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Story Location: Argentina

  • How My Host Mom and I Almost Moved

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    How My Host Mom and I Almost Moved

    Growing up, I moved with my parents twice across the country, and we often reflect on the moving experience as a stressful but exciting time. For the first two months of my semester abroad in Buenos Aires, Argentina, a real estate agent weekly showed the apartment I shared with my host mother to potential buyers,…

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  • Argentine Patagonia on a Student Budget

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    Argentine Patagonia on a Student Budget

    I traveled around Argentine Patagonia in February, alone, before my Argentine Universities Program started and trust me, I know all the excuses not to go: “It’s too expensive,” “It’s too far from my program’s location,” “There’s not enough time to see everything.” But as someone who took the time to plan out a trip, I can assure…

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  • How Living in a Spanish Speaking World Changed My Identity

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    How Living in a Spanish Speaking World Changed My Identity

    Figuring out who you are in a different language is not an easy task. While it may seem that achieving a certain degree of fluency in a language will facilitate the ability to express yourself as you do in your mother-tongue, studying abroad has shown me it is a process much more complex, challenging, frustrating,…

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  • An Insider Guide to Transportation in Buenos Aires

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    An Insider Guide to Transportation in Buenos Aires

    I was already running late, having slept through my alarm, and had about 25 minutes to get to class. Back on my home university’s campus this wouldn’t have been a problem. In the U.S. I attend a small college and every class is within reasonable walking distance. In contrast, I have found that attending class…

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  • How I Learned to Love Hating Life in the Big City

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    How I Learned to Love Hating Life in the Big City

    I grew up picturing the big city bright and tall in my mind. It was a dreamscape of endless possibilities and exotic people. I grew up in a small rural town in the middle of nowhere, at the base of a mountain range the size of a small state. In Hailey, there were four stoplights…

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  • Exploring Buenos Aires through Running

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    Exploring Buenos Aires through Running

    Exploring Buenos Aires through Running From a young age, I have always been involved in athletics and was a two-year DIII athlete at my college.  Hence, continuing to run while in Buenos Aires, Argentina was a given.During my time in Buenos Aires, I enrolled in a half-marathon and a 15k (9.32 mi) both for the…

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  • On Nightlife, Drag, and Identity Expression in Buenos Aires

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    On Nightlife, Drag, and Identity Expression in Buenos Aires

    On Nightlife It was around 3 AM on a Saturday morning in late March, and I was celebrating a friend’s birthday at Fiesta Whipin Almagro, Buenos Aires. I was dancing mindlessly on the club’s second floor when I noticed people stepping back to create a circle. In the center, a tall figure was swaying to the…

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  • The Quest for Tranqui

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    The Quest for Tranqui

    It was the second week of orientation. My friend Allie and I were sitting in ParqueBarrancas de Belgrano, one of the many green spaces in Buenos Aires. Barrancas is a grassy hill peppered with trees, where locals sit around drinking mate, throw around a frisbee, or play with their dogs. Allie and I sat there…

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  • Going to Therapy Where English isn’t the Dominant Language

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    Going to Therapy Where English isn’t the Dominant Language

    Going abroad when you struggle with mental health or are used to a certain style of healthcare can be a daunting idea, especially if you’d like to study abroad where English isn’t the native language. Luckily, if you’re considering Buenos Aires, Argentina, you have some great options! In 2005, the World Health Organization ranked Argentina…

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  • Navigating a City Proud of their European Heritage as a Student of Color: Part Two

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    Navigating a City Proud of their European Heritage as a Student of Color: Part Two

    As discussed in part one of this series, Buenos Aires is a city whose citizens pride themselves on their European heritage, resulting a city-native identity that relies on being white. As a result, students who don’t pass as white may be quickly labeled as “other.” Students I spoke with who identify as East Asian or…

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