Week Five
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
I feel like so much has happened this week, and I don’t know where to start. I guess, in the words of Maria (from the Sound of Music) I can start at the very beginning (of the week) – a very good place to start.

Last Sunday evening, Willi, Verena, Lorenz and I went to a classical concert in Bienne. Three friends of the family were in the orchestra, and one of the pieces was written by an 18-year-old, and so that is why we went. It was a very enjoyable concert, but for some strange reason, after every song, the organist and the director would bow about 15 times, literally. The would take a few bows, then walk off like it was the end of the concert, then come back on and take some more bows, and repeat this maybe 3 times each song. And then for the last song they walked off and on again probably 5 times! All this time the audience had to applaud. I don’t know if that’s normal here, but I wasn’t very impressed with it. But the music was very good. Everyone played perfectly, from what I could tell.
Monday was a pretty regular day. I had French in the morning and art after lunch. In the evening, the “responsables” – the leaders – of Jana’s youth group all came over for a Bible study. They let me join in, and I was glad to participate, even though I didn’t quite follow everything. Apparently Tuesday was a normal day too, because I didn’t write about it in my journal.
On Wednesday I wrote a French exam because it was the end of the second trimester for the French for Foreigners class. It was pretty easy - the verb tenses and grammar I knew - but there was a lot of vocabulary I didn’t know because I was in the class for only 2 weeks, and they were words that they had been studying for 2 or 3 months. And as is the norm for me, I spelt many words wrong (especially on the dictée), and so got lots of points deducted. I ended up getting 3 ½ out of 6, but that’s ok because the mistakes I made were either just stupid, or excusable. On Thursday we got out results back. For the course we had 2 teachers. One was quite “mechante,” (mean) but it was she that suggested I take the 4th level of French for Foreigners class, or take classes with Jana. The other teacher laughed when I said I might do the 4th level and said I definitely wasn’t ready. I think I am, but I guess we’ll see after I write the entrance test.
On both Wednesday and Thursday, I went down town after I was done at school. I bought a chocolate bar (as is usual for me everyday) on Wednesday and a small pastry and a small wheel of creamy cheese on Thursday. I quite enjoyed these delicacies as I sat on a bench facing the beautiful Lake of Neuchâtel.
Thursday, after my snack, I did some shopping. It’s quite funny how secure the washrooms are, with heavy duty locks and stalls without large cracks, like in Canada, and doors that even go all the way to the floor. I quite like that. But in contrast, the change rooms over here are hardly rooms at all – just curtained off little cabins into which the sales people freely stroll to “help”. This is one thing about Switzerland that I don’t like! I try to change very fast and be discrete about entering a “change room”.
After dinner on Thursday, I went with Jana and Timon to their orchestra practice. Maren usually goes too, but she was still on her way home from a field trip. It was very cute. The orchestra consists of 1 celloist (?) (Timon), 2 third violinists (2 girls about 10 or 12 years old), 1 second violinist (a boy about 13 years old) a first violinist (the teacher) and a pianist (Jana). They say there are a few more people usually, but because of the Easter holidays they weren’t there.
When we got back home, we watched a funny French comedy called “l’Aile ou la Cuisse” with Louis de Funes and Coluche. It was quite funny, and surprisingly enough, I was able to follow pretty much all of it. The actors spoke pretty fast and used huge hand movements and very accentuated body language.

On Friday morning, we woke up to about 3 centimetres of snow – the first snow I have seen in Switzerland (not in the mountainous regions). They had a white Easter, but not a white Christmas (and hardly a white winter at all). We ate a regular breakfast and after, Maren, Jana and I went on a Good Friday walk, although it wasn’t all that pleasant because it was raining and freezing rain, and the snow was starting to melt. We saw a big chateau – le Chateau de Jeanjaquel. We hung around the house for the morning, ate lunch, and after lunch Jan

a baked for the upcoming evening. She made a chocolate chip cake in the shape of a fish and mini “gateaux du fromage” (cheese cake to be eaten as part of the main course - not a dessert). We took these to the youth group as our contributions to the “picnique Canadien” (pot luck). Before eating supper, we went on a hike through the town of St-Blaise and through a forest. We stopped periodically to read and talk

about parts of the Easter story. It was really cool (and kind of wet). After hanging out a while after a delicious supper, we went home. I was tired, but it was a good day. It was funny on the way home, Maren and I were talking and I answered her twice in English without thinking about it. I said, “nice,” and, “sweet,”. I know how to say these simple things in French, and often do, so I guess this means French is becoming as natural to me as English?

On Saturday we went skiing on the local mountain just 30 minutes away, owned by Didier Cuche (a very good and famous Swiss skier)’s parents. It was sooo awesome! The snow was so deep and powdery. Probably the best day of skiing I have ever had! It was funny, though, because there were no ski lifts, just T-bars, so your legs didn’t really get much of a rest ever.
For dinner, we had racklette! It was so delicious! What it is is large pieces of cheese melted under a hot grill. Then you scrap (“rackle”) it off onto a boiled potato. C’est mag-ni-fique!
On Saturday night, there was a rendezvous with the youth group. We met at the church and started off by playing games. I felt sick, so I went home at 10, but everyone else stayed over and got only ½ - 2 hours of sleep. They sang songs, read parts from the Bible and prayed together. It sounds cool, but I’m glad I went home early. At 4 in the morning, they all got up and left in a bus to Cressier, where they met a bunch of other people at the church at 5:30. They walked 3 kilometres to Le Landeron (another village) and had breakfast and walked back. I set my alarm to get up in time for the walk, but decided at 5:05 I would rather continue sleeping, so I did.

When everyone finally did get up, Maren and Jana were pretty much dead, and everyone else was tired too. We had a quite day. For breakfast, we had the hardboiled eggs that we painted together on Friday, a tresse (a sweet, braided bread) and a traditional Russian food that I don’t know what it was called. It was sort of a mousse or a pudding in the shape of a cone. It was vanilla-y and had little granules of I don’t know what in it – maybe some kind of grain. It was pretty good.

You could eat it with a spoon, or spread on bread. Also at each of the kids’ places was a huge basket of chocolate! Unfortunately, most of my basket is already gone. But the Easter chocolate is top notch here… no kidding around like the Easter eggs in Canada. We talking cr

eamy, nutty Swiss chocolate. The rest of the day was pretty laid back. We drove to a bustling little town for a walk about and took a couple pictures. After supper (Jana was on a date), Maren, Timon and I watched the Dukes of Hazard en Français, and I was impressed with myself because I understood most of it.
Something funny I’ve noticed about the Kausches and movie watching is that they keep all the lights on (where as I would usually watch in darkness) and they stop the movie half way through (sometimes at a suspenseful moment) to take a 2-3 minute break. This makes me laugh inside.
Oh! Just wanted to make of record of this being the week when the Kausches started to make fun of me. They imitate my accent and tell me all these things that I say a lot like "okay" and "peut-être" and "je pense". Timon likes the fact that it takes me so long to make a "gr-gr-gr-gr" sound - a little noise made in the back of the throat, I think it's next to impossible for Anglophones to do it. I don't mind that they make fun of me though. I like it. We all laugh, and I'm glad we feel close enough to laugh at and with each other. Jana says they laugh at me because they love me, so I say, continue laughing.
Well I guess that’s officially the end of my fifth week in Switzerland. Thanks for reading.