Saturday, March 31, 2007

Kutna Hora

Went to Kutna Hora On Saturday.

The bone church of Sedlec. (I'll post more about it later--the inside is completely decorated with human bones)


Outside the Bone Church of Sedlec.


The Plague Column in Kutna Hora.


St Barbara's Cathedral in Kutna Hora.


St James's Church in Kutna Hora.


Statues along the Jesuit College (Kutna Hora).


St Barbara's Cathedral.


The Stone Fountain in Kutna Hora.

I kid you not, this was the entrance to the Bone Church of Sedlec.

Saturday, March 24, 2007

Experiment

So, when Mom was here she suggested that I might be a touch hypoglycemic. I checked out some info from the web, and I think she might be right. I've had my blood sugar tested before and everything has always been fine, so I don't think.. well, hard to explain.. I don't think I really have hypoglycemia, but I think I might benefit from trying to follow some of the suggestions for dealing with hypoglycemia (basically, I have a tendency to crash about three or four hours after I eat--I get cranky and tired, I develop a headache, I feel anxious and jittery, and I can't focus). I'm going to try to eat something every three hours and see if that helps. I might (if I get really motivated) try to keep a notebook and record when and what I eat and how I feel. (I probably won't. I will probably just use this as an excuse to EAT FOOD!). I do need to do a better job keeping away from sugar, though--I really have been eating too much sugar since I got to Prague. (I just need to finish the two bags of cookies I bought and the three tons of candy Mom brought for me first... and I better do it quickly so I'm not tempted to eat it in the future...)

Everything is Illuminated... again... part 2

Alex: How much currency would a first-rate accountant
receive in America?

Johnathan: I don't know. A lot, probably, if he or she is good.
Alex: She?
Johnathan: Or he.
Alex: Are there Negro accountants?
J: Yes, there are African-American accountants...
... but you don't want to use that word.
Alex: And homosexual accountants?
J: There are homosexual everythings.
There are homosexual garbage men.

A: And how much currency would
Negro homosexual accountant receive?

J: You shouldn't use that word.
A: Which word?
J: The N-word. [stuttering uncomfortably] ...It's not the N-word, but-
A: Negro?
J: Yeah, that one.
A: But I dig them all the way. They are premium people.
J: It's that word, though. You're not supposed to use that word.
A: What is wrong with the Negroes?

(I don't know if the transcript is as funny as the movie or
if you just have to have taught English in the CR to appreciate
the joke, but...)


Anyway, according to my roommate, in the Czech-English
dictionaries here the English translation of the Czech word for
"black person" is Negro. I've learned not to trust those
bilingual dictionaries--I've had my students say some pretty
weird things when they use the dictionaries.


Anyway.

Everything is Illuminated... again...

Here are the transcripts from the two scenes in Everything is Illuminated
(I thought I should put the two lines in context--otherwise, they might
seem a little offensive):

Alex: Grandfather, I've got Jonfen. We should go to Lutsk. Yes?
Johnathan: Are you sure he's okay?
Alex: Grandfather!
Grandfather (in Ukrainian): Shut up! I'm blind, not deaf.
I heard you the first time!

Johnathan: What does he say?
Alex: He says, "Okey-dokey, we will go now. "
Johnathan: Where will the dog be?
Alex: What do you mean?
Johnathan: I have a phobia.
(Alex looks confused)
Johnathan: A fear.
(Alex still looks confused)
Johnathan: I'm distressed by dogs.
Alex (to his Grandfather): He is afraid of dogs.
Grandfather (in Ukrainian): Bullshit, no one is afraid of dogs.
Alex (to Johnathan): Grandfather informs me this is not possible.
Johnathan: What?
Alex: Get in the car.
Grandfather (in Ukrainian): The bitch and the Jew will share the
back seat. It is big enough for both of them.

Johnathan: No, wait. Wait. You don't understand. I have a very serious,
serious problem with dogs.

(Cut to scene with Johnathan sharing the backseat with the dog).

More Czech Journal

So, here is some more of my Czech Journal. I think I've posted some of the stuff before, but I couldn't figure out where I left off, so I'm just posting all of it again. You will probably have to skip forward a bit. Oh well.

February 6, 2007 8:24pm

Was feeling upset and exhausted and frustrated, then realized it was about time for my monthly breakdown (like clockwork). Also time for me to fight my monthly urge to look at plane tickets to the States. I told myself I would have a good cry before I went to sleep, but I’m too tired now so I guess it will just have to wait until I have more energy. Ugh. Hope this one passes as quickly as the last one (about 36 hours of wallowing in self-pity, then it was gone).

February 18, 2006

Wow. It has really been a long time since I’ve written anything here. I just finished watching Everything is Illuminated. The best scene is where Alex, the translator, asks “Jonfan” how much currency premium accountants make in the United States. The conversation that follows is pretty much like something out of any one of my classes. (I showed it to my roommate and she was laughing her ass off).

But meanwhile, I’m trying to steel myself for a trip into the classroom tomorrow. Nervous as hell… and I know I need to appear confident… can’t let them smell fear. I would say that this group isn’t so scary (and dangerous) as some other groups, but I’ve learned my lesson about taking anything for granted. Now I feel like I need to be on guard from all sides.

February 24, 2007 8:37am
Well, survived another week of this whole teaching thing… whew. It is now Saturday morning. It is a little chilly outside, but I think I’m going to go jogging anyway. I just need to give my breakfast some time to settle. Then, grocery shopping and maybe some cooking. Nothing too exciting—Saturday is usually a day of recovery from the week. I always tell myself I’m not going to do any lesson prep over the weekend, but I usually wind up doing some. Monday is going to be a little crazy again, so I have to do at least a little bit at some point this weekend. I may try to leave it for Sunday evening, though…

I need to work on developing a social life—not so good at that. I was working on it, then all that crap happened with complaints and observations and whatnot, so I put social life on the backburner. Now I think I should probably start working on it again…

So, wow, it has been a long time since I’ve really written anything. Ummm, but I’m not going to write anything right now because I’m still waking up and I feel like anything I write will be slightly incoherent. I’m gonna watch the last episode of Reno 911 season three.

Before I do that, though, I have a Czech lesson for everyone:

To je škoda = What a pity. (pronunciation: toe yeah shkoda—š is sh)

Škoda is also the name of a Czech car.

Enjoy.


February 27, 2007
Feeling pretty good right now. My student for tomorrow morning cancelled, but it was less than 6 business hours before the lesson, so I should still get paid for it. So, not only do I get to sleep in tomorrow, I have her lesson for next week prepped now AND I get paid for sleeping in. Yeah. Life is not so bad sometimes.

Last weekend I went into the creepy building (see pictures I posted a few weeks back). The creepy building is open once a month for a few hours—it was open last Saturday so I went there before I went grocery shopping. The inside is just as creepy as the outside—maybe a bit more so. It used to be a tomb for Communist party leaders—Gottwald’s embalmed body was displayed there for a few years until it started to decay (ewww…). The inside is completely in marble—it was colder inside than it was outside. Everything was at right angles—completely uniform. There were no windows. Well, almost. The lower level had a couple of windows, and the upper level didn’t have windows but it did have some nearly opaque glass in the ceiling. Having the only natural light come from the ceiling gave the place a feeling of being built completely underground—not a pleasant feeling overall. It was so odd because everything was so geometric and measured. On one hand, there were no flaws—but that is not a good thing. There was no extra ornamentation or design to help give the eyes a break—it was all so harsh and oppressive. Still, I’m glad I went to see it. Things like that remind me that I’m in a country that was Communist for several years. That is something that will always make this place foreign—will make it different from West Germany or France (or the USA or Canada). There is a whole range of experiences that I can never tap into (which is not a bad thing, it is just something I need to remember. Things like this monument remind me of that).

Sunday I went to Letna Park. There is a giant metronome at the top of Letna Park. The park itself might have been nice, but it was in such a state of disrepair. If I wanted to film a post-apocalyptic movie, I would use Letna Park. There was grass growing up through the cobblestones and pavement, there were stairs missing (and parts of stairs missing). There were broken slabs of… benches, pavement, platforms, etc littering the park. I half expected to see people using drugs under the few benches that were not completely destroyed. I thought about taking pictures to post on my blog, but I decided against it. It was just a little too depressing.

I also saw the Exhibition Hall in Prague—also known as the Odessa train station (but only to people who have seen Everything is Illuminated. By the way, for those of you who are going to come and visit me, I recommend this movie. Parts of it were filmed in Prague—and the areas are easier to find than the places Amadeus was filmed—I still haven’t found any Amadeus sites yet).

Then I went shopping on Wenchaslas Square (Vaclavske Namesti) to try and find a pair of pants that fit. Didn’t have too much luck, though I did find the most AWESOME top at Marks and Spencers (I feel like I’ve written this before. I know I have. I just can’t remember if I wrote it in my blog or if I wrote it as an email to someone. If it is somewhere else in the blog, sorry). Anyway, the top was wayyyyy to expensive (over 1000 crowns!) so I told myself I didn’t really need it (I actually told myself that it didn’t fit. They didn’t have the size I needed, so I tried on the next closest size. I think that technically it did fit, but my story is that it didn’t fit well enough for me to spend over 1000 crowns on it (basically, two weeks of groceries).

Yeah, so that was my exciting weekend. I know, I know—I may as well have stayed in the States and had the same exact weekend back there (only six hours later). But, well, it’s Prague.

I think today was another blue day. I can’t decide if it is a blue slash or a blue cross. My system has already become complicated. I decided that having just two options—a blue X and a black X—was not enough, so now I have blue and black slashes (I also have left a couple of days blank because I really did not know what to do with them. I think they may count as black if I have a lot of black Xs and slashes, but they will count as blue if the blue marks outnumber the black marks. I know, I know—too complicated. But my days are that complicated—a good lesson, a great lesson, an indifferent lesson, an awful lesson—and all in the same day. This morning I played the Hypothetical Game with some of my students (they had taken a Mock PET exam last week, so I wanted to do something light with them). They had to write out cards with hypothetical situations (What would you do if you won a million dollars), then write three possible answers. Now, these are my computer tech students, so I was a little worried about their creativity. And it took them a looooong time to do six of their cards (I finally had to stop them so we could actually get to the game!). They did have some good ones though—in a very logical way. One student wrote “What if you broke your car” as his situation. One of his options was “cry like a small child.” The other student wrote “Imagine you were the most popular person in the world. What would you do?” One of her options was ‘be very tired.” Of course—it makes perfect sense! I love it when my students come up with stuff like that!

Well, I’m gonna read a little bit then get some sleep. I’m pretty tired right now.

March 1, 2007 11:40am
Ugh. Don’t know what is wrong with me, but I feel blah. Just completely blah. I really don’t want to have to go teach right now. I just want to eat chocolate, crawl into bed, and read and sleep. Oh, and drink tea (and maybe some hot chocolate). I may have to get some hot chocolate at the school café just to reward myself for leaving today (although I did already teach this morning. But I already had some chocolate to reward myself for that). Blah. I hate feeling like this. Blah blah blah.

8:45 pm
Feeling better—it may actually be a blue slash day (even with my totally wacky Czech class and my drag-ass exhaustion through three straight hours of teaching). So—wacky Czech class: 90 minutes is probably about 20 minutes too long for a beginning level language class, but… hell, I need to learn the language anyway. So, I was completely exhausted through the entire Czech class. Then, in the last fifteen to ten minutes, the teacher decided to explain the entire Czech verb system to us. Yeah. The ENTIRE Czech verb system. Granted, it is nowhere near as extensive as the English verb system, but… turns out there are four different groups for conjugation… and the verbs can switch groups depending on what tense is being used. So a verb that is conjugated as a group 1 verb in the present tense is conjugated as a group 4 verb in the future tense. Ugh, ugh, and double ugh (and ugh again). We’ve also started looking at a case. Don’t know which one it is, but:

Amerika
Jsem z Ameriky
Jsem Američanka

Yeah. That. Also, it looks like the verbs in the past tense have to be conjugated for the gender of the speaker. Dude. I just have one thing to say… To je škoda.

Well, I have my guide book out and I’m gonna try to figure out what I want to see this weekend. There were a couple places I wanted to go, but it looks like they are closed until April. I may just have to stay in and drink tea and watch tv (CNN, Al-J, and Sex in the City on my laptop). Oh, and fight the urge to go back to Marks and Spencers and get that freakin’ awesome top.

By the way, it is odd having business folk as students. I was talking to one student about finding the awesome top at Marks and Spencers and that I didn’t get it because it was too expensive, and he was all like, dude, that store is cheap. If you want expensive clothes, you should go somewhere else. (Okay, I embellished his English just a little bit there, but you get the picture). I had some students tell me to go shopping in a mall (WTF?? Do they think I’m made of money here? Do I have Czech crowns coming out of my a$$?) and I actually had a different group of students suggest I go shopping between classes (insane). And everyone always talks about how materialistic Americans are… HA! It is all freakin’ over the entire world, thank you very much.


March 12, 2007
This is bad. This is really bad. I haven’t even been working three months and I already need a vacation. Ugh. Not cool. I am sooooo lazy… I’m telling myself that I feel this way because it is so nice outside and I don’t want to be inside prepping lessons, but… I just don’t feel like doing anything. I haven’t even been writing in my Prague journal that much. It could be because I’ve been busy, but… I’m also lazy. I have so much to write about, but I keep putting it off and putting it off.

Well, I’m gonna take a break form prepping lessons to have some food. Then I’m going to try and do some more prep. I want to go jogging today—and I should go through my Tai Chi form. I did some major cleaning this morning, and went into school to check my email and get some stuff for my lessons this week (I just can’t prep there because it is always crazy. I just can’t focus there.)


March 13, 2007
Happy Tuesday. Anyway, here is my daily interaction with things Czech: I told my students that they all have to give a presentation on their favorite song and explain why they like it. I figured I’d learn about different Czech artists and they would have an opportunity to stand in front of a classroom for a few minutes and speak in English. This would be a really great idea except for the fact that the pool of Czech music is—ahem—not that big. Last week the first student gave his presentation and tonight I had about half the class come up to me and say that they were planning on doing their presentation on the same singer. I mean, what are the chances of that happening in a classroom in the States? Hell, in a classroom in the States you probably wouldn’t have more than a couple of people doing the same genre of music, let alone the same artist. But live and learn. The Czech Republic is a small country.

Had another Czech class today. The class started with twelve people. Today there were only five of us—two Americans, two Germans, and one Brit. The Germans have totally left us in the dust (to be fair, one has studied Czech for a few months already and German has cases and gendered nouns and things so they have a head start). The other American and I were hanging on for dear life, and the British guy was just completely lost. He didn’t even have his book with him. I think he will be the next to go. I think the only people who will really stick it out will be the two Germans, the other American woman, and me.

Our Czech teacher speaks German and English (and Czech, duh), so classes are conducted in a mixture of those three languages. Both of the German women speak English, but sometimes it is easier for the teacher to explain something in German to them. The funny thing is that sometimes I understand those German explanations, so I guess I’m getting two languages for the price of one… (and the Czech class is free for me, so my price of one is nothing-except the cost of the book—which was about 25 dollars [ulp]).

Well, Mom is arriving Friday—pretty exciting. I think we are going to head over to Dresden. I want to see it (and I need to get my passport stamped because I’m coming up on 90 days), so… roadtrip! (Okay, technically train ride, but…).

Oh! Big news! One of my students was fired. A couple of weeks ago, at one of my companies, as I was getting ready to leave there was this big fuss because one of my students was crying in the office. I had no clue what was going on (and I felt more than a little uncomfortable), and then last week the company cancelled both classes at the last minute. Then today I got a text for the scheduling manager for the company to go and see her. When I talked to her, she explained that “one of the students was no longer with the company.” I still have two classes at the company (phew… that was my first concern), but the times may be changed just slightly (we shall have to see). But anyway, it is pretty good news for me. The student who was fired was difficult to teach. (I think she had ADD or something). She just could not focus on anything—even when it was something that she had said she wanted to do five minutes earlier. Anyway, this leaves me with one student in the class, so I will have to make some adjustments to tomorrow’s lesson plan for her… but it shouldn’t be too tricky. I really want to find out what happened, but I’m afraid to ask. I mean, if I go in there demanding the latest gossip then that might be a little unprofessional. On the other hand, I could introduce the concept of gossip. Hmmm….


March 14, 2007 9:47am
Dragging my ass this morning. I need to leave for my LEGO classes in about an hour, and I still haven’t showered yet. On the other hand, I did go jogging this morning, so… guess I’m not doing too bad. I still need to do some prep work for tomorrow morning—and prep a couple of classes for next week. Ugh. Oh, and I have a job interview next Tuesday after I teach in the morning. Fun fun fun.

So, I stopped by a Martial Arts school last night to talk to them. I never did find any place that did Tai Chi (the same style I’m doing now), so I thought I’d maybe check into a different style. My main requirement was that I would be able to continue studying that style even if I move somewhere else. No dice. I’d stumbled onto a relatively rare form of Kung Fu. Ugh. Ugh and double ugh. So, my next thought is to find a Salsa class. I’ve always wanted to learn how to dance, and I figure Salsa should transfer pretty easily, so…

Actually, I wish my roommate would find a place to teach Swing Dancing here because that is what I would really like to do. It is American, it is upbeat, and it is pretty intense. But she hasn’t had any luck finding a studio to teach out of, so… I’m going to start looking into Salsa lessons.


March 22, 2007
Well, Mom left this morning. She arrived last Friday (about seven hours later than she was supposed to because she had missed the connecting flight in London—through no fault of her own). We had a good visit. We went to Dresden on Saturday, and then explored Prague for the rest of the time. We saw the old town square (and explored the old town), Charles Bridge, the Castle and Mala Strana, Vinohrady, the Mozart museum, the museum of musical instruments… I think that is it. Oh, and we also found the best Czech restaurant—we were just there last night and I’m ready to go back.

I think the strangest thing that I saw, though, was yesterday. Mom and I were walking from the museum of musical instruments to the Mozart museum and we saw a policeman standing by a van. The passenger door to the van was open and there was something lying on the ground right next to the door. As we got closer, we could see garbage bags flapping in the breeze. Then, as we got even closer, we could see a man lying under the garbage bars. A dead man. The oddest part of the whole thing was the fact that everybody was so nonchalant about it. The policeman was not really paying attention to the body. There were no crowds gathered to stare and gawk (there were a couple of construction workers, but they seemed to treat the sight more as an opportunity to take a break from work than an event or sight worth noticing). There were people crossing the street where the body lay, walking a foot or two away from the body. As Mom and I walked away from the body, we saw a man put a leash on his dog—imagine what would have happened had the man not put a leash on his dog. Crazy. But I guess when you live in a city long enough, you get to see dead bodies. And I guess three months in a city is long enough.


Other things I’ve seen:

-A poster for the museum of communism. The design on the poster? A smiling teddy bear holding a gun.

-A poster with a man extending his middle finger. I have no idea what it was advertising, but the middle finger was obviously necessary.

-A poster with lips covered in salt next to a sign that said “fucking.” Again, no idea what it was selling.

-A man walking down the street drinking a beer from a glass bottle. At 7 in the morning.

-Another man walking down the street carrying a gun.

One of my students was telling me about swimming in the sea. She told me she saw a huge crap on the bottom of the sea. I had no idea what she was talking about at first. Then I realized that she meant a huge crab. (those damned voiced/unvoiced consonants).

But anyway… I really don’t know what to write. Mom’s impression of the people in Prague was that they reminded her of Germany… 20 years ago. I had always had a sense of something like this (without being able to articulate it), but the sensation of being in a time warp was so strong when we came back from Dresden. Even though Dresden is only 2.5 hours by train—and was also formerly communist, the difference between Prague and Dresden was apparent even to someone as oblivious as me. And it is not just about hearing the Final Countdown everywhere—the clothes, the hair, the makeup… it was just so different.

And Prague itself… or maybe just the whole thing combined—the people, the city, the language, the food—everything… Well, maybe the whole package explains when I have had problems feeling settled here. It is Europe, but it is different. Before this, all my experiences with Europe were with Western Europe. And this is similar, but it is different. Ugh, this is so incoherent. I’m a little tired right now but it is too early for me to go to sleep so I’m just wasting time by trying to update my Prague journal. Guess there is no point in updating if I am just going to be incoherent. But maybe I will understand myself if I go back and read this. I hope.

And then there is this whole job mess that I’ve somehow managed to land myself in. How do I manage to do stuff like this? How do I manage to make my life more complicated than it needs to be? How? Why can’t it just be normal and boring—or, if not that, just stable for a few months. Then again, I guess it was pretty stable over the last year and a half, so I can’t really complain. A year and a half of stability (with no major decisions) is pretty impressive for me—damn near a record, I think.

Anyway, I’m trying to decide where I want to go next. Bratislava? Vienna? Krakow? So many choices, so little money… Ugh, and the whole time thing too. But I will figure it all out.


March 23, 2007
So, my roommate and I have decided that we need to write a book called “Czechs in the Mist”. It will be an ethnographic study of Czech psychology. This decision has come as a result of my conversation today with my students. We were talking about men and women in the workplace. One of the discussion questions was if Men should earn more than women. Their answer: of course, end of discussion. I was like… ? … umm, why? Well, it is because they are the men and they need to provide for their families. Okayyyy…

I also had a student complain that there are not enough words in English. I tried to explain to her that she feels this way because she is still learning the language and that actually English has one of the largest vocabularies of all the world languages (if not the largest), but she refused to believe me. I should have told her than Czech doesn’t have enough words for me—right now it only has about 20 words. How anyone can communicate in a language with only 20 words is beyond me…

Ahh, and this is the same student who just doesn’t get IT. By IT I mean that she still doesn’t understand that she can’t refer to people like herself as Normal and people unlike her as Not Normal. Today she was talking about “Spanish People and Normal People.” I was like… ugh… No. I tried to point out to her that Spanish People are probably pretty sure that they are normal, but she just didn’t get it.

Anyway, any conversation between my roommate and me that is about our students usually involves one of us quoting one of two lines from Everything is Illuminated:

“Grandfather informs me that this is not possible.”

“What is wrong with the Negros?”

Basically anything we encounter with our students fits into one of these two categories. The idea that men should earn more than women fits into the first category. That is just the way it is, end of discussion. There can be no discussion about it (according to the students) and any attempt to have a discussion makes them look at the teacher like he or she is a grand idiot. The Normal People comment falls into the second category. Most of my students just don’t get issues of appropriacy. If I point these issues out, they complain that you can’t say what you want in English. I then point out that you can say what you want, but you will probably get some strange looks and disapproving stares (and comments). But it is more than a just an issues with vocabulary and appropriacy. It is a complete unfamiliarity with multiculturalism—the fact that different people and cultures and points of views exist—and are okay. Here there are the Czechs—the normal people—and everyone else. My landlord informed me (when I first moved in) that there were no murders or rapes in Prague—except for the Russians and Ukranians. I’ve learned to avoid—at all costs—letting class conversations get on to the topic of Gypsys. My students HATE HATE HATE the Gypsys. Some of my students are not too keen on “Black people, Asian people, Arab people, Spanish people, Italian people. French people, Americans, Russians, Ukranians…etc, etc…”

And I know that the same attitudes exist in the States—I don’t fool myself into believing that everything is perfect there. I still can’t help feeling a little disoriented when my students start to say these things in the classroom. My reaction has been to try to get my student to examine these statements and question if they are really 100% the case. But then I run up against “My grandfather informs me that this is not possible” and the discussion is over.

On a somewhat related note:

Invalid – stress on the second syllable.

Last week one of my students (the normal people vs everyone else student) was talking about “the invalids.” I had no idea what she was talking about so I asked her to elaborate. She then started talking about how there are too many spaces for the invalids” (stress still on the second syllable). I was like “handicapped. Invalid is what you call something that is no longer valid. For example, I bought a train ticket last month and I can no longer use it to travel because it has expired. It is now invalid.”

Czechs in the Mist. Look for it in a bookstore near you.

Mom's Visit to Prague

So, here are some pictures from Mom's visit to Prague. It was very, very cold (and usually windy), so I didn't get a lot of pictures.


The Mozart Museum. It was a little overpriced for what it was--there really wasn't too much there. The highlight was a lock of Mozart's hair (which kinda creeped me out--it reminded me too much of relics--like the bones of a saint paraded down the street in a box once a year).


As part of my collection of pictures of dead composer's graves, here is Dvorak. He is buried in Vysehrad (along with Smetana, whose grave was slightly less ornate). I think if I never learn any more Czech, I will be content with having learned how to pronounce Dvorak correctly (or as correctly as a non-Czech can pronounce it).


St John Nepomuk on Charles bridge. He was thrown from a bridge. People rub him for luck. Personally, I wouldn't think that rubbing a guy who was thrown from a bridge is all that lucky, but... whatever.

Pretty building. Don't know what it is, but it looked nice so I got a picture.


Golden Lane behind the castle. It is called Golden Lane because alchemists supposedly lived here. It started out as a place for palace guards to live, then it turned into a dangerous place with thieves and murderers. Eventually, there was a cafe here that Kafka frequented (or maybe he lived here--I forget). But hmmm, that makes me think... it has been a couple hours since my last cup of tea. I think it is time for another one...


Me. I know I don't post many pics of myself, so even though this is not a great picture, I figured I'd post it so you all could see that I actually am in Prague and not really writing these posts from a mental institution in the States.


Detail of Narodni Divadlo, the National Theatre. This is one of the Prague Opera houses (I think there are three total? Or three Opera companies with several theatres... who knows). Anyway, my Czech classes are right across from this theatre... and I pass this theatre on my way to work (if I'm teaching at the main school). It is very, very cool... I think it might be my favorite building in Prague.

More Dresden Pics

As you can probably tell from these pictures, it was cold and rainy in Dresden.

A view of Dresden city center.


Bruhlsche Terrasse (looking towards the Hofkirche).


Sachsische Staatsoper (the Opera House).


The Kronentor at the Zwinger.


I have no idea... I just saw it across the river Elbe.

Friday, March 23, 2007

My best Dresden pictures


Whew...

Well, I finally got the insight that I needed. And it feels right. I am just going to type it all out to see if it is as solid on paper (computer screen) as it is in my head-but it feels like it has clicked (I think I actually heard--or at least felt--a click. If nothing else, I feel a sense of relief at having made a decision).

I've decided not to take the job. My reasoning will probably sound really strange, but here it is:

As I was riding on the tram back from work today, I started thinking about my life in the Army. After about a year in the Army, I knew that something wasn't right. Everything just felt off balance. I wasn't sure what was off balance and I had no idea how I could fix everything (I was only 18 at the time), so I started to cast about for anything that I could use to stabilize my self and my life. Unfortunately, the only way I could think to get any stability was by getting married. The marriage actually wound up destabilizing me even more (which led me to try to find other ways to stabilize myself, which, in turn, lead to greater instability). Ten years later, I can look back and view the experience as a whole and not just a series of isolated events. Everything that I did was an attempt to give my life some stability. Hindsight is NOT 20/20, and I will never know if my attempts at stability made things more difficult for me or if they helped me, but my gut is saying that right now I shouldn't look for stability outside of myself.

I know it is probably an odd parallel to make, but all anyone can ever do is base their choices on the experiences they've had. Maybe that is why teenagers and young adults make so many bad choices. It is just that right now I have a sense of things being not quite right--like I am standing on a lily pad that keeps leaning a little too far one way or the other. I thought it was just the job, but I am starting to find some stability and organization in the job now, so I think the feeling of instability is coming from culture shock and a sense of isolation. I think that if I take this job as an attempt to stabilize myself it will be a bit like leaping from the right edge of the lily pad to the left edge rather than just inching myself towards the middle. I think that before I try to make any major changes I need to make sure I am in the middle of the lily pad. If it is still unstable at the point, I need to move to a new lily pad. But not yet.

I know my reasoning is odd and touchy-feely. There are no lists and pluses and minuses--there is just a gut feeling. But it feels right. I think I've learned to trust my gut more and lists less when it comes to making decisions. After all, the decision to join the Army looked excellent on paper.

Nothing is simple

Well, nothing is simple in my life. I manage to complicate things every few months. Latest complication? I've been offered a new job (the job I wrote about awhile back). I didn't really think I would be offered the job, so now I just have no idea what to do. I keep waiting for some great insight or something, but nothing is coming. I know I should make a list, but... that always seems to me to be a very artifical way of making a decision that includes elements that can never be recorded on a list. I just keep trying to think about how it all feels--does it feel right, does it feel wrong, where do I think I sould be professionally, where do I think I should be presonally...? And I get a different answer to each of those questions. I'm starting to think that my only course of action here might just have to be inaction--a decision to not change anything right now. I mean, could I really handle another change anyway? Can I take that kind of upheaval? Or if I make a change now, will that lead to more stability?

And I can't get over the fact that they actually want to hire me. I mean, I feel like I just pulled a fast one on these folks. Don't they realize how completely clueless and unqualified I really am?

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Dresden


Mom in Dresden (I love this picture!). It was freezing cold and sehr windig. Following are more pictures of the city. Dresden was pretty much flattened in WWII--the Allies bombed the sh*t out of it (Slaughterhouse Five--excellent book--read it). All the monuments were rebuilt after the end of the war. Mom and I went to the city museum which was pretty good. I just wish it had had more about the rebuilding--I would like to know when it was started, when it was completed, and who did it.


The Hofkirche.


The Frauenkirche. Excerpt from my guidebook: "Burned out in 1945, its shell seemed to have survived intact, only to collapse two days later. Reconstruction work started in 1993 [...]"

Detail from the Zwinger.


The Frauenkirche in the distance.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Karlstejn Castle (Hrad)

So, I went to Karlstejn Castle last Sunday. The weather was beautiful. The outside of the castle was great (though the inside was a little plain). After I visited the castle, I walked around in the hills surrounding the castle. All in all, a very pleasant day.






Anyway, Mom arrives in Prague tomorrow. I'm only doing half of my conversation class tomorrow morning so I can pick her up from the airport. I'm excited about her visit, and I hope to have some more pictures to post. (Which I will post eventually. The internet here is still a little spotty, so if I disappear for a week or two it just means that I don't have internet access in my apartment.) It is 9pm here, but I still have one more class to prep (and I need to pick up my room a little bit--there are papers and books everywhere...)

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Update

So, the internet at the apartment is spotty right now. i can use skype, but I can' actually get on the internet. Very odd and bizarre.

Today I went to a different company and talking to the person there about the job they advertised. It wasn't really an interview, but I think I would have a good chance at getting the job. The official interview is March 20.

I don't know if I would want to do it or not. There are some good things about the job--I'd be teaching in one place, I'd be making more money, and I'd be working out of the same series of text books.

The bad things are that I'd be teaching the same group of people for six hours a day. The day starts at 7:15 and it is about an hour commute from where I am living now. So with commute and lunch, I'd be spending 11 hours a day on this job. It wouldn't be as flexible as where I work now (I have found it very easy to re-arrange my lessons for Mom's visit here). There also isn't the teacher development that my current job offers (which was a major factor in my accepting employment here). The main thing: I'd be teaching all-male classes--guys about 25 to 45. All miitary. (They mix enlisted and officer in the same classes--a fact I still can't get over!! It just seems... so wrong). I would miss my one-on-one classes... I'd miss having female students... the job isn't quite what I thought it was. I feel like I'm committed to the interview, but I don't think I would take the job if they offered it to me, which is probably not a good attitude to have.

One of the reasons that teaching all male classes does not appeal to me is because I'm having some problems with one of my students now. Nothing major, but he is starting to get a little disruptive in class. He is a bit older than all the other students and his English is the weakest. I think he is frustrated and trying to act "cool" to cover up his weak English. I have to be very careful about who I pair him with--it is a balancing act. I'm trying to give him some extra attention to make him feel that he is not being left behind. He probably should be in a lower level, but he came from a lower level and if he moved back he would be working out of the same book he just finished--a boring prospect that might lead to more problems. So, we shall see. I will figure something out.

Sunday, March 04, 2007

Feeling stressed...

... and I don't have any really good reason to feel so stressed. I'm no more or less prepared than I usually am on a Sunday evening--I may even be just a little more prepped than I usually am. Still, I feel really stressed. And for some reason, I don't feel like teaching next week. Again, there is no good reason why. I just don't want to do it.

I just realized that I can probably teach one of the lessons I just prepped twice this week--once on Wednesday and once on Friday. Cool. I will need to make some adjustments, but I think it will work... I hope.

Anyway... I still have three full classes to prep and three classes that are mostly prepped but which I need to tweek a little. Ugh.

Well, I better get back to work.

Sunday Tourist Activities Pics

So, every weekend (or every other weekend... or every other every other weekend) I try to do something touristy in Prague. Today I went to the St Agnes Convent to look at some medieval/Renaissance art. Here are some of the pictures I took along the way:



'Nother picture of a bridge. Notice St Vitus's Cathedral in the background. I've got to start getting out of Prague so I can get pictures of things other than bridges (or at least get some different bridge pictures).


Statue of Dvorak. I can almost say his name now.



The cloister at St Agnes Convent.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Ugh.

So, I' ve started looking at flights back to the USA for summer. I'm just trying to price some tickets--I want to get a feel for how much to (gulp) budget.

So far it looks pretty bad. Everything is over 1000 dollars. I found a ticket for over 3,300. Ugh and yuck. I may have to consider flying into NYC or something--will check the price on that... nope, not any better.

Anyway, not that it is too important now. I can't buy a ticket until I have my job interview and find out what is going on with that (it is on Thursday--wish me luck).

Anyway, I'm working on a list of questions to ask the interviewer. Most of my questions will be about the students and the methodology. I feel like I am starting to get more of a feel for what to ask about students and school set-up.

Friday, March 02, 2007

Second observation feedback session

So, I had my second observation feedback session today. I think it went well. I got a slightly above average score (for where I am now).

According to the reviewer, here are the things that went well:
1. Every task/activity had a clearly thought out end goal
2. Good monitoring, teacher availability and error correction
3. Teacher generated game was interesting, student-centered, and purposeful
4. Teacher used concept checking questions after instructions

Here are the things I need to work on:
1. pace/dynamic/atmosphere (basically I need to move a bit more quickly)
2. linking activities/ideas (I need to make the connections between the things I'm doing a bit more clear)


So, not too bad, I don't think.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

More Prague Journal

February 6, 2007 8:24pm


Was feeling upset and exhausted and frustrated, then realized it was about time for my monthly breakdown (like clockwork). Also time for me to fight my monthly urge to look at plane tickets to the States. I told myself I would have a good cry before I went to sleep, but I’m too tired now so I guess it will just have to wait until I have more energy. Ugh. Hope this one passes as quickly as the last one (about 36 hours of wallowing in self-pity, then it was gone).


February 18, 2006


Wow. It has really been a long time since I’ve written anything here. I just finished watching Everything is Illuminated. The best scene is where Alex, the translator, asks “Jonfan” how much currency premium accountants make in the United States. The conversation that follows is pretty much like something out of any one of my classes. (I showed it to my roommate and she was laughing her ass off).

But meanwhile, I’m trying to steel myself for a trip into the classroom tomorrow. Nervous as hell… and I know I need to appear confident… can’t let them smell fear. I would say that this group isn’t so scary (and dangerous) as some other groups, but I’ve learned my lesson about taking anything for granted. Now I feel like I need to be on guard from all sides.

February 24, 2007 8:37am

Well, survived another week of this whole teaching thing… whew. It is now Saturday morning. It is a little chilly outside, but I think I’m going to go jogging anyway. I just need to give my breakfast some time to settle. Then, grocery shopping and maybe some cooking. Nothing too exciting—Saturday is usually a day of recovery from the week. I always tell myself I’m not going to do any lesson prep over the weekend, but I usually wind up doing some. Monday is going to be a little crazy again, so I have to do at least a little bit at some point this weekend. I may try to leave it for Sunday evening, though…

I need to work on developing a social life—not so good at that. I was working on it, then all that crap happened with complaints and observations and whatnot, so I put social life on the backburner. Now I think I should probably start working on it again…

So, wow, it has been a long time since I’ve really written anything. Ummm, but I’m not going to write anything right now because I’m still waking up and I feel like anything I write will be slightly incoherent. I’m gonna watch the last episode of Reno 911 season three.

Before I do that, though, I have a Czech lesson for everyone:

To je škoda = What a pity. (pronunciation: toe yeah shkoda—š is sh)

Škoda is also the name of a Czech car.

Enjoy.

February 27, 2007

Feeling pretty good right now. My student for tomorrow morning cancelled, but it was less than 6 business hours before the lesson, so I should still get paid for it. So, not only do I get to sleep in tomorrow, I have her lesson for next week prepped now AND I get paid for sleeping in. Yeah. Life is not so bad sometimes.

Last weekend I went into the creepy building (see pictures I posted a few weeks back). The creepy building is open once a month for a few hours—it was open last Saturday so I went there before I went grocery shopping. The inside is just as creepy as the outside—maybe a bit more so. It used to be a tomb for Communist party leaders—Gottwald’s embalmed body was displayed there for a few years until it started to decay (ewww…). The inside is completely in marble—it was colder inside than it was outside. Everything was at right angles—completely uniform. There were no windows. Well, almost. The lower level had a couple of windows, and the upper level didn’t have windows but it did have some nearly opaque glass in the ceiling. Having the only natural light come from the ceiling gave the place a feeling of being built completely underground—not a pleasant feeling overall. It was so odd because everything was so geometric and measured. On one hand, there were no flaws—but that is not a good thing. There was no extra ornamentation or design to help give the eyes a break—it was all so harsh and oppressive. Still, I’m glad I went to see it. Things like that remind me that I’m in a country that was Communist for several years. That is something that will always make this place foreign—will make it different from West Germany or France (or the USA or Canada). There is a whole range of experiences that I can never tap into (which is not a bad thing, it is just something I need to remember. Things like this monument remind me of that).

Sunday I went to Letna Park. There is a giant metronome at the top of Letna Park. The park itself might have been nice, but it was in such a state of disrepair. If I wanted to film a post-apocalyptic movie, I would use Letna Park. There was grass growing up through the cobblestones and pavement, there were stairs missing (and parts of stairs missing). There were broken slabs of… benches, pavement, platforms, etc littering the park. I half expected to see people using drugs under the few benches that were not completely destroyed. I thought about taking pictures to post on my blog, but I decided against it. It was just a little too depressing.

I also saw the Exhibition Hall in Prague—also known as the Odessa train station (but only to people who have seen Everything is Illuminated. By the way, for those of you who are going to come and visit me, I recommend this movie. Parts of it were filmed in Prague—and the areas are easier to find than the places Amadeus was filmed—I still haven’t found any Amadeus sites yet).

Then I went shopping on Wenchaslas Square (Vaclavske Namesti) to try and find a pair of pants that fit. Didn’t have too much luck, though I did find the most AWESOME top at Marks and Spencers (I feel like I’ve written this before. I know I have. I just can’t remember if I wrote it in my blog or if I wrote it as an email to someone. If it is somewhere else in the blog, sorry). Anyway, the top was wayyyyy to expensive (over 1000 crowns!) so I told myself I didn’t really need it (I actually told myself that it didn’t fit. They didn’t have the size I needed, so I tried on the next closest size. I think that technically it did fit, but my story is that it didn’t fit well enough for me to spend over 1000 crowns on it (basically, two weeks of groceries).

Yeah, so that was my exciting weekend. I know, I know—I may as well have stayed in the States and had the same exact weekend back there (only six hours later). But, well, it’s Prague.

I think today was another blue day. I can’t decide if it is a blue slash or a blue cross. My system has already become complicated. I decided that having just two options—a blue X and a black X—was not enough, so now I have blue and black slashes (I also have left a couple of days blank because I really did not know what to do with them. I think they may count as black if I have a lot of black Xs and slashes, but they will count as blue if the blue marks outnumber the black marks. I know, I know—too complicated. But my days are that complicated—a good lesson, a great lesson, an indifferent lesson, an awful lesson—and all in the same day. This morning I played the Hypothetical Game with some of my students (they had taken a Mock PET exam last week, so I wanted to do something light with them). They had to write out cards with hypothetical situations (What would you do if you won a million dollars), then write three possible answers. Now, these are my computer tech students, so I was a little worried about their creativity. And it took them a looooong time to do six of their cards (I finally had to stop them so we could actually get to the game!). They did have some good ones though—in a very logical way. One student wrote “What if you broke your car” as his situation. One of his options was “cry like a small child.” The other student wrote “Imagine you were the most popular person in the world. What would you do?” One of her options was ‘be very tired.” Of course—it makes perfect sense! I love it when my students come up with stuff like that!

Well, I’m gonna read a little bit then get some sleep. I’m pretty tired right now.

March 1, 2007 11:40am

Ugh. Don’t know what is wrong with me, but I feel blah. Just completely blah. I really don’t want to have to go teach right now. I just want to eat chocolate, crawl into bed, and read and sleep. Oh, and drink tea (and maybe some hot chocolate). I may have to get some hot chocolate at the school café just to reward myself for leaving today (although I did already teach this morning. But I already had some chocolate to reward myself for that). Blah. I hate feeling like this. Blah blah blah.

8:45 pm

Feeling better—it may actually be a blue slash day (even with my totally wacky Czech class and my drag-ass exhaustion through three straight hours of teaching). So—wacky Czech class: 90 minutes is probably about 20 minutes too long for a beginning level language class, but… hell, I need to learn the language anyway. So, I was completely exhausted through the entire Czech class. Then, in the last fifteen to ten minutes, the teacher decided to explain the entire Czech verb system to us. Yeah. The ENTIRE Czech verb system. Granted, it is nowhere near as extensive as the English verb system, but… turns out there are four different groups for conjugation… and the verbs can switch groups depending on what tense is being used. So a verb that is conjugated as a group 1 verb in the present tense is conjugated as a group 4 verb in the future tense. Ugh, ugh, and double ugh (and ugh again). We’ve also started looking at a case. Don’t know which one it is, but:

Amerika

Jsem z Ameriky

Jsem Američanka

Yeah. That. Also, it looks like the verbs in the past tense have to be conjugated for the gender of the speaker. Dude. I just have one thing to say… To je škoda.

Well, I have my guide book out and I’m gonna try to figure out what I want to see this weekend. There were a couple places I wanted to go, but it looks like they are closed until April. I may just have to stay in and drink tea and watch tv (CNN, Al-J, and Sex in the City on my laptop). Oh, and fight the urge to go back to Marks and Spencers and get that freakin’ awesome top.

By the way, it is odd having business folk as students. I was talking to one student about finding the awesome top at Marks and Spencers and that I didn’t get it because it was too expensive, and he was all like, dude, that store is cheap. If you want expensive clothes, you should go somewhere else. (Okay, I embellished his English just a little bit there, but you get the picture). I had some students tell me to go shopping in a mall (WTF?? Do they think I’m made of money here? Do I have Czech crowns coming out of my a$$?) and I actually had a different group of students suggest I go shopping between classes (insane). And everyone always talks about how materialistic Americans are… HA! It is all freakin’ over the entire world, thank you very much.