Diplomacy – A Game About How We Play Games With People

Some board games are more complicated than an innocent like Candy-land but are worth playing because of their social depth and replay-ability. Diplomacy is one such strategy board game meant for two to seven players. The game is set during WWI, where players take control of one of seven great powers. Players must talk to their opponents a majority of the game, discussing how to coordinate their armies on the board. I consider Diplomacy’s social aspect an archetype that appears repeatedly in gaming communities. In the heat of a game, players learn about their friends’ subtle cues as they try to stay two-steps ahead. This kind of cue-reading is found in Magic: The Gathering, Settlers Of Catan, Dungeons & Dragons, and especially Poker. The communication and interpersonal skills for outwitting an opponent in Diplomacy are a major part of all the games play on campus. As I talk about other games later this year, I will try to get back to this central idea.

Diplomacy is a game invented in 1954 by Allan B. Calhamer, a Mailman and hobby-game enthusiast. Players take the role of  countries that participated in The Great War such as England, Germany, Italy, France, Russia and Austria-Hungary. Each player starts with a few army units, which are not nearly enough to win the game. Players must enlist the help of other players in order to gain progress. Player’s use their army can make one move from one territory tile to another with only one unit in a territory at a time.

Diplomacy is played with two phases which repeat until there is one country standing. The most important phase is the diplomatic phase; a period of 15-30 minutes for writing down moves to reveal that turn and more importantly make deals and alliances with your opponents. Next is the reveal phase, when every player simultaneously reveals their unit moves. Since the reveal phase ends the turn, players go back to the diplomatic phase to discuss what just happened. There are more rules that have to do with armies assisting other armies to take tiles and the seasons of each turn which can be found here.

The board of Diplomacy. (Intellectual Property of Wizards Of The Coast Inc.)
The board of Diplomacy. (Intellectual Property of Wizards Of The Coast Inc.)

The rules of Diplomacy seem hard to understand at first but it makes sense as you go along. Once you get used to the three moves your units can make a turn, the rhythm of the game picks up momentum. While the goal of the game is to become the last country standing, many Diplomacy players rarely have the time to complete an entire game. The experience of playing magic itself is worth more than winning the game.

I started playing Diplomacy around the time I arrived at Dickinson in my first year. in my first game, I remember playing Russia, with my friends Amanda Turner, Tristan Arnolds, and Shisheng Zhou playing England, Germany, and Italy respectively. I remember clearly Amanda had pulled me aside and talked me into attacking Shisheng. I trusted her. Big mistake.  It was too late after I went all-in on invading Shisheng Germany. I discovered Amanda and Shisheng moved their armies around my armies simultaneously, pushing me out of my own territory. In two turns, I was out of the game. That’s what Diplomacy is all about. 

Amanda (left) and Shisheng (right) writing down orders for their armies.
Amanda (left) and Shisheng (right) writing down orders for their armies.

This year, I was determined not to get fooled again. This time, I played as Turkey, while Shisheng played as Germany and Tristan played as Russia. Amanda picked England again since it fits her style of play best. Amanda chooses to wait most of the game passively, looking for opportunities to grab power when the dust settles between other players. Personally I kept my alliances shrewd, never committed much of anything that anyone told me, and always played aggressively. In fact, sometimes I had outright broken promises with people in order to get ahead. The game ultimately continued for six hours with not a single country defeated, except for Austria-Hungary and Italy whose players decided to quit midway.  While there was no clear “winner”, the experience of getting to outwit my friends on different occasions in-game made me feel like I had won.

Tristian (left), Shisheng (front), and Amanda (back) talking during a diplomatic phase
Tristian (left), Shisheng (front), and Amanda (back) talking during a diplomatic phase

I recommend anyone who has a lot of friends to play Diplomacy. Especially if that person thinks they are a good liar and believe they have gullible friends. Who knows, maybe those “gullible friends” will surprise you by stabbing you in the back. To me, games are always about playing the player, not the game or their pieces. A face-to-face tabletop game should always include layers of communication and long-term strategy elements. The fact that reading people is so difficult and interesting is what keeps my friends and I itching to play another round.

One Last Note:

There’s no guarantee of this, but I’m hoping that my friend Tristan Arnolds will organize the game for the International Relations Department that he has been talking about.

Links:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diplomacy_(game)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_B._Calhamer

https://www.wizards.com/avalonhill/rules/diplomacy.pdf

http://www.diplomacy-archive.com/FAQ/index.htm

http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1N1-144CC4670E267F60.html

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Connections: Identity and Community


Writing, whether online or on paper, is going to have structure. This structure may not be taken from a book or an instructional video, it may even lie hidden, unknown to the writer, but it will be there. The way people compile information in their heads and spit it back out will almost always follow a trend or pattern. Another way of saying it is that people innately create connections between thoughts and actions, including when we write. Making a connection between what we read or watch, and what we write is similar, just one frame larger in the full picture of analyzing the relationship between pen and paper.

The guidelines to writing well are not slim or short; there might be an endless number of guides to writing, probably one under forgotten syllabi in the side drawer of your desk. Digital rhetoric, for example, is one thing to be aware of when reading or posting online. In James P. Zappen’s article on digital rhetoric one of his key points for writing online is Identity and Community.

Now how will I make sense of writing about writing on a blog that is titled ‘mixed kid problems’? It’s actually kind of simple. Identity and Community, the two terms Zappen emphasizes as important factors in digital work, will be the topic of my blog post today. However, the terms and their skeletal bodies of the processes by which people form identities, are simply going to be shifted over to the concepts of bi and multi-racial ethnology. What you get is mixed identity and mixed community.

Is this a random connection based on a coincidence of similar words? Perhaps.

It might also be what I meant by how connections work in people’s head, and subsequently, how it finds its way onto parchment.

Identity can be as easily understood as the lyrics to your least favorite country song, or as difficult as it was for most of us throughout high school. And what if you are searching for yourself? How can you find it, much less know it’s been found?

Of course these are questions we all ask, it’s kind of part of the human experience in life. So instead, I would ask whoever has thought of these questions, those of us who know what it’s like to want to fit in (probably not a small demographic), to take that uncertainty and paint it on their face, on their skin, on the tongue which we use to convey language, and on the eyes of our peers. Coming from two different worlds, and trying to understand both, can be tough no matter the distance in between. Just imagine if you asked worlds (planets) to come together; close like Earth and Mars, or far like Mercury and Pluto (still a planet to me).

If my words seem too abstract for you, then good. Because a person defining themselves, while at the same time being defined by other people is not a sensation that clings to the concrete.

As I continue this blog my posts and ideas will, of course, become more defined/exact. If you have a ship full of thoughts you should probably anchor them to something if you want others to share in them.

Here’s where I start: 

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Ellie Finds a Home

Growing up, my family made sure that animals were always apart of the family no matter what it was. I have distinct memories of every spring having little chicks in our bathtub and raising bunnies in our backyard. These pets were short lived by none other than our golden retrievers. Since I have been alive we have had four golden retrievers that have lived long, exciting lives. Each one of them has made a lasting impact on my life and childhood. It was a tradition in our family that the golden retrievers belonged to the eldest person and for the next dog; it would belong to the second eldest and so forth. Since there are 5 members in my family, every one but me had the chance to call the dog “theirs”.

“Charles” Barkley 2000-2014
PJ
PJ “Rigley” 2002-2011

As the start of senior year was quickly approaching, my family was mourning the tragic loss of our 3rd golden who suffered a long hard battle against Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Since December 25th we looked hard and long for the dog that could mend our broken hearts. It wasn’t till August that we had found a local breeder just down the road from our home in our small country town. We all drove out to the farm on August 15th 2011, and there was two golden retriever puppies playing out front of the farmhouse. One had a pink color and the other had a blue color to differentiate the gender. The last two goldens we had were males and this was finally going to be the one I was able to call “mine.” I picked pink and the rest is history.

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She sat on my lap the whole ride home, which later became a bad habit, as she got older. I had already picked out a name for her but it required a vote by the whole family. Unanimously the name got 100% of the vote so on the 3rd day, we named her Ellie.

The first month can be best described as a whirlwind of emotions. I never left her side and vice versa, I took her everywhere like a little kid and their blanket. This had benefits and consequences because I was able to train her all day every day but she developed bad habits that she still has today. For example, for about six months she used to sit on my lap while I was driving which raised serious eyebrows for any passing cars. Eventually, she became too big to actually sit on my lap but the habit continued that she always sat either on the front seat or on the armrest between the two seats. Now she just likes to stand on the armrest and stick her head out of the sunroof while I drive. It took about the same amount of time for her to learn where the proper place to go to the bathroom is, the difference between a toy and furniture, how to steal food from the table and that digging a hole in the carpet is not the same as digging a hole in the ground.

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Although her favorite activity is something my family made sure to instill very early on in her puppy years that is swimming. The first time we took Ellie swimming, the only way she would go in the water is if I would go in first. She still wouldn’t follow me, not even for a treat. Eventually, I just picked her up and walking into the water and she swam for the first time ever right next to me. From then on, she would swim for hours on end fetching sticks, digging for rocks, chasing fish and letting he strong current carry her for 2 miles while we ran after her.

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The first year of Ellie’s life was jam packed with memories that I will always treasure. From 9-hour road trips to swimming in the ocean and to being the team mascot at every field hockey and lacrosse game I had my senior year of high school. She made that last year unforgettable in more way than by just being her. She taught me a lot about responsibility and reflecting back now, I realize I was more prepared for college than some of my peers. Solely based upon that I had this huge undertaking of raising and training a puppy by myself.

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“FIRE FIRE LEAVE IMMEDIATELY”

I can sleep through a lot …..thunder storms, movies, trains, lectures, you name it- I can sleep through it. One exception to my bear like hibernation is the god awful fire alarm in my apartment. That fire alarm is a sound that makes me question every wrong thing I’ve done in my life that has lead me to deserve this suffering.

Now I usually don’t get this angry about fire alarms but I also haven’t been in a situation where fire alarms have woken me up from my sleeping at 4 a.m. on a Saturday night two weeks in a row!

The first incident was after a long night of Netflix and baking cookies with my roommate. I had finally fallen asleep around 1:30 when all too soon I hear:

“FIRE FIRE LEAVE IMMEDIATELY”

I just laid there for a minute questioning if I was really awake or not and then also weighing out the pros and cons of actually getting out of bed for this alarm.

  Pros  

-I will be safe from a potential fire

   Cons

-I will have to get out of bed at 4 in the morning

-I will have to stand outside for who knows how long

-I will have to GET OUT OF BED at 4 in the morning

Sadly my roommate forced me up and out into the cold outdoors.

As all of us half asleep and/or still drunk zombies waited for public safety to arrive we concluded that there in fact was no fire, to which my roommate responded by groaning loudly, making her angry face at me and waving her arms aggressively. She promptly accepted her fate and sat on the ground.

Public safety FINALLY arrived after what felt like a very long, cold time and shut off the alarm. My roommate and I shuffled back into our apartment and as soon as my head hit the pillow:

“FIRE FIRE LEAVE IMMEDIATELY.”

I am not even joking, I went into shock, was this really happening again? Did I really have to put on pants one more time after I had just taken them off???

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GIF found via Giphy

My roommate let out an angered scream, I rolled out of bed and we went back out the door.

Did we have to go back outside for that second alarm? Probably not but I heard this rumor that you get fined if you don’t leave the building during a fire alarm and I wasn’t taking any risks. Also the alarm is so loud if you can stay in the apartment while its happening and not want to rip your own ears off, you’re probably deaf.

My roommate and I were the only people to go back outside the second time so either I have better hearing than everyone in my building or they were willing to withstand Satan’s voice to not go outside.

The alarm went off 3 more times that night but I withstood the horrible sound because my roommate and I were pretty confident at that point that there was no fire. Or worst case scenario I’d have an excuse for not turning in my homework on Monday.

This past Saturday I thought I was having déjà vu when I woke up to “FIRE FIRE LEAVE IMMEDIATELY” and looked at my clock to see 4am! I was mad because I needed to find more layers to put on since it was cold but the fire alarm was still screaming at me to get out of the building. And as we went walk out the door my roommate grabbed her coat and whispered “I’m ready to kill.”

Public safety arrived faster this time and to our surprise began checking all the apartments. They soon discovered on of the apartments on the lower floor filled with smoke!

Despite all of us residents being sleepy and/or still drunk we all began trying to figure out

A.) who lives there

B.) are they okay

C.) what was on fire

D.) was there anything actually on fire?

We all quickly found out the answer to C.). One of the public safety officers pulled a smoking pot out of the building and dumped the scorched block of ramen noodles into the grass next to the door.

giphy

GIF found Giphy

There was chorus of “are you kidding me?” and just about everyone rolled their eyes at the sad fact that someone had burnt their ramen noodles at 4 am on a Saturday night.

After 5 minutes of attempted smoke clearing we were all let back into our now smelly building. I’m not going to lie it was smelly before this but that weird smell was better than smelling burnt air every time I leave my apartment.

Moral of this story is please don’t cook anything flammable after 10 pm because if you burn it and wake up your entire building we will shame you.

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Stoweked

This time of year really makes me think about home. There are so many traditions surrounding fall; watching football on Sundays on the couch by the fire, the leaves changing, and hanging on to the last few days of nice weather, that I miss while at school. I thought this would be a perfect time to write about my hometown, as it is almost peak foliage, and Stowe just got a shout out in the Huffington Post Travel as the the number one spot on 10 of America’s Best Places for Seriously Stunning Fall Foliage. We happen to have a lot of state (and town) pride. Here are a few pictures to give you an idea of just how beautiful it is.

https://yazhangphotography.smugmug.com/Landscapes/Vermont-foliage-Fall-Colors/i-wNrwfr6/0/L/_MG_4764-24m-L.jpg

Here is one including my favorite animals, cows, which is most likely because I have grown up next to or near dairy farms for most of my life.

https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/105/315413372_c3c3d990b2_b.jpg

While I am having some serious FOMO of foliage right now, I do not miss all of the leaf peepers (what we call tourists who come in drones to take pictures just like the ones above). But who can blame them? We in Stowe are used to tourists, who flock to Vermont for every season of the year.

One of my favorite things to do in the fall at home is hike. The view of the colored leaves from up high is unlike anything else. One of my favorite hikes is the Pinnacle Trail, which is a quick hike with an unreal view at the top.

http://images.summitpost.org/original/76133.JPG

You can also hike up Stowe Mountain, through a number of different trails varying in steepness and difficulty. I hiked a few this summer and here is a picture I took from the top of Nosedive (a ski trail).

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As I talk about all of these amazing things about Stowe, I realize that the greatest part about it is the community. I may not have realized it in high school and growing up, but I think about now how lucky I am to have grown up in such an amazing place.There is such a tight knit community. I went to a public high school of about 200 kids, so everyone knew everything, about everyone. There were times in high school when I absolutely hated that, but looking back now, I am so grateful. Although people would know things about your life in under 10 minutes of them happening, everyone is supportive of each other. We had such a unique high school experience. For example on Fridays in the winter, we would have the afternoons off to ski. Our weekend activities consisted of hiking the countless trails, mountain biking around the mountain and skiing every single weekend during the winter. I appreciate this non-traditional lifestyle, and definitely miss it now being in central Pennsylvania. While this post can not do Stowe justice, I wanted to give a small insight into what life in a small town in Vermont is like. As soon as it starts snowing (which will be sooner then we realize), I will write more about what it is like to live through what can seem like the longest winter in the world.

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It All Starts Here…

What is synchronized skating?

 Synchronized skating is a team sport in which 8-20 individual skaters join as one to perform a program in a competition or show. Judges look for specific elements including blocks, circles, wheels, lines, intersections, moves in isolation, etc. It is characterized by teamwork, speed, intricate formations and challenging step sequences. There are fourteen different levels, each level specifically for your age and skill level. 

Synchro began around 50 years ago in Ann Arbor, Michigan at the University of Michigan. In 1976 Dr. Richard Porter organized the first group of team skaters. In honor of Dr. Porter, twenty years ago the Porter Classic was created. 

There are three different regions in the United States for Synchronized skating:  Pacific Coast, Midwestern, and Eastern. Each region has small competitions in which any team is allowed to participate in. It’s not completely necessary  to participate in these competitions, however, it is strongly recommended.

Each competition has multiple sets of judges, whose job is to rate the elements of your team’s program and then rank you according to your performance against your competitors. The main purpose of these competitions is to give you feedback from a judges point of view whether or not to remove, add, or improve specific elements within the program. But we all know that the ‘real’ purpose of these competitions is to build up your team’s street cred.

Continuing on you have Sectionals, Nationals, and Worlds, but that’s a story for another time. 

Team Reflections

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2015-16 Team Reflections Open Juvenile
This season has started out slowly, we have 4 weeks until our first time skating our program in front of judges at Capital Critique. Capital Critique is exactly what it sounds like; it’s a time where judges watch your team’s program twice, one right after the other, and they critique it. Most of the time this means that they will tell you whether or not something is working, and if you should take out an element or add an element to improve the program. This is also a time for them to tell your coaches if you are meeting all the requirements for the level in which you are competing. 

Leading up to Capital Critique our team practices together once a week for 3-4 hours. Two hours of the practice is on ice and the rest off ice. Beyond this, you are required to have one private lesson with your coach of choice and skate at least twice a week outside of team practice and individual lessons. 

The life of a skater is busy, demanding, and difficult, but somehow we manage to make it through with the support of the team, and of course laughing at our failures and then fixing them. Synchro isn’t an individual sport, it’s definitely a team effort. 

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Why the MLB Playoff Race and Studying for Exams Are Really the Same Thing

Screen Shot 2015-10-07 at 3.02.58 PMimages

Ahh yes. Fall. The leaves are turning and the girls with sweaters and Ugg boots carrying a pumpkin spice latte are starting to reappear. While football is consuming the majority of our time on Saturdays and Sundays, the MLB Playoff race (well, now it’s the postseason I guess) gives us sports fans something to find interesting during the week.

While the premature champagne celebrations by teams clinching a playoff birth can get a little old, the real entertainment comes from the race to get into the playoffs. As a college student, I equate these playoff races (and the incredible stress they cause) to students furiously cramming for exams. While you may say “but Nick, its only October, I have two months until my exams”, trust me, they are coming for you faster than you can say anxiety attack.

Students have an incredible ability to procrastinate and put off work until the last minute. So do baseball teams that coast all summer and wait until September when they’re 5 games out of a playoff spot to actually start trying. It’s human nature. Whatever the case may be, I find great entertainment in watching both scenarios unfold in front of me.

Take the Washington Nationals for example. While they hadn’t exactly coasted all summer, their meltdown was hilarious. It was all over SportsCenter and every major sports blog. The icing on the cake was the little scuffle between hothead burnout Jonathan Papelbon and franchise poster child Bryce Harper. THAT was high quality MLB action, stuff fans love to see (unless you’re a Nats fan, then I’m sure it sucked).

This sort of meltdown is something that every college student finds entertaining during exam week. You’re stressed. You haven’t slept in like 36 hours. Your eyes are practically bleeding from staring at a computer trying to memorize every fact about Israeli culture that your brain can handle. But then one kid sitting near you in the quiet section starts screaming every curse word imaginable, smashes his computer on the ground and storms out of there like a bat out of hell (yes I have actually witnessed this).

While that kid probably needs to be locked up in a mental institution, it is still relatively amusing and gives us the sense of relief that “hey, at least it’s not me”. Same goes for the other teams watching the Nats meltdown. They’re just glad they made it through the regular season without embarrassing their organization on national TV.

HOWEVER. The icing on the cake here is that you, college student, and you, MLB team, probably saw these meltdowns and thought you were all good. Thought you had it in the bag. Then comes the exam/playoffs and you too have a meltdown of biblical proportions. Those crazies you were laughing at mere moments ago will be watching you too and thinking, “hey, at least it’s not me!”.

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Teams Who Run Together Stay Together

As a Division 3 lacrosse program, we are only allowed a certain number of practices during the fall. For about four weeks, we are able to practice about three times per week. Although it seems like not a lot, these practices are loaded with drills and tons of running. Running is one thing that we sure do a lot of in the fall. After having the whole summer to prepare for our fall season, our coach expects us to be in top-notch shape, ready to run and work hard. Doing all of these different run tests and sprints during practice can clearly be a pain at times, but in the end it is worth it. We had a different kind of run test two Sunday’s ago but this time it was not on Biddle Field with just our team, it was here on campus with the Dickinson Community.

Run For Steph is a 5K that takes place every fall here at Dickinson. Steph was a Dickinson student who tragically passed away after getting hit by a drunk driver just over ten years ago. Since then, there has been a 5K set up in her honor and to raise awareness and money for a great cause. With that being said, teams, clubs, sororities, and countless other Dickinsonians come out on a Sunday morning to take part in Run For Steph.

So, on that Sunday morning all fifty members of the mens lacrosse team showed up in full force to run the 5K. This was not a test that was going to be timed and monitored by our coaches but instead, this was a test of our team’s character. Some guys could have showed up with a bad attitude, maybe still a little shaken up from the night before, and just pout the whole time while they were there. Although that is not what Dickinson lacrosse is. Our whole team showed up ready to represent and ready to run.

Now, the actual 5K was no joke. While you could run it at your own, leisurely pace, my teammates and I made it a little race of our own. Last one to finish the race was going to be in for a rough treat after they crossed the finish line. Everyone went all out for it and had finished the race except for two. Next thing we knew, our two remaining teammates were neck and neck coming down the last stretch- neither of them wanted to be last.

It turned out our last two teammates finished in a dead tie so in good spirit, there was no punishment for the loser. Our entire team stayed around until the last of the other runners finished the race. All in, this was just an hour out of our Sunday morning. Instead of wasting away a Sunday morning by sleeping or just complaining about how hungover you are, our team was able to make it a very productive morning. Run For Steph 2015 was a success… such a success we even got a team picture!

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What is “Bring on the Borscht” ?

Screen Shot 2015-10-06 at 7.23.51 PMWelcome to my very Russian yet very American life, that to me, seems completely normal. Recently I discovered that the blurred line between my cultures isn’t considered “normal” to most people. Thanks to my boyfriend’s shocked face in the middle of the dance floor at my cousins super Russian wedding a few weekends ago, I knew I had to make a blog about my “Russian-ness” that not many people know about.

This blog is going to be my outlet where I can be honest, expressive, and passionate about my Russian culture and how it has shaped the person I am today. It’s intended to make my readers laugh, learn, and relate to my stories and posts about my family and unique experiences. My goal is that together, we can relate to one another no matter our cultures, and appreciate each other and where we come from. I hope to not only inform people about myself and my heritage, but also engage my readers to share their own experiences and how they relate to mine. Together we will learn that our cultures aren’t as “different” or “strange” as we think.

Have you ever been to a night club with your family in Brooklyn?

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My parents and I at a Russian Night Club in Brooklyn

Have you eaten Kholodets .. aka MEAT JELLO ?

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Click image for more bizarre Russian foods

Do your friends think your dad is Gru from Despicable Me?

Well, the answer to all of the above is HELL YEA for me. That’s just a preview about what some of my blog posts will be about. Although many things about my Russian culture may seem a bit weird or odd, and I tend to make fun of a lot of it, I still love and appreciate where my family is from and my heritage. I’m basically going to be making fun of myself and my family in most of the blog. If you find any of my posts offensive, then don’t stay. But know that I am not intending to hurt anyones feelings or look down upon the Russian culture. It’s mine. I’ve lived these stories and experiences too. So don’t hate, and join me on my life journey of integrating my Russian-ness with my American-ness.

Along with funny and absurd posts about my culture, I also will be including some more serious posts like:

My First Day of Kindergarten, AKA: The first time I heard English

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Having Russian phone calls with family at school when everyones staring at me

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So, welcome, “Здравствуйте.” I hope you enjoy following me and learning more about who I am, and my heritage. Each post will be dedicated to a Russian artist or someone that has influenced my “Russian-ness” at some point in my life.

I’m dedicating my first post to my girl, Alla Pugacheva, the most famous female Russian singer of all time. She is basically the queen of Russian music and has been for the past 50 years. My parents and grandparents know every word to every song of hers and I’m starting to realize that hearing it in the background of parties or long drives with my family, I’m learning most of the words too. If you learn this song, you’ll be golden at the clubs or any Russian event! … You’re welcome.

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2015 Student Projects

2015 Student Projects are beginning!

Leave a comment below with: 1) two or three sentences about what your blog is and 2) your URL.

Due: Thursday 10/8

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