So I've made it to Ireland. A full day of traveling, three airports, two airplanes, and bus later I have finally made it to NUI Maynooth. The two flights over were generally uneventful. Get on the plane, attempt to sleep, eat a poor excuse for a 'meal,' give up on trying to sleep, endure sickening turbulence, and get off the plane. Just the average flight. Except when I stepped off the second plane I was in Dublin, Ireland. I still can't get over that. Ireland was just a place I never thought I would get to, let alone get the chance to come to at only 19. To live like a student. With other students. Are you seeing how this can still be a problem for me to try to wrap my brain around?
So lets move on to the actual story. My first two days here. When we got off the plane in Dublin the first person we met was the immigration official. When he asked what I was doing in Ireland I told him I was studying abroad for the semester and he promptly told me, "Well Colleen as you're here I don't think you're abroad anymore." Funny, I didn't think of it that way after not sleeping for close to 24 hours, but thanks, I'm glad that got cleared up. After a few more minutes of me not really understanding what he was saying I was finally allowed through, after being told I only had two weeks to meet with the local Garda to finish my immigration process.
My first meal in Ireland: a toasted bagel with peanut butter and a bottle of water. I know, it sounds amazing. Well...not exactly, but it did fill me up for awhile. We then got on a bus, exciting, I know, and drove to Maynooth. Maynooth is picturesque. It looks very much like a New England fishing town, but it's different because you know that the New England fishing town is really based on what you are actually seeing. The all the houses and buildings are of varying heights and are painted different colors. I like it a lot. I'll have pictures up soon.
NUI Maynooth is undergoing a lot of construction, so it's hard to say if the North Campus (where I live and is the newest part to the university) is pretty or not. Well, actually, it's really not. It's painfully obvious that these buildings were subjected to the 1970's and 1980's idea of nice architecture. On the flip side the South Campus, that also holds St. Pat's College and the seminary, is gorgeous. When we got to were the main part of the South Campus was all I could think of was "This looks exactly like what I picture Ireland and England to look like." I felt like I had stepped into a movie set for Harry Potter or some medieval royal movie. The cathedral that we got to into was just amazing. It's completely Gothic, including a gorgeous rose window and choir loft, and has these carved wooden bench/seats that are amazing. When we were standing in the aisle, a group of three guys were standing in the bench/seats and were practicing a song. Again, it was as if I had been transported into a movie. I half expected a royal court to walk through the doors and into the cathedral.
My room when I first arrived was disgusting. I honestly do not think there is another way to try to describe it in kinder terms. However, that is in the past now, with four hours of cleaning doing the job of making it a place where people can live. This is the view from my apartment though:

It's nice isn't it? Very green. I'm going to leave this post as this, and hopefully in a day you will all hear about my trip to Dublin.
Cheers!