The Stubble Jumper Goes Home
Saturday, February 7, 2015
Too Much Time on My Hands on a Saturday
With cold weather and snow all around I spied a nice little Lebanese restaurant right under the Inn where I stay. A nice bowl of lentil soup was exactly what I wanted, with perhaps a side of hummus to go along. Nope. They are closed. Seems there was some water damage about 3 weeks ago, and the only message on their phone and in their window states 'we will be open on Tuesday. Many Tuesdays have passed since that sign went up. And no lentil soup has been made available to me.
The Cold and Snow Still Here
At least the city has made an effort to remove the snow this time. Fighting with snow removal equipment, I picked my way back to the Inn where I will likely hunker down for the weekend. This morning offers no reprieve from the cold - we are at -17 right now. Maybe I will drag myself out for a walk somewhere later today. It would probably be a good idea to get out and take a look at the city. After all I have that cheapo bus pass. I might as well make good use of it.
Students were scarce as hen's teeth yesterday. I am sure they decided that it was unacceptable to be out in the cold coming to school during a blizzard. Only a dozen or so braved the weather. That however made teaching easy. I only had to think for 12 people instead of dozens.
Television watching is out of the question. I just subjected myself to a program called 'world's cheapest people'. There was some idiot who had a makeshift clothesline strung in his house where he hung used paper towels to dry and reuse. Beside the paper towels hung little strands of string. Apparently he reuses his dental floss as well. I guess I can thank God that although my marriage was miserable, it was not a marriage with a cheapskate. This idiot then took his wife out on their monthly date night. He began the date night early in the day - he took her to the movies and of course matinees are cheaper. After springing for the tickets to the movie he had his wife find seats in the theatre. Not exactly difficult. The theatre was empty. But what he did while she did that was disgusting. He rummaged through the trash bins to find a used drink cup and nearly empty popcorn box. Apparently that theatre offers free refills on drinks and popcorn. So, he took the drink cup and popcorn box to the concession stand and got his refills. Poor wifey had no idea what he had done, and dug into the treats thinking he was a prince. Then, when they left the theatre, he got another free refill for each for the drive home. He made sure they also provided ice in the drink. OMG, that show was bad enough. But watching it makes me just as looney as the people in the show.
Nothing new to report from Edmonton. Work is work, weather is weather. And all of my experiences here will be over in 11 weeks.
Students were scarce as hen's teeth yesterday. I am sure they decided that it was unacceptable to be out in the cold coming to school during a blizzard. Only a dozen or so braved the weather. That however made teaching easy. I only had to think for 12 people instead of dozens.
Television watching is out of the question. I just subjected myself to a program called 'world's cheapest people'. There was some idiot who had a makeshift clothesline strung in his house where he hung used paper towels to dry and reuse. Beside the paper towels hung little strands of string. Apparently he reuses his dental floss as well. I guess I can thank God that although my marriage was miserable, it was not a marriage with a cheapskate. This idiot then took his wife out on their monthly date night. He began the date night early in the day - he took her to the movies and of course matinees are cheaper. After springing for the tickets to the movie he had his wife find seats in the theatre. Not exactly difficult. The theatre was empty. But what he did while she did that was disgusting. He rummaged through the trash bins to find a used drink cup and nearly empty popcorn box. Apparently that theatre offers free refills on drinks and popcorn. So, he took the drink cup and popcorn box to the concession stand and got his refills. Poor wifey had no idea what he had done, and dug into the treats thinking he was a prince. Then, when they left the theatre, he got another free refill for each for the drive home. He made sure they also provided ice in the drink. OMG, that show was bad enough. But watching it makes me just as looney as the people in the show.
Nothing new to report from Edmonton. Work is work, weather is weather. And all of my experiences here will be over in 11 weeks.
Thursday, February 5, 2015
Snow is on the way......
Now almost at the 11 week mark I am telling myself I can do this. We will see how I feel after the next couple of days. We have a massive dump of snow forecasted, and so far I have not witnessed good snow removal in this city. I am hoping that changes. Otherwise we will be plodding through the white stuff like pioneers.
I still like the work, but jeez these new Canadians quickly learn how to play the system. All they have to do to earn a free seat in this program is show up. If they don't show up for 8 of the classes in the entire term they are punted. I have heard every excuse under the sun for why they are not attending, and with each excuse they want me to indicate they were there, when in truth they were not. One even thought I should mark her present while she went to Peru for almost a month. Not bloody likely!
Others think they belong in a higher level in the program Those ones cannot even understand the response to that. Sure they belong in a higher level. But generally, my students are sincere. They work on the assignments I give them. They do their best. They improve.
As of tomorrow, I have 11 weeks of teaching here left. I am sure I can do it. Soon I will be able to say that there is only 1/2 left. That will be the milestone. I think February 27th is the half way point.
I still like the work, but jeez these new Canadians quickly learn how to play the system. All they have to do to earn a free seat in this program is show up. If they don't show up for 8 of the classes in the entire term they are punted. I have heard every excuse under the sun for why they are not attending, and with each excuse they want me to indicate they were there, when in truth they were not. One even thought I should mark her present while she went to Peru for almost a month. Not bloody likely!
Others think they belong in a higher level in the program Those ones cannot even understand the response to that. Sure they belong in a higher level. But generally, my students are sincere. They work on the assignments I give them. They do their best. They improve.
As of tomorrow, I have 11 weeks of teaching here left. I am sure I can do it. Soon I will be able to say that there is only 1/2 left. That will be the milestone. I think February 27th is the half way point.
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Guests at the Inn
I poked my nose out the door this morning to see how cold it was. It was cold. But more than that I spied a box near the trash. A long box that indicated it was a bag for a gun. Yikes. I mentioned this to the manager, and he had not noticed the writing on the box. I left, saying that I hoped that whoever the guest was, hopefully has left. He agreed.
Other than that, not much new. I see that we have a short reprieve in the weather for one day and then back into a deep freeze and blizzard. Oh well, by the end of the week there are only 11 weeks to go. I can do it.
I gave my students an assignment to make PPTs with instructions for doing something. They were extremely creative. One made a PPT for lockdown in the school. Another made one for using a first aid kit. And then one made one by not making one. She led me to believe she knew what she was doing, but I guess I should have asked a few questions. She was going to show the class how to buy things online. But she didn't have a clue. It was entertaining, but far from done. We will work on that next week. It turns out that her husband helped her buy an iPad online but clearly she did not have any input for that purchase. She was babbling about how you can use a cheque to buy something online if you do not have a credit card. I asked how she was going to deliver that cheque. No answer. Oh well, it gives me something to do, right?
Now it is time to pour some Bailey's into a glass and relax.
Other than that, not much new. I see that we have a short reprieve in the weather for one day and then back into a deep freeze and blizzard. Oh well, by the end of the week there are only 11 weeks to go. I can do it.
I gave my students an assignment to make PPTs with instructions for doing something. They were extremely creative. One made a PPT for lockdown in the school. Another made one for using a first aid kit. And then one made one by not making one. She led me to believe she knew what she was doing, but I guess I should have asked a few questions. She was going to show the class how to buy things online. But she didn't have a clue. It was entertaining, but far from done. We will work on that next week. It turns out that her husband helped her buy an iPad online but clearly she did not have any input for that purchase. She was babbling about how you can use a cheque to buy something online if you do not have a credit card. I asked how she was going to deliver that cheque. No answer. Oh well, it gives me something to do, right?
Now it is time to pour some Bailey's into a glass and relax.
Sunday, February 1, 2015
12 More Weeks
Another week has gone by. Thank God. I worked like a madman, but on Friday I packed it up by 3:30 and came back to the Inn. Some person sent a blanket e-mail advising that all data entered would be lost from Wednesday to Friday. There was some virus in the system. I had spent a good amount of time on Wednesday entering all the individual student attendance for every day of the month. Knowing that I would have to re enter all that did not impress me at all. Other than that, it was a good week of teaching. Students worked hard on their assignments. Students continue to improve in their pronunciation. So I must be doing something right. Or else they are just doing it all on their own. Doesn't matter - somethings are improving and that is the goal.
I am going out to lunch with an old Calgary friend today. You can be sure that I will order some kind of meat that has not been stewed in a slow cooker or from a grocery store deli counter. That date is something I am looking forward to. I also had a long Skype chat with another old Calgary friend who has relocated to Ontario. As we digressed and laughed I told her that I think that we should video our visits and see if some network would pick it up. We could have weekly chats and keep recording them. If Seinfeld could run for so long, I cannot imagine our visits not being a hit with the boomers. What we admit to and talk about are all that a boomer can identify with. Plus, some of our gabbing is pretty darn funny, even to us. We were talking about history and how we both were very disinterested in that subject during our school years. Now, we tend to watch all sorts of documentary channels and learn so much about that which we avoided in our youth. I admitted to her that I tend to be a closet history buff these days. Why? Because what I am learning in my senior years is something that I was supposed to be learning at the beginning of my life. I can't talk about this new knowledge to most people because they would think I had lived on another planet when they all gathered this information decades ago. I must either keep this my secret, or remember to use the 'past tense' when I talk about it.
I have my lesson plans ready for this week. Hopefully that means less time I spend at the computer too. We will see. Only 12 weeks left before I return to green and warm.
I am going out to lunch with an old Calgary friend today. You can be sure that I will order some kind of meat that has not been stewed in a slow cooker or from a grocery store deli counter. That date is something I am looking forward to. I also had a long Skype chat with another old Calgary friend who has relocated to Ontario. As we digressed and laughed I told her that I think that we should video our visits and see if some network would pick it up. We could have weekly chats and keep recording them. If Seinfeld could run for so long, I cannot imagine our visits not being a hit with the boomers. What we admit to and talk about are all that a boomer can identify with. Plus, some of our gabbing is pretty darn funny, even to us. We were talking about history and how we both were very disinterested in that subject during our school years. Now, we tend to watch all sorts of documentary channels and learn so much about that which we avoided in our youth. I admitted to her that I tend to be a closet history buff these days. Why? Because what I am learning in my senior years is something that I was supposed to be learning at the beginning of my life. I can't talk about this new knowledge to most people because they would think I had lived on another planet when they all gathered this information decades ago. I must either keep this my secret, or remember to use the 'past tense' when I talk about it.
I have my lesson plans ready for this week. Hopefully that means less time I spend at the computer too. We will see. Only 12 weeks left before I return to green and warm.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
I Know Who They Are
This weekend, I realized that I have been working for 3 weeks and after only 4 days I actually could say their names, and know who they were. That is a big feat. Coming from all places of this world, the names alone are enough to cause one to stumble. I had the most problem with one from Eritrea. His name escaped me. I recognized him, but he was Shawneshca, Shawnesha, Shawshaw, Neshsha until, I finally mastered Shanesh. He grinned a broad grin when I finally said his name properly on the fourth day.
The weather has been all over the place. Arriving on a rainy day, moving into a blizzard, and then facing -30s for a few days kept me wondering how to get through this, or leaving after earning enough to cover what it cost to arrive. Somehow, during the three weeks I just settled in and did not think much about going home. That is because there was no time.
Now, with 13 weeks left in the contract I think I can do it. But that is because I have been experiencing weather like home. Once this honeymoon is over and real local weather takes over I will likely be counting the days once again. I have said my good byes to a new friend I met at the Inn. Now that she is gone, I seem to be the resident longtimer here. What seems to be the norm here is people arrive, stay a couple of days, and then are gone. Cindy was the resident with the longest history until I arrived. She is a doctor from South Africa who is getting her credentials here in Canada. She and her partner from Ireland have been here for three months. She left for a hotel closer to her new clinic where she will be working. Now I am the regular seen in the halls and the parlour, replacing the other two. The other group of regulars appear to be those who work in Fort Mac, who work a week and get a week off. The Inn appears to be their home in civilization. I also realized yesterday that I have not gone out to dine since the day I arrived. I would not call that a dining experience. It was a diner near the Inn, and seemed to be the only place open on New Year's Day in this neighbourhood. Other than that experience, I have bought a few lunches at the school cafeteria. There are a number of eating places in the 'hood, but after a day of work and more fine tuning of lesson plans for the next day, I hardly feel like dining. I guess I should make an effort. I also need to find a salon that I will trust to cut my hair. I am beginning to look like a ponytail would be the style now. But again, no time to even consider an appointment.
Now Sunday morning, I will make some coffee, read the Saturday newspaper, and vacate my room so the cleaning staff can do their magic. I am also considering some 'ice cleats' I spied at MEC yesterday. You can somehow attach them to your footwear and (I guess) master walking across icy surface. The came in small, medium, and large, but I could not figure out how to decide which size to buy, or how the heck to attach them. Would I need a chair to sit on in order to stretch them on over my boots? If so, does that mean I also have to carry a portable chair to do this? Or do I just dance on the street, trying to balance while I attach them? I think the item is actually out of my league, and that the people who use them are climbing an ice face in the mountains, and just have them on before they begin the climb. Google will surely tell me what to do. This is what I saw at MEC. Kicking them onto my boots does not really feel like an option that would work.
The weather has been all over the place. Arriving on a rainy day, moving into a blizzard, and then facing -30s for a few days kept me wondering how to get through this, or leaving after earning enough to cover what it cost to arrive. Somehow, during the three weeks I just settled in and did not think much about going home. That is because there was no time.
Now, with 13 weeks left in the contract I think I can do it. But that is because I have been experiencing weather like home. Once this honeymoon is over and real local weather takes over I will likely be counting the days once again. I have said my good byes to a new friend I met at the Inn. Now that she is gone, I seem to be the resident longtimer here. What seems to be the norm here is people arrive, stay a couple of days, and then are gone. Cindy was the resident with the longest history until I arrived. She is a doctor from South Africa who is getting her credentials here in Canada. She and her partner from Ireland have been here for three months. She left for a hotel closer to her new clinic where she will be working. Now I am the regular seen in the halls and the parlour, replacing the other two. The other group of regulars appear to be those who work in Fort Mac, who work a week and get a week off. The Inn appears to be their home in civilization. I also realized yesterday that I have not gone out to dine since the day I arrived. I would not call that a dining experience. It was a diner near the Inn, and seemed to be the only place open on New Year's Day in this neighbourhood. Other than that experience, I have bought a few lunches at the school cafeteria. There are a number of eating places in the 'hood, but after a day of work and more fine tuning of lesson plans for the next day, I hardly feel like dining. I guess I should make an effort. I also need to find a salon that I will trust to cut my hair. I am beginning to look like a ponytail would be the style now. But again, no time to even consider an appointment.
Now Sunday morning, I will make some coffee, read the Saturday newspaper, and vacate my room so the cleaning staff can do their magic. I am also considering some 'ice cleats' I spied at MEC yesterday. You can somehow attach them to your footwear and (I guess) master walking across icy surface. The came in small, medium, and large, but I could not figure out how to decide which size to buy, or how the heck to attach them. Would I need a chair to sit on in order to stretch them on over my boots? If so, does that mean I also have to carry a portable chair to do this? Or do I just dance on the street, trying to balance while I attach them? I think the item is actually out of my league, and that the people who use them are climbing an ice face in the mountains, and just have them on before they begin the climb. Google will surely tell me what to do. This is what I saw at MEC. Kicking them onto my boots does not really feel like an option that would work.
Monday, January 19, 2015
Almost Forgot
This Inn is perfect. I feel like I am living in a large house. There is a lovely parlour down the hall where I can enjoy a quiet time instead of staying in my own suite. There are beautiful antiques everywhere. In fact, I have a massive ginger jar on my bureau and am so afraid I might knock it off. Not too sure of I would want to pay what would be required to replace it. Today when I returned from work I trundled down to the parlour to get a fresh bucket of ice for my water. There is a huge side by side fridge there and always buckets of ice stored in the freezer side. But today there was only empty buckets in the freezer. I decided to fill one myself. I pushed on the front of the door to get ice and.nothing happened. Darn. I wanted ice. Back to the reception and asked the desk clerk how to get ice. He closed the office and came back to the parlour with me. Straight to the fridge and into the freezer section. He then took an empty ice bucket in one hand, and dug into the ice resevoir with the other hand. Clanking of ice, and I knew that the chamber was full. Fo some reason they have disabled the door dispenser. OMG. Is this how the cleaning staff dispenses ice buckets for the rooms? I quickly told him that I could do this myself. Tossing that bucket into the sink, finding a cup, in the dishwasher, to scoop off the top layer of cubes and tossing them into the sink. I then scooped ice for my room, with a clean cup, and returned with a fresh bucket. Now I know what the drill will be.
1 cup
Top layer of ice into the sink
New clean cup
Scoop ice into a clean bucket
Take to my room
I don't want to think about how many ice buckets I have consumed that were dispensesd with bare hands that had travelled God know where they had been prior.
1 cup
Top layer of ice into the sink
New clean cup
Scoop ice into a clean bucket
Take to my room
I don't want to think about how many ice buckets I have consumed that were dispensesd with bare hands that had travelled God know where they had been prior.
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