The last one was a quickie – but it turned out beautifully!
VeronicaV's Life List
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1. join a 43things team
1 entry5 people -
2. learn Ruby on Rails
2 team members . 1 entry . 1 cheer1,344 people -
3. win that bottle of champagne
1 entry . 1 cheer3 people -
4. visit the bundespressestrand
1 person -
5. spend more time with someone special
3 people -
6. make someone feel beautiful
1 cheer31 people -
7. Write more entries in Wikipedia about women
1 person -
8. learn how to use 43 Things
2 team members . 2 entries102 people -
9. transcribe grandma's diaries
1 entry . 2 cheers1 person -
10. visit Alaska
708 people -
11. ride a dogsled
1 cheer5 people -
12. buy MYSELF flowers at least once a month
4 entries . 3 cheers6 people -
13. Do the RAOGK translations in my inbox
1 person -
14. learn the names of the flowers I buy
1 person -
15. get more than 6 hours of sleep at least once a week
1 entry . 1 cheer1 person -
16. be famous
2,312 people -
17. clean up my room
132 people
I just spent 2 weeks up in the Western Fjörds of Iceland in Ísafjörður on an intensive Icelandic course at the “Háskólasetur Vestfjarða” (http://www.hsvest.is ). We had instruction every day from 9-17 except Wednesdays, where we had 2 excursions in the area in the afternoon. We had four lectures (in Icelandic!) on Icelandic history, language learning, music, and the economics of the Western Fjords.
On the weekend we had the option of following the Gislisaga with a movie, lectures, and hikes in nearby (by Icelandic standards) fjords.
We learned so many words, and useful Icelandic, like how to buy bread (we practiced this in real stores!) or how to talk about the weather (can you say “bad weather” in 25 different ways?).
I bought a murder mystery (in Icelandic) by Stella Blomquist, the current star of Icelandic writing, a mystery person (something hard to do, keep a secret in such a small country). I hope to be able to read it now, I’m doing pretty well on the free newspapers that are all over the place.
It was worth it, fun, and I will never learn to use the dative plural in normal speech or understand how numbers are inflected (telephone numbers go masculine because a telephone is masculine, money amounts go feminine because kronur is feminine, and counting numbers go neutrum. Just to keep you on your toes, minutes are feminine and hours are neutral. AAAAARGH!).
They will offer the course next summer, in case anyone on this list are interested!

