January 2006 Reflection

I can’t believe first semester is already over — time flies when you’re keeping busy and constantly experiencing new things! The pace of coursework has picked up, especially as more and more assignments are handed out and the pressure of last-minute cramming for final exams has been felt. I’ve also started working on my thesis project. In a nutshell, I’ll be researching tissue engineered blood vessels. My project will involve seeding cells onto different materials (small intestinal submucosa and urinary bladder matrix, for the science minds), exposing the engineered vessels to flow in a bioreactor, and observing the response of the cells and the materials to see if they could be used as substitutes for arterial vessels. At the moment, I’ve been reading journal articles to see what’s been done in the past and what I can do with my project, but I’m planning to start expanding cells soon. I can’t wait to work in a lab again.

The time spent planning for trips has started to pay off. In November, I went to London and Paris, where I hopped on and off the Tube and lived off of delicious food from French bakeries. For Christmas break, I went to fifteen cities in 24 days. First, I met up with three other Mitchell Scholars for a Christmas market extravaganza through Germany and Austria. I sipped warm mulled wine in the cold, snowy weather, experienced cars whizzing by at what seemed like breakneck speed on the Autobahn, and, of course, shopped my way through Christmas markets in Nuremburg, Rothenburg, Salzburg, and Munich. Then, another friend and I met up to travel through Italy, Great Britain, and Ireland together. I traded Irish beer for Italian wine, spent Christmas Eve at midnight Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica and New Year’s Eve at Big Ben in London, and wandered my way through beautiful little towns like Verona, Bath, and Kilkenny. Though I had a wonderful time traveling and exploring, I was looking forward to returning to Limerick after a tiring whirlwind trip.

I’ve still got a lot in store for the New Year. It’s hard to believe that I only have two weeks of classes left in my program. The rest of the time will be filled with more assignments, more research, more exams, and more travel. I’m looking forward to getting to know more people in Limerick, meeting up with the other Mitchell Scholars, and continuing to learn and grow from my experiences in Ireland.

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January 2006 Reflection

The thick of night had settled and there was heavy snow falling. The location was Munich and the mission was to scale a medieval castle tower. The team included three fellow Scholars, our adventure tour guide, and a man we’ll refer to as “John” (although “John” is actually the boyfriend of a Mitchell Scholar, you can imagine that we picked him up off the street for added dramatization). We entered the castle armed with a headlamp, some thick jackets, and a serious craving for exploration. After pushing through several empty rooms and passing a rather unimpressive jewel case, we made it to the lower tower shaft. Up we went. Circular staircases turned into ladders and, eventually, our group climbed through a trap door and out onto the roof. It was snowing heavily as we celebrated our mission accomplished with a round of hot chocolate provided by the tour guide.

The next day our small group of explorers parted ways as we all had different Christmas plans. I caught an evening train from Munich to my mother’s hometown in southern Bavaria. Two weeks I spent in Kempten visiting my grandparents, skiing the Alps, and perfecting my Bavarian accent. My German vacation did not, however, take me completely away from Ireland. During my stay, I managed to watch both Michael Flatley’s new production Celtic Tiger and an hour-long Irish travel documentary. New Year’s Eve was celebrated with my 88-year-old grandmother before flying back to Dublin on the first of January.

One of the things that I really enjoy about Ireland is its mild temperature. Germany was frigid and always well below freezing. Stepping off the plane in Ireland was a warm welcome home at two degrees Celsius. After returning to Dublin, I kept myself busy with several academic projects and continuing work on my startup company.

Yesterday, I flew into southern Portugal where I am taking a short surf holiday. The surf shack I am staying at is in the very southwest corner of the country and boasts some of Europe’s best surf. Prices are down as it’s not the high season, but the waves are actually much better over the winter. I booked for a half-week and fly back on Wednesday, leaving myself plenty of time to prepare for Friday classes. Once again, I have found some Irish connections while traveling abroad. Two of the girls at this surf camp are from Ireland and we watched the surf video Step into Liquid that features about half an hour of surf footage from Donegal Bay.

While it’s great that my academic schedule gives me quite a bit of traveling flexibility, it’s not all fun and vacation for me. I usually spend several hours daily working on schoolwork and my startup business even when traveling. I’m always back in Dublin over the weekends and have been happy both with my fire safety program and MBA classes.

In the next month, I’m looking forward to seeing much more of the Irish countryside. I’m hoping to surf some areas near Cork and on the west coast of Ireland. Donegal Bay has some of the best Irish surf, but might be a bit above my level. March has in store both a week of SCUBA diving in Galway with the Trinity Diving Club and a trip to Belfast with the Mitchell Program. Long-term plans include a bike trip around the Emerald Isle and an expedition to Africa over the summer.

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November 2005 Reflections

My first two months in Ireland have been amazing. The Equality Studies program has really given me the opportunity to explore the international development issues that interest me in addition to opening my eyes to a new conception of equality that is more comprehensive and interdisciplinary. There are many mature students in the course, which brings an experimental element to the discussions, and the nature of the program facilitates opportunities for students to form relationships and friendships outside of class (in fact, tonight I am going to an Equality Studies reception). Many of the friends I have found here in Dublin are from my courses and the classroom environment is very open to discussion and the equal exchange of ideas. In addition, Kathleen Lynch, who is one of the leaders at the Equality Studies Centre, has really helped me find ways to combine what I am learning inside the classroom with opportunities for activism outside the classroom. Through her contacts, I have just begun an internship with an organization in City Centre called Banulacht: Women in Ireland for Development. This organization works at both the grassroots and policy level to encourage analysis and dialogue of local and global development issues among women with a focus on human rights, trade, economic literacy and capacity building. In addition to doing some administrative work, I will have the opportunity to plan their conference for International Women’s Day and attend workshops and meetings about lobbying to the Parliament and economic literacy.

I have also gotten involved with a student development organization called Suas, which focuses on development education and in-country projects in India and Kenya. I have enrolled in their weekly development course which focuses on such issues as trade, environment, women and health. I am working with their office in City Centre to plan a weekend workshop for students returning from Kenya and India and to help plan their “Make Poverty History” campaign in collaboration with Oxfam. The people I am working with are all around my age and the organization is very dynamic and a lot of fun.

Lest you think I am all work and no play, I must state that the past two months have also been some of the most relaxing of my life. I find that the pace of life in Ireland is much less hectic than in the US, and I’ve taken advantage of this newfound free time to read, go salsa dancing, go to weekly Irish music sessions, and go on hikes outside of Dublin. And oh yes… sleep late. I’ve also discovered the joys of afternoon tea and biscuits. My roommates (two of which are Irish and three of which are other international students) and I have decided to implement weekly co-op dinners so I’ve gotten to taste food and try recipes from all over the world. We Dublin Mitchells have just instituted our own co-op dinner, which is a great way to keep in touch and get a good meal once a week!

I think that one of the most amazing parts of the Mitchell program has been getting to know the other Scholars. The opening weekend in Dublin with Trina was amazing. We went hiking in Wicklow, saw a play, toured some of the most interesting places in Dublin and got briefed about Ireland from experts in politics, economics and culture. But one of the best parts of the weekend was just getting the chance to get to know everyone a bit better and hear about the diverse backgrounds of everyone in the class over a Guinness, or in my case, Bailey’s Irish cream. Just last weekend, Lily, Ben and I went to visit Aaron in Galway and we all took a trip to the Aran Islands where we rented bikes for a few hours. It was one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever seen and miraculously the weather was perfect. Britt and I are also taking a trip to Spain and Morocco for our reading week next week, so that should be a lot of fun.

I have also found that the Jewish community here in Dublin makes up for its small size by being extremely warm and welcoming. The Rabbi and his wife invited me over for Shabbat dinner as soon as I contacted them upon arrival, and I have spent a lot of time during the Jewish holidays this fall at their house, getting to know their family, and sharing meals with them. The Rabbi hosted a huge party for Sukkot, complete with Middle Eastern food and a musician and storyteller with stories from all over the Jewish Diaspora. When I was in synagogue for Yom Kippur, two different families invited me to their house to break the fast after having known me for only half an hour. I am glad to have found such a welcoming community and I look forward to getting to know them better as the year progresses. The Equality Studies program has also been extremely understanding of the fact that I had to miss so much class for the holidays. I went to Israel for a week for Rosh Hashana to visit my family and my professors emailed me any readings I missed and offered to sit down with me individually to help me catch up on the missed class discussions. This Master’s program is really unique and special and creates a type of community between and among its students and professors that I have not experienced in other academic environments.

In conclusion, these first two months have exposed me to the hospitality of the Irish people, new and challenging ideas in my Master’s program, new friendships and many opportunities for growth. I would like to sincerely thank the US-Ireland Alliance and for giving me this opportunity

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November 2005 Reflection

Culture is the fountainhead. It is civiliation’s water table. We choose either to follow it or react against it — so long as we are part of a society, there is no third choice. I am here in Belfast to study culture and have chosen to represent my studies through music. An artform with enough expressive capacity to capture the ephemeral ebb and flow of culture. This is my charge, and there is no other place in the world where such a goal is as exciting or problematic.

Belfast, like all of Northern Ireland, is a culture in flux. It is neither part of the UK or part of Ireland, though it desperately wants to be part of something. Never has a place with such a strong identity had such a profound identity crisis. There is an unmistakable rhythm of Belfast that grows louder the farther one gets from its city centre, which is (as most city centres are) struggling to look like every other city centre and succeeding (which, of course, means failing) to various degrees. This rhythm is fierce and loud in public — it is an assertive alpha male that refuses to be ignored. Manic laughter, abrasive invectives, and tenuous silences. It is a Jackson Pollack painting, unintelligibly scattered yet unified in its stochastic transience. But in private it is a different person –desperately alone and wishing to be heard, validated, and challenged. Both of these souls are fed by the rain and nurtured by the hum of pubs and pitter-patter on increasingly urban sidewalks. Two children of the same parent stream. Two ideas. Two themes. Two melodies. Two motifs. Two timbres. Two movements. This will be the lifeblood of my work.

And if this were not enough, Belfast is now thrust into the mainstream of European modernism. As Queen’s continues to attract scholars and artists from the world over with its Belfast Festival and generous university stipends, it becomes a centre of contemporary aesthetic thought. It raises questions: What does it mean to be a Northern Irish composer? Is regionalism parochial? Is adaptation selling-out? I am reminded of a quote by James Joyce describing a similar process in what is now the Republic almost 100 years ago:

“I will tell you what I will do and what I will not do. I will not serve that in which I no longer believe, whether it call itself my home, my fatherland, or my church: and I will try to express myself in some mode of life or art as freely as I can and as wholly as I can, using for my defence the only arms I allow myself to use — silence, exile and cunning.”

I am not willing to concede that Northern Ireland is ready for such a mandate. Self-sufficiency is predicated on a strong sense of self. As the North continues to develop a cultural self, its art will be embedded in struggle and enquiry. Perhaps only through this — through a rigorous analysis of the profound dualism on which this country is predicated, will a sense of identity develop that will function as a basalt. If culture is truly the fountainhead, then there can be no other way. I hope to aid in that process. As an outsider looking in, I will do my best to contribute my own commentary to the dialectic. I eagerly wait to hear what Ulster has to say.

Out of the abstract and into the concrete. Packed pub, Gaelic football. Concertino for clarinet, viola, and tape. Sound laboratory. Thinking along the Liffey (riverun, past Eve and Adam’s, from swerve of shore to bend of bay). Halloween. Irish hospitality. Friends — expat exiles of the world searching for a new life in Belfast. Empty pub, man with guitar. Cue = line, left =right. Guinness. String quartet. National symphony. John Field. George Mitchell. Quarter-life crisis. One month. One month? Crotchet = speed of life.

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November 2005 Reflection

Although I elected to study at NUIG for the applicability of its particular graduate program in Economics (a MA in Economic Policy Evaluation and Planning) to my future academic and professional goals, my time in Galway has already been enriching in numerous and unexpected ways.

Galway

Galway is sometimes referred to as ‘the graveyard of ambition.’ Though I haven’t found it to be that exactly, the Irish pace of life is more relaxed than the frenetic and harried pace to which I grew accustomed while working as a consultant in DC. Living two blocks from both Galway Bay and Quay Street’s heterogeneous pubs and shops makes every day feel like as much of a vacation as a time to study and reflect. This calmer perspective and the beautiful and vibrant surroundings have enabled me to pause and really enjoy the present.

The Mitchell Scholars

The first congregation of the Class of 2006 in late September helped me really appreciate both the uniqueness and the significance of the Scholarship. As the first Mitchell to arrive in Ireland this year (in some cases by several weeks) I had developed a routine, albeit a fun one, that encompassed my academic, extracurricular, and social activities in Galway. Gathering as a group for the first time in Dublin, however, engendered a sense of community with the other scholars and provided a glimpse into the possibilities that this year promises to hold for camaraderie, travel, and new experiences.

The action-packed week in Dublin was highlighted by a picturesque hike in the Wicklow Mountains, a tour of the Chester Beatty Library, an all-male performance of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest at the Abbey Theater, and a reception at the Gravity Bar atop the Guinness Brewery. In addition, we learned a great deal about Irish politics, economics, law, and social life through a series of briefings from leading figures in each of these fields during an event hosted by British Telecomm. During our discretionary time, the inaugural guys’ night out (courtesy of Goton) provided an auspicious beginning to the craic. The opportunity to become better acquainted with the other scholars really enhanced each of these already tremendous experiences and I’m eager to get to know everyone during our year here.

Travel

Because my arrival in Ireland marked my first visit to Europe, I can now say with confidence that prior to arriving here I did not appreciate or comprehend what an incredible opportunity this year will be (and, consequently, how indebted I am to the Alliance, USIT, CIE, and all of the sponsors that make this year possible). To overcome my aversion to the stresses of traveling I have decided that the best way to proceed is to simply start booking trips. I have scheduled visits to London, Milan, and Florence and still hope to add Prague and Paris to my itinerary as well this semester. One year isn’t nearly enough time to visit the multitude of museums, cultural and historical landmarks, and beautiful cities in Ireland, much less Europe, but I hope to see everything that I can while I’m here.

I have, however, already traversed the West of Ireland extensively, taking weekend trips to the Burren, the Cliffs of Moher, the Aran Islands, and Connemara. I also visited the Bens, Ashford Castle, and Kylemore Abbey with my parents when they were recently here on vacation. The trip with my parents was particularly enjoyable and I decided to revisit Clifden and the Bens with a college friend for a memorable hiking and hitchhiking excursion.

One of the highpoints from these many trips was cycling around the Aran Islands with fellow Mitchells Ben, Lily, and Melissa, my roommates from Galway, and my aforementioned college friend, Meg. Despite the fact that I have only been to the Islands once and do not read about the weather there frequently, I will make the bold declaration that we saw Inis Mor on the most beautiful day in its history (who doesn’t enjoy a good superlative?) Biking through the quaint streets and enjoying the scenic views along the coast and from the cliffs was an unforgettable experience and one that I hope everyone here gets to enjoy at least once.

Economics

Finally, the MA in Economic Policy Evaluation and Planning has been both academically challenging and very rewarding. After a two year hiatus from school while working in the field of antitrust economics, returning to formal classroom study has been rewarding not only for the intellectual stimulation but also for the interactions with the diverse and international student body. I have already begun expanding the frontiers of my economic knowledge after only two months and have thoroughly enjoyed classes thus far. In addition, all of the professors have been extremely accessible and willing to discuss both their ongoing research and my specific interest in applications to health economics.

I’d like to thank everyone who has made this year possible. It’s been tremendous and I’m looking forward to what the remainder of the year brings.

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November 2005 Reflection

This time last year I remember thinking to myself, “If I actually get the Mitchell Scholarship, I’m going to be so excited that I’ll randomly break out smiling for the next two years!” I thought normal students didn’t get these types of scholarships — that they were for the people with 4.0 GPAs who triple majored, started an international organization, and single-handedly put an end to world hunger while training for a marathon in their spare time. But it turns out normal people can be Mitchell Scholars, because I’m one! And yes, I’m still smiling about it =).

As the sun burst up over the Atlantic Ocean, I squinted out into the Eastern sky to see if I could catch my first glimpse of the Emerald Isle. I wanted to know if all the stories I’d heard of a rolling, green countryside dotted with wooly white lambs was true. As the coast inched into view through my oval window, I first saw what appeared to be a quilt of grassy, green squares, each one divided by stone hedges. A few days later, on my first windy, wet hike through that same countryside, I found that it is home to lots of wooly sheep, but in fact they all have one brightly colored spot of spray paint on their backs so their owners can distinguish their flock.

Not only did I see my first Irish sunrise from the sky, but also my first sunset. By the end of my first day in Ireland I had moved into my dorm at DCU and then moved again to the Westin in Dublin’s city centre. There I met the other Mitchell Scholars for the first time since our interviews last November as we boarded a coach headed to the Guinness Storehouse’s Gravity Bar for our welcoming reception. This incredible bar, positioned 30 meters above the city with an almost 360 degree view, save the elevator shaft, was amazing! While there, I was delighted to find that my fellow Scholars are not only brilliant, but also unpretentious and adventurous! I have no doubt that in the future our ‘Reflections’ will be peppered with stories from many a trip spent happily exploring Ireland or some continent together.

During the weeks that followed our Mitchell Orientation, I got settled into life at DCU. I found a beautiful park to go running in, an enormous Tesco to do my shopping at, and after several failed attempts, figured out how to effectively use the bus system here. Now that I have a bus pass, a gym pass, a DCU student ID, an Irish bank account, and a Garda (police) registration card, I think I can breathe a sigh of relief that I am finally done jumping through administrative hoops. I have also learned that “Irish time” is at least 15 minutes behind most clocks, that ‘craic’ means ‘a good time’ here and not a drug, and that Irish people will intentionally provoke you a bit when you first meet to see if you’ll defend yourself or lighten up and laugh with them.

Irish people really are wonderful! I quickly discovered that they are an incredibly friendly and chatty bunch! They’ll go out of their way to help you, and if you start a conversation, you can expect it to last as long as the pub stays open. Their warmth makes up for the considerably colder and rainier weather here than I had become used to during my past four years spent in Southern California. But don’t worry, the overcast skies and incessant wind have provided the perfect opportunity to get back to my Chicago roots! (Speaking of which, I don’t care if it’s really the World Series or not, because the White Sox won it!).

I am so happy to have this opportunity to live abroad for a year! As challenging and frustrating as it can be feeling like a 5-year-old in a foreign country, since I don’t understand the most basic things again (I have a whole new appreciation for ‘push’ and ‘pull’ signs on doors), all the experiences are worth it! Now I know that people can in fact be blown off their feet by the wind, and that it’s not just in the movies that pedestrians have a tidal wave splashed onto them by a passing bus.

Thank you again to Trina and Dell for the personalized interest they take in each of us! They have put together an amazing scholarship program that I am incredibly proud to be a part of! Thank you also to DCU for being the first university in Ireland to offer a one-year MA in International Security and Conflict Studies – you read my mind! And a big thank you to the dozens of amazing organizations that support the Mitchell Scholars. You have each made us feel incredibly blessed to have this opportunity!

With that I must close because tomorrow I am off to Spain and Morocco for my first taste of Mediterranean culture (and cuisine)! I am looking forward to a year filled with exciting experiences as I immerse myself in Irish culture, study the finer points of international security, and travel as much as my meager savings will allow!

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November 2005 Reflection

Welcome to my Mitchell Journal! This is a brief documentation of my first-ever experiences east of Maine, and the North and South of Ireland.

From the moment that Carie Windham and I set down in Derry/Londonderry Airport, I have noticed the people here to be warm, patient and welcoming — from a couple that offered to call a taxi, to the cab driver who waited while we spent a half-hour in the student accommodation queue to get our keys, to the university staff and fellow students, who have made it a great joy to be here.

I have also noticed that many people here have a solid understanding of American politics. It seemed to surprise some that there were Americans here who had the same active interest in their own situation: my first night at a pub in the North, when someone told me that she was from Omagh, Co. Tyrone, I told her that the only thing I knew about the town was the deadly bombing that took place in the August after the Good Friday Agreement in 1998. She stared silently at me, shocked that an American would know anything about the tragedy. It seems strange, for many people here to talk about their own politics, but as an American I feel like I can get their perspectives from my unbiased one.

I decided that while a pub is not a bad place to learn about Northern Ireland politics, I could learn far more by participating in it. Recently, I started interning for the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP). The SDLP is a moderate nationalist party, and although I have no position on the constitutional question, agree with many of the social and economic policies that it advocates. I have learned a great deal, specifically about housing, disability and employment issues facing people in the North and the implications of a regional Legislative Assembly, which is currently not meeting. Plus, I have great chats with the people in the office over tea breaks. (These sure don’t happen in Maine!)

With each conversational exchange, I am getting more used to the accent and word use. One of the first words that caused me initial alarm and then humor was ‘craic’ (pronounced ‘crack’) which means ‘good time.’ Some other examples peculiar to the Derry/Londonderry vernacular and accent are ‘fifty’ being pronounced ‘fufty,’ and being greeted, ‘Yes, Ben’ rather than ‘Good Morning” or ‘Hello, Ben.’ As a Mainer, made well aware of my own accent, I can appreciate these regional linguistic differences.

I have spent much of my free time touring the island. The locals here often return home for the weekends, and so the Mitchell Scholars usually spend the weekends travelling and visiting each other. With the others, I tasted a perfectly-poured pint at the Guinness Gravity Bar, watched Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Ernest at the Abbey Theatre, and the heard the National Symphony Orchestra at the National Concert Hall in two visits to Dublin. I’ve seen the Spanish Armada exhibit at the Ulster Museum and toured the parliament building at Stormont in Belfast, and also have bussed down to Galway and cycled the hilly stonewalled roads of the Aran Islands. The other Scholars here are an amazing group, and in many ways we have already become good friends. I feel very fortunate to have this experience with and among them.

This city is an amazing place to study conflict resolution. I am at a university that has a partnership with the United Nations University (UNU) called International Conflict research (INCORE), which allows my course access to a diverse group of conflict research specialists and admission to interesting speakers and events. Recently I attended a lecture by Ramesh Thakur, the UN Senior Vice-Rector of UNU, who discussed the idea of “human security,” protecting humans from starvation, disease, and disaster in addition to military or terrorist threats, as a concept needing more emphasis by policy-makers.

I am learning from people in a place that has undergone, and is still undergoing, conflict. One of my professors was an active member in the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland, and in addition to academically studying the conflict, he participated in years of negotiation processes that helped make the Good Friday Agreement possible. I am learning each day from a second classroom, the surrounding city, from some who have experienced the worst years of ‘The Troubles’ and others who are still victimized by sectarian violence today.

It is a very different world to witness children pelting armoured police vehicles with stones, to see those stones become glass bottles used for the same purpose by republican pub-goers on Halloween in Derry, or to read about those bottles becoming pipe-bombs used for the same purpose by loyalist marchers in September in Belfast. This is still a divided society: the vast majority of children in Northern Ireland grow up in segregated areas and go to segregated schools, political party participation for the most part is based on ethnicity, and paramilitaries still exert a tremendous amount of control over their neighbourhoods.

But although Northern Ireland is still divided, there is peace where even a decade ago people might not have thought it possible. The recent IRA decommissioning is a testament to this peace. The economic revival of the all-Ireland economy has been augmented by this peace. The Mitchell Scholarship, to honor Senator Mitchell’s role, was created because of this peace. So this peace, by the generosity of the U.S., Irish and Northern Ireland governments through the US Ireland Alliance, is why I’m able to study here. At this point I owe so much gratitude –especially to Trina, Dell and Kathy — and to those others who made my experience here possible.

It has been a little over six weeks since I boarded the plane at the Portland Jetport, and already I have had one the greatest experiences of my life. I eagerly await the challenges, excitement, and good craic that await me in the coming year.

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November 2005 Reflection

Even though I’m based in Limerick for the year, I’ve been in Dublin for about the same amount of time as I’ve been in Limerick since I got to Ireland in late September. My program is pretty unique — it’s a joint effort between five different institutions in Ireland: the University of Limerick, Trinity College Dublin, University College Dublin, the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and the University of Ulster. Each institution offers its strengths to the program. For example, UL has a strong materials science program, so it teaches the biomaterials module, and Trinity has a strong tissue engineering program, so it teaches the cell and tissue engineering module. This year, Ulster is not teaching any modules in the program, but it plays an active role in program development. As such, I get to take several intensive week-long classes (9am-5pm, Monday-Friday) in Limerick and in Dublin, do a lot of distance-learning assignments in Limerick, and carry out a research project at UL.

As soon as I arrived in Ireland, I headed to Dublin for three weeks of class. I lived out of my suitcase as I learned about human anatomy, hip implants, and ear prostheses. The classes have been great — I’m getting introduced to a lot of the practical, real-world applications of biomedical engineering, and I got to learn about the human body in the anatomy room using human cadavers. (As engineering students, though, we were only allowed to examine the different structures in the body. We weren’t allowed to any cutting — that was reserved for the medical students.) At nights and on weekends, I got a chance to walk around Dublin, drink my first pint of Guinness, and get together with the other Mitchells at our Mitchell orientation. Of course, as soon as I had finally settled into a nice rhythm and learned my way around Dublin, I was headed back to Limerick, where I’ve slowly figured out my way around a whole new city.

I’ve been in Limerick for around three weeks now. At the moment, I have no classes, only distance-learning assignments to submit, so my schedule allows for quite a bit of flexibility. I should get my research project assignment in the next month or so, and I’m looking forward to working in the lab again. These past few weeks have been great and given me a lot of time to think. I’ve also started expanding my cooking skills, though I don’t claim to become an expert chef by the time I leave. Even though the number of Chinese-Irish was higher than I expected, the Asian grocery stores I’ve managed to find still carry a much smaller selection of Chinese foods than I would like. It’s rained a lot less than I anticipated, but laundry prices are ridiculously higher — E5 to wash and dry one load of clothes! I’m hoping to do a fair amount of traveling this year, though I think I’ve done more planning than I have actual traveling so far. I’ve already explored Dublin, and I made a weekend trip to Galway and the Aran Islands with three other Mitchells. In a few weeks, I’m going to meet up with another Mitchell in London, and then I’m headed off to Paris.

My life here in Ireland is slower than my life was back in the States, which means I’ve had a chance to sit back and take a deep breath, and I’m definitely enjoying every moment of it so far.

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November 2005 Reflection

October 31st 2005 — London, England

I ventured over to the UK for today’s Halloween celebrations. I left Dublin early Saturday morning, caught up with some friends studying at Oxford over the weekend, and am now in London.

Although London is quite the popular travel destination, this is the first time I’ve been here. The friend I’m staying with gave me a three-hour walking tour last night that included sitting on a lion and observing the statue of a limbless pregnant woman. This morning, I was going to visit Westminster Abbey, but was discouraged by the long line and wet weather. Instead, I went to IKEA. I’ve been looking for a cheap blanket and pillow, which both happened to be waiting for me at the Brent Park store. There was also a lamp that I couldn’t resist — it doubles both as a torchiere and reading lamp. My afternoon involved a brief nap followed by an “all you can eat” buffet at a nearby Indian restaurant.

Life is good for me right now. School at Trinity is great and I have this wonderful opportunity to travel regularly. In the next couple months, I’ll be traveling through Germany with a couple other Mitchell Scholars and hope to hike into Finnish Lapland. I’m also working on plans for an Africa trip next summer.

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November 2005 Reflection

As my previous experience in Europe was limited to a nine-hour layover in London’s Heathrow Airport, I really had no idea what to expect from Belfast, Ireland, and Europe in general. While the airport was very nice, I was fairly confident that Europe had much more to offer. Though I’ve only been here a little over a month, I’ve not been disappointed.

Moving always involves a fair amount of chaos. My move to Belfast was no exception. Everything here seems at least slightly different — purchasing a cell phone that I primarily use to send text messages, returning to life as a graduate student after a two-year hiatus from school, and adjusting to a new academic system — definitely involved a learning process. As of late, however, I have settled in and Belfast actually feels likes home.

Belfast is a fascinating, paradoxical place. I was struck by the city’s vibrancy. Belfast has a great bar and music scene. In my relatively short time here, I’ve heard everything from indie rock bands in modern concert venues to traditional Irish music in centuries old pubs. The city appears to be changing rapidly from the linger stereotype that raised more than a few eyebrows to the city that routinely shows up in the travel pages of major American newspapers. At the same time, it is clear that Belfast is still in the process of emerging into normality. Just a short walk from the university or city center, visible signs of the conflict remain and the possibility of violence continues to be a very real part of everyday life in some parts of the city.

Moreover, Northern Ireland seems to be in a strange state of ‘inbetweenness’ as the people don’t seem to fit entirely with either culture. This is not intended as a criticism, but rather that Northern Ireland seems to be a unique place despite strong cultural connections to both Ireland and the United Kingdom. At the same, I don’t know where they are headed as there obviously remain major barriers to a unified Northern Irish cultural identity. Of course, this is just my initial, inevitably incomplete, snapshot of the situation.

The Mitchell orientation in Dublin was another major highlight. I sampled the best Guinness that I have ever drunk (and sadly perhaps ever will) at the Gravity Bar, while meeting a diverse cross-section of Irish society. My time with the other Mitchells was equally amazing. I will never forget the day-long hike filled with sparkling conversation, at least 150 weather changes, and strikingly beautiful scenes seemingly cut directly out of the sort of “Natural Beauty of Ireland Calendar” that I would (and probably will) buy for my grandmother; Mike’s duet of a classic Bruce Springsteen song with local bar singer; and bonding over fine cuisine at Super Macs after a night of revelry. Another highlight has been travelling to visit other Mitchells throughout the island. So far, I’ve visited both Dublin and Derry twice with trips to Galway and London planned in the next few weeks. In addition, with the aid of USIT’s generous travel stipend, I am busy planning a series of trips over the holiday season. Overall, it has been an amazing month to say the least.

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November 2005 Reflection

I’m very grateful for being able to have this opportunity to experience Ireland this year. The previous month and a half have been an exhilarating process of integrating with the Irish society here in Cork city, in the southwest of the green isle. This is my first time in anywhere in Europe, let alone Ireland. The welcoming for the Mitchell Scholars in Dublin was a fantastic initial experience — hiking in true Irish weather (rain), a crash course in everything Irish, theater and great food. And it’s proving true what I’ve heard others say time and again — the year in Ireland is made all the much better by getting to share it, at least in part, with the other Mitchell Scholars, scattered all over the island.

I have had the privilege of making Cork home. Some call it the People’s Republic of Cork. For Ireland’s #2 city, it’s unusually small, and to me, that’s perfect. It’s big enough to attract a lot of research in biotechnology and science in general, yet small enough to be quickly in places where cows and sheep abound. I’m studying biotechnology here at UCC and couldn’t have asked for a better program. The students are able to mold the course to their own interests, something I’ve really appreciated. There’s a research component to the program, and though I haven’t yet joined a lab, I’m excited about all the opportunities. UCC is very much a research university in the sciences, yet isn’t immune to the friendly, relaxed Irish culture. Professors are always willing to stop for a chat, and the students I’ve met are more than eager to talk about their research, the latest soccer game, American politics or more. On that note, I found it hilarious how in my first two classes here, both professors opened with a joke about Americans! It’s also been a lot of fun to have peers from diverse locations around the world — Nigeria, Iran, China, India, Pakistan, and, of course, most of Europe, to name a few. It feels like a mini-UN at times.

For all its differences and its much more relaxed pace than that of the States, the UCC student body is very similar to that of North Carolina in that it is filled with students who are inspiring, passionate, and eager to change the world for the better. I’ve met most of them through the societies (just an Irish way of saying a student organization). I’ve learned a lot about fair trade from several motivated students whose most recent achievements have culminated in Cork’s designation as a Fair Trade city. Through the Surgeon Noonan society, which raises money for medical instruments to several countries in Africa, I joined a large group of medical students, all of us in white coats (to make ourselves visible and to bring home the point of collecting for medical purposes), and went (legally) from pub to pub during Cork jazz festival weekend with buckets for collecting donations. It was quite a sight to see the brigade of white-coated, bucket-carrying students trick-or-treating for donations in the busy streets of Cork.

I hane’t yet had the chance to join a game of hurling, though I’ve been warned numerous times about doing so! I’ve joined the athletics club (Irish for track and cross-country) and have had my first go at yoga. My travels have been limited to the southwest of Ireland, as there’s been a lot to see and experience here. But I have a trip to London planned soon and more ambitions to see as much as I can of everywhere to take advantage of being on this side of the Atlantic. More adventures to come! Cheers!

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November 2005 Reflection

As I leaned across the counter of a dimly lit police station six months ago and ticked off the contents of my stolen bag, I couldn’t help but think that my travel days were cursed. “How am I ever going to survive a year abroad?” I moaned to the officer on duty.

“No worries,” he assured me. “Londonderry is the friendliest city in the world.”

One month into my time at the University of Ulster, I have to agree.

Take, for instance, the recent case of my stolen student identification card. Upon discovering it was missing, I scoured the sidewalks on my way to class and rummaged through all of the drawers in my room. No luck. I started to hope that someone might turn it in to the accommodation office and save me the 12 pounds Sterling fee. Instead, the ID card arrived in my mailbox a few days later, mailed to my address with a short note that said, “Carolyn, Hope you didn’t spend much time looking for this! Cheers!” No return address. No complaints about sending it. Just the sort of simple act of kindness that has punctuated my life at Magee.

Still, the paradox between those acts and the ever-present reality of living in a town still scarred by the Troubles is just one of the most intriguing parts of studying in Northern Ireland. In the same town where people mail your student ID, strangers clamour to buy your first Guinness, and the person with the least amount of groceries gets an automatic bye to the front of the line, you can watch children pelting police cars and ambulances with rocks, you can walk past the powerful Bogside murals or look at the banner from Bloody Sunday, and many of the people you talk with will lower their voices and share their own personal tragedies from “the conflict” in hushed tones across pub tables. It’s a contradiction that I’m still struggling with. While Derry often looks like any small town to the untrained eye, I am constantly learning about the various layers of history still embedded in the town’s walls and each person’s memory. For an aspiring historian, you can imagine, it’s a fascinating place to study.

That’s just one of the reasons why my days at the University of Ulster seem so promising. Though I applied to the university based on the program and the faculty, I’ve come to appreciate what a perfect place it is for a student of Irish history. It has been invaluable, during the last few weeks, as my professors discussed 17th century Ireland, to have the opportunity to actually walk the walls from the Derry siege. Or to see relics from the event housed in St. Columb’s Cathedral. As I’ve read biographies and more recent histories, it has been an amazing opportunity to actually walk the streets of Bogside or to navigate the Bloody Sunday Centre. I feel as though my education at Ulster will be two-fold: taking in the lectures and insights of my professors and then actually walking through the history outside my window. And thanks to our generous travel stipend, I’ve already been able to do primary research at the British Library and to spend a few days living in the history museums in London.

History aside, however, Derry is strangely starting to feel like home. Though I readily admit that I’m still in the “honeymoon” period, I’ve fallen in love with the city. It’s large enough to support a host of arts venues and vibrant nightlife but small enough that it’s all within walking distance. Already, my roommates and I have established ourselves as “The Americans” at a local pub quiz night (although we’re not all American — the Americans are just the loudest ones) and we’ve become regular customers at the best (i.e. Most artery clogging) places for traditional Irish breakfast, cheap fish and chips, and chicken curry.

I was disappointed, at first, to be housed in a postgraduate/international student flat because I worried that I’d be missing a crucial part of my cultural experience. Luckily, however, I realized quite quickly why the accommodation office made the choice as I walked past the undergraduate flats during Fresher’s Week. So, instead, I’ve joined the hill walking club and tried to make an effort to invite students from my class to quiz night or to pubs with my friends. Though it hasn’t been the easiest thing, I’m slowly adding to my list of Irish friends and, therefore, my tendency to drop bits of Irish slang into my conversations.

Even though they aren’t helping with my Irish, I’ve also enjoyed getting to know the other Mitchells through our “easu/almost plunging to our deaths in bogland” hike through Glenveagh, our trips around Dublin during orientation and subsequent trips to Belfast, London and Dublin. We’re quite a diverse group and although I can’t yet hold my own with Mike while talking about music or while debating foreign policy with Geoff, I look forward to the things I’ll glean from their experiences and backgrounds. By the end of it all, I hope that I can take a bit of the best of them home with me.

To really get to know my Irish neighbours, however, I’m excited about a project that I’ll be working on throughout the year with Habitat for Humanity in Belfast. I contacted their volunteer director to see if it might be possible to spend some days on the work site on my days off or to assist with local volunteers in their office. Instead, she suggested that I take on their new “legacy” project. Essentially, Habitat has been building in two sectarian neighbourhoods in northwest Belfast — one traditionally Catholic and the other traditionally Protestant. Because homeowners must stockpile “sweat equity” by working on their house and other Habitat houses, Habitat has deliberately built the two neighbourhoods at the same time, house by house. Therefore, someone from the first site will have to put in hours on the other site to qualify for their home. As the directors told me during our meeting, Habitat’s intention was to bring the two communities together to serve in a safe environment and to offer the residents a chance to start to see one another as people, not just members of a particular group. Since the project is closing this winter, they’ve been searching to a way to commemorate their efforts.

Enter one overly ambitious American with Wednesdays and Fridays off from class.

Though the specifics haven’t been worked out yet, I think my role will be to research the history of the two neighbourhoods and to record the individual stories of the volunteers, directors, and homeowners. Together with photographs and oral histories, I’ll (hopefully) create a publication that Habitat will use for publicity and as a historical record. In addition, I hope to spend some weekends on the work sites helping to finish the final houses. I spent a Saturday in Ballysillan, recently, and had a blast installing dry wall and trading stories with an aspiring midwife from northwest Belfast. Though I can’t promise my wall won’t eventually collapse, it was a great way to meet people outside the university and to feel like a tiny part of a much larger community.

Other than that, however, I just look forward to the days to come. The entire town of Derry has been transformed to prepare for the Halloween celebration this week, dubbed the oldest and largest Halloween festival on the island and I plan to be in the thick of it, because, as my classmates have told me, there’s no better way to truly be immersed.

Feel free to email me at: carie.windham@gmail.com if you have any questions or want to hear more stories from Derry…

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