- Disclaimer -

The views and information presented in this blog are my own and do not represent the Fulbright Program or the US Department of State.

Monday, January 12, 2009

My Daily Routine

Aunt Pam sent me an email asking what a normal day's like here in Thailand, so I figured I'd answer on here rather than just to her so that everyone knows how I do.

On weekdays, I wake up at 6:30, take a shower, eat some cereal, make some green tea, and walk to school. I arrive at about 7:30. At anywhere between 7:35 and 8:00 the students congregate in front of the flagpole, organized into classes. They sing the national anthem, address the Buddha statue, sing the alma mater, and then listen to any number of teachers give announcements.

Class begins at 8:40 everyday, according to the schedule, but I often don't see any students in my first period classes until 8:50 or 9:00, depending on how long the flagpole meeting was and if their homeroom teacher had things to tell them. I teach 21 periods throughout the week, with four of these periods being marathon, 2-period long elective classes.

Monday is my busiest day with 6 periods. Wednesday's the easiest with only 2.

I normally break for lunch when I have a free period, normally sometime between 10:30 and 12:00. If I wait around and get to the cafeteria after the students do, most of the food disappears and I have only 15 minutes or so to eat what little I can scrape together.

Like I said, I teach different amounts on different days, but when I have down time I plan for upcoming lessons, make props, study Thai, and catch up on emails and things online. I stay busy.

Afternoons are normally more laid back. And the students tend to be louder and more difficult to keep in line. Just have to go with the flow in these situations. The students have a variety of activities they are involved in throughout the week. Thursday is scout day, so most of the kids and teachers dress up in Boy scout uniforms and have lessons about how to tie knots or whatever.

I often bring running clothes over to the school with me and go for a jog around 3 or 4 in the afternoon. The kids get a kick out of this for some reason. I play ping pong and basketball in the afternoons too. Students were amazed by me dribbling through my legs and spinning the ball on my finger. Another thing you can do to draw attention as a farang (foreigner) is play guitar. I had to play "Country Roads" before the entire school on New Years. Good times. Made me miss home.

After running, I head home, take a quick shower and chill until Khun Yai brings me some dinner. If I happen to see her or Khun Dtaa on the way in, we have a word or two. The other day grandpa surprised me with an ostrich egg, which I'd never seen before. I have a picture I'll try to put up sometime. (By the way, I have a ton of pictures that haven't made it to Facebook yet).
I eat dinner by myself, usually putting on a DVD in the room if it's cold or getting dark out. If it's not either of those, I like to eat by the lake, watch the animals, etc.

That's pretty much the extent of my day. From there on I generally just watch a movie or read until I fall asleep. Usually sleep comes at about 9:30, but I've been staying up later lately for some reason.

The weekends is much the same, just without the teaching. Khun Yai brings me all the meals during the weekend, and I think she's caught on that I can barely stomach her dehydrated seafood rice porridge dish for breakfast. Now I consistently get fried eggs and a piece of toast, sometimes a cup of coffee. Before quite recently the director of the school wouldn't give me permission to go anywhere or do anything, so I was literally trapped in my room. I have begun sneaking out whenever I feel like it, and he either doesn't know or doesn't care. I've gone to the city a few times, explored a little bit. I met Paige, the other Fulbrighter in Chiangrai, last weekend and we had a good time.

So, long story short, I'm getting along. I'm enjoying myself, but I also miss everyone back home. Look forward to getting back in about two months!!

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Sook San Wan Bpee Mai!!!

aka - Happy New Years!

First things first: I am not currently, nor was I ever, on fire. There was a club that caught on fire in Bangkok on New Year's Eve, but I was far from it. It really was a sad thing. I think over 60 people lost their lives in the fire, but no one in my Fulbright group was near the tragedy.

I bussed into Bangkok from Chiangrai on Tuesday night/Wednesday morning. It's about an 11 hour ride, so the night bus is the way to go. And for the equivalent of about $25-30, you can't really beat it. Sleeping is a little sub-par, but I got enough sleep to last until 3:00 in the morning on New Years.

Chike, JR, and I stayed at the YWCA hotel, which is where Fulbright put us up for Thanksgiving. It's a nice place, and the three of us split a triple room, so we kept the price pretty low - about $50 a piece for the 3 nights. The hotel is centrally located in Bangkok, but somehow manages to be a 10-15 minute walk from the sky train, which is sometimes a hassle.

New Year's Eve the guys went out to dinner at Tony Roma's with Rawi - a Thai-American from UC Davis - and his uncle's family. I ate tons of steak and ribs. And I paid for it. My stomach has accustomed itself to Thai portions consisting of mainly rice, so all the American food was a challenge for the digestive system.

After dinner we basically milled around the countdown area at Central World plaza, which was the Thai equivalent of Times Square. The "ball drop" was less droppy than I expected. In fact, the ball was stationary, but it did, conveniently, have a big clock displayed on the side. There were tons of people in the plaza. I've got to say that this is the most people I've personally ever seen in one place. And it was close-quarters. I've also never been unintentionally groped so many times in my life. But, mild complaints aside, it was cool. My view of the ball was slighly obstructed by an ill-placed palm tree, but I'm fairly certain the New Year came without a hitch.

We quickly discovered that leaving the plaza was going to be a problem. An empty taxi simply didn't exist, and the skytrain was packed. We tried walking further from ground zero, but it didn't help. So we celebrated the first hours of the New Year at a street restaurant eating some spicy beef and sticky rice. We didn't find an empty cab until about 3:00am.

Thursday we got up late and headed over to the ritzy Paragon shopping mall area. I'm not sure if I've talked about Paragon on here before, but it's a wild place. They have crazy expensive shops there, sell Lambourginis and such. In one of the malls we found a Sizzler, which I'd never eaten before, but enjoyed thoroughly (except for Chike's blatant and unabashed snatching of JR's cheesy bread). Later on we spent a good amount of money in the bookstore and went bowling on the top floor of Paragon. We met the girls for dinner at a Mexican restaurant, and, once again, I stuffed myself. It was delicious! A bar down the road had a pool table, so we rounded off a pretty full day with some billiards.

My Friday was spent at a place called the Ancient City. It's a place where they reconstruct sites from around Thailand in one plot of land. Depending on what mood you're in as you enter, I would say your opinion of the place could range anywhere between "lame" and "awesome". For us it was awesome because we rented Golf carts and we got a little rowdy with them. That's all I'll say... Then we went the the world's largest crocodile farm. I didn't enjoy this as much as I should have because I was dog tired from the cart exploits, but I had a good time.

I left for Chiang Rai again on Saturday evening. During the day, Chike and I wasted time wandering around the mall areas. I bought a pair of tennis shoes that wouldn't cut my feet open and kept myself from spending more money on books, which I consider an acheivement. I couldn't get a VIP bus ticket for the ride back home. While the 1st class ticket was cheaper, it also earned me a smaller seat beside a father and his crying young daughter. I found it easy to remain stoic during it all, though, probably because I spent my time in Bangkok like a pampered American.

New Year's was fun, in short, a good break from teaching.

I'm writing this now at a time when I'm normally teaching. For some reason over half of the school's students are having an assembly, so my schedule is shortened by two classes today! There are rumors from the Chinese teachers that tomorrow I'll be heading to another school to watch an Academic Competition. Again, just rumors, but enough to get me excited. It's not that I'm looking to get out of teaching. Just that I'm looking for a little excitement. The messed up schedule actually means that most of my classes are way behind, which is a big bummer. But, this is Thailand.