
Welcome to my blog! I'm finally here in America, and have finally set up a blog in an attempt to track my progress across the pond. I'm only two weeks in, and am already sick of telling approximately three million different people the same information, so y'all can just read it on here instead :)
Firstly, America is just what I expected - everyone told me NOT to expect it to be like in the films, but it actually is. I feel weirdly at home here, mainly because I feel like I've seen everything before, but only on the big screen. The roads are ridiculously wide, to match the cars that are ridiculously big - both my American room mates drive massive SUVs as if it's the most normal thing in the world, which I suppose to them it is. The absence of round-a
**(Above is me in front of my Halls!)**
fact that you don't have to have a licence plate on the front of your car in South Carolina!You pretty much can't do ANYTHING without a car - I haven't seen one bus or sign for a train station, and even getting a "quart" of milk results in a twenty minute drive to Walmart. The food is also ridiculously stereotypical - especially here down South. I've experienced burritos, pancakes, tacos, sweet tea (which actually nearly beats English tea) and the craziest "ice cream" called Dippy Dots, which are like Millions, as in the sweets, but instead of being chewy inside, are filled with ice cream. I didn't know whether to be impressed or alarmed when I was told they were originally made using a freeze drier designed for creating cow feed....the food in general is insanely unhealthy. Walmart doesn't seem to believe in anything natural...even the sliced apples come with a pourable caramel sauce. At the moment I'm surviving on Special K and pasta in an attempt to avoid the American trend of obesity!The photo on the left are coloured nachos....
I took advantage of America's economic depression last week in a trip to the "mall", and managed to buy lots of American labels for about a third of the price I would have paid in England - Abercrombie & Fitch hotpants for $30 and Haviana flip flops for $13! Despite my friends' jibes that I would be teetotal for a year, luckily we've managed to get our hands on plenty of alcohol out here. My

Unfortunately, though, I actually have to do some studying....Classes started nearly two weeks ago, and they're very different from English university classes. Firstly, you don't have seminars and lectures, you just have "class", which is a group numbering anywhere between 15 and 100 people, in which the lecturer talks, and student occasionally contribute. Classes are compulsory, and attendance is taken - failure to turn up means your grade is reduced, meaning that skipping Civil War lectures at 9am on a Monday morning is just not possible like it is back home, damn it! The tutors are far more into

Although in theory we speak the same language, I spend half my time asking people what they mean... Americans use so many different words to us, and the ones they use that are the same they pronounce wrongly! "Lolly gagging" is dawdling, "flannel" is a man's shirt, not a washcloth, a "jumper" is a Babygro, a "tramp" is a slut, a trolley is a "buggie", a "sham" is a pillowcase....duvet is pronounced "doo-VAY", pecan is said "pee-KAAN" and they don't say "bugger"!