Showing posts sorted by relevance for query tesco. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query tesco. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, June 11, 2010

A Trip to Tesco

The trip to Tesco last night was too much fun not to share. So, come with me on a photo journey of a Thai Wal-Mart!

First off, the item that caused me to finally whip out my camera:
Hi-Cal?
A completely different set of advertising priorities at work!

Next, a trip down the snack aisle. I always enjoy seeing what different chip flavors there are in other countries...
Different Pringles

...but these sound really strange! Fruity Pringles?!
Blueberry Pringles?

Gum flavors can sound strange, too:
Gum Flavors

Now this aisle's contents might seem strange:
Monk Basket

But it's just referring to these:
Monk Buckets
which you can buy to donate to a monk in exchange for blessings.

You can also pick up some incense in bulk, since you're going to the wat anyway:
Incense

Nearby, in the beauty aisle, you'll notice that the main adjectival promise on all of the products is "Whitening"
Whitening Creams

But they do have some favorites from my childhood:
Jellies!
Jellies!


On to produce!

You've got your lychees and rambutans
Lychees and Rambutans

Whatever this fruit is...
What is this fruit?
(Rachel? Miranda? Do you know?)

And Mangosteens!
Mangosteen!

Which are also available in juice form:
Mangosteen Juice

There's some pre-packaged meals for your convenience,
Pre-Packaged Mysteries
but I'm not sure what those contents are.

More types of soy sauce than we have types of ketchup in America:
Soy Sauce!

Peanut Butter, for those with Western tastes:
Peanut Butter!

And more Pocky flavors than I've ever seen!
Wall of Pocky

Want something sweet for a treat?
Various Sweets

Or maybe something savory from this aisle:
Meat Snacks

That's where I found out what they do with the parts my parakeets didn't eat:
Cuttlefish


After seeing all of this, you may be surprised to hear that I didn't purchase any of those things. I did, however, buy one of these:
Waving Slicer
so I can try Thai cooking at home using a tool I got in Thailand.

I'll be going back to Tesco next Thursday, though, so if you want any of the things you see up above, place your orders now!

Thursday, June 10, 2010

A Better Day

I think I needed to get some of my travel woes off my chest yesterday, because today's much better!

After breakfast, we drove to one of the local "government" (i.e. public) schools in Sing Buri. J.J. showed us around, and we got to observe some of the primary classes (ages 3-6). We watched them learning their letters, playing at recess, listening to the teacher read, and I spent some quality time making animals out of clay with a couple of 4-year-old girls. I took a ton of pictures and some video, which will do a much better job of showing you what it's like. When they went to lunch, we met the principal, who was excited that we had decided to come to Thailand to visit ("Why you didn't come to Thailand before now?").

I loved seeing how similar things are to American schools, how very much the same kids are everywhere, and yet how small things are different - everyone takes off their shoes and line them up outside the door of the room, the kids and the teachers all wear uniforms (dress shirts and skirts/shorts for the kids, black pants and colored button-up shirts for the teachers. The teachers even have certain colors to wear each day - Thursday is orange, apparently!), each student has a tin cup that they use to get drinks from the water jug outside the room, and so on. At one point, some of the boys in the 4-5-year-old class were getting too rowdy and misbehaved. Things suddenly got very quiet, and I looked up from the clay dog I was making with a little girl named "Ew" to see the boys sitting with their eyes closed (well, mostly. One kept stealing furtive glances around), breathing deeply under the teacher's coaching. J.J. explained that they had been naughty so the teacher was making them meditate. Very interesting!

We bade farewell to the kids and got back on the truck to go back to the canteen for cooking lessons.

We made green papaya salad, fried noodles with Chinese broccoli, and bananas in coconut milk. I took a ton of pictures and, to the delight of all of my foodie friends, I'm sure, we also got copies of those recipes and others besides. I will be both cooking and sharing when I get back, I promise!

I asked J.J. if I could learn some other recipes while I was here. She asked the cook/housekeeper at the EcoHouse, who was hovering over our entire lesson, tasting and adjusting and making sure we put in the right ingredients at the right time. They said that I could help her make dinner anytime to learn more Thai cooking. Excellent!

After the long lunch, we continued our language lessons. I have now memorized 1-10 and a smattering of other words. Oddly, I find that Russian keeps coming back to me here - I kept wanting to ask the children "Shto eta?" since I don't know Thai for "What is this?" It's strange how my foreign language instincts manifest themselves.

Dinner should be starting soon, and then the big excitement of the evening is a free taxi ride to Tesco tonight. (Tesco's a big supermarket/Target-type place. It's British, right? That's where I've heard of it before?) Woot!

As I said, things just seemed easier today. I hope it'll stick.

I was mistaken on the schedule before - we go to Lop Buri tomorrow to visit, as J.J. called it, the monkey temple. That has the same kind of thrill as the phrase "elephant village," doesn't it? Just to add to the excitement, J.J. also mentioned that we would have a bodyguard tomorrow. I wondered if Lop Buri province was one of the dangerous ones from the uprising a few weeks ago. Turns out, it's because the monkeys are, as J.J. put it, "very naughty."

Should be interesting!

Friday, June 18, 2010

In Which I am Adored by Thai Children

Hello again, friends!

Sorry for the delay - some time Wednesday evening the internet quit working at the EcoHouse. Boo! Last night was filled with the excitement of the weekly trip to Tesco, but tonight I was able to walk down the street to the local internet cafe that is funded, I believe, exclusively through the foreign volunteers here in Sing Buri. As are many of the "taxi" drivers in town, too.

So, I am done with the orphanage! This afternoon, one of the other volunteers asked me if I was sad about leaving the kids. "Nope," I said. When she looked a little surprised at my lack of grief, I tried to explain how, after eight years of teaching, I'm used to saying good-bye to groups of kids. It's not entirely true, since I wasn't ever one to show that kind of emotion or make that kind of connection with students. Heck, it even inspired one of my pieces in "Making Waves"! Since she's one of the volunteers who have mingled tears with cigarettes at the thought of saying good-bye to the kids at the end of next week, I imagine she is as mystified by my cold-heartedness as I am by her overwhelming affection.

The kids are sweet, though. I've become popular thanks mostly to my supply of Uno cards, stickers, construction paper, and other such treats. Some of the girls gathered around me for a while today as I showed them photos on my iPhone - my cat, my parents in Egypt, Jason in Turkey, my speech kids, Rachel and Jack, and so on. They squealed over the picture of Jason and while I said firmly, "Friend. Friend," they looked at each other and said with that sliding, knowing, intonation, "Oooh, frrrriend...." That converation's exactly the same everywhere I go, apparently.

They were very excited by the colored construction paper packet - I had a mob of students around me asking for a page; I made them tell me the color of it in English before giving it to them. One girl drew a picture of a princess on her paper, then wrote "I love you," and presented it to me. I asked her to write her name on it, and she wrote "Atoo," followed her name in Thai. Another girl grabbed my left hand while I was teaching a group how to play jacks and tied a friendship bracelet onto my wrist. As we were pulling out of the school area, the kids mobbed the truck, grabbing our hands, calling good-byes, and making hearts with their hands. One little one pressed a stick of gum into my hand, then pressed up against the side of the truck, tilting her face as high as she could to whisper in my ear, "I love you."

Monday, June 14, 2010

In Which I Bond with the People I Know Best

I'll have to be quick with today's entry, since the internet has been flaky today, and I'm not sure it'll last much longer.

I began my week at the orphanage this morning. I headed out to breakfast (french toast with chocolate syrup and fruit) at the canteen at 8:00. Shortly after that, 7 other volunteers and I boarded one of the Greenway trucks and headed off.

The orphanage was about a 20 minute drive away, not counting the stop we made for paint supplies. As we pulled through the white cement walls, kids came to the doors of the three-story open-walled school building and waved madly at us. Once we parked, the four volunteers who have been working at the orphanage for a while scattered to their favorite classrooms. Paiwan, the driver, took the rest of us on a quick tour of the school.

There's about 230 kids there, from age 4-17. They sleep on the floors of a big, open two-room building behind the school building. Jasmine, Lola, and Katy (the veterans of the group) spent the night with the kids last week and told us their week-day schedule. The kids get up at 5:00 to clean the dormitory and school rooms, then shower and have breakfast before starting classes at 8:00. They finish their school day at 4:00, play for an hour, have dinner, and then go to bed at 6:00.

Paiwan explained that there are three projects right now: painting one of the classrooms, laying down tile in one of the bathrooms, or "teaching". Two of the new girls wanted to paint; Declan, to token male of the group, volunteered to tile; and I, of course, took on teaching.

Paiwan pointed out the primary school classes (grades 1-4 on the first level of the building), told me "go see, go teach!" and then disappeared.

I found Katy in one of the rooms, grade 4 I believe, and she offered to let me help her. The 8 kids in the class were all coloring in the coloring books she had bought for them at Tesco. I pulled up a chair next to one set of 4 desks and... watched the kids color. I had no idea what else to do to be useful.

After a while, Katy went over the days of the week with the kids in English. She had them all write them down in their well-worn lecture books, and I sprang into action at that point, seeing something I could do. I helped a few of them with the spelling of the tricky words like "Wednesday" and went over the pronunciation of them a few times with independent kids. As they finished that, though, my helpfulness faded again.

So, I went looking for another classroom. I found one next door with some kids in it, but no teacher and no volunteers. The kids didn't seem to mind my pulling a chair up next to them, so I did that again and watched them work. They were doing some kind of writing in workbooks, spelling or science or something like that. One of the boys next to me was rather distracted - he wasn't doing much writing. So, I pulled out my notebook and a pen and started to copy the words he was writing. Since it was it Thai, I had no idea what I was writing down, but once he saw what I was doing, he was glued to my paper. When I reached the end of where he had gotten no, I pointed to the blank spot on his paper and said, "Next?" He got the hint, and, watching my hand carefully, he started to work again. He beamed when he saw me continue to copy whatever it was he was writing. Soon, I had a crowd of the kids around me, pointing at my writing and jabbering to each other.

That quickly turned into an English-Thai lesson as we took turns pointing to the pictures in their workbooks. I would say the word in English, they would all repeat it, then they'd say it in Thai, and I would repeat that. When we ran out of words on the page, I started drawing pictures in my notebook of various animals for them to identify.

They started to get a little bored, and one of the boys next to me tore off a corner of paper and wadded it up. He grabbed my hands and pulled my arms straight, palms up. He then walked me through a little magic trick - putting the paper in my palm, then in the crook of my elbow, then in my left palm, then in my other elbow crook, and then "Magic!" it's disappeared!

I, of course, had to respond with my dad's good ol' rubbing a coin into your elbow trick, except with a piece of paper instead. They loved the trick and begged me to repeat it over and over "One more! One more!" Fortunately, it was lunch time by then, and I had to leave.

We left the school grounds for lunch at a restaurant down the road ("restaurant" meaning a roof over some stone tables ... kind of like an outdoor truck stop).

When we returned, Paiwan pointed me in the direction of the upper grades. I went up the stairs to find that the students were all still on break. I sat on the benches along the wall and watched them. I loved it, these middle-school-aged kids. They're the same everywhere. The boys roughhousing and teasing each other, some walking with very low status, some with a swagger you can tell they're imitating from someone older. The girls were teasing the boys right back. Some of the bolder ones came right up to me and asked, "What your name?" I'd tell them, and they'd run giggling back to their groups to chatter about... me, I'd guess.

A bell rang, the students drifted off to the different rooms, and I walked down the hall under I found what had to be the library - a sad collection of books. I thought of the boxes and boxes of young adult books I have in my garage at home and wished I had a way to get them there for those kids.

One of the teachers poked her head in when she saw me there and invited me to go to her room. I did, and a girl grabbed my hand and pulled me to a desk next to hers at the front while all of the other kids stared. From what I could tell, they were writing essays about computers. The girl quickly stopped working, though, to get down to the important questions:
"What is your name?"
"Amanda." (Much repeating of this one - it must be strange-sounding to them!)
"Where are you from?"
"America."
"Do you have baby (she pantomimes being pregnant, drawing an invisible bulge on her belly)?"
(Laughing) "No."
"Do you have boyfriend in America?"
(Still laughing) "No."
"Do you have boyfriend in Thailand?"
"No, no boyfriend."
"You can have boyfriend here!" she said, waving her hand around, indicating the boys who were sitting at the back of the room, watching this interchange.

After declining her generous offer, I asked her if she had a boyfriend. "No!" she said, while her friend behind us started giggling. "I am only 13. At 13, only study. At 14, study. 15, 16, 17 you have boyfriends."

Kitty (her nickname, she explained. She called her friends Sati, Liti, Fiti. Man, I love 13-year-olds!) went on to teach me all kinds of interesting things. With the help of an "English for Kids" dictionary, she taught me how to say "I love you," "I am beautiful," and the days of the week in Thai. She repeatedly told me I was beautiful ("You don't look 40! You very beautiful!") and put her arm next to mine for comparison. "White skin, you are beautiful! I am Africa!" and she'd wrinkle her nose in disgust. I tried to tell her the opposite, but she was having none of that.

Kitty also asked me about computers (since that was the essay topic and all). She asked if I had one at home. When I said I had two, she was shocked. She also asked if I had a piano (keyboards in common, perhaps?) and if I played the violin. When I asked her if she plays, she said she dances instead. Which led us to another very important topic of conversation - Lady Gaga. Luckily, I had a couple of her songs on my iPhone so we could sing along a little.

When that class got out, I observed a science class and helped the teacher for a little bit with an English class by listening to the kids read sentences to me "What is this? They are jump ropes. What is this? They are kites."

We left the orphanage at 3:00, stopping by downtown Singburi for snacks from the 7-11 (cold water and a strawberry popsicle! Yum!) (They have Magnums here, Em, but it's been way too hot to eat something that rich. Still, I think of you every time I see one!).

What I think about today:
1. I don't think I made a lick of real difference to the kids.
2. I'm going to wear rattier clothes tomorrow and see if I can spend part of the day painting or laying tile so I have more sense of accomplishment.
3. I think if I were here longer, I might bond with them better. As it is, I'm a passing character.
4. The other volunteers said they like the little kids better than the older ones. "At least with the little ones you can, you know, tickle them until they laugh. What do you do with older kids?"
5. What do you do? You talk about boys and music, of course!
6. I really miss hanging out with middle school kids.
7. How weird does that make me?
8. Monday = purple for the teacher's uniforms.
9. Everyone takes off their shoes before going into the room.
10. Despite distractions (like, say, me), I saw absolutely no behavior issues today. None. The teachers told the kids what to do and they did it. No interventions needed. And these kids are all way below the poverty levels of urban US kids, so take THAT STMS philosophy!

This week will be educational for me, I'm certain. It might also be slow and boring and kind of purpose-lacking. I'll do what I can, but without more structure, I'm not sure I can do all that much.

(So much for this being a brief entry, ay? Here's hoping the connections still around long enough for me to publish!)

Friday, June 18, 2010

In Which I Notice Things

Tonight marks the two-week anniversary of my arrival in Thailand. The heat and humidity are still awful, but a little more bearable. I have learned some basic phrases and how to count to ten. I have also made a number of observances about things that are just... different that I will now recount for you here:

1. There are pictures of the king everywhere - on banners outside of buildings, on the signs over the road to each province and town, on all of the calendars I've seen - everywhere.
2. They're never the same picture of him. In fact, some seem to be completely candid and not all are flattering.
3. The major intersections have lights that count down the times - red numbers count the seconds from 60 or 90 or 125 or whatever, then they go green and count down, then yellow to count down. I kind of like this idea.
4. Not having a roommate means I can sleep with less modesty. This has helped my heat rash.
5. So has the "cooling powder" I bought at Tesco. They have an entire wall dedicated to the different brands. I got curious and bought three kinds.
6. I also bought a bucket to make doing sink laundry easier.
7. I am ridiculously excited about my laundry bucket.
8. The bug bites appear in a variety of sizes, from smaller than an Altoid to bigger than a quarter. They can also be red or white with red surrounding it. If I get a blue one, I'll assume it's out of patriotism.
9. The bugts like my calves and ankles best.
10. All of the volunteers are identifiable by the numerous red welts on the backs of our legs.
11. The natives don't seem to have nearly as many bites, if any at all.
12. They are, however, just as bugged by the heat and complain about it, too.
13. Which surprises me, since they've never known any other type of weather. Is the human body innately tuned to 75-degrees?
14. The women carry around washcloths and rags in their purses to mop off the sweat.
15. Many of them also have long sleeves they pull on over their arms when they're in the sun to keep from getting darker.
16. There is a definite perception that white skin is beautiful here.
17. I've never been told so many times "You beautiful!" as this week. I have also never felt more awkward about it.
18. I kind of like the idea of teacher uniforms - it's nice sometimes to have at least one decision made for you.
19. Boys don't seem at all resistant to the color pink here.
20. The buses here are totally decked out in bright colors. Like, crazy professional-graffiti murals all over them with LED lights on the grills.
21. A lot of the trucks have lights on the front, too, purely for decoration.
22. Almost everyone gets around on motorcycles.
23. Sometimes the entire family is posed on the motorcycles, and it looks like the kid's driving, since she/he stands in front of the seat and holds the handbars, too.
24. You take your shoes off before entering any home, museum, wat, or classroom.
25. There are dogs everywhere. Not quite strays, not quite pets.
26. I feel safer at night because of the two dogs that sleep at the gate of the EcoHouse.
27. I have grown quite fond of the geckos in my room.
28. They are still absolutely terrified of me.