1–2 minutes

Day 1 – Huh? I’m in Rome? – Tina

344 words, 2 minutes read time.

On the journey from the airport to the apartment, most of the buildings passed by had a similar beige, earthy color palette that reminded me of cosmetic in various skin tones. It seems like the designer of these buildings purposely kept the natural color of the materials they used.

The closer to the center of the city, the more ancient architecture comes into sight. As I have mentioned about the earthly color palette used on the exterior of the buildings, this unique feature does help the ancient architecture to blend in, or should I say, it makes both the ancient and modern visually live together in harmony. 

The temperature is definitely the core memorie of the day. As an individual who always spend their summer in AC covered environments, the hot air hit me hard. On top of that, the exhaustion from the long flight worsened the situation. 

The smell of the smoke gave me a certain vibe from New York; the only difference is that you’ll smell the scent of weed instead of cigars. At some places, such as the airport, they do have areas labeled and sectioned for people to smoke. This is also a way to prevent the smell from expanding, as well as keeping cigar butts in one place and keeping the environment clean.

The Italians like to buy their food fresh, and going tothe market is an important part of the daily life.”

  • After the trip to the supermarket, I understood why the book include this phrase. The price compared to U.S is wayyy cheaper. I still can’t believe 20 € can get me such a promising amount of groceries, U.S could never💔.

Over all, today was a tireing but also fun day. Had the first hand experience of being a tourist in a while, and especially first time in Europe. Saw the Fontana de Trevi amongst waves over waves of people; seeing them in person always feel different, so much brighter(Lego could’ve have done a better job). 

Finally out and touching some grass.

4 responses to “Day 1 – Huh? I’m in Rome? – Tina”

  1. moussatonicisse Avatar
    moussatonicisse

    I totally agree! The heat here is unbearably, especially for people that stay mostly inside protected by the AC! I was overly confident and grabbed a lot of dark clothes, something I am starting to regret! I told myself that “at the end of the day this is not meant to be comfortable” but rather to experience something new. Turning something that you deem as hard and uncomfortable into something that is your new norm–walking tirelessly through Rome in the heat–is somewhat of a virtue! Push through!!

    I totally love the way you throw a punch at the US and groceries. Me and the guys were so confused when we realized how cheap everything is. I think we must still recognize that we are privileged to even consider groceries as cheap! 

    Great post!

    –Moussa Toni Cisse

    Like

  2. josephpaige02 Avatar
    josephpaige02

    I love your observation about the tones of the buildings, and their harmony with the ancient monuments. I also have been shocked by the affordability of groceries here. The idea that I can get the ingredients for multiple dinners for under 20 €, and they’ll be clean because of Italy’s food safety laws… Revolutionary.

    Like

  3. Julia F 🌸 Avatar
    Julia F 🌸

    I will forever miss the cheap groceries. Not only did they taste 10000x better, I also didn’t have to spend half my paycheck to afford them.

    Like

  4. isabelherrera79 Avatar
    isabelherrera79

    I am also a huge fan of air conditioning so the hot air hit me hard too. I totally get the title of huh I’m in Rome because I was so shocked that I was actually there. Walking around was very surreal. I will miss cheap groceries and free water 😔

    Like

Leave a reply to moussatonicisse Cancel reply