Going home now!

Brussels is a funny kind of place to be in summer. The center is full of tourists while the business areas feel almost empty, though it’s a funny kind of empty. There are still people around but not in a productive getting-things-done kind of way. Restaurants are closed and cafés feel very empty.

Having spent a year here as a student I’ve really enjoyed coming back just for two weeks, finishing off the year by playing the role of a journalist. I really love the feeling that you’re doing something worthwhile, that you’re creating something which will inform people and perhaps even show them things from a perspective that they hadn’t perceived before. I love that as a journalist you have a legitimate reason for calling up the most important people, the most informed groups and can talk to them. Yesterday I talked to the Iranian embassy, interviewed a professor about North-South wealth disparities in Belgium, then talked with and organised an interview with Shell Oil. Oh, and went to an EU commission press conference. This all going on while sorting out a hellish mess with my Belgian bank.

Then, just to finish off the year in what might feel like a successful way, I plucked up the courage (sad, I know) and accepted my friend Julie’s kind invitation to a dinner party at her house. I was only hesitant because my French, though greatly improved from how it was at the beginning of the year, is nowhere near colloquial fluency level. In time it will perhaps be but I was worried about missing basically everything that was going on. I hate that! I shouldn’t have been worried though as the evening was really fantastic, Julie’s place is an absolutely beautiful loft-style space at the top of a house in Uccle. I’d never really ventured into Uccle though so going there was a treat.

Today’s been a bit of a bum so far as my German housemate who I was going to have breakfast with blew me off having said we’d mutually call each other when we wanted to go out. Sadly, when I called her she’d already finished at the café we were going to go to and was on her way to a Brussels tourist trap with a friend. A bit disappointing. Coffee though later with some Spanish girls for one last time.

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Finishing the Class: Erasmus equals great friendships perpetually paused

It’s the time of the year when we’re saying goodbye and ending school. Actually, I’m not really at the stage of saying goodbye yet, but it almost feels like it. I’ve spent almost a year in Belgium and though at times the strain of maintaining ones self-esteem has been a struggle, it’s been a hugely rewarding experience. It’s great to do something really hard, something very difficult that lasts a long time so that you can show, to your self as much as to anyone else, that you can do it.

The key, I think, is achieveable goals and personal goals. There’s no point in reaching for something that other people set you because there’s no real incentive. One you pass a certain age the pressure of other peoples’ expectations begin to count for less and your own aspirations and hopes for yourself count for more. If your goals are so outlandishly enormous in their expectations, your own demoralization at the challenge presented could well stop you achieving them. Essentially, one needs one’s own imputus, desire, and self confidence to propel oneself to succeed.

One of the hardest things about being in a place for only a year is the knowledge that all the great friends and relationships you create are going to be at the very least put on hold and tested to their extreme after a few short months. You know that although these friends are fantastic at the moment, once you leave the country and everyone disperses around Europe the world again, it becomes increasingly hard to continue the intimacy you’ve come to enjoy. That’s a tough thing to acknowledge. I said a kind of goodbye to a friend on Monday, a goodbye that had to be carried out over the phone because our respective exam (mine) and travelling (hers) schedules meant we couldn’t meet up. As we spoke I found myself saying “well, have a great trip…. and if I don’t see you in London like we discussed, then I hope your flight home passes well. And in that case I hope everything at school next year is great and I hope to see you sometime again in my life. I don’t know when I’ll next be in Canada, but I hope, in the next few years!”

This is the one downside of international friends: they can never be with you. The solidarity of a core group of friends who knows about that night in the bar, or that guy who you were flirting with oh, that time, is hard when they all live in different countries. It’s a form of cruel irony that once you pushed through the self doubt, fear, and language barrier, once you do find the friends who you know are amazing people, they go off a leave again. You leave them and they leave you. And you have to go back to being strong and self reliant again. Self reliant isn’t fun, and anyone who tells you otherwise is just kidding themselves. Relying on other people is great because it means you trust them and it means they can trust you back and rely on you when they need to.

Of course having international friends is cool, but it makes the off-the-cuff dinner party a little hard to plan. And planning does not lead to very off-the-cuff events. Obviously being instinctive and random has its limits and having international friends has a multitude of other benefits that you trade for. Like visits from abroad, if you happen to live in a desirable location. If you don’t then you’re screwed and will have to be the schmuck who has to fork out for the plane tickets any time you want to see these friends.

The worst thing, is that these friends you create, these friends I’ve created, I feel like I’m only just getting to know now. You can’t know someone in just ten months, but you can get a really good start. And now that I have that beginning I don’t want to lose it. But I will. We all will.

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Trying to STUDY!

There is, no joke, a steel band concert going on in the square outside my house. This is not conducive to a high level of productivity. I’m trying to work on an essay on Russian Foreign Policy and the incessant noise is not helpful! Please people, could you stop having so much fun for just a couple days? Next weekend, party away: I’ll join you even. This weekend, please be miserable. Thank you.

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