I’ve always been fascinated with communication, so in my
senior year of college, I decided to put that passion to use and go on the Florence
Program. I was a music student at FSU
and ended up taking basic studies throughout my four years, so I could
also tend to music making. My freshman
year I was shocked to learn that even instrumentalists had to sing. Not only did we have to sing, we learned to
do so in Italian. That experience made going on the Florence Program a natural
choice.
Forty years later my Italian alter ego is still fun to
flaunt! The world has changed a lot and
offers many virtual experiences, but there is nothing like that “we’re not in
Kansas anymore” experience to give meaning to the American experience. I learned more about myself and what shapes
my thoughts and attitudes in Italy than anywhere I’ve visited in the United
States. It was intimidating to be on the program with so many art majors, but I carried my flute with me everywhere and played it in some memorable places. Some of these included inside the Ear of Dionysius, on the ruins in Agrigento, and after dinner at a Sicilian sulfur mine.
As one understands the language and how Italians care to
communicate; the Italian legal system; the Italian health care system; the
Italian appreciation for historical patrimony; the Italian appreciation for the
arts; the Italian love of sports; and the Italian quirky habits, one also
begins to understand how Americans use English; what Americans value; along
with American social systems.
Avanti Sevoia! Go for
it! Make your Italian adventure count.
Deborah Nelson
Florence, Italy, 1975 alumna
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