bunny... ah buddy Matti, birthday bunny Alice and Spanish bunny Olga |
same night, an hour later... |
Some parties, unfortunately, don't always have a happy ending, especially if people bump their heads against walls:
Kathy in the A&E department of Queen Elisabeth Hospital |
beers!! |
I wondered if maybe the limited amount of time in their Erasmus year urges people's minds to keep telling them: "Make the most of it!, Seize the day!, Take as much as you can, ... and don't mind the consequences?" Are there consequences at all? Would they be rather positive or negative? I only know that if there's too much of something, it becomes less special, and therefore less valued or rather uninteresting. I had a point where I didn't want to go to parties anymore, because I was bored of them. Different parties blurred into each other and one was just as good (or bad) as the other.
I really think it is the people who make the difference. If you respect people, you don't treat them superficially - and this is probably what I have missed at many parties. Of course, I also had many real-deal experiences in the last couple of weeks and month with some serious talk and enjoyable chitchat which will stick in my mind for long (hopefully).
I really hope that you don't get the wrong idea of me being abroad - I also work hard and have a "real" life here (the notion of real is still open to discussion, of course), but, how can I best put this, it is different to studying in Aachen in terms of intensity. Your life is happening in a fast forward mode: Friends are made quicker and lost faster, routines are rare and become an important means of orientation rather than merely being dull. Decisions are made more conscious and you tend to opt for 'yes' more often than for 'no', because there might not be a second chance at all! That is certainly worth retaining for future decisions, I reckon. Ok, enough for today - back to my essay which is on the brink of its completion!
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