วันศุกร์ที่ 12 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551
Jarhead//Click
วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 11 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551
Toast and Peanut Butter!
The rest of the day was kind of long and boring. I quite literally spent it in my room, all alone. I ate lunch by myself in the kitchen. It was rice with chicken and cucumber that P'Kla had bought and brought home for me. In the afternoon I could hear Beam, Cherry, and Kla downstairs watching TV, so I thought I would go join them. But when I got downstairs Cherry was sitting on the couch giggling, and Beam was obviously hiding behind the couch. I could hear her giggling too, but I played along anyways, and pretended that she was doing a good time hiding, tried to ignore Cherry's giggling like she wasn't actually giving it all away. After what seemed like 10 minutes Beam threw and eraser at me and asked me if she startled me. I should have lied and said yes but I said no and kind of told her I knew she was there all along. Then they told me they just drank some weird Thai energy drink that made them "go crazy." I dunno, it was really weird. However, Beam told me that she will be able to go to the ballet with me, which I'm really excited for. Also, AFS emailed me today about the massage course, and apparently it's actually the one on October 1-10 that is still open, which means that I won't be going to that camp that I didn't really want to go to anyways on the 1-3. Tomorrow I am to go to school to talk to my coordinator and make sure all these plans will work out, hopefully she will let me miss out on the camp and go to the massage course.
I've really got to find something to do around here. I know I really shouldn't be complaining, because alot of the other exchange students around here haven't done nearly as much as I've done in the way of traveling around and seeing touristy things and such, but I can't help feel like my family isn't taking enough of an interest in me. I think alot of it has to do with the fact that they're just all so busy, combined with me not being able to do anything on my own. It's beginning to get really frustrating. I need to find some new hobbie or something to keep me preoccupied. I should take up scrap booking or knitting or something that I can do at home, because really I can only spend so much time studying Thai and nerding it out on the internet each day.... I just think I need to somehow find the balance between alone time and going out time. Right now it's a little too much alone time. I'm still feeling good about being in Thailand, and alot of what is driving me crazy I think is that fact that I'm in Thailand! I want to go out and see and experience new things, instead of just being alone in my room all day. Ok, enough ranting for now. I must go eat dinner.
วันอังคารที่ 9 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551
Le Grand Tour
So, here is a video of my Thai bedroom. I actually took it a couple of weeks ago, and have tried uploading it a couple of times, but it never worked until now. Enjoy:
Today was spent studying Thai with the help of P'Beam and P'Kla, eating various meals throughout the day, watching the Golden Compass, and reading some of Slaughter-House Five. For lunch I ate a Thai version of Itchiban Noodles. And when I say "a Thai version", I mean it was exactly the same as Itchiban Noodles, except spicy. So spicy that by the end of it my lips were numb. But not so spicy that I was crying. So a good level of spicy-ness I guess. Beam tried to teach me the five different tones in the Thai language today, and I pretty much failed miserabley. The only tone I have no problem with is the rising tone, where you make your voice kind of as though you were asking a question in English. The five tones (just for those who are interested) are: mid, low, falling, high, and rising. Although several words may have the same spelling and same pronounciation in Thai, because their tones will be different, it changes the meaning of the word. For example: mai (mid tone) means a mile, mai (low tone) means new, mai (falling tone) means no, mai (high tone) means ".... right?", mai (rising tone) means silk.
I also watched a bit of a Thai horror movie with Beam and Kla, however there were no English subtitles, so I was absolutely confused as to what the dialouge was. Yet, amazingly I was still able to follow the story line, and still got all scared/creeped out along with everyone else. Yay me! Tomorrow will be another lazy day as far as I know, and then on Friday I'm to go to school for a little bit to discuss with my AFS Coordinator some plans for the school vacation. I'm hoping that Rachel from Australia will be able to come stay with me for the last week of September, then from October 15-24 I will go to a massage course in Ayutthaya with Elisabeth from Germany. Today when I talked to my coordinator on the phone she said that Cherry told her that my host family has travel plans for the break, which I'm absolutely unaware of. So I asked P'Kla about it, and he knows nothing either, however he promised he will find out for me, so that I can figure out for sure if the massage course and such will work out. Apparently I'm also supposed to go to some camp at the beginning of October with my coordinator and maybe kids from my school. I don't really know what it's about, but my coordinator asked me about it a couple of weeks ago and I said sure I'd go, but that was when I had absolutely no other plans... I'm not really sure if I'm still interested in doing it. But whatever, I guess I can suck it up for a couple of days. Also, Pailin won't be able to go see the Nutcracker Ballet with me, so I asked Beam if she would be interested in going instead, and she said yes! So there is still hope for me seeing some ballet yet.
p.s. Guess who totally fogot to eat her carrot in the fridge? And who has some sour milk in her bedroom? Long story... Beam's Aunt bought me some milk to take with us on the weekend, which Beam had in her bag along with some chips and candy and such, which she gave to me when we got back on Sunday... However, the milk was left un-refridgerated all weekend, and still has been since then... Let's just say it's reached the point of nastiness. I better remember to throw it out tomorrow, before it gets any worse. Ewww.
The Water Horse
I completely forgot to mention the best part of getting back on Sunday night... having my parcel which my family sent to me waiting in the living room for me to open it! Honestly, it was like Christmas came early.. There were all kinds of wonderous things hidden within, such as Borat (watching that after being in a kind of reverse Borat situation, you know going from North American culture to something totally different, kind of sheds a new light on the whole movie), a video of the dance recital this year, salt and vinegar chips (yay, something other than seaweed flavour!), earrings from Jan, and all kinds of Canadian type souvenirs. It really made my day.
I spend yesterday doing not to much at all, just getting some much needed rest and catching up with people from back home. In the evening my host dad asked me to go for a bike ride with him for exercise. It's really starting to annoy me how much he's on my case about getting exercise. But I figured a bike ride would be nice anyways since it would give me a chance to explore the neighborhood a bit. Let's just say it was a very short bike ride, with absolutely no hills (imagine bike riding in Alberta, how tiring), and the bike put at a very low gear. I didn't even break a sweat. I did get alot of weird stares though. Afterwards I went up to the roof of my bedroom for the first time, where they have it all set up like a deck kind of. I'm not too keen on doing that whole experience again, since the stairs to get up there were scarier than the scary stairs at the restaurant in Paris.. for all of the two people who might be reading this who went to Paris with me.. everyone else just imagine some super rickety wooden stairs.
Today I actually managed to do something productive, and I studied Thai on my own for about an hour and a half. Although I deffinately haven't mastered the Thai language yet, I can feel my skills improving, mainly in the fact that whenever people tell me new Thai's words now, I can actually remember them. Before it was always as though the words would just go straight through my brain, and not "stick" at all. I've also begun teaching myself the Thai alphabet, which is already helping alot in understanding the Thai language. I think learning it will be a huge benefit since there are so many sounds in Thai which don't exist in English, and that way when people tell me new Thai words, I will know how to spell them in Thai with the correct sounds, rather than trying to write them using the English alphabet. In the evening I watched the rest of the movie The Water Horse, and showed Beam and P'Kla the video of the dance recital along with many other pictures from back at home in Canada.
For tomorrow my big plans include phoning my AFS coordinator to see if it will be possible for Rachel from Australia to come stay with me for a week in September, as well as to see if I can attend the massage course in Ayutthaya in October. I spent some time today looking into different meditation courses I can take in Thailand, and the best one I've found is actually the same one Nickolai did in India (visit www.dhamma.org to read about it). I really want to do it as soon as possible, since there is another program I can do where I go stay with the monks in a temple in North Eastern Thailand, but this program doesn't actually teach meditation, only the monk lifestyle, and therefore they recomment you take a meditation course beforehand. However, AFS says we're not allowed to do any meditation courses during school time, which means I would have to wait until April to do it! Hopefully I can convince them to make an acception....
Also, I've added the pictures from Chanthaburi to my photo page (http://community.webshots.com/user/kristenthailand )... I apologize in advance for my extemely bad hair in the pictures. This is what happens when my hair is subjected to both humidity and wind.
วันอาทิตย์ที่ 7 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551
Chanthaburi
วันพุธที่ 3 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2551
A Quick Note...
COC
So, here is everything about the camp:
SATURDAY:
I had to wake up early in order to drive to the AFS office. P’Kla and P’Beam took me, and on the way there it started raining pretty heavily, so the traffic was pretty jammed (apparently that happens every time it rains). Since it was still raining when I got there, we were told to wait on the bus until all the other students arrived. I sat on the bus with a boy from Egypt. We talked about all the things we’ve done in Thailand, and I asked him some different things about Egypt and what not. Since he’s Muslim, and this month is “Ramadan” (sorry if that’s not spelled right :S), during the whole camp he could only eat early in the morning before the sun would rise, and at night after the sun had set. Kind of felt bad because the rest of us pretty much spend the whole day eating right in front of him. There is no way I would be able to fast like that, mainly because I would faint. But, I guess I will be seeing Patch fasting all throughout this month as well. One of the students was really late to arrive, so we didn’t get much of a chance to visit Ayutthaya (the old capital of Thailand) before we had to head to the camp. We stopped at a mall type place for lunch, and AFS gave us 150 baht each to spend on food. I ended up eating sushi with a girl from Germany named Theresa, and when we were done that we met up with some more German girls (over half of the camp was made up of German girls) to eat the biggest ice cream sundae I’ve seen at my life. Honestly, I think it had over 10 scoops of all different flavored ice cream in it. Sooo good. We hopped back on the bus and headed to a Temple in Ayutthaya, although I’m sorry I forget the name. We didn’t get too much time to spend there, we just got to take a quick peak inside the temple at the large golden Buddha image, and look
SUNDAY:
In the morning I woke up and had a nice HOT shower. It was amazing. We spent the day doing different activities with the AFS volunteers. We learned some Thai language, and different students talked about the methods they are using to learn Thai. One of the boys from Belgium has learned Thai so quickly that he even explained in Thai how he learns Thai (he can also speak Dutch, French, German, and English). A boy from the USA can already read and write Thai. I’m also just amazed by how well all the students from Germany and Belgium for example can speak English. I don’t know if it’s just that since they are exchange student’s they had to go through some selection process and had to be good at English, or what. But it showed me how poor the Thai students English language skills are, even though they have been studying it for the same amount of time as the Germans and such. Although I guess I really can’t talk, because my second language skills I’ve learned from studying in school aren’t really too amazing either. We also spent some time planning what we could like to do for the long school break in between semesters which is coming up. I made plans with Elisabeth from Germany to attend a massage course in Ayutthaya for 10 days, which means the two of us will be staying together and living in Ayutthaya during that time. I know just have to talk to my host family and make sure I am allowed to go. AFS is also setting up an optional trip at the end of October for students who want to travel to the South of Thailand and stay in a resort on the beach. I signed up for it, along with a bunch of other students. In the evening, our curfew was 11 45. Katirjin and I went to visit with Shawna from America, and we once again talked about all the cultural differences and compared them to our lives at home. Apparently Shawna’s family has been making a big issue about her hair. When we first got to Thailand she had her hair all braided with extensions, which her family made her take out so that her hair is now really short. Since she is African American, her hair texture is different, and her hair doesn’t need to be washed that often. Since Thai people wash their hair everyday (even Cherry seems to think I’m gross for only washing mine every second day), Shawna’s family contacted AFS and one of the volunteers had to go meet with Shawna and explain to her that she needs to wash her hair everyday, and Shawna tried to explain to them that she can’t or else her hair will get too dried out. The whole situation seems a little ridiculous to me. I think it shows just how much we as exchange student’s are expected to just fit right into our host culture, and that sometimes the host family has a hard time adjusting to things the student may do differently.
MONDAY:
This day was definitely the funnest. We spent the morning learning Thai Dance and Thai Flower Making. During the Flower Making part, we learned how to make a bouquet of roses out of blades of grass. It was super hard, but I think mine turned out not too bad. After our short break, we learned Ancient Thai Boxing. The thing to know about Ancient Thai Boxing is that it is more a form of art than a form of fighting. We learned different methods of punching and kicking, and it kind of made me feel like we were all doing Tae-bo. Then, two of the teacher’s assistants (boys who were maybe 12 years old), showed us their Boxing routine which they will use to compete in an upcoming competition. It started out as kind of a dance routine, where they did different movements worshipping the gods and preparing to fight. Then the fighting started. It was a choreographed fighting sequence, just like you would see out of the movies, and it was one of the coolest things I’ve seen in my life. Unfortunately I didn’t have my camera with me at the moment to take a video of it. The boys acted in it so well, taking turns hitting each other and knocking one another to the ground. For example, one of the boys would run at the other and kind of run up the other’s chest and pretend to kick him in the head so that he would fall down. We were told that in the afternoon we might be getting wet, so we all changed into our swimsuits and different clothes. We went to this area of the resort where there was a fairly large pond, and they had all different activities set up such as tight ropes or logs that you
TUESDAY:
After eating breakfast of only toast and English type food (yay no rice!), a bunch of us played UNO for a bit, and then sadly had to go pack our bags to head back to Bangkok. AFS informed us that a National State of Emergency had been declared by the Thai Government. I don’t know too much
I’ve also added my pictures from the COC Camp to my photo page, so if you’re interested you can take a look at them. http://community.webshots.com/user/kristenthailand