Life of Beauty

While the Renaissance has obvious important contributions to history of Italy, our tour guide at the Vatican Museums mentioned a unique reason it is still impactful today. The Renaissance taught the people of Italy to create and appreciate beauty and Italians will go above and beyond to make life more beautiful for those around them. I experienced this first-hand in Rome. On our last night, Kristin, Angelina, and I went to a restaurant called La Dispensa just a few blocks from our hotel. We were immediately greeted with a friendly smile and seated inside. After an exchange between a few waiters, however, we gathered we were pretty much blocking the space for the servers to walk through and were asked if we would like to be seated outside instead. We moved to the outside table and as soon as we sat down we were each given a glass of champagne for our inconvenience of moving tables. Moving outside really was no inconvenience for us, but we gladly accepted the complimentary champagne. Our waiter pointed out I looked cold and asked if I was okay. Even though I told him I was fine, he took off the suit jacket he was wearing and placed it around my shoulders. Since I was a bit chilly, I appreciated the gesture and left his jacket on through our entire meal. All waitresses ourselves, the three of us kept noticing differences between the workers at La Dispensa and those back in the States. It was the little things that impressed us the most like opening each individual wet nap package after we finished our plate of mussels. Angelina remembered what our tour guide had said that morning and attributed the exceptional treatment of us to the Italians trying to make our lives more beautiful.   Things I saw in Rome:   T

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Rome Experiences Big & Small

Rome, in its impenetrable and unmoving beauty, has been an experience I will never forget. While there were so many sites and experiences tightly packed in a two day time period, and there were various moments of stress and uncomfortability, I would not change anything. I could talk for ages about the Colosseum or the Roman Forum and how surreal it was to see such ancient structures full of rich history, but I found that my most memorable moments in Rome the past two days came from the small moments of walking through the crowded streets with my friends, ordering gelato for the first time, eating a croissant and a latte in a small cafe, and riding in a taxi with my professors. (Okay, seeing the Sistine Chapel in person and the Pantheon, and all of the buildings, in truth, was something unable to be explained until one sees them personally, but I digress.) The first night in Rome, my friends and I walked a little way from the hotel to a restaurant called Ristorante 3 Archi. We eventually found out that it was called this because, naturally, there were three arches inside the restaurant, but we sat outside. Our waiter, who we found out was named Memo, was very kind and offered us a discount on our food. We all ate pizza, and, despite being in a state of exhaustion and culture shock, all enjoyed ourselves in the cool night air. On our last night in Rome, this Saturday, my friends and I decided to eat at Ristorante 3 Archi one last time to visit Memo because we had told him we would come back. He was so excited to see us and even gave us his business card at the end of the night. I have included the picture that we all took at the end of the night as we finally said goodbye to Memo and his delicious food that he was so proud to present to us each night. I was always told that Italians were proud people who valued their relationships with every person they happened to meet, but experiencing the kindness and hospitality from a stranger was so nice and made me feel so much more comfortable in the unfamiliar city. I will never forget the small moments during these days in Rome, as well as experiencing all of the iconic monuments that one simply must see in order to truly be submerged in Italian culture. The drawing I am including in this post is from outside of the ancient Pantheon. Before we went inside, the class all sat and admired it from afar on the steps of a fountain across from the Pantheon. While standing there, I noticed a strange looking animal sculpted into the fountain. I soon found out from Dr. O’Connor that it was some form of dolphin hybrid that was very popular within the culture; he said we would be seeing them a lot, especially in Florence. While we waited...

An Apparently True Story

From the time I was a little girl, I had heard stories this magnificent country. People I knew would speak of how it changed you as a person, and that whatever perspective you may have used in the past would change forever. Obviously, I had very high expectations coming into Rome, as well as doubts. What if the city wasn’t everything I’d imagined? What if TV enhanced it to the point where nothing was authentic? What if the art didn’t move me? Gladly, I can safely say that all of my expectations were met. In fact, they were completely blown away; never in my life have I felt so immersed, especially in a country to which I’ve never been. Strangers were kind and patient with me. The food was unlike anything I’ve ever tasted before, richer in every way. Every building looked as if it were taken from a painting, and the real paintings from Heaven itself. The entire atmosphere felt different, almost though a warm blanket had fallen upon the Eternal City. I have Italian ancestry myself, but I never truly appreciated what my great grandparents had until this very moment. I’m now imagining what it must have been like to wake upon Rome every day, and I realize it must have been a beautiful life. I feel grateful to have experienced the days they spent walking among the pillars of an empire. Perhaps one day I will return with others from my home who wish to understand real beauty. For the first time in a long while, I can say that I do.

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