to interject with some of the older tools. After that we took a city tour. I had no idea that Bach was buried inLeipzig, so it was a bit of a surprise to walk into a church and see his burial place. 
Friday, we took a trip to the Ottobock center, which was incredibly cool. Even from the outside, the place was impressive, and once you entered, it was full of interactive exhibits. As a biomedical engineer, prosthetics are really intriguing to me, and it was amazing to see the technology that they are developing. We ended our final day in Germany with a delicious Moroccan meal! I can't believe that the five and a half weeks are already over. I have had such an amazing experience. I've seen things I will never forget, learned things about myself, and met some wonderful people! I am so grateful that I took the plunge and came on this study abroad program, and it is an experience that I will highly recommend to anyone who will listen!

Amsterdam!



We arrived in Amsterdam late on Friday night and went and checked into our hostel. Since it was so late, we called it a night to be ready for a full day of adventure tomorrow. On Saturday we ate a pancake house for breakfast. This pancake house was supposed to be one of the best pancake houses in Amsterdam and it was definitely good! They had all different types of pancakes from banana to nutella flavored! After eating breakfast, we went on a bus tour around Amsterdam. Let me tell you bus tours are the way to go. They show you so much of the city in a two-hour span. On the tour they showed us some of the major historical sites in Amsterdam. One of these was Anne Franks house where Anne and her family hid out from the Nazi’s during War World II.  It drove us by the museum part of the city where there was the Van Gogh Museum, Rijkmuseum, and the Diamond Museum. After the bus tour, we walked around the city for a little bit. The city was crazy since it was gay pride weekend. People were wearing the most unbelievable outfits; guys were dressed up as girls and vise versa. In one of their canals they had boats after boats of people dancing and just going insane. This was one of the most interesting things that I had ever seen. Also there was trash everywhere since there was the parade. It was disgusting the stuff that people had thrown all over the city.
The next day we woke up early and went to Anne Franks house. This was an emotional experience to see where the family had to hide during War World II. When we actually went into the attic, it felt so cold and lonely. I could not have imagined having to stay quiet all day long without even having any sunlight. The attic was really well hidden by the bookcase; I would have never known it was there. Being in the house made the entire story of her actually real and not just a book that I had once read. 

Berlin: A Fitting End to a Great Program


            Coming to Berlin, I was not expecting to like it. Both my host mom and brother said that they did not like the city, especially because of its size. I ended up liking the city a lot though and never felt overwhelmed by either its size or the amount of people there (maybe that’s because I had been in Rome the weekend before though).
            Upon arriving, we went on a bike tour of the city with our guide Sion. He was a very funny and honest guy and would have made the tour worthwhile even if it wasn’t interesting. It was very interesting though, and we got so see and experience some of the major landmarks of the city such as Checkpoint Charlie, the Halocaust Memorial, and parts of the Berlin wall that were accompanied by stories of escape from East to West Germany. Having been born in 1992, I never got to personally see any live footage or know much history of anything related to the Berlin wall, so this was particularly intriguing.
            The next day started with a tour of the Reichstag, the Germany main parliament building. The main point that I got from that tour was that after both WWII and the reunification of East and West Germany, that the government made themselves as accessible to the public as possible. This includes seats within the actual parliament for the public and offices of the politicians with glass windows exposed to the outside to that people can always see what they are doing. That afternoon we went to the Sachsenhausen Concentration Camp. This was not a camp in which hundreds of thousands were killed, but still definitely got the point across of the inhumane and sick ways of torment of the Nazi’s. Most disturbing for me was probably the way in which they killed most of the Soviet prisoners: through pretending like the soldiers were getting medical checks but then secretly shooting them while they were getting their height “measured.” Another sad part of this camp occurred after the war in a period in which the Soviet Union took over the camp and did not use it as a memorial for the victims as a war but as a means of celebration and gratitude to themselves. Overall it was a sombering experience, and I believe that everyone who visits Germany should go to a concentration camp in order to help and spread the word of the horrific events that occurred there so that they do not occur again.
            On Wednesday we went to the Charite learning center. We got to talk and interact with two of the medical students there and even got to try out some of the devices that they use for education, such as a device that causes tremors to give students the feeling most elderly experience upon being put on too many medications. We had gotten to learn about the German Medical School system and its differences from American Medical School before, but they do things even differently than the rest of Germany in Berlin. For example, after a few years of being in school, the students are able to go through training and tutorials with different computer run “dummies” and programs so that they can learn how to perform certain techniques (such as how to insert a tracheal tube) before actually doing it on a patient. I personally could definitely use more practice, as it took me around six times to insert the tube correctly. I like this approach though and think that the practical application of getting to perform the actions you will have to do in the future on real people is essential for any medical school student. Following that, we went to the Charite Museum and learned about how some medical procedures used to be performed (such as removing a bladder stone) as well as got to see some of some of Rudolf Virchow’s personal collection of preserved organs.
            We went to Leipzig the next day and started by going to the hospital. A tour was given by a nephrologist, so it and the information he gave mainly involved the dialysis section of the hospital. It was unlike any hospital that I have ever been to and was really cool to learn how they make their own saline solutions for dialysis at the facility itself. Following the hospital we went to an apothecary museum. Although it was small, I learned a lot about topics such as the history of homeopathy. For instance, homeopathy was first started by Samuel Hahnemann in the 1700’s when he realized that cinchona (used to cure malaria) actually caused malaria like symptoms in patients who did not have malaria. This created the homeopathic staple of “like cures like.” The museum was followed by a tour of Leipzig, which was a very nice city and reminded me a lot of Bonn.
            Our last full day in Germany consisted of going to the Otto-Bock Center, where the Otto-Bock company showcases and educates the public on the human body and how their devices allow people who have complications such as amputated limbs to resume almost normal functioning in their everyday lives. The building itself was designed to look like it was surrounded by muscle fibers, which was extremely awesome and as a whole was very technologically advanced. It made me extremely excited to be a part of the future of biomedical engineering.
            Berlin was a very fitting city to end our program on, as it is a city full of history and a huge part of Germany today. I think that anyone who visits Germany should go to Berlin and I would definitely come to it again in the future. I do not know why so many people that I talked to did not like the city, but can only speak for my personal experiences. 

Monday, August 19, 2013

Rome!


Chao!
This long weekend we decided to go to Rome. Our flight landed on Thursday evening and then we went and checked into our hostel. Friday one of Samantha’s friends, Michael, took us around to four of the main churches in Rome. It was awesome to have him help us find our way around Rome on our first day there. He is doing kind of the same thing that Olivia is doing; he helps students from the University of Dallas when they come over to study abroad. He took us around to see four of the main churches in Rome; Saint Paul Outside the Wall, Saint John Lateran, Saint Mary Major, and Saint Peters Basilica. Each of these churches had unique characteristics to them but they had the same overall architecture. Later that night we went and had our first Italian meal. In Italy there meals are more like events. They have five different courses, the antipasta, primi,secondo, contorno, and dolce. I only had it to the primi before I was beyond stuffed full of pasta. The dinner lasted for almost three hours before we had finished eating.
On Saturday we went to the Vatican and spent the day there. We first climbed up 551 steps to get to the top of the Cupola. It was one of the most amazing views up there, you could see over the entire Vatican area. After spending around an hour up there, we decided to go and visit the Vatican Museum. This was one of the biggest museums that I have ever been in before. They had over 80,000 artifacts from old carriages to De Vinci paintings. It was really interesting to see all of the different artifacts and how different every exhibit was from the other. We spent around four hours just getting through all of the different exhibits. The museum ended in the Sistine Chapel, this was by far the best part of the entire museum. I could not believe that Michael Anglo had painted all of the paintings in the chapel; they were spectacular. We found out that Michael Anglo hired workers to help him paint the chapel but after they went to lunch the first day he locked the door and painted over all of there paintings they had done because he didn’t like there work. This left him to paint the entire chapel on his own.
Sunday we had a busy day doing the Colosseum, Roman Forum, Pantheon, and the Fountain Di Trevi. The Colosseum was where they would do gladiatorial contests and they would let the spectator’s come and watch. Due to an earthquake, half of the top of the Colosseum was destroyed. The Roman Forum is the ruins of the ancient buildings of the city of the Rome. The heat made this not as enjoyable as I would have hoped since it was all outdoors. Next we went to the Pantheon, which is a temple for the gods of Rome. There is a hole in the top of the ceiling that is open to the sky. We ended our day throwing coins while making wishes into the Fountain Di Trevi. This was one of the busiest places we visited, there were people everywhere. After this long day of being all touristy, we had to enjoy some Italian gelato. Everyone is right whenever they say that Italy make the best gelato, it was the best I have ever had.
I really enjoyed visiting Rome but it is a city I don’t think I would ever go back to. It was super touristy and there were people everywhere. Also it was over 90 degrees the entire time we were they’re making it extremely hot.

Vienna!


This is our third week here in Europe and we were in Vienna this week.  Vienna was a beautiful city; all of the buildings architecture was remarkable. We started the week off by getting a walking tour around the city and learning some of its history.  Our guide showed us some of the major monuments like the church. Later we went to the Catacombs. In the Catacombs many priests that had served in the church had been buried there. They believe in having the heart, organs, and body be placed in different churches. Saint Stephens’s church received the organs from the different people. Also in the Catacombs were mass burial sites where they would throw victims of the black plague in after they had passed away. The rotting smells of the corps began to be smelt from the church so they stopped with the mass graves.
On Tuesday we went on a walking tour with Dr. Schnabel that turned out to be Dr. Wasser. He showed us around the city and explained some of its medical history. I learned a lot of interesting facts about Vienna such as the university use to have a fraternity that would get intoxicated and brawl. A slice on there face would indicate that they were apart of this fraternity which most of them enjoyed. Also at the university there was a prison and they would house people who had committed crimes there. If you were sentenced to death they would let the medical students dissect your body and then they would get a Christian burial. Later that day we visited a funeral museum. This outlined the way that burials have changed over the past decades. Death is a large part of there culture so they take a lot of pride in their funerals. After the tour of the museum, he let us actually lay in one of the coffins. This was quite the experience!
Wednesday we went to look at fools tower. When we got to the tower, I thought the main focus was going to be the black plague but it covered a wide range of diseases. They had different organs and wax figures of the different effects of some of the diseases. This was by far my favorite thing to see in Vienna! It was very fascinating how most of the wax figures had stories behind them. Later that night we went to the classical concert at Saint Anna’s church. They played pieces from famous composers like Beethoven and Mozart. These four people were incredibly talented and amazing to listen to.
Thursday we visited Sigmund Freud’s house and got a guided tour throughout. I learned a lot of new things about Sigmund Fraud that I didn’t know. I never knew that he was addicted to tobacco. This was interesting to me since he was a doctor, I would of thought that he would of stopped smoking once he was diagnosed with jaw cancer. I know that he didn’t think he could write when he didn’t have tobacco, but knowing the effect of cancer I would have stopped. Being able to actually see where Sigmund Freud did his work was really neat although it was extremely hot in there.
We ended this week by going to the National History Museum that housed the Body Worlds Exhibit. The museum had thousands of different animals, diamonds, art, and insects. There were so many different types of animals from monkeys, elephants, buffaloes and much more. Along with the animals, there were meteors that had fallen from space. I actually got to touch a meteor! After the National History Museum, we went to the Body Worlds Exhibit. This was my favorite museum that we saw. There were actual bodies of different people in the exhibit and each of them focused on a different part of the body. Some of the bodies showed the muscles and how they work when exercising while others showed the circulatory system and different diseases associated with it. Vienna was a very fascinating place and I learned a lot of different things throughout! 

Ich wurde ein bär in Berlin

     So we made it to Berlin.  This last week flew by way too fast.  I already miss Germany.  This past Monday, we arrived in Berlin in time to eat some Vietnamese food before our bike tour with Sion.  I was surprised his first language wasn't english.  He gave us a great tour.  My favorite site had to be the Holocaust memorial.  Walking between the blocks was very disorienting especially when someone would cross your path only to disappear quickly afterwards.  There was no way of knowing where anybody was, and I could tell it would have been easy to get lost.  Also on the tour, we stood on the ground over where Hitler's bunker used to be, we visited Checkpoint Charlie, and we saw other Berlin sites such as the Brandenburg Gate, Museum Island, and the Book Burning Memorial.  At the end of the tour, Sion recommended Brauhaus Lemke for dinner.  I had a huge pork knuckle, some of the best sauerkraut I have ever tasted, and the beer sampler.  
     The next morning, we made our way to the Reichstag.  I loved learning about German history and politics.  I also loved learning about and seeing the transparency incorporated into the building to keep the people in charge.  Afterwards, we made our way to Sachsenhausen.  Sachsenhausen was extremely gloomy.  Although I had learned that it was prisoners that had to do the dirty work, the horror of it didn't hit me until then.  Sachsenhausen was depressing and actually made me angry at the terrors the victims of the Holocaust had to go through.  
     Visiting the Charite hospital on Wednesday was awesome.  We learned that the students teach the younger students, and then the students taught us.  We played with stethoscopes, do an intubation, and simulate what it physically feels like to be old.  The whole morning was fun.  I had a blast trying to run up the stairs like an old person and then having to step down two feet per step on the way down.  We then went into the Charite museum where we saw a collection of specimens with a variety of diagnosis.  Afterward, we had a lecture in an old lecture hall from Dr. Wasser.  
     On Thursday, we visited the pharmacy museum.  We learned some cool stuff like how they used to make pills back in the olden days.  Also we made some tea.  We then toured around Leipzig and saw some cool Leipzig things.  That night, I had a great time with my friends hanging out at the döner shop.  I'm going to miss döner.
     Friday was our last day in Europe, and it was a good last day.  We visited the Otto Bock museum that morning where they had a whole lot of hands on pieces.  We learned the obstacles prosthetic companies are trying to overcome and what advancements they have already made.  Being someone that had been on the fence about my future career before coming to Germany, I had decided med school after watching the surgeries in Bonn, but now I'm leaning more toward prosthetics again.  I'll just have to try and keep my options open.  That afternoon I visited the Pergamon Museum where I got to walk through the Ishtar gate of Babylon.  We then took a nap before having a delicious meal of lamb couscous.  
     Overall I liked the feel of Berlin.  I liked the feel of all Germany actually, and these past couple weeks have been some of the best in my life.