Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
On a Day at the Spa
You sit in the sauna of course!
I've recently discovered this wonderful Swiss pastime. It all started with a day trip to Lavey-les-bains last weekend, and continued with another outing to Bains des Paquis here in the city last night.
On our way to Lavey, my friend and I stopped over in Montreux (which is at the other end of Lake Geneva). After an hour-long walk along the lakeside we came to a beautiful little castle, where we ate a picnic lunch and enjoyed the calmness of the lake and fall colours on the hillside. We hopped back on the train to our final destination: the thermal baths. Although we had to wait for about half an hour to get in (I now know where all the Swiss people hang out on grey November weekends), it was well worth it! We spent a couple hours lounging in the pools, sauna, hammam, and my favourite: the relaxation room. Napping on a lounge chair in a warm room infused with eucalyptus while they play relaxing music that is coordinated with the lighting is definitely my idea of a good time. I slept almost the whole train ride home after all that exertion.
After work yesterday I went with two of my coworkers to a similar set-up here in town (minus the thermal baths). It is situated on a really neat little peninsula that juts out into the lake, and from the turkish bath you can look out and see the cathedral and skyline of Geneva. I am seriously considering getting the 11-visit pass... I regret not jumping in the lake after the sauna, so I have to go back at least once more anyway!
Friday, November 13, 2009
On The People I've Met
Last Friday I attended a panel discussion on peacekeeping with my boss at the Palais des Nations (THE UN building here in Geneva). I felt a great sense of pride to be able to flash my blue badge and walk into that building as part of the UN community. As curious I was to explore, we weren’t able to stay long after the very engaging panel as we had to get back to work, but I hope to be able to return and do a proper tour in the next few weeks.
With the launch of a new report in the branch, we celebrated with drinks and appies at the end of the day and then continued the party to a co-worker’s housewarming. About 40 of us squeezed into his apartment in a beautiful heritage building, and enjoyed a smorgasbord of delicious Finnish food and drinks. What a great way to end the week!
Since then I have been invited out to a dinner party with people who work for the World Economic Forum and who are employed by the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council. I have eaten wonderfully expensive Lebanese food with a friend of a friend who was in Geneva for meetings with colleagues from the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, including a landmine survivor. I have listened in utter disbelief to the stories of another UNEP employee who has recently joined us from Afghanistan, and who was one of many non-essential UN staff that were evacuated from Kabul after the deadly attacks on the guest house NEXT DOOR to his. I have gone to work every morning and sat amongst 4 other extremely intelligent and inquisitive females (yes, that’s right msoo ladies!), each of us representing a different nation (France, Czech Republic, South Africa, the US, and of course Canada). And on Monday and Tuesday I will sit in on a meeting of international experts who act as advisors to the work of our branch, as the abstract and outline for the piece I am working on will be presented among other items for their review.
Although I truly miss being within walking distance of everything the west end has to offer in Vancouver (my budget accommodation here doesn’t really allow for that), and of course the city’s natural beauty, I know that I could not have this experience back home. Although I’m just getting a taste of what international work is like, I think I am hooked...
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
On a Mission
I’ve been in Geneva for exactly one week so I suppose it is time I posted on my first-ever blog. We’ll see how long I last with this, but I hope to update often enough for me to remember my time here, and for you to get a better picture of my experience over the next couple months.
What a whirlwind week it has been! I’ve come to this quaint little city in the heart of Europe, a Swiss peninsula surrounded by France, to see where it all happens. Geneva is home to something like 200 (!) international organizations - everything from the World Health Organization to the International Telecommunication Union... of course the one that I am most interested in is the United Nations Environment Programme. I was officially accepted for an internship with their Post-Conflict and Disaster Management Branch on October 8, and after frantically getting a visa, booking an international flight, tying up loose ends with work at the Seymour Watershed, and filling my stomach with delicious Vancouver sushi one last time, my two huge bags and I touched down on Swiss soil less than 3 weeks later.
My home away from home for the first 5 nights was with a friend of a friend who conveniently lives 15 minutes walking distance from where I am working. She made me a homemade soup the first night I arrived and I knew it was the right place for me! Starting work the day after I arrived and filling my free time in the evenings looking for a room to rent in a city that is notoriously 'challenging' on the accommodation front caught up with me at about 3 pm on Friday afternoon, which made for an eventful Halloween weekend in bed (or in the bath trying to warm up – apparently wool socks, long underwear, a duvet, a sleeping bag, and a down vest aren’t enough to keep a sick person warm). On Sunday I pulled myself together and mustered up enough strength to load all my stuff into a taxi that whisked me all 5 km away to my new home in Grand-Saconnex. I’m living with a multicultural group of 3 other students/interns... yes living... in Switzerland. Awesome.
I’ve dreamt about living in another country ever since I spent a summer in Scotland when I was 14, and suddenly it is reality! Although I’ve done some backpacking in South America and briefly in Europe this summer, it is a very different feeling to unpack my bags and come home to the same place every night in a foreign country. So far I am loving hearing a different language every day, figuring out how to bathe in a shower without a mounted showerhead, and navigating the produce section of the grocery store, where you have to weigh and sticker your mushrooms before you get to the cashier. I’m also still a bit overwhelmed by the fact that I am working under the same roof as all the other incredible organizations housed in the International Environment House.
I’ve aspired to be a part of the work that the UN does in some way for many years, and this is certainly a big step forwards for my career. Although I can’t share too many details, I will be working on a project with the broad goal of greening UN peacekeeping operations and minimizing their environmental footprint on surrounding communities. This is a great fit for me as it integrates my background in natural resource management with humanitarian work, which is an area I have much to learn about. I’ve already been exposed to the immense diversity that is the UN, with nearly everyone in my office coming from a different country and speaking 3 or more languages (this is a good incentive for me to keep up some sort of language training at all times when I return home to unilingual Vancouver). I know that this will be as much an opportunity for me to learn from my colleagues as it will be an opportunity for me to contribute to their work. Let the mission begin!