Wednesday, October 21, 2009

toros y mas

La vida madrilena continues to go well. Maureen, Emily and I have all begun to settle in to the routine of teaching and are tired a lot of the time but also really enjoying it. Our Spanish is very slowly but (we think) surely getting better. Here are some pics from last weekend's adventures (narrated below).

mas madrid



On Friday my school did not have classes because we were celebrating the feast day of some saint. Each class went on a field trip to somewhere in Madrid; I went with the 4th level kids (sophomores) to the Retiro (it's a big park). I wasn't looking forward to it too much because I thought we'd have to do activities with the kids in the park all day, but as it turned out we teachers just gave the kids some instructions for a scavenger hunt (not as exciting as it sounds- it involved finding religious statues and writing about how they related to the saint) and ditched the kids. It was fun hanging out with some of the teachers outside of school. After the kids left we went to Plaza Mayor and had a picnic of calamari bocadillos and clara (beer with lemon).

On Friday night we went to a sweet concert in a small club with a few of Emily's friends. One of them knew the manager of the band- a Cuban group called Havana Abierta (download them! they're really good!)

On Saturday, Maureen's principal Maria Carmen took Mo and me to a performance of Footloose at a high school near their school. Although high school musicals aren't as common here, this school is known for having really good ones. Indeed, the performance-acting, singing, dancing, everything- was really impressive! Though they kept the English title of the play, everything was translated into Spanish- so instead of "gonna cut loose, footloose," you have "yo quiero bailar, bailar" - it was kind of comical.

Finally, on Sunday, we went to a bullfight. It was one of the last ones of the season, so it featured younger and less experienced toreros fighting younger and smaller bulls and was sparsely attended. Since bullfighting is not too popular among the current generation of Spaniards, the crowd that does turn up is mostly old Spanish men who heckle the whole time and tourists. Luckily we bought the cheapest tickets and were up at the very top, so we were sitting with the heckling men who seemed to actually know what was going on (unfortunately, this also means my pictures are not very good).

This was my second time at a bullfight but Maureen and Emily's first. It is definitely kind of jarring at first but you get over it pretty quickly. On the one hand, you are basically watching an innocent animal being tortured and killed. They give the bull a good stab in the back before he even gets into the ring so that he is already weakened and the torero has lots of helpers who distract the bull and men on horses with long spears who come out to help stab him- so the torero is really given a big advantage. And despite the stereotypes of bulls as angry, aggressive animals, they are really only like this when provoked. When he first comes out, the bull just stands placidly in the middle of the ring looking like he wouldn't hurt a fly. It is only when they taunt him with bright red and pink capes and stab him multiple times that he becomes aggressive. It also does take a long time and many stabs for the bull to actually die (they're incredibly resilient/strong) and when his legs do finally collapse underneath him it's a little heartbreaking. Then horses drag the corpse of the once majestic animal out of the ring, leaving a trail of blood in the dust.

So why would anyone take pleasure in this sadistic show of torture? Well, in addition to these unnerving aspects, there's also a lot of tradition and ritual involved- in fact, many consider bullfighting a form of art. (I could try to describe this tradition and ritual and art but I think you'd be better off just reading some Hemingway). Although the torero's goal is to kill the bull, he also has to respect the bull. If he doesn't stab in just the right place, thus prolonging the bull's death, everyone boos- we witnessed this with one of the toreros we saw, who really stuggled to kill the thing. People also cheer whenever the bull has any kind of victory- one of the ones we saw was really smart and managed to jump over the wall of the ring and run around the outer ring separating the crowd from the bull ring for a good 30 seconds before he was caught. Later he actually knocked over one of the horses with the stabber guy on it and headbutted him several times. (You do have to feel pretty bad for the horses- they are blindfolded and heavily armored- and likely sedated- so they won't scare, but they often are attacked by the bull and of course have no idea what's going on). Anyway, ultimately I think bullfighting is not as inhumane as it seems. The bull meat is sold at a pretty high price, and if you think about it, most of the other meat we eat is not slaughtered with nearly as much reverence. Also, the sparkly costumes are pretty great.

Ramblings on bullfights aside, the weekend was a good one, despite the fact that Deirdre ditched us for Barcelona! I would give you updates on the week so far, but nothing interesting has happened. I'll let you know if it does.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Long Weekend!

Time for another update from Madrid! Although today is Monday, I am writing not after a long day of work but after a day of relaxation, shopping and chocolate con churros. That's right, today was a national holiday in Spain- it's called Puente de Pilar and is some kind of nationalist holiday that involves a huge military parade. Maureen and Deirdre learned of this when they heard low-flying planes practicing on Friday and were on the verge of fleeing to the nearest Metro station, convinced that we were being attacked. Those of us who actually have to work on Fridays were unaware of this, but I really can't complain because we just had a 3 day weekend! We got to relax, go out, and hang out with Deirdre, our roomate Emily, and our friend Caitlin, who is also an auxiliar in our program.

Emily and Maureen
Maureen and Caitlin

Yesterday, Maria Carmen, the principal of Maureen's school, took Maureen, Deirdre and me on a day trip to two little towns outside Madrid: Aranjuez, where the king and queen's summer palace is (though the current monarchs don't use it), and Chinchon (it's fun to say), which is a very cute, very old little town with lots of pretty, well-worn architecture and rustic little taverns. Check out the pics:
Aranjuez y Chinchon

Maria Carmen is really nice and generous and has sort of taken Maureen- and consequently me and Deirdre- under her wing and decided to show us lots of different places while we're here. Next weekend, she is taking us to a musical and she has also offered to take us to Salamanca and other places in the future. We're not sure why she's so nice to us but we're not complaining!
We also went to the Reina Sofia museum this weekend- home to Picasso's Guernica among other masterpieces.

Teaching continues to go well. The lesson plan I am using now involves using songs and lyrics to help with listening and teach new vocab and cultural concepts- who knew Avril Lavigne's "Sk8er Boi" could be such a useful ESL tool? The songs "Hey There Delilah" and "Viva la Vida" have also been successful, but I've definitely gotten the most mileage out of Sk8er Boi- it brings up lots of vocab and idiomatic phrases such as "punk" and "stuck up their nose," while also teaching valuable lessons about life, love and acceptance. Maureen's teaching is also going well, although she has one troublemaker named Arron, who asks her if she's ever been to the "house of the boys who play" (Playboy Mansion) and according to the other teachers is part gypsy (always a sign of trouble to Spainards).

Anyway, that's pretty much all that's new here. Unfortunately, the news from home is not as good. I am definitely grieving the Red Sox ALDS loss though I am many miles away. I was so excitd that yesterday's game was on at noon EST (6 pm our time) because that meant I might be able to watch it. By the time we got back from our trip, though, it was already the 7th inning, so I had to watch victory slipping away in the form of mlb.com updates. And on top of that the Pats lost last night! Sad times. Oh well, I guess I should start getting into Real Madrid instead.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

we have an apartment!!! (and other news from Madrid)

Hola! I am very happy to report that I am writing this post not from a tiny hostel room, struggling to hear my own thoughts over the tuneless cacophony of drunken Germans singing on the damn Gran Via, but from the quiet comfort of my own living room. That's right, we finally moved into an apartment on Thursday! And no, it is not the really awesome one I told you about before (the so-called "light at the end of the tunnel"- I think I jinxed it). That one didn't work out. And by didn't work out I mean we got totally screwed over, but whatever, we're not dwelling on it. We ended up finding a nice, big place in the same neighborhood. Mo and I are now living with Emily, another girl from our program, who is really nice, and it's going really well so far. Check out pics of the apartment in my Picasa album:

Our apartment!



On the job front, we also started teaching on Thursday (it was a big day). My job is going great so far- I really like the school, the teachers and the students. It's a Catholic school but it gets public funding (which is true of all of the schools that work with the program- it's a common thing here). It is a little weird how much Catholic stuff they have everywhere (it's kind of intense), but the school is really nice and big and has lots of resources- according to the teachers from Maureen's school, mine is the "posh" school, while theirs is kind of ghetto- aka poor and has lots of immigrants. [Side note: They really HATE immigrants here- the anti-immigrant sentiment is even stronger and definitely more unaninimous than it is in the US. When looking for apartments we were repeatedly told not to look in Lavapies- a predominantly immigrant neighborhood- and were also assured by many landlords that the neighborhood we were in "no es Lavapies"- aka there are no immigrants- well, except us I guess.] But anyway, my job: I am an "auxiliar de conversacion" for the 3rd and 4th level English classes in the secondary school (meaning 14-16 year olds). I work with 4 different classes of 30 kids but I only take 10 at a time. Since they do grammar, reading, writing, etc. in their regular English class, I get to focus just on speaking and listening, meaning I get to be the "fun teacher" who does interesting things with them. I've only worked 2 days so far so I haven't even met all my kids yet, but so far I really like them. Their English skill level varies but generally it's pretty good. They seem pretty interested in talking to an actual native English speaker from the USA. Hopefully that interest won't wane as the year goes on (though I suspect it will). I asked them about what music, movies and TV shows they like and they're all really into American stuff and think Spanish stuff sucks. For some reason Green Day, Sum 41 and Blink "one hundred and eighty two" seem to be the most popular bands. They also watch a lot of American shows dubbed in Spanish (when someone said they loved One Tree Hill I refrained from exclaiming "Oh my God, me too!" lest I sacrifice any small amount of authority and respectability I might have). At Maureen's school, the "theme of the year" is "All the people moving," which is apparently some song that is popular here that they think is popular in America. Her schools has a big banner with this slogan and pictures of people on surfboards, bikes, etc. She didn't have the heart to tell them that it doesn't really make sense in English.

Anyway, it feels really good to finally start to settle into our lives here. Before we just kind of felt like tourists on a vacation that was dragging on a little too long, but now it feels like we really live here. Though the thought of spending a whole nine months here at first seemed daunting, now I'm really looking forward to it (though I still miss everyone back home lots and lots and lots).

Unrelatedly, there has been a general air of sadness here since the announcement yesterday that Madrid didn't get the Olympics. There has been a big campaign here that features a hand with all the Olympic Rings colors on it and the slogan "Tengo una corazonada," meaning "I have a hunch." The president, the king and queen, the mayor of Madrid and the president of the Community of Madrid all went to Copenhagen to campaign. I think everyone knew it was a longshot but they were still really disappointed (though it was surprising that Madrid beat out Tokyo and Chicago in the first round). Personally, I'm glad it went to Rio since it's never been in South America, but I do feel kind of sad for the madrilenos since they wanted it so badly.

That's all for now. I'll update next week on the trials and travails of my first full week of teaching.