04 December, 2004

Accidental Teacher in Tena

(Note: Events took place on Nov 24, 2004)
Things had gone smoothly so far on our 15-day Ecuador adventure trip (granted, it was only the fourth day, and so far none of the back stabbing and cattiness of the women had surfaced, which would later make the journey...shall we say, more interesting). The 2-night homestay in the remote parts of the jungle did not prove as disagreeable as had been feared, notwithstanding the lack of electricity, abundance of mosquitoes, and bathing in an outhouse. Whatever was lacking in entertainment was made up for in animated conversations helped along by countless bottles of the local cerveza.

The following morning, a visit was suggested to the nearby elementary school, and thus we stopped by in town and merrily shopped for pens, notebooks and other whatnot which were intended as gifts to the schoolchildren. Upon reaching the school, the children promptly gave a rousing rendition of their school hymn (or the Ecuadorian national anthem, my faculties were clouded by the previous night's festivities). In turn, we presented the gifts, including the frisbees and footballs Krista and Linda brought over from Canada, much to their delight - the excitement was such that class almost degenerated into a frisbee throwing contest if their teacher Esther had not brought things under control.

Veronica suggested we teach them some English words, like counting from one to ten. Piece of cake. The children eagerly listened to our instruction and shouted out the numbers the best they could. At this point, seeing how our group was composed of a virtual United Nations (or Iraqi war coalition) of members, a light bulb went off in someone's head and it was suggested that we teach them the same numbers in our respective native tongues. Tabea (Swiss) started things off in German, breezing through the numbers while everyone else grappled with the tongue-twisting gnashing syllables - such a harsh language! Linda (Canadian) followed suit, demonstrating her prowess of that most flowery of languages - French. Sadly, our attempts at nasal intonations failed to impress. Then, it was Luc's (Belgian) turn - he made gurgly sounds that resembled mutterings by drunken Dutch sailors.

After his presentation, as all eyes focused on myself (our two Aussie friends were left wilting on the sidelines), with great fanfare I announced that I would be teaching in not one, but two - yes, two - languages, Mandarin and Tagalog. I then proceeded to do just that - though my memory was fuzzy at times (payback for 10 years of faking my way through classes) - which pretty much trumped everyone else's efforts. Soon everyone was in awe of my linguistic talents, compliments were showered and my ego swelled twenty-fold with pride at my newly found celebrity. The glory proved to be short-lived though. Upon my return to work, as I patiently waited while H.C. Yang thumbed through the pics with feigned interest, she suddenly bolted upright and exclaimed, "Hey, moron! Look at your Chinese numbers! Number 4 is wrong, wrong, wrong!!!". Though I vehemently protested to the contrary, H.C. was equally certain of being in the right, and in the back of my mind doubts were beginning to form. After much dispute, W.R.C. weighed in and corroborated her findings - much to H.C.'s glee, as she continuously reminded me of this shameful debacle (by muttering "what a fraud..." whenever we bumped into each other at the cafeteria) for weeks to come. I take consolation that the schoolchildren of Cando are none the wiser - until the next Mandarin-speaking tourist comes to town.

09 September, 2004

Montreal Notes


Due to extreme cheapness, decided to forgo staying 3 nights in a posh hotel and would instead book a bunk at the Hostelling International youth hostel in downtown Montreal and feel what it's like to be a penniless backpacker. It was actually a pleasant surprise, being clean and the bathroom not being stinky (wonder of wonders, a maid materializes from nowhere every morning to disinfect every little tile!). They assigned me to the largest room holding 10 people, thus I was able to meet and chat with my roommates - even hanged out with them on the last night - so at least in this respect the hostel is ideal for solo travellers.

The hostel also organizes activities almost every day - like we went to the Mont-Royal park on Sun where the locals hang out (think Central Park), and also to Parc Jean Drapeau where there was an Electronic Picnic (with DJ) every weekend. Too bad I missed the Tuesday and Thursday night pub crawls in nearby Rue Crescent (one of the two main drags for bar hopping, the other being Rue St. Denis). But you get the idea, its much more fun than staying in a hotel room by yourself.

What is without doubt the most memorable thing about the trip are the travellers I met, ranging from the Portuguese guy Vasco who's 30 and has never had a real job and is now on a 3-yr PhD program which is fully funded by the govt (free tuition and he gets CAN$3000 monthly allowance!!! Life is so unfair), the British-Malay girl who was telling me about the ice wine tasting tour in the Niagara area, the Chilean chemist to whom I was animatedly recounting that I witnessed the extraordinary 5-set Nicolas Massu match at the US Open, the two Japanese students (Yuzge and Tatsu) who struggled mightly with their English and yet somehow we got along well during the picnic - Yuzge was fascinated when we taught him the lyrics to "Mr Robato" so much so that he kept singing the chorus - 1,2,3 all together now - "domo arigato, mr robato...domo"), my Canadian roommate Corey whose wallet was stolen inside our room (the only downside), this English guy Richard whose favorite expressions "Ace" (as in "that'd be ace, man"), "classic" ("wow, that's classic") really cracked me up, the Aussie Steve who looked like a homeless bum (according to him he looks less so nowadays coz he shaved off his beard) and was recounting how enamored he was with the woman bartender at the club the previous night and how he got shot down in his attempts to get her phone number, and the French student couple who at first were simply amused and mystified at the TV show "What Not to Wear" and but were at the end of the night quite addicted to it.