Beware of Pickpockets!

Don’t be a victim of pick pocketing abroad! Sometimes it’s easier said than done, because in many parts of the world (especially Europe) people make their living off this unsavory act. It may be likely that you get pick pocketed even if you are safe about it. The art of pick-pocketing can definitely be protected against for by following a few simple tips to make you a less obvious target!

  • Men- do not carry your wallet in your back pocket. Always go front pocket, or even better use a slim money clip.
  • Women- make sure your purses can be closed tightly with a zipper.

(This may not guarantee protection, but it’s less of a target then just a normal tote bag or something that doesn’t close securely) Also, make sure you are wearing your purse across your body, as it is much harder to grab.

  • When traveling on public transportation or eating in restaurants, hold your bag in your lap, or place it at your feet, AT ALL TIMES.
  • Carry any extraneous bags/purses on your side rather than at your hip
  • Do not carry a lot of cash on you. If you go to the ATM, go home directly and put the extra money in a safe spot.
  • Do not carry your original important documents on you. Unless it is required by your host country’s law, carry only copies and leave the real ones in a safe spot at your home.  If for any reason the original documents get stole, contact the American Embassy in your city as soon as possible. For a few hundred dollars they can help you get a new Passport.

These are some basic precautions to guard you against personal theft, but the biggest thing you can do for yourself is to BE AWARE OF YOUR SURROUNDINGS!

A little extra common sense and awareness can really go a long way.

 

OIE Peer Advisor

Thoughts and Feelings? Ugh.

If you’ve attended a Study Abroad 101 session or a Pre-Departure session at the Office of Internationalization (which, if you’re studying abroad with us, you should have…) then you’ve heard our spiel about the importance of writing a blog or journal while you’re abroad. And most of you probably had the same reaction that I did when someone first told me that: ‘Are you kidding? I’m not keeping some touchy-feely journal while I’m there. That’s a complete waste of time and totally not my style, but thanks.’ Before I went abroad to Switzerland for a year, I had no intention of writing a blog or a journal. All I had ever heard about blogs was that they were kind of fluffy and proper and something you sent to your grandmother. I didn’t have time for things like that. However, once I got there, and started to go through serious culture shock, my mind changed.

I don’t tell people that I wrote a blog; what I wrote was a rant. The online portion ended up only being three separate entries, spaced out at very interesting times throughout the year, and none of them are particularly flattering or supportive of the whole study abroad experience. And let me just remind you all: I ended up loving my year in Switzerland. The good times completely outweighed the bad and by the end of my time there, I did not want to come home. But reading back through the blog reminds me of how difficult it was to assimilate and get used to a new culture. It’s a nice reality check for me that things weren’t always perfect, but I overcame challenges and became a part of a new culture and absolutely fell in love with it.

I also carried around a journal. No, the entries didn’t start with ‘Dear Diary, today I am feeling pensive…’ Sometimes I didn’t even put words in it. I might pull it out of my bag on a lazy Sunday afternoon in a park and start drawing things that I saw around me. Or I’d copy down a really cool phrase that I heard in French, or slide a memento in there for safekeeping. It wasn’t a journal in the formal sense. It was my own interpretation of a journal. Just like my blog was my own interpretation of a blog. That’s the most important thing to realize about keeping a blog or journal or written record of your time abroad: there’s no specific way you have to do it. It’s not something that’s going to be turned in. You don’t even have to tell your relatives that you’re writing a blog online. For that matter, just keep it on your computer, so you’re the only one that has access to it. It’s whatever you want it to be. Once I got over the idea that it didn’t have to be five pages of perfect English, full of profound thoughts and mushy feelings, it became a lot easier to just use it as my own personal outlet.

Now, five years later, it’s really wonderful to be able to look back at my blog and journal. Pictures are great souvenirs as well, but the thing about photos is that in twenty years, you may forget what you were thinking in that moment. With prose, or poetry, or whatever it is that feels comfortable, it actually allows you to preserve your thoughts, which I find is far more powerful than a photograph. While my thoughts weren’t terribly positive all the time (here’s my Rant, if you’re brave: http://thelonelyyodeler.blogspot.com/) it’s a nice reminder of my time abroad.

So if you’re against fluffy feelings, that’s fine. Just write about something…whether it’s food or a really cool sign you saw or pages and pages of rants, like what I did. In five years, when you’re where I am, you’ll be thrilled to have the memories.

 

Kat Cosgrove, OIE Graduate Peer Advisor