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I am now stationed in Seattle, where it doesn't actually rain all the time. These recent days have been spent exploring the city and plotting long jogs around small parks as well as where we ought to meet some interesting people to befriend. Meanwhile, the job hunt continues.
May 30
For those of you on Facebook, I just posted an album of pictures from my last few days in Ann Arbor, the cruise, and this past week here in Berlin. Look for, "Time of the Season." My photo sets of Berlin can also be viewed on my Flickr.

Although I actually made it outside this morning (it's sunny and hot, sweaty hot), I'm back in my apartment listening to some street band music (Czech polka, perhaps?) through my window. Lately I've mostly stayed inside, spending all day online busy with applications and whatnot. But today my electric toothbrush beeped an unusual beep, threatening to lose power completely. So I went to Conrad's for a transformer and the post office for stamps. No luck at Conrad's, but I found a small one at Saturn that can control up to 45-watts (not enough for my blowdryer, but more than enough for my toothbrush) for only 15€.

I remember my electronics adapter-buying trip of Paris. It was after a class meeting at the bar, so I was feeling just tipsy enough to string together the necessary French to get what I needed in my hand and out the door. Today I didn't have any booze, but I think I did just fine. It probably helps that the word for "transformer" here is "Transformator."

Last night I was tempted to make it out to a gallery party, but I wasn't feeling particularly social so I went to a park and read a few short stories of Cortázar. I've decided that he inspired Etgar Keret's technique, but Keret replaces Cortázar's oblique, Borgesian poetics with contemporary politics. Maybe I only see the similarity because of the surprise rabbits and gory endings in each of their stories (Cortázar's "Letter to a Young Lady in Paris" and Keret's "Hat Trick"). Then I went to a street vendor and had an excellent roasted half-chicken and salad. After reading a bit more, they brought me a complimentary tea (I didn't see them give any to the men).
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May 29
I promise I'll get a new post up soon and some pictures are also on their way (and maybe even a video!). I found a new apartment, which I will be moving into on Saturday. Now I'm in the middle of applying for jobs and internships, which resists much discussion due to my superstitiousness.

That said, if someone wants to get me an excellent present (or re-gift an old one), I would really love to have all three seasons of Arrested Development. You can request my address for purposes of "mailing a postcard or brief letter" and surprise me with a much larger envelope, yeah?

Also: Kebabs
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May 26
I lost my sleep schedule somewhere between the EDT and GMT + 1 (well, +2 thanks to DST). During the cruise, I woke up regularly at 6:45 in the morning. Now, after three late nights in a row, I sleep until eleven or even noon. To tell you the honest truth, I'm craving coffee. I think this means it's just about time to get a job.

I'm looking into sitting in on an art history lecture series at Humboldt University. I imagine it will help my German more than my knowledge of the field, but it will be interesting to see how they approach same subjects I’ve been studying in the States for years. A couple of the girls I've met here have attended lectures there before and were impressed by how continental they found the faculty's theories.

Today I went to Radspannerei (Admiralstr. 16, Kreuzberg) to purchase a basket (der Korb) and bell (die Glocke) for my bicycle. 7€ for both, as well as the tools necessary to install them and to raise my handlebars. What a deal! I then went grocery shopping for my new apartment, came home, and purchased a ticket to see La Bohème at the Komische Oper Berlin. The show isn't until Sunday, so I'll let you know how it goes.

My fascination with life abroad has been focusing lately on what serves as cultural intersections, rather than what marks difference between people. In some ways it relates to the realization of the massive influence American culture has on the rest of the (western) world. The popularity of Curb Your Enthusiasm in Sweden, for example. Or more banal things catch my attention, like the incoherent babble of babies or the absolute melancholy felt in nearly all subway systems. How wonderful it is to live here in the summer, when a bicycle can satisfy all my needs for urban transportation.
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May 25
So, here's what I have found so far in Berlin:
Two nice cafés with semi-consistent W-LAN internet access. Café Morena (Wienerstrasse 60) has a delicious carrot soup that's sure to satisfy your daily needs for dietary fiber. Bar Bateau Ivre (Oranienstrasse 18) has previously been mentioned in the NY Times (I have doubts if Michael Kimmelman has left any place in this city untouched by his paint-, wait, ink, again, keyboard-stained hands). They do have a juicy fruit, almond yogurt bowl and serve excellent decaf.

The need to play Bob Marley in cafés is spread worldwide from Starbucks in Michigan to Paris and, as I can now confirm, to Berlin.

Some really tall men. So tall that my head doesn't reach their shoulders. So tall that I can't see around them when a band plays in a small bar.

Really beautiful Swedish women. Do I need to mention that they're tall, too?

Room 77 (Graefestr. 77), a small bar, possibly operated by Americans, that can pack the house with 20 year-old-girls who like to wiggle and 26-year-old men who like to sport fedoras and watch girls wiggle just to see a 4-piece American "bluegrass" band. This band had the requisite banjo and harmonica, loose tanktops and beards, and also a washboard and a lead guitar with broken strings. But it was all just so silly, so silly.

Hähnchenhaus, a stand near Skalitzerstrasse that sells half a roasted chicken for 1.90€.

A super flatbread stand here in Kreuzberg, shown to me by Chaz, where warm, delicious flatbread can be purchased for a euro.
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May 25
As is apparent in nearly all of my past blogs, I prefer to get my writing done in the late morning, sitting in my favorite café with some delicious treat by my side. Today is no different, but it does mark the beginning of my entries while living in Berlin.

I arrived in town just under a week ago after spending a week with my sister, mom, and grandmother on a cruise around the Mediterranean. My expectations of the cruise experience were met and my need for a vacation fulfilled. There were some trouble spots, but overall I'm very pleased that my family took up this opportunity to come see Europe and spend some time together before scattering across the map.

After my family kissed me good-bye just outside the drop-off spot of Terminal A, BCN, I checked all of my bags without a problem and headed off to Berlin. (As many of you know, I was a little concerned about the 22 kg weight limit imposed by the budget airline, but the airport employees gave me no trouble at all and I made it here with my small wardrobe, ceramic mugs and Bose SoundDock all intact.) It took the full 2-hour flight to make the language switch from the Mediterranean's latin-based languages to German, and about four days to learn how to ask a barista for wireless internet.

My search for a suitable apartment kept me busy all week. Today I move out of Chaz's apartment into a short-term rental. Next week I'll move into an apartment of my own where I can stay for the summer. I've been staying in a beautiful neighborhood in Kreuzberg, right by the canal. Nearby are oodles of vegetarian cafés, hip bars, and - best of all - large, lush and leafy parks in which I can ride my bike.

My first day in town happened to be the day of the Dalai Lama's speech at Brandenburg Gate, where over 2,000 supporters of a free Tibet came to hear his holiness speak (and release 3,000 Luftballoons!). After the speech, the crowd dispersed into Tiergarten and its surrounding areas as if after a summer music festival. Chaz and I took this time of reflection to visit the impressive Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe and talk about his stay in Cairo. I've also had time this week to see one of the weekly markets here in Kreuzberg, visit briefly with my friend Patryk, who sold me a bicycle (deep purple, currently basketless), and go to Michigan's own Hans Papke's dinner party, where I met others who fell in love with Berlin despite coming in the late fall (summer is clearly the best time to be in the city, when swans court each other in the canal beneath weeping willows and the city swarms with bicyclists wrestling ice cream cones). Last night was László's birthday party, which meant a picnic of shish kebobs and roasted bananas in the park, followed by drinks and cake at Matilda (Graefestrasse 12) and dancing amidst the young and drugged in the minimal-electronica club, 103 (Falkensteinstrasse 47/48).

Despite feelings of homesickness that are going to be hard to shake, I'm doing well. My allergies are acting up and it's clear I'm going to have to figure out the local healthcare system in order to get some nasal spray. I haven't started to look for a job yet, but that's next on my list (after getting a basket on the bicycle, of course). The big difference between this journey and ones of my past is that I've already met lots of people and have spent only a couple of hours alone. I'm actually looking forward to having time to myself, to digest the move and develop a plan for the next three months.

I think learning German will actually be quite easy here. The class I took at U of M did a great job, I think. I'm sure my time abroad last year prepared me well, but I'm braving the language barrier and using my German much quicker than I ever did with my French in Paris.

The plan as it stands now is to stay for the summer and perhaps longer, if I find an appropriate job. Some of the people I've met said that it will be nearly impossible to find a job worthy of a permanent move and that I ought to lay back and enjoy the summer unemployed. Others said it should be quite easy, or at least easier than a German looking for work in the States. But, as some of you know, there are one or two specific attachments I have back home in Michigan I have no desire to cut free that may be bringing me back stateside sooner than I previously planned. For now, it's all fine with me. I'll stay flexible and see where my adventures lead me, doing my best to save my money all the while. Just in case.
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    • I am Katie Sharrow-Reabe and I am interested in structural and social architecture. Linguistic and cultural translation. Progress through retrospection. Subliminal and subterranean connections. And I would like you to help me put these fragments into a hole.
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