Monday, January 28, 2013

New Year! Same Czech!


Dobry Den,



            Hello family, friends and any one else that happens to read my blog. I am still pretty new at this and have been overwhelmed with this entire experience in Prague that I’ve lost complete track of time.
            Let me tell you though I have had one hell of a journey. If it all ended today I would say it was a success. I’ve met many people, been to a handful of places and have seen things I never thought I would have been able to see. It hasn’t been easy though. Every thing in this world has a process and actually being a foreigner for the first time and an expat having to deal with such processes is a bitch to say the least. Nothing here is easy, and even when you think it is shit gets tougher. Thankfully I have been fortunate enough to snag a job here and there. With a few private lessons as well, where I find myself traveling for over an hour outside of Prague and into the countryside.
One nice thing about the program I’ve taken though is that there is a large expat community that may or may not have been through the same problem making it easier to have any questions answered whether you are lost or confused.
            So far I’ve taught Business English lessons at Czech companies, standard conversation lessons covering a variety of topics, and teaching classrooms of 10-15 teenagers at a time. Teachers... I feel ya. It is difficult keeping together an unruly class of teens that only speak Czech and some broken English. Many times I wish I knew Czech so I could tell them what to do in English and repeat it in Czech but I’ve had a hard time trying to learn the language. When you look at another countries alphabet and it consists multiple E’s, R,’s or N’s, to name a few, you get a little confused.  I will however continue to study and practice my pronunciation. Thankfully I have met a few Czech’s that are more than happy to help teach me and find it amusing watching me try as they hear me butcher their language.
            In my downtime I find myself lesson planning, the nice thing is that if I have a lesson and if a student cancels I can just prop it on the shelf for another day. I would admit it sucks sometimes but it is nice to go back and grab a lesson I am familiar with to teach to a new student. It has also taken sometime but I am able to rattle off some grammar info when asked on the spot or brought up in random conversation with other teachers and students after class. There are certain rules, structures and forms I may not be that familiar with but teaching and looking over material on a near daily basis has helped.
            Since I’ve moved here though there are many things I am not used too or have noticed. One of these is being in my own world half the time. Standing around outside of Tram stations or Train stations or even just shopping in a Supermarket you rarely hear any English. Sometimes I may hear English and when I do I tend to perk up and glance to see who is speaking. Many instances though I find myself wondering what they are saying to each other or just thinking in general about the current situation I am in. Another thing I have noticed is how much Czech’s are into their history, traditions, and customs. They actually are proud of their customs and genuinely look forward to them. I ask my student’s about certain traditions I see and they enthusiastically tell me. After being here and seeing this I would have to admit that most American’s take their own ‘traditions’ or holidays for granted. Never have I seen anyone say anything really good. Normally you hear people complain, “Oh Great, Walgreens or Walmart or Wal-whatever have already put up their X-mas decorations.” Who cares!? You should be happy and excited for what X-mas brings to family and friends. Aside from that another thing I’ve noticed is how damn happy everyone is and how proud they are with the job they have. Whether it’s at a Supermarket or the local KFC and McD’s. Never have I been to a fast food place where they are so happy to see you, polite, courteous, and prompt with getting you the food you ordered. Seriously, in America everyone that works in fast-food hates their life, complain, and do a shitty ass job doing their job. In the Czech Republic they always have a smile on their face and truly appreciate your business. Another thing is how noisy American’s are. I literally find myself pretending to not be American sometimes because of how obnoxious most Americans are. Not to mention rude. It truly is pathetic and sad but hopefully most people when they do travel notice this and take it to heart so that we don’t have these blatant and obvious stereotypes.
            Honestly it’s quiet funny seeing what has happened to us, in our society and world in general. Our lives have become digital, our friends have become virtual and everything you would ever really want to know is a click away. Which is kind of scary. Since I’ve come here and experienced what I have experienced I don’t know if I will ever be the same. I don’t want to experience the world through second hand information or the Internet because… well, it’s not enough. I’ve realized that if you want authenticity, we as human beings have to initiate it ourselves. We will never know our own potential, or what we can see or even what we can do until we push ourselves to find it. It’s this self-discovery, which has taken me and can take anyone to some of the wildest, and most beautiful places on earth.
            On that note I leave you again but I intend on trying to make this a normal habit where I can continue to share my views, experiences, and pics to go along with some of my post’s so you get a partial illustration.

Peace,

JP


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