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What the Irish people taught me about life in just four short days


Jeremy Branham at the Aviva Stadium, in Dublin
Jeremy Branham at the Aviva Stadium, in Dublin
Photo by Jeremy Branham

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On my first trip to Ireland, I was excited to explore Dublin. While this was the first stop on the College Football Travel Tour, I was more interested in the culture and the city than I was in the Emerald Isle Classic between Notre Dame and Navy. While I enjoyed the game, I fell in love with Ireland more.

To be honest, there were some ups and downs on this trip. I didn’t visit all the sights that I wanted. With places like Kerry, Cork, and Galway, I wish I had more time in the country.  Personally, this trip to Ireland had some emotional highs and lows and travel adventures along the way.

With all that Ireland and the city of Dublin have to offer, the best thing about this place isn’t the food, the sights, or the scenery. I fell in love with the Irish people.

Conversations with the Irish people

During my four days in Ireland, I had long conversations with a number of locals – teachers, stadium security guards, college students, travel writers, and filmmakers. I connected with them.  I hope to see them again. A few of them I now call friends.  They stole my heart more than they will ever know.

While I’ve visited a lot of countries, the Irish people are the friendliest I’ve ever met. Many people may seem friendly but I’ve never met anyone else like them. The Irish people are engaging, polite, and genuinely interested in others.

Ask someone for directions and don’t be surprised if they take you there themselves. If an Irish man or woman asks you if you were here for the game, they will follow up with questions about how you enjoyed your experience. They want you to have a good time. They are proud to call this place home. More importantly, they want this to feel like home to you.

I hung out in a number of pubs, drank more than a few pints of Guinness, and talked with the Irish people. Irish “craic” is a term used to express good times, connection, and conversation with people. I even heard the term used euphemistically to excuse drunk, flirty behavior. Yet it’s more than that.

Irish craic really does exist and it’s a term that perfectly describes the Irish people. No one does this like they do. Yet it’s something that you have to experience.

Why are the Irish people so engaging, friendly, and interested in other people, their culture, stories, and experiences? They get it. They understand what it means to come from a group of people that is connected to one another. They are proud of who they are and believe the people are their greatest asset.

The Irish people are the underdogs and don’t take life too seriously. They understand that it’s the small things that matter. They aren’t concerned with popularity, fame, riches, or ego. What makes the Irish people so great? They understand that it’s people that matter.

Why you should visit Ireland

Ireland’s economy is struggling. There are homeless people on the streets of Dublin. The country is green and beautiful but the weather isn’t always great. They aren’t known for their athletes or celebrities (outside of U2 and Colin Farrell). Yet don’t ever tell the Irish people what they aren’t or what they can’t do.


Nster.com


21 Comments

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People in rural Ireland are often insular, back-stabbing, two-faced, poorly educated, cunning, racists.
Glad you enjoyed your stay in our country and the company of the Irish. You are welcome to return anytime, but next time visit places outside of Dublin, to understand more of the warmth of the Irish character.
This uplifting story by Mr Branham i can relate to and makes a nice change from a lot of depressing comments on IC,its clear he is an out going person and enjoyed meeting with the locals, and i would guess that he was the instigator in many of the contacts with people he met,Thanks
Thank you for looking past the football game and the silly Irishness that is the "fighting Irish". Quite wonderfully said.
Really nice article. Im delighted you had a great time and you were treated great.
The guy writes a nice article, and still people complaining!! Unbelieveable!!
I agree with the author as we have spent a great deal of time in Ireland and were amazed at their friendliness and interest in other countries and people. They also have a great sense of humor. The kindnesses individually displayed on so many occasions are too numberous too mention. Regarding the number of athletes and celebraties, there is on thing so many people seem to forget or do not know about. The Irish population hovers around 4 million people. You could fit them into the Bronx in NYC. Figures from a few years ago show England - 55 million, Germany - 90 million, Italy and Spain - 50 million and so on. They are the most remarkable people given their size and population which so few people seem to realize. Can't wait to return there.
Don't forget, there's an eastern (Leinster) and western (Connacht) Ireland too! Most homeless people on the streets in Dublin/Ireland are either professional begging families from Romania. Or career beggers from the Travelling community. Or drug addicts who are banned from hostels for anti-social behaviour. WoundedKnee (WK)! The Columbia he mentioned could be the United States Ship (USS) [space shuttle] of the same name. As a professional traveller, he could be outer space? Street sinage is perfectly adequate for the non-dyslectic travellers. KO!
I suppose in his defense we should commend this guy for meeting some Irish people. It is perfectly possible to spend four days in Ireland and have no interaction with any Irish person. That's because of the truly extraordinary rate of Mass Immigration to the country--foreign migrants dominate vast sectors of the economy, especially the tourist industry.
He obviously did not meet anybody with a mortgage or unemployed,the only people having the "crack" in Ireland today are the tourists looking for the illusion what he actually saw was Ireland through pint's of Guinness
people are its export, something not right about that.
Is this the Ireland of 2012 or of yesteryear? I feel this commentary rings much more true of pre-Celtic Tiger Ireland than the present. The Ireland of today is a far cry from the wit, hospitality and craic of previous generations.
The only craic I've ever seen in Ireland was the kind hanging out the back of somebody's jeans!
Even recognizing the national game of putting one in his place, some of the criticism of Mr.Branham verged on the misanthropic. I wish him well in the future and hope he can return to Ireland as I am sure that he will be in touch with everyone he met through social media.
thank you Jeremy, with so many critics of Ireland on this site you really got what the Irish people are all about.




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