Yes, I'm REALLY Moving
Gosh I can't believe it. Less than 7 weeks from today I'll be on a flight to Hannover to discover a new home, continent, language and culture. I'll officially be an EU resident and this is like a dream come true for me. I can't wait to get my visa for the long haul. It's scary but exciting at the same time -- much more exciting! I love to travel so living in Hannover is ideal for me because it's in the center of Europe and I can fly or take the train anywhere and be to some of the greatest spots in under an hour. I can't drive from here to Boston in under an hour, so to think I can be in Copenhagen (fly) or Hambug (train) in 45-60 minutes is pretty great. I saved up enough money so that I can explore my new turf once I arrive without the pressure of having to work myself into a coma as I have living here in America these past years. I've been saving for this relocation for several years now which meant working a lot to get to this point, I started saving awhile ago and when I mean saving I mean SAVING.
The view from our former hotel room where we stayed for 2-3 months each year for 3 years!
But it's finally here now, I'm moving and it's time to reap the rewards of my labor. Life is like that, isn't it? We have to sweat and work before we see the fruits but boy, when the fruits are ripe for pickin' it sure is exciting. I sometimes feel VERY limited in America, and it's not because America is boring or anything but we're kind of closed in over here and don't get a lot of exposure to outside cultures, we experience culture but always on our own grounds (a Thai place in Boston, a Mexican eatery in Texas, etc.). I'm interested in going outside of my fish bowl to experience a culture within that culture, in its natural habitat so to speak. I'm really looking forward to seeing places like Denmark, Italy and Turkey. I want to travel to Spain. I'd love to see Scotland. Sometimes in America I feel like I'm at Epcot Center's World Showcase and I'm seeing culture through the lens handed to me here, "Look at this! It's France! See this! It's Germany!"... I want to BE in these countries, be the outsider, be the "guest" and feel both the pleasure and pain of it all.
This place has the best brunch on Sunday. I went here with my family and my good friend Esra Celik.
I will miss America though, it will always be home to me because I was born and raised here. But I'd love to try out Europe for awhile. I've been wanting to live abroad since I was around 12 years old and my BFF relocated from London to South Carolina and I couldn't get enough of her accent, way of life, and listening to her stories about British life and culture. I caught the relo bug very early on. Of course, my aunt and uncle had a huge influence on my life, lived in Europe, South America and Russia when I was growing up and I LOVED opening packages from them whenever they shipped stuff over to me. It was the highlight of my life to see something in a language I couldn't understand or a toy I'd not seen before.
I'm hoping to buy one of these next Spring. I'm dying to own a vintage car. I'd also take a new Mini Cooper, but a used one.
And of course, you have my mother's family who are mostly Polish/Russian/Irish (my dad is English/Irish), they all immigrated here in the late 1800s during the 1st World War and so on the farm where she grew up they ate only traditional Polish and Russian food and spoke Polish and some English. When I went to their farm growing up (in Rhode Island) I would help my grandmother bake bread (she made a lot of challah "braided bread" or an egg bread but I cannot recall the name), pastry twists and pies. We also made golabki, golomki sauerkraut, kielbasa, pierogi... Since Polish food is a mix of German and Slavic cuisine, living in Germany feels a bit familiar to me in a funny way.
I someday dream of having a shop like this one, in an old building... This is around the corner from our apartment currently. My husband's family once owned a bunch of buildings here but no more. Imagine owning a place like this? One can dream!
So what are all of these photos of? They are mostly taken in Hannover (List district). Not all the homes in Hannover look this way as 80% of the city was bombed by Americans during World War II (right after the end of the war too, boooo!) so much of it had to be rebuilt quickly resulting in lots of postwar architecture without all these ornate details. But in some districts of Hannover you still have lots of these pre war buildings from the 1800s (some from the 1700s) that are amazing. There are many streets there just lined with gorgeous buildings, each one different and unique. I will show you more once I'm over there, okay? These photos are all a few years old. I can't wait to move - the count down has officially begun! (images: holly becker)
Comments
The apricot one almost looks like it's made out of gingerbread :)
(That's always what I think when I see Harrod's in London)
If you ever make it to Paris and need a guide, I'd happily play that role !
x x x
___mathyld___
I will be adding it to my list of favorites right now. xo!
~ Vicki
Jorun, a Swede in Luxembourg
And if you want to do a little trip to Spain, let me know and if I could helpe you, it would be a great pleasure.
Hannover looks beautiful.
yep. i get you. all my childhood moving and kiddie expat times definitely shaped me. and here i am in Germany!
sunny greetings from a small town near Frankfurt! geisslein
There is nothing that opens up your horizon quite like living in different countries and cultures. I've called 4 different countries my home, including Germany, where I was born and raised. You will learn wonderful, and sometimes hard, lessons that nobody can teach you if you stayed put in your own culture.
So congratulations and the best of luck to you!
xo, Riz
Welcome (back) to Germany (...says the Dutch girl ;)!
My mom emmigrated from Germany, but embraced USA 100% so I will have to work hard to recapture my roots, but I will! If I live long enough, I too, will be a part-time German. ALl the best to you and I look forward to following all of you experiences!!!
I can feel this move is going to be so successful for you, especially because you have experienced real life in Hannover already ... so you can get on with enjoying yourself without the culture shock.
I don't know how I can feel this happy for someone I never met :-)
And you can always come home and visit the US when you feel like it.
Thrilling~can't wait to follow your journey!
I know you'll someday open a great shop.
My maternal grandmother was born in Hannover! But they moved to Texas.
Tina
And if by any chance you need some help with your German/you store - I'd be more than excited to get to know you :)
Greetings,
Alina
So here we are with three kids living in Morocco. Our kids speak three languages and have seen more of the world that most adults ever will. Instead of reading about the Sahara Desert or the Eiffel Tower in a geography book... we take them there! It's AMAZING! Some days are challenging and I miss my family so much but it's the best life- truly everything I ever hoped for!
I say all that so that you will know that you really can live your dream and be happy doing it! It's crazy and fun and I wish you every happiness in your upcoming adventures!
I know what you mean about loving America, but wanting something else. It's so big here, so expansive. It can keep you sucked in, especially when so many in the world seem so desperate to get HERE. Something is stirring deep inside of me for a new life, somewhere else. And I can't tell if that means Norway or Nebraska (let's face it, they're both foreign to me!).... but this post has inspired me to start saving myself, to really make a change that I can be passionate about.
I can't wait to read about this journey! I know it will be exciting and wonderful!
Bremen has a lot of old buildings like that as well! It's a dream owning one of them in pink pr purple! ;)
S*
Hannover looks gorgeous. I don't think I've been there (i'll have to ask my mom...i might have been when I was 8 or 10). I am obsessed with pink buildings (i've been taking photos of pink houses lately to post...). So gorgeous, that architecture!
Hope your weekend is going well!
I love the USA and a big part of my heart will always be with my old life in NYC but we all need new challenges and happy mine involves a wonderful city!
I wish you and your husband all the very best.
Enough sadness, what I really meant to write was that although I still don't feel great about how my voyage turned out in the end, reading about your beginning makes me feel again like how I felt before leaving, when I was all giddy and excited. When, although I had a lot of work before me, I felt relaxed somehow. That makes me feel really good about life again, and makes me feel really hopeful that I may get to move back one day, and in the least plan to visit for a month or-two next summer.
Thanks for making me feel good about life again, sweetpea. x
i'm also about to move to the EU with my boyfriend (he is austrian).
I am as excited as you are! I lived in Hamburg for 3 years in the past, and now i'm back in Montreal since 6 years. I am looking forward to easily travel from A to B and discover so many great places!
For now we are planning on relocating to france, but i'm sure we'll make it to say hi in person once there!
xo
M-C
Enjoy your move and your live in my beautiful country!!!
Yvonne
PS: And of course you will be having your shop - and your Mini Cooper - just visualize it!
Y.
Good luck in this new leaf of the book of your life.
Cheers from someone who's tasting that, but only temporarily
I am sorry to hear about the problems with you Decor8.
I hope you will be able to solve the problem soon (for you own peace of mind).
Bye,
Marianne.
I have always felt the same since I was little as well of wanting to live over seas and then once I was there it was confirmed even more. I feel it in my bones.
We will live through you vicariously:)
xo
Good luck!
Good luck :)
"Gründerzeit", by the way, is the official name for this type of architecture, because it mostly stems from around the 1870s, when the second German Empire was founded; it coincided with growing wealth among city dwellers, which was expressed in these very ornate buildings.
Have a great time in Hanover!