Sunday, December 30, 2012

Official SAS Spring 13 Blog

Here's the link to the official Semester at Sea blog for the Spring 2013 voyage. They usually update it with events that are going on on the ship as well as field programs that students go on. Sometimes there are pictures, sometimes there are videos, and sometimes there are student stories.

Check it out while I'm gone! I've been following it for a couple years and it's actually quite interesting.

http://www.semesteratsea.org/voyage-blogs/spring-2013/

9 days until takeoff, 6 until San Diego!!! 


Monday, December 24, 2012

Fellow Voyagers

Consider checking out some of the blogs below. These are some fellow students who I will be traveling around the world with!


Katelyn Campbell and Sam Jensen: http://samandkatiesas.blogspot.com/
Erica McCarthy: ericaaroundtheworld.wordpress.com

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Tick Tock

It's December 12 (12/12/12 for all you wish makers out there). Which means that...oh...in less than a month, I will set off on my voyage of journeying around the world. At this time next month, I'll be somewhere on the MV Explorer, doing classwork, talking to people, eating potatoes and pasta. A lot of what I normally do at home. Except I'll be on a ship. Traveling around the world.

Yesterday concluded the fall quarter of my sophomore year of college, and my first quarter at Fairhaven. This has by far been the best quarter so far, and I can't wait to make the next two quarters even better! I don't think it's really settled in that I'm going yet. It's always been something that was so far off in the distance, that now that it's creeping up on me, it still doesn't feel like it's just around the corner. Which it totally is.

I've signed up for quite a bit of trips. More than I think I originally intended to, but these are trips that I've had my eye on ever since I knew SAS existed. Home stays, service visits, and even a little bit of adventurous trips thrown in there. I'll be traveling around Beijing for about 4 days (and even tobogganing down the Great Wall!), I'm going to be traveling to the Mekong Delta in Vietnam and doing a home stay there (during Tet, no less), I'll be feeding monks at a monastery in Burma, riding a Snake Boat in India (I'm still not entirely sure what this is...), doing a cultural cooking class in South Africa, visiting the slave dungeons in Ghana, and possibly hiking up to Berber  villages in Morocco. And that's just one thing for each port, and I'm doing multiple day trips in a couple of them.

I'm trying to decide what I'm most excited for at this point, and I really can't say. When I think I've decided on a favorite trip, I remember another one and the process of attempting to pick out a favorite excursion starts all over again.

Winter break has officially started, which, if this were any other normal break would mean relaxing, watching too much TV, reading here and there, and just generally being lazy. But since this is the break before SAS, that means I'll be crazy busy with last minute paperwork, getting everything I could possibly want or need for the 4 months I'll be gone, and finally...packing.

If there are any other SASers out there reading this, I wish you well with getting ready, and I'll see you on the ship in less than a month!!

Monday, October 15, 2012

From Dream to Reality...

As of Saturday, it's official.  Semester at Sea and I have defined our relationship.  Status: officially happening.
What does one do when a dream becomes a reality?  When fives years of excitement, pining, anxiousness, and a myriad of other emotions finally reach the same conclusion?  I don't really know.

Friday is when SAS released their final financial aid contribution to each student.  I was disappointed to see that the Alumni scholarship that I spent weeks on didn't earn me a pretty penny at all.  Not even a penny, actually.  It was so anticlimactic to open my MyVoyage page (an account I've been dying to have since I was 15) and see that nothing (nada, zip, zero) had changed.
But my parents, being the blessing of support that they are, have decided that this adventure is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that doesn't have a price tag, although the literal tag is enough to make any sane individual question their sanity.  So that's where I'm at.  It's happening.
I'm registered for classes.  One may think that the hard part is over, but oh no, you don't know Semester at Sea (or WWU, for that matter) like I do.
I still have to get solid answers out of the financial aid department, which I thought would be easiest thing of the whole debacle, but it's turning out to be the hardest.  I'm still going to be applying for outside funding, visas (which is a whole process in itself), not to mention the list of 549 other items that must be completed before I leave.  And of course, I must prepare emotionally as well.
The idea of being away from home for 4 months is daunting.  The longest I have gone without contact with my parents was the month I spent in Kenya, where it was literally impossible to get ahold of them. So as I travel the world by ship, where I will have my electronics readily available, I wonder if that will make homesickness better or worse?  Come January 9, all will be revealed.
I don't even know if anyone is going to read this.  My parents are the only ones who have been with me on this journey, right from the very beginning when the idea of Semester at Sea was a distant dream that I scoffed at the idea of.

On May 3 I visited the open ship in San Diego.  I was early, eagerly waiting in Timitz square for my tour to begin.  A staff member walked up to me and started talking.  After back and forth conversation about Semester at Sea, she told me "It'll work out, I can feel it."  So all I have left to say is this: To the stranger that believed in my dream without even knowing me, thank you. You're right.  It's working out.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Dreams vs. Reality

As of yesterday, it is officially 6 months until the MV Explorer will leave from Ensenada (or is it San Diego? That part is still confusing...), and hopefully I'll be on it.  I first set my sights on Spring 2013 when I was just beginning my senior year of high school.  Everything seemed so far away, it was still late 2011, I hadn't even graduated or passed my senior boards, I hadn't even finished my first semester of the year.  I thought I had all the time in the world to get things ready for Spring 2013.  But now it's 6 MONTHS until the voyage leaves, which gives me about 3 months to get all the funding together.  It's hard to push myself to fundraise and write letters and fill out scholarships when it all seems like an impossible dream.  After all, is it really possible for me to get the amount of money I need?  I had renewed hope when I logged onto my account to find that $3000 had been knocked off the overall cost, which I was able to manage by endless research and stalking a past participant whose blog I had followed during her voyage.  But now that I think about it, that is just a very, VERY, small amount of the overall cost...
I keep telling myself that nothing is going to happen unless I try, so that's all there's left to do.  Generally speaking, people weren't very supportive of my trip to Kenya, so I don't think I'll even try to rally people to support this amazing journey, which, if I'm being honest, is their loss.  

So here it goes.  If I write it down then it HAS to happen.  After all, that worked with Voldemort in Harry Potter, so it must work in real life.  I SOLEMNLY SWEAR THAT I WILL TRY MY ABSOLUTE HARDEST TO MAKE SEMESTER AT SEA HAPPEN.  As Yoda once said, do or do not, there is no try.  Is that enough fantasy references for one day? I think so.  But really, I promise to try to dedicate at least 1 hour (preferably 2) a day looking for scholarships and other sources of funding.

  The end. Fin. Ciao. Adios. 

Friday, June 1, 2012

Ch-ch-changes

It's been a month since I've officially posted anything, but boy the ball has NOT stopped rolling.  Since the last update, I've visited the ship in San Diego, met with my school's study abroad office, officially paid my deposit, and am a confirmed participant who will be living somewhere on Deck 3 (if all goes as planned).  The more information that is released by SAS about Spring 2013, the better it keeps on getting.  Turns out there's going to be a tester program called Unreasonable at Sea during the S13 voyage, where some of the world's upcoming and leading entrepreneurs will be traveling with us on the MV Exploring, working with students on tacking some of the worlds biggest problems by coming up with sustainable and creative ideas.

Win.

The application process between SAS and Western was a bit of a hassle, but now comes all the paperwork...and finding the funding.  I thought about robbing a bank for awhile, but I don't think I have the chops to pull it off.  But it would make for a really good story when someone asks "So, how did you come up with money for SAS?"  In all seriousness, my summer will be spent working (hopefully), filling out scholarships and receiving them (hopefully), as well as (hopefully) winning the cash prize from the Monopoly game at Hagen.  And possibly robbing a bank.

In other completely related news, looks like S13 is leaving from Ensenada, Mexico now!  Kinda puts a dent in the roadtripping plans, but it could still work out.  It's my goal to say that I traveled the world and didn't fly on a plane.  Of course I'll have to fly home from Barcelona, but I'm not gonna count that one.  Unless I never return...

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

A Fake Acceptance...

It's been a while since I've updated last, mostly because it seems like I've made a lot of progress without actually having made progress.  Yeah, figure that one out.  I woke up one morning and found an acceptance email from Semester at Sea!  I was over the moon of course, until I continued checking my email and found another one sent a couple minutes later that said I was kinda accepted.  It's almost like an oxymoron.  Accepted, as long as my school approves me.  Which of course means that I haven't been approved by my school yet.
But on to more exciting news, the Spring 2012 voyage returns tomorrow!  And I'm going to San Diego the day after tomorrow the tour the M.V Explorer.  Say you were a yoga fanatic, practiced if almost your entire life, it's part of your daily schedule...part of who you are.  Me seeing the M.V Explorer is like a yoga fanatic going to do yoga at an ashram in India for a couple months.  Yup, I'm that excited.