If you told me last summer that today I started packing for a five-week Summer Language Abroad program in Italy, I would have not only been thrilled but also thoroughly confused. After making the difficult decision a week before the fall semester to drop one of my majors in order to graduate early, I found myself frantically looking for six credits I could register for on such short notice. It was pure luck that I found a seat in “Intensive Beginning Italian”, and when I clicked “submit” on NOVO I had no idea how far studying Italian would take me.
My residual Spanish from high school helped a little, but learning Italian from the beginning was still a challenge I was excited to face every day in Professoressa Serafini’s class. By the end of our first week, Beginning Italian was my favorite course. Over that fall semester, I continued to love the content and collaborative learning in our class, and I found myself looking for even more outside of it. I began watching Italian TV on Netflix and adding the Italian songs Professoressa showed us to my playlists. There wasn’t a doubt in my mind when I registered for another Italian class in the spring, then eventually a minor in Italian Studies (that will most likely become a supplementary major), and an application for Summer Language Abroad. There is still so much of the Italian language for me to learn, and countless cultural phenomena for me to observe. I am so grateful for my admittedly impulsive decision to study Italian and all the opportunities for growth it has introduced to me.
Five summers ago, I had the opportunity to travel to Italy with the Cleveland Youth Wind Symphony and perform throughout the country. We stopped in Siena for a day trip on our way from Florence to Rome, taking a tour of some of the many historical sites and cooling off with a gelato in the famous Piazza del Campi. I was fifteen years old, I knew no Italian besides “ciao”, and I had no idea I would ever be returning to Siena, never mind studying there for five weeks. Now, I look back on that trip and cringe. While I appreciated every second I had in Italy, I now know that there was so much I was missing out on through my limited viewpoint. This time, I am going to do everything I can to mitigate this cringeworthiness by speaking in Italian, looking beyond the major landmarks, and studying the sites I visit in depth so I may truly understand their gravity. It is likely that by the end of the summer, I will look back at June 2nd, 2023 me and cringe just as hard. More than anything, I hope to grow my cultural competency, step out of my touristy comfort zone, and expand my understanding of how culture shapes place and place shapes culture. In a week everything is going to change, and I couldn’t be more excited.