Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Ingredients of the cereal bar looking thing...

Ingredients of the cereal bar looking thing that I bought at Aldi this weekend. Mostly benign and healthy seeming... until the end.

összetevők: maltitszirup, zabpehely teljes magból,
buza-risz extrudatum
apritott vorosafonya
kukoricapehely
palmaolaj
mez
nedvesítőanyag: glicerin, aroma, emulgealoszer: szojalecitin es zsirsavak mono- es digliceridjei, alma sűrítmény, etkezesi sav: citromsav, só 
nyomokban tejtermeket , foldimogyorot, diofeleket es szezammagot tartalmazhat. szaraz huvos helyen tarolando
figyelmeztetes: nagyobb mennyiseg fogyasztasa hashajto hatasu



Ingredients: maltitol syrup, oat flakes, whole seeds,Wheat-iris extrudatum
Crushed Berry
cornflakespalm oil
jersey
humectants are glycerol, aroma, emulsifier: soy lecithin and mono-and diglycerides, apple juice, food acid: citric acid, salt
trace amounts of dairy products, nuts and sesame seeds contain. Store in a dry, cool place
Warning: Excessive consumption may produce laxative effects

Yay for google translate! I shall not devour these snack bars with great haste.


On a side note: Facebook is being stupid and not importing my notes correctly.
Even more off topic side note: The Hungarian Firefox spellcheck lists stupid as correct! And the English one says "spellcheck" needs a space.
On an even weirder side note: try searching for "knusperone new lifestyle" on google images. Scroll to see all results.

Monday, September 27, 2010


View Walking Tour in a larger map




9/27/10 - where I went today
(Not listed on the map:)
Took the Red Line to Deák tér
From there - Yellow line to Okotogon
(Listed:)
The Blue drawn line is me walking from the Oktogon to the Opera House to Treehugger Dan's then to school.
Next is the red line that I drew - walked along Nador utca to the Parliament Building then back to school.
The purple line - from school to the Hummus Restaurant then grocery shopping and back to deák tér.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

New Pictures and Random Office Supply Adventure

Today, in desperate need for more highlighters I went on a mini-adventure! I went to Keleti pályaudvar by metro. From there I got a little confused, mostly due to a lack of street signs. (Most of the signs here are on the side of buildings or fences, I really haven't seen any actual posts with signs.) After wandering into the train station I got some good directions and a few pictures. Realistically using those directions it was about a 15 minute walk to the Office Depot, although I might be overestimating normal conditions since the sidewalk was under construction! Found the Office Depot, took a much faster way back to the train station! I now have 8 different colors of highlighters, three pirates of the caribbean notebooks, and two bottles of hand sanitizer! I brought my camera with me today and have some pictures from the trip there and the trip to school!

The Keleti Train Station


Close-up of the top of the building

Inside the station

Barrier to the Metro 4 line construction area across from the train station. My favorite picture of the day although I did get a few "Why are you taking pictures of that?!?" looks. Also, quite representative of the graffiti here: entirely unreadable!
This is a fountain in the park by Deák tér.
The Basilica... will get a better picture some other day... since I usually walk by it every day.


Well, that wraps it up for pictures today. I tried doing video, and the hi-def looks great, but I need to work on having a steadier hand. Image stabilization can only do so much, as I used to tell people!

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Hospital Visit

Sorry about the lack of any update. Although this one should be a bit interesting. I am now much more familiar with the Hungarian medical system than I was a week ago. On Wednesday I had some abdominal pain so I went to the CEU medical center. There are two doctors at the on campus medical center, one tried to book an appointment for me for the next day with another non-ceu doctor, but could not get a hold of the place by phone. I left with instructions to come back later that day so she could call again. I left, took some Advil, then the pain got worse, went back, she then examined me, and decided to send me to the hospital. Of course the pain happens to be on the same side where my appendix is, and it hurt enough that I actually cried out when she pushed down on the area, so the whole hospital thing makes sense. I freak out a little, but not too much, considering. So I get instructions on how to get there, and try to find someone from my department to inform about this and let a professor know that I would be missing a very important meeting. This was around noon, and the meeting at four (I assumed I wouldn't make it and was correct).

Off to the hospital I go! Taking the blue line, and not getting too lost. I had a paper with the address of the hospital which helped, since I could stop random people, point to it and get instructions. The stop was further away from the hospital than indicated by the instructions/map. Thankfully after getting off at the correct stop (I was at the point where it was a bit painful to walk) I ran into two English-speaking girls who were very kind and gave me very accurate and clear directions. (On that note, I would love to redo the maps that the medical center gives out, if just to make them clearer!) They said it was about a five minute walk, and realizing where it was even asked my if I could walk the distance, because there's a bus I could take instead. It ended up being about a 3-4 minute walk, even at my slower pace so I was fine (the pain magically subsided for the walking, enough to, well, walk). Enough about the journey there. I found it.

The check-in desk had no one there. There was just a security guard who told me in Hungarian to wait. (A very nice man translated, saying the woman was at lunch.) Pay attention, this is a theme of non-full-blown-emergency medical care in Hungary. (Or as I've heard from other students, perhaps a theme in general here.) The hospital is older looking, there is noticeable damage to walls and doors. Very different looking compared to the shiny, overly well lit American hospitals that I'm used to. I sit, I wait maybe 20 minutes. She comes back from lunch, knows some English, prints out a form in English, and even accepts my temporary Hungarian student ID! (Never forgetting my passport in my dorm room again!) She deals with 4 other people while I'm trying to fill out the form. The proper format for a Hungarian address seems to vary by type of form/context but I have issues telling what to use when. The safest seems to be Zip Code, District Roman Numeral, (Either name of district or not), Street, Building Number, Room/Apt. Number. Odd since in Budapest the district is the middle two digits of the zip code anyway. Forms done, taken upstairs a waiting room. Wait. Wait some more. Look lost and scared making eye contact so they notice me. (Very useful technique indeed.) Nice med student asks me a few questions. I'm in a teaching hospital so there's a lot of med students here, which is good because it is mostly the young people here that speak English. Although if you act non-intimidating I've found that a lot of other people will speak some English, or French, or Chinese. (Although my vocabulary is quite limited in the later two languages.) I finally get into the examination room and meet one of the best doctors I've ever met in my life. He spoke English well too, and was willing to explain everything that he was about to do. After the physical examination, he was fairly certain it was appendicitis, he sent me to have blood drawn and an ultrasound, with strict instructions to not eat or drink anything in case I would need surgery. Neither of the women taking blood spoke English. Nem is no in Hungarian. I said "nem" a lot when they couldn't find the deep veins in my arms and started looking towards my hands. They even looked at my wrists which I've heard from American doctors is a major don't. So after whacking the crap out of my right arm they got me the first time. (Perhaps only the third time in my life I remember that happening.) And then they filled a vial, and then another, and another ... all in all, 6 vials! Vampires! I don't ever recall having that much blood taken before. Then they sent me to the room for the ultrasound. I took a moment at that point to try to make some international calls on my cell phone, which, much to my surprise, worked! I blew threw about 2500 ft in credit that day though! Got ahold of David, and had him call my mom. (For some reason calling her didn't work the first time.) The ultrasound tech spoke English and even showed me what he was doing on the screen. Couldn't find my appendix though.

Next they send me back to wait, and then from there to the building next door for a gyn consult. (I have a history with ovarian cysts so this has to be considered also.) I go to the doctor, Mr. Nice Doctor sends me to and am told to come back tomorrow. I go back to the first building and Mr. Nice Doctor gets annoyed with them. He then calls, has another doctor specifically agree to see me, makes sure the guard over there will help me get to where I need to be and then sends me on my way. The guard doesn't speak English, and I don't know enough Hungarian to communicate effectively yet. He takes me to another door, presses a buzzer and gestures that I should wait. No one answers for maybe 3 minutes or so. He is down the hallway at his post and gestures for me to press again. I do. A very very grumpy man answers, and speaking quite excellent condescending English informs me I should wait, implying just like everyone else. /facepalm Thankfully I didn't have to deal with him. Although he might have been the supervising doctor for the med student that saw me. Waiting game again. This time the waiting room, was a more typical Hungarian waiting room. Aka a hallway with benches in it.

A very nice female doctor came over to me, and I got yet another physical exam. You know how in American doctors offices they provide you with gowns or those thin paper coverups? None of that here. Well once in first ultrasound. After the exam I get sent for another ultrasound. This one was less fun, but still had an English speaking tech who was nice. Again another hallway waiting room before the ultrasound, this one in front of a marked locked door. Apparently you just sit down and wait. No check ins. This time he had a monitor he could turn on to show me rather than turning his screen. This one was the more invasive, "Can I please take a shower, a bath, and then maybe another shower?" kind. Went back upstairs, waited some more. Ms. Nice Doctor came by and said there was an emergency she had to run to. After she got back she came over and discussed the results, including blood work with me. Yay, white blood cell count normal, no sign of infection! She recommended I see an endocrinologist. (It is quite possible the severe pain I was in can be attributed to the side effect of a medicine which she says they don't prescribe in Hungary for that very reason. Yay, American medical establishment. /sarcasm) So she sends me home around 6:30.

I run instead to the departmental welcome party in hopes of finding my professor so I could explain in person about the missed meeting. She is very nice, although I know that she'll be tough academically. (Which is a good thing!) She left the party before I got there though. I ran into some people, explained that I was fine, and then left with Claudia to head back to the dorms after scarfing down a slice of pizza. Got back to dorm and had dinner in the cafeteria. (Until I got to the welcome party at 7 I hadn't really eaten or had anything to drink since about 8 that morning!) Got on skype to let everyone know I was okay (I think, I don't remember the rest of the night, except showering, a very very nice long shower). Sleep.

The next morning I got up to see the doctor I had the appointment for. Again, doorway in the basement of some medical building with benches in the hallway. Still having trouble getting used to this system. No reception where I go say "Hey I'm here for my appointment!" Also the office is pretty much one room, not much in the way of modesty either. He and my CEU doctor are of the opinion that my problems are something I should just deal with and wait out. Grrr... I disagree, and thankfully I have that referral to the endocrinologist from Ms. Nice Doctor from the hospital. If things don't get better in the next week (I'm being fair I think, giving it a week, especially since the pain is quite manageable now) I'll go to see this other doctor. I suspect the medicine I'm on has my whole body screaming WTF?!? at me.

Sorry for the really long post and all of they typos, but I figured this would make explaining easier. Also, it lets me sort everything out in my own mind. All considered, I'm doing fine, even with a small 200mg Advil the pain is gone. Yay! (It does give me a good potential thesis topic if the one I have doesn't work out. Although I'd really have to work to make it fit the History requirement...)

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Pictures from Sept. 12th

My pictures from the bus trip didn't really turn out as clear as I would have liked. That being said, once I was off the bus I got some better ones. Started out on the bus tour which took us from the dorms in Pest over to the Óbuda castle side. At the castle we had to option to stay for the last day of the wine festival. Four of us stayed, it was a great way to spend my birthday. The two night pictures are from the wine festival. Will post more later!

Both sides of Budapest, taken from the Óbuda side.

Parliament Building
I think this is Matthias? Church. Lots of restoration work being done on it right now. One of the few shots without tarps!
Potato Pancake. Fried and smothered in sour cream. Okay, but bland.

The castle at night.



Szervusztok!

I've been in Budapest for over a week now and facebook just isn't working out as a blog. So here we go, Jess in Budapest. (Although I figure I'll just go ahead and say Europe since I'll be traveling around!) I plan on using this blog to post pictures and keep everyone updated on my life and studies in Budapest. This is my 11th day here in Budapest, finally settling in and getting into a good routine. I even got to do a touristy bus tour Sunday on my birthday! Picture post to come soon!