Life as an international student is always an adventure.
This morning I woke up to the sound of *drip *drip *drip as my laundry machine leaked more water than
it spun, flooding the top floor of the apartment and finding its way through a
crack in my bedroom ceiling and falling to the floorboards. Queue a frantic
email to my landlord (who happens to be conveniently in New Zealand). Don’t
worry though – I don’t currently live in university provided accommodation.
Suddenly, it’s starting to look like a very good option for next semester.
Laundry machine
safely unplugged, but startled awake, I headed to the gym for an early morning
class. The gym, TrainMore (just one of many options), is relatively cheap and
right in the middle of the city, conveniently located next to the law library.
It’s the perfect stress reliever and a welcome opposite to sitting in lectures
and libraries, provided you can find the time. The only other thing you might
need is motivation and despite my good intentions for the gym, Block 1 got the
best of me and found me scrambling to find a balance. As of this week, we’re
officially in Block 2. New block, different schedule, and hopefully more of a
balance now that we’re all a bit more used to the pace of LLM life. *fingers
crossed*
The start of Block 2
is a quick reboot after the finish of Block 1 last week. The past two weeks
were a whirlwind of handing in papers, getting results and taking exams. The
two highlights as everything came to a close were the moot court we
participated in (that counts for 50% of our grade) and my first-ever open book
exam.
It’s hard to say
which I found more daunting, but I think the moot court exercise wins. From the
moment I saw it on the syllabus, I was dreading having to stand up in front of
my classmates and argue my case. For a journalism graduate/non-lawyer it was a
scary feeling, but as it turns out everyone had the same jittery nerves on the
day, lawyer or not. This was good because it meant no one was laughing or
judging (we left that to the two judges in robes hearing our case and rapidly
firing questions at us). Instead, we were rooting for each other and hoping all
teams did well, even when we secretly wished our team would win. In my case,
I’m sad to report the Defense council did not win, but overall the experience
was great and felt very rewarding after the six weeks we had been working on
the case, with the added bonus of winning best speaker on the day.
LLM Human Rights and Criminal Justice moot court 2013 |
Since I run the risk
of only sounding happy about the moot court now that it’s over, I can safely
say it must have been enjoyable because I have now signed up to participate in
the ICC Moot Court that takes place in May in the Hague, representing Utrecht
University (along with 4 other colleagues) against 30 teams from all over the
world. Yes, I am slightly terrified, but what doesn’t kill you gets you a law
Masters, right?
The other challenge
of the past two weeks was our open book exam. While you might think ‘open book’
sound incredibly easy because you have all of the answers at your fingertips,
the exam is a three-hour race to find those answers. No excuses!
I haven’t gotten my
grade back so I’m still anxiously waiting to know if I conquered this open book
test after all. One thing I do know for sure is that I have become considerably
better at bookmarking. Not to mention, I got my handy sticky-note booklet free
from the law society. They must’ve known what was in store for me better than I
did.
As the weeks go by
and streets get lit up for Christmas and of course the Dutch Sinterklaas
(celebrated on December 5th), I count the ways I am turning
fully-fledged Dutch and the little things that make me stand out as clearly
international.
On the Dutch side,
you know you’re turning Dutch when:
- You start craving delicious treats associated with Sinterklaas such as Speculaas and Pepernoten.
- You plan your shopping for Thursday evening because you know that’s the only late night shopping of the week.
- You yell ‘Goedemorgen’ enthusiastically to the rubbish sweepers at 7am on the way back from the train station after a weekend away from this city (that of course you missed).
- You start craving delicious treats associated with Sinterklaas such as Speculaas and Pepernoten.
- You plan your shopping for Thursday evening because you know that’s the only late night shopping of the week.
- You yell ‘Goedemorgen’ enthusiastically to the rubbish sweepers at 7am on the way back from the train station after a weekend away from this city (that of course you missed).
On the not-so-Dutch
side, you’re still international when:
- You and
your roommate dress up to hand out candy to children on Halloween and are
disappointed to realize Dutch children celebrate Sint Maarten and do their
version of trick-or-treating (with homemade lanterns instead of costumes) on
November 11th.
- You
still forget to put on gloves when leaving the house and then realize just how
chilly your hands get when you’re biking the short trip to school.
- Every
time the cashier at the Albert Heijn asks you ‘Wil je een bonnetje?’ (Would you
like a receipt), you still tilt you head to the side, stare blankly and say
uncertainly “Ahhhh……no.”
The great thing
about the (short) break between blocks means there is time to travel. Utrecht
is the perfect starting point for a weekend away, whether it’s to one of
Europe’s most popular cities (on my bucket list: Barcelona, Berlin, Lisbon,
Budapest) or to explore one of the other great cities in the Netherlands. There
are several inexpensive ways to get around. If you book in advance and do a
little research you can find yourself on a weekend away even on a student
budget. I luckily had the chance to travel between Block 1 and Block 2, after
days of comparing cheap flights and bus rides across Europe, but that’s a whole
other blog, so stay tuned!
Until
the next time/Tot de volgende keer!
Erin
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