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The Readjustment Period

I think most people will tell you that coming home after a study abroad experience is hard. I knew this, I believed it, but I didn't expect it to affect me this much. I didn't expect readjustment to be such a full body experience. I didn't know how much Sydney changed me until I wasn't there. Sydney is one of those places that gets inside you and changes you in ways you've never expected.

There's No Place Like Sydney

As I'm packing up and preparing to leave tomorrow, there's an overwhelming feeling that my time here is incomplete. I feel like I could cancel my return flight and be happy to stay indefinitely, but there's too much waiting for me back home. There are classes to take and friends to see and things that I'm excited to go back to. Only, I wish I could take Sydney with me.

 

Post study abroad blues :(

Coming back home after 2 months of being in Europe was much harder than I anticipated. 

During my last week in Rome, I felt ready to come home and return to the normalcy of my life in the U.S. However, once I settled back in, I felt emptier than ever.

I missed what my life had been over the summer. It was like a slap in the face stepping back into reality.

There were no more world-traveling adventures. No more eating at new restaurants every night. No more spontaneous activities and hanging out with amazing new friends.

Rambling and Reflection

Plenty of Irish songs take as their theme a longing to return to that land from which, for whatever reason, one has had to depart. Though my departure does not by any means measure up to the sorts of circumstances the songs get written about, I can certainly understand wanting to go back. It’s a funny thing, though; by the end of my time in Dublin, I was in many ways ready to go home—ready to trade concrete for cornfields, busses for my bicycle, the unabating noise of the city for the soft evening chorus of summer bugs that reminds me of my central Pennsylvania childhood.

Movements Across Borders

Through my program with IES Abroad, I was afforded the opportunity to attend "Discover IES Abroad" events that showcased different aspects of the countries where students were placed, including Spain, Italy, and Austria, to name a few. Along with my class, I attended three Discover IES Abroad events. I attended one event from Spain, one from Italy, and one from Argentina. The Argentinian Discover IES Abroad Event that I attended was a lecture about the Feminist Movement in Argentina and the Latin American Region.

Aliana Stanley

Aliana Stanley
page_blogger

Aliana Stanley is a Senior at Spelman College in Atlanta, GA. She is a Psychology and Political Science who plans to attend law school after graduation. In her free time, Aliana likes to spend time with friends and catch up on the latest trending Netflix show. She has a passion for helping others and learning new things. As she goes through life, she hopes to visit at least 6 of the 7 continents and be fluent in 4 languages other than English!

Fayetteville, GA

A Day in the Life of a Virtual Abroad Intern

Considering the logistics of a virtual internship abroad, it may be challenging to picture what that may look like. How does the time difference work? Are there language barriers? What about cultural barriers?

I had all those thoughts as I thought about what my internship with the Vall d'Hebron Hospital would be like when the site is in Spain, but I am in Georgia, USA.

For me, the adjustment to a virtual internship abroad was significant. I had to learn quickly that things don't work the same way here as they do in Barcelona.