***Effective January 1, 2025***  
All Tulane affiliates participating in Tulane-related travel outside the United States will be automatically enrolled in CHUBB's new international health insurance policy (Master Policy No. GLM N186660489R). All medical and safety support and services while abroad will now be managed through Crisis24.

If you need medical or urgent support while traveling outside of the United States, contact Crisis24: (+1) 312-470-3115  / Toll Free: (+1) 844-896-4183 / goc@crisis24.com

TU Citizen: Meredith Connelly

short-haired woman in blue sweater

"I asked her what was wrong and she was the picture of reassurance ('Tout est bien, tout est bien') until I tried to cut another slice and there it was again--the groaning. Apparently I was not only cutting the slices of cheese wrong (each cheese has a specific cutting technique) but I was also eating them in the wrong order (strong cheese ruins your palette for subsequent, milder cheese). I remember running on two hours of sleep listening to a full breakdown of Proper French Cheese Etiquetteâ„¢ thinking, 'This is gonna be a long semester' And it was. A semester full of linguistic flubs (pro tip: préservatif is NOT a cognate) and embarrassing faux pas from demolishing a sideview mirror with my bike on a routine bread run to utterly failing at eating an artichoke. Beyond language immersion and a deep appreciation for my host family, I think that sense of discomfort, of submitting to being made ridiculous by your own ignorance, is the most important lesson I took from that semester. Traveling is like that feeling of entering a stranger's home for the first time; tentative, off-balance, unsure of where to arrange yourself within a space constructed without reference to you. But eventually you settle in, you admire the objects on the shelves, you exchange pleasantries with your host. Will you leave with a full understanding of who that person is? No--nor should you expect to. But that brief glimpse behind the curtain is a good place to start."