This morning, I met Carol for our third breakfast. She noticed that there were many more people
in the BLUU than there had been during our previous get-togethers and expressed
that she thought this was because of the time change and people being more
willing to get up early now that it is light outside. I asked Carol if they have a time change in
Brazil and she explained that they do, but it does not line up with ours since
it is currently summer there. As a
result, the time difference between here and Sal Paulo can range anywhere from
two to four hours making it difficult for her to keep up.
Carol and I
spent much of this meeting discussing sports.
Last Thursday, Carol attended her first TCU football game. I asked her whether she had enjoyed it, and
she said that she enjoyed the exciting experience, but did not understand much
of the game and was surprised how long it lasted since each quarter is only
fifteen minutes on the clock. I was glad
she made it to a game because I feel like her time at TCU and in the United States
would not have been complete without getting to experience an American football
game. We also talked about the Olympics
since the summer games will be held in Sal Paulo next year. I was surprised to hear that Carol was not
that excited about this and did not even have a good idea which sports are
played at the Olympics. My family enjoys
watching a variety of sports during both the summer and the winter Olympics, so
I would have thought it would be exciting for Carol to have the Olympics in her
home town. However, she expressed that,
for her family, it was much more exciting to have the world cup there last
year, an event that most Americans pay little attention to.
Something
that Carol does seem to find quite interesting is the idea of winter and the
cold. In Brazil, they never get snow,
and it does not get nearly as cold as it gets in the United States. She also, understandably, struggles to
comprehend what the temperature will be like day to day since she is not
familiar with the Fahrenheit system. I
explained to Carol that the weather varies a lot here during November and
December and can be anywhere from the comfortable temperatures we are getting
right now to below freezing with ice on the ground. She seems apprehensive about the colder
weather since she thought it was quite cold just over the past weekend when it
was in the fifties. This will be a new
experience for her.
I am really
enjoying learning about Carol’s life in Brazil and the cultural differences
between there and the United States.
Carol often surprises me when I assume that things like the Olympics are
viewed the same way everywhere and then discover that Carol and I have vastly
different outlooks on this event. This
goes to show that, while we are similar in many ways, we may also be different
in several ways that I have not even yet realized.
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