It's been a while since I've written one of these entries. I created this blog to keep in contact with the rest of the world but I have done an extremely awful job at it. I thought it would be easy to just sign on and write about my life here in Prague. It's been really easy to sign on, but extremely hard to put my thoughts down on the screen. Maybe I have arid thoughts or maybe it's a lack of effort. Sometimes my head is like a desert with the occasional tumbleweed blowing by and other times I feel indolent and torpid. But whatever has been happening, I am now going to try to shake it off. Bring rain to my proverbial wasteland.
Update: Prague was beautiful when we got here in August. Prague is even more beautiful in the winter.
Another update: It is officially winter in Prague.
Full blown winter. Snow was covering just about everything until yesterday. The average temperature has been around 20 with a low in the single digits. Today it is about 30. Relief. The snow is melting and creating a slug around the city. It's sorta funny to think that 30 degrees is a relief though. It also gets dark around 4pm nowadays, successfully inducing sleepiness around.....19:00. It's bad. Maybe that is a factor to my laziness. This is my first winter and I might be overdramatizing the situation but winter is not my favorite. I don't plan on being outside much and we usually speed walk (can't run because of the icy roads) to wherever we need to go. No lingering or loitering outside. It's bad for your health.
Teaching for the past four months has been amusing to say the least. Most have become a conversation rather than a "lesson." My one-on-ones want to practice speaking, making my job a whole lot easier. Just think of a topic and bam, 240 easy Korunas. (A whopping $13) Unfortunately, it feels like any other job. You work all day just to come home and talk about it. It seems like its all we talk about. At home, in the pub, at a party and now in this blog. So I'm sorry that this section is truncated.
Plans for the holidays: 1)We are going to Brussels for a few days to visit and celebrate Christmas Eve with Eve's friend's boyfriend's family. 2) We are going to Milan to celebrate New Year. We will be in Italy for a few days, so hopefully we will travel a bit.
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Tuesday, September 21, 2010
Hello Mr. Salcito
Cesky Krumlov |
My first day at the high school (it's a Jewish school and they actually have all grades but i teach a class of 12-13 year olds and a class of 18-19 year olds and i like to say its a high school for some reason) was one of those times in your life where you question why the fuck you made the decision to do something in the first place. I was introduced to the head English teacher, a very nice lady that was engrossed in preparing her next lesson, who asked me a few questions before the 8:30 bell rang. "Have you ever taught kids before?" "No." "Haha" (she smiled one of those pity smiles) Ominous. "Your first class is easy, the older kids are very nice. Your second class...are 12-13 year olds, mostly girls and they will giggle a lot." "Oh great." I might have even said that. I don't really remember because my mind was preoccupied with restraining myself from turning around and running out the door. Then the bell rang, and my teaching career began. Ten teenagers stared at me wondering how did this guy got into the building. Awkward. I wrote my name down on the board and introduced myself and we all started to get to know each other. Well, they started to get to know me. They have known each other for a long time. Then the bell rang, and I let out a prodigious sigh. My first high school class was over. Yay. Only an infinite amount more to go. On my way out, a student said to me, "Bye Mr. Salcito!" It's hard to explain how that feels until it happens to you. It was strange to say the least. So strange that I told them to just call me Matt. I wasn't sure if I could handle being a complete teacher just yet. Also have to keep cool you know.
I'm about three weeks into teaching and I'm finding out that it gets easier and less stressful the more times I do it. It's actually quite challenging and rewarding. (Taught what those words meant to my 'older older' students the other day, hah) I think this could be fun.
I live in Prague now. Seeing myself writing that has a profound impact because it makes it real. I live in Prague. I have an awesome apartment in the heart of downtown. I work at various places in the city, and I am slowly embedding myself into this culture. We have found a couple restaurants we like to go to, cafe's to read in, parks to relax at, clubs and bars to get drunk at, etc. I might actually become Czech. That actually can't happen, legal shit. Plus, its only been two months since we've left Florida. Only two months. Thats a short and long time, at the same time.
I miss everybody back home.
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