Friday, June 29, 2012

On Our Way to France

Second blog after three weeks in Europe.

That's either totally deplorable or I'm too busy having a blast to keep up with it. You be the judge.

Last time we left you, we were about to head to Strasbourg. Well, Strasbourg was very cool. We partook in some of the local cuisine--tartes flambées:

Amie and Tartes Flambées
 We saw the sights, which included an enormous cathedral--the Cathedral Strasbourg, which was the tallest building in the world from 1674 to 1847. We dropped by the European Council building to say hello and "keep up the good work with the whole empire-building thing." We went to a great park called Parc de L'Orangerie, where Amie made some French friends and saw monkeys ingest their own feces--always a treat. But the coolest thing about the whole trip to Strasbourg was our hotel--Le Biblenhof. 


Cathedral Strasbourg


Parc de L'Orangerie and Amie's New Friend

Amie in Alsace Vineyard
Amie at the Germany-Italy Soccer Ga
It is set among acres of Alsace vineyards outside of Strasbourg. It was so picturesque, so charming, and quite relaxing. They have a pack of St. Bernards that were always quite interested in what we were having for dinner and we all had a great time walking through the vineyards and taking in the sights. 

Other than that, it's been business as usual in Wiesbaden, our de facto European home. We've attended a couple of barbecues with friends, gone swimming at the city pool (which beats any American city pool I've ever seen hands down), and we've been closely watching the European soccer matches. Last night, Germany lost...:-( Seriously very sad for Germany. I saw tears--real tears. Poor schlaaaand. Amelie said: "Oh, soccer lost, we can't say schland anymore." She was all dressed up with her Germany face paint and everything. 

In a couple of hours, we'll depart for the centerpiece of our Europe trip--France and Italy. One week on the French Riviera (and the wedding of course!!!) and one week in Italy before a stop to meet a friend in Switzerland, then back to Wiesbaden. Stay tuned!

-The Kershaw-Svamberk's

P.S. Check out my parents' blog: Tomandkaren.posterous.com 


Saturday, June 16, 2012

The Jet Lag is Over

Well folks, we made it to Europe. It was truly a long and harrowing journey:

  • June 11--leave for Newark--arrive in Newark at midnight.
  • June 12--navigate New York City public transit system from Newark to LaGuardia airport with a mountain of luggage. This wasn't nearly as bad as we'd thought it would be. Hop on a flight to Ottawa, Canada. Here's where things get dicey. The immigration officials in Canada gave me a pretty hard time for some bad choices 13 years ago. Finally, we barely make it to our 7-hour flight to Germany, arrive in Germany at about 11 AM and, in an attempt to beat the jet lag, stay up the entire day. We went to bed around 8 PM. That's one helluva day--awake for around 30 hours straight. But Amie was an awesome traveler--which was the only nice thing the arrogant, smug Canadian immigration officer said to me as she and Dominique stood behind me during my "this guy's a terrorist" interview. Jerks.
The last few days have just been hanging out in Wiesbaden, eating good European food, drinking good European coffee, and staying out of the rain as much as possible. It's the European soccer finals right now and Germany is playing. This only happens once every four years and it's a really big deal right now. So that's been fun to see.

Amelie has been such a good girl. Today, we went out to a small German village to visit some of Dominique's friends. Between them, they have 3 daughters. Amelie played with them like they were three American girls, even though at first they talked to each other with looks of profound confusion on their faces. Eventually, it just turned into regular old little girls running around like maniacs. And between hanging out with her Oma (German for grandma) and these little girls, Amelie's German--and openness to learning it--have dramatically improved.

At this point, we're booking a last-minute hotel and rental car for Strasbourg, France. We'll be going there on Tuesday. I'm told it's a beautiful city and I'm looking forward to finally using the French I've been learning for the past year. Plus I just love France, which is the real reason we came on this trip anyway.

Stay posted, folks. What's coming is Strasbourg, the wonderful and charming French Riviera, our wedding, Italy, Prague, and Berlin. It's a lot to take in. Much love, people!


Friday, June 8, 2012

No Kids

Have you ever heard those people who say: "Who would want to bring a child into this topsy-turvy world?"

My response would be somewhat Socratic: "Have you ever heard of this thing--history?"

Even in the political and social near-utopia that was ancient Athens, only one out of four children survived past the age of 2 or something and people were dying at 35 from rotten teeth. (Not factual, by the way. I could look it up, but I'm not. You get the point.)

Or here's another one: I had this professor. I loved his class. We talked about politics and everything that was wrong with the world and we were realistic and engaged and he wore Birkenstock's in December. It was awesome.

So the class is going along and I'm having a good time and prof. says something about hating kids. Come to find out, he's like 60 years old and has no kids--but he loves his cats. Nothing wrong with that, I like cats. But he's on this anti-kid rant and he's not stupid, so he must have figured that some of us in the classroom probably have kids.

Well, I don't hold it against him, he's entitled to his opinion, but I pretty much stopped listening--not about politics though, this guy knows what's up--but about life. He doesn't get it. At 60 years old, he hasn't lived. Plus, I don't believe he hates kids. He's not Aleister Crowley, he's a nice guy, and a nice person can't just make a blanket statement like "I hate kids" and actually mean it.

Why don't these people just say what they mean?: I don't want to have a child because it will cramp my style.

That's pretty much it, isn't it? They don't want to spend their money on somebody else, they don't want someone else monopolizing their time, they just want their freedom. 

I can respect that. I don't want to spend my money on somebody else or give up my time to somebody else and I want to be free. I get it.

But there's a lot of wrong thinking that I would like to correct.

Here's what I gained when I had a child:

  • Two best pals (Dominique and Amelie) that I love hanging out with. We go out to dinner, we sit at cafes and chat, we travel Europe, we watch movies, we go to concerts and tons of other great stuff.
  • A new-found motivation to succeed in life. Whether it's my work or school or my music or writing, I take things a lot more seriously and I do things well and I do them right. 
  • Someone who listens (and will continue to listen) to my rants about politics or society or music and art. See, Amelie just wants to learn about the world, just like we all did at her age. She's got questions and I get to use my ideas and knowledge and opinions to educate her in whatever way I feel is best (which is a great ego-stroke).
  • Lots and lots of love.
Here's what I lost when I had a child:

  • Getting hammered every night. Oh darn it. That sucks. It was so awesome to spend all of my money on a wicked headache. 
  • Everything that isn't important. When you're limited on time, you tend to spend your time on more worthwhile things. I don't waste nearly as much of my life on video games, TV, loser friends, and pointless activities as I used to. Some, for sure, but not as much.
This is by no means trying to convince people to have children. It truly is a big responsibility to have some innocent, defenseless person be completely dependent on you. If you're not ready, you're not ready. I just don't want the excuses. 

So yeah, let's hear some of what you've gained and lost because of your kids down in the comments section.