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So, this past week my class took a week-long trip to the small town of Blaubeuren, just outside of Ulm. It was a great week filled with German learning, hiking and many, many excursions. I had one of those coming full circle experiences because I visited a city for the second time in my life.
That city, as shown by the three times it appears in the title of this post, is Ulm. It was in fact the topic of my admission essay to Valpo, about however the world seems to be getting smaller and smaller, there are always surprising new things to learn as we go that is a summary, the original was a very extended metaphor made worse by the fact that I had been abstaining from the English languageโ something which I think can be made clear is happening again based on the almost 3 lines that make up this sentence.
Above: Ulm ca. One of the things that surprised me most was the way that my teacher described the tower. The city itself was not very clean, being there was no modern sewage system at the time it was built and the church could house almost 5 times the number of people than the population of Ulm itself.
It was clean, it was quiet, there was room to spare. Going back there now reminds me of how much framing influences how we perceive the world around us. And the same thing goes for everything that we see in life, the more that we see, the more that we have to compare it too, and the more we can learn about the reasons why things are the way that they are in the world. Recently the addition of a new roommate from Spain has made it feel a lot more lived-in than before.
Although many people find dialects to be a sign of simple mindedness, I find them totally fascinating. They give language personality and are proof of socio-linguistic developmental patterns that created many smaller pockets of dialects as opposed to one homogeneous language.