Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Making Your Voice Heard


Wherever you live and whatever your nationality may be, I’m sure that you know the importance of “having your voice heard”. Currently, for us Americans, we’re being reminded to cast our ballots for not only the Presidential Election, but also for state and local positions, as well as extremely important amendments. This is well, good and proper, and I hope that all of you who are able will go out and cast your vote. I know that I have!

However, it’s important to remember that your voice can and should be heard in many more ways than only in the political arena. We have social media literally at our fingertips, and far too many people are misusing its power. Instead of broadcasting to the entire world why you’re voting “against” someone or something, focus your energies on something much more constructive – what do you stand FOR? What do YOU do to help make those things actually happen?

Now is the perfect time to make your voice heard in ways that can help you become as awesome as probably already think you are. In light of the natural disasters that are affecting people around the world (and right now, as an American, it’s once again on the home front), I encourage you to bring recognition to your favorite charity. It doesn’t matter whether it’s financially, with your time, or even a quick post via your favorite social media outlet; just use your individual power and influence to help make a difference.

Do good; feel good.

©2012 CountryEuroCityMouse. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Dealing with Food Intolerances in the Land of Bread and Beer


When you make the decision to live abroad, there are always going to be some sacrifices that you’ll have to make. Some of them will be foreseeable, such as going through culture shock and working towards assimilation in language, dress, mannerisms, et cetera. Other things will be crazy little bundles of surprises that you never would have dreamed of even on your trippiest day. One of my craziest and most inconvenient surprises has been the manifestation of so-called “intolerances” within me.

Now, I have always known that I can’t tolerate stupidity. I don’t mean ignorance; I don’t mean being undereducated; I don’t mean uninformed. I just mean plain, flat-out, unabashed stupid behavior that is far too often celebrated, accepted, and, to my disgust, inexplicably imitated. I do have Stupidity-Intolerance and I struggle with it every day. Fortunately, I know I’m not the only one who has this form of intolerance, so it helps to be able to talk about it with sympathetic listening ears.

Sadly, shortly after having moved to Germany, in addition to the first, I developed new intolerances to deal with. I was constantly ill, lethargic and feeling poorly most of the time. It was so bad; at one point, I was scheduling my week around doctor’s appointments. To make a long story short, after no fewer than 12 doctors, too many invasive procedures, a lot of helpful suggestions from my dad (who strongly encouraged me to look into natural healing & homeopathy) and a doctor friend of mine (she introduced me to the western adaptation/incorporation of Traditional Chinese Medicine, or TCM), I’ve been dealing with lactose intolerance and more recently, glucose intolerance.

There’s no need to get into all of the details, but I do think that it’s important for you to know that if you are going to spend a significant amount of time in Europe, you need to be aware that the pasteurization process of milk differs from that in the US. I’ve heard from many people in the US military that they developed these intolerances while being stationed abroad, so this isn’t anything new. Nevertheless, it’s important to know about. For example, I wasn’t “lactose intolerant” when I was at home in the US, and even when I go home, I can eat some things that I would never lay a finger on anywhere in Europe. I can eat acceptable amounts of Häagen Dazs or Ben & Jerry’s ice cream and it won’t bother me, but then again, they’re both American products. Go figure. Any other ice cream brand or dairy product (excepting butter & hard cheese) is pretty much a no-go for me. This is an adjustment that I was not necessarily prepared for when I signed up to live in ‘Schland.

The latest intolerance I’ve developed is just a shame. Germany is known for all kinds of food products, and unfortunately, I don’t really eat or drink the top three. I have never tried a drop of beer in my life (and I really don’t intend to), I am not a fan of sausages unless my father-in-law picks one out for me & insists that it will “change my life”. (It usually doesn’t, but at least it tastes good.) Admittedly, I’ve never been a major bread lover anyway, and if anyone knows of the horrors that can be experienced when your body turns against you because of bread, you learn to stay away.

CountryEuroCityMouse

But it’s Germany! The breads here are amazing. They’re big, small, fluffy, and dense, of varying shapes and sizes and even combination of grains. It’s really very hard to say no, especially when throughout the day, you smell more Brötchen being freshly baked, or you see small children holding onto their Bretzels with a death-grip. I’ll tell you, do not harass anyone in Germany who’s got bread in his or her hands or mouths. That’s a blatant invitation for an altercation, big or small, young or old. Bread is something sacred in this country. There are so many idioms that use “bread”, the discussion of bread baking practices is common political fodder, and many people still call dinner Abendbrot (evening bread). This is fitting, because generally, breakfast and dinner incorporate breads, while lunch may often be the warm meal of the day. No joke – I could devote an entire blog to Germany’s love affair with bread. It runs deep.

Fortunately for me, it’s becoming more common here to offer gluten-free breads (rice or corn-based) or breads that are baked using spelt (Dinkle), which usually doesn’t bother those who are “just” glucose intolerant.

I’m curious to know if any of you have similar experiences in your respective countries. It certainly forces me to be more creative, picky and informed in my eating practices!

©2012 CountryEuroCityMouse. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

For the Handyman Who Ain’t – IKEA


First of all, for those of you who are deeply offended by my use of the word “ain’t” in the title of this week’s blog entry, sorry. Well, sort of. If I were truly sorry, I probably wouldn’t have used it in the first place. It just reminds me of a saying one of my nursery school teachers would say when she heard a kid use the word: “…‘Ain’t’ ain’t a word, and we ain’t gonna say it.” As I child, I always found that saying to be totally stupid. Who was the genius that thought that it would be remotely useful to use a disdained word three times in one sentence as a reminder not to use the word at all? To this day, this saying makes absolutely no sense to me. Granted, I actually do remember the sentence, but I was never one to use “ain’t” in any case – unless, of course, for narrative emphasis. It’s a cheap trick, I know. But it gets results.

This entry actually isn’t about the etymology of the word “ain’t”; it’s about IKEA. (Whoa! You’re probably wondering where that came from. As you should already know by now, randomness comes second nature to me.) If you are over the age of 18 and don’t live at home with your parents anymore, you probably know of which store I am referring to. I don’t know if I can call IKEA a “store”. I personally liken it to being one of Big Brother’s Labs created to look like a massive furniture store. You either love the place or you don’t; but depending on the size of your budget, you probably end up going there either way.

Such has been the case with us. I usually like shopping, I guess. But I’m the kind of person who’s always on some kind of mission. That means I go in, I look for the specific items I need or want, I look at some additional items that might catch my eye for a little while, and then I’m ready to make the purchase and move on my next mini-mission. At IKEA, however, you may as well write off half a day before you even get in the car to drive there. Insanely enough, those Swedes found a way to make furniture shopping a universally torturous glorious experience around the world.

IKEA, here in Germany, pronounced “EE-KAY-AH”, forces you to walk through a maze, going so far as to adding a blue or yellow dotted line to “guide” you along the way. (Are you feeling like a lab rat yet?) Even if you know exactly what you want, say, an inexpensive office chair, you must walk through at least four unrelated departments before you can get to the one you want. Along the way, you must battle through people who stop the flow of traffic to look at a purple Bårgy, whatever that is, and leave their cart – and infant child, mind you – unattended to gaze at this new IKEA item in wonderment. Meanwhile, as you try to skirt this diversion by walking on the other side, you’re side blocked by a group of confused looking people walking in the opposite direction of the obnoxious dotted line, who, in addition to having failed the first test, also look irritable and confrontational as people continue to get in their way.

By the way, if you are in a hurry, you are an idiot for going to IKEA in the first place.

I’m not going to get into the details of the IKEA shopping experience. Scholars have written books on the place, and focus specifically on the manipulative techniques and product placement used to intentionally create psychological experiences before and after the sale. I know many people who scoff at their products and claim that they’re so inferior to other brands, blah, blah, blah, but when we go to visit them at their place and see their Billy bookshelves etc., they sheepishly admit that “for now” they, too will “settle” for IKEA products. Whatever. I know other people who go there with their kids and have a celebrated “IKEA” day, which is absolutely horrifying to me. My husband and I do not celebrate going to this store. We do not ride there thinking, “Yippee! We’re going to be herded around like cattle, wait in an exasperatingly long line and have to figure out how to fit these crazy boxes in a car that is clearly not large enough to accommodate them.” We don’t eat the scary hydrogenated pellets or anything else they have to offer in their canteen, so by the time we’ve finally selected all that we need and pay the fee to have the majority of that mess delivered directly to our home, we’re exhausted, starving and ready to drop kick the happy families leaving the store with 1 Euro hotdogs and 50 cent ice cream cones in hand. This actually was an excursion for them!

Back at home; when it’s time to build up the items, I can’t begin to tell you what change comes over my husband. He gets this determined look on his face, pulls out the instruction manual and all of his tools and gets to work. He’s going to build something, gosh darn it! At this point, he clearly has this major surge of testosterone, which I find to be perplexingly sexy and hilarious at the same time. For the love of humanity, it’s just an IKEA bedroom set, but after you’ve taken those countless hours to build your adult Lego-home, you can’t help by feel a major sense of accomplishment. The best thing about IKEA items is that when you put together something that you’re going to be using on a daily basis, you have a deeper sense of attachment to it because you helped bring that particular item into being. You’re proactively contributing to the betterment of your living space and you’re doing the family budget a favor at the same time.

Our IKEA shopping binges are always an eye-opener for me. As annoying and generally frustrating as I find it to be, it still amazes me how many things you can actually buy in one place for your interior decorating needs. Through your efforts and the genius that is IKEA, you and Big Brother’s Furniture Lab have brought you one step closer to making your house, your apartment, your loft, or whatever – a home.

©2012 CountryEuroCityMouse. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Trading Spaces


Before you say anything, I know, I know – I’ve been a bad mouse. First I start blogging multiple times a week, showing you pictures and posting quotes and writing weekly entries; and then, for three whole weeks… silence. Sorry about that, friends. There’s been a lot on my plate lately. One particularly time-consuming event involved a long-awaited move from Purgatory back to Earth.

About a year ago, we moved to a nice apartment and believe it or not, we got along pretty well with our landlords (a husband/wife duo). It was located in a nice area, across the street from a playground, about 6 blocks away from a school in one direction, 6 blocks from a grocery store in another direction and about a mile and a half from some retailers in two directions. The one problem is that, well, it was in a village. I mean, their City Hall wouldn’t have called it that, but in the end, that’s what it was. Initially, I didn’t consider this to be too problematic because it seemed like the perfect, quiet idyllic place to go when you wanted peace and quite to write and be creative. I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Our apartment was located in a large house divided into four family units. Let me just say that my husband and I were incompatible with all three neighboring units within the house. There were just small differences, I suppose. While we tend to avoid manic and aggressive dogs, our neighbors downstairs had a penchant for raising them. While we consider bodily functions to be a rather private matter, the neighbors upstairs were FAR less inhibited. The neighbors beside us apparently took Rihanna’s song “Breakin’ Dishes” very seriously, and regularly had loud conflicts around the convenient hour of 2 AM. That’s not all, but these examples should give you a general impression of our experience there. We finally decided we’d had enough and discovered an idyllic apartment in the EuroCity before we went to New York.

My husband said it best when he said that the best thing about that place was the landlord duo (and yes, we’re planning on meeting up with them for dinner again some time this month. They really ARE very nice people). Another disturbing but probably equally accurate thing that my husband said was a few minutes before we were scheduled to return the keys to the apartment. As we stood in the empty living room listening to the manic dog's barking tirade in the background, he sighed and said, "What were we thinking? This is a place where you go to DIE." 

Now, about a week after our official move-in day, everything feels absolutely right. I can now sit at my computer without wanting to yield a Thor-like hammer and knock some sense into someone every time I hear the voice of a neighbor. That, my friends, is progress.

©2012 CountryEuroCityMouse. All rights reserved.