Saturday, December 27, 2008
Two quick observations
1. Everything dies here. My plants, even though they should have lived since they do not need a lot of water, have died. And there are more dead cockroaches. This place sucks the life out of everything.
2. The baggage claim is the great equalizer. Some of you might not agree (or even realize it), but the 'isms' (racism, classism, sexism...) are alive and well at airports around the world. It is quite staggering. However, there is no getting around the baggage claim. God bless the baggage claim. :)
Saturday, December 13, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
One of the Most Boring Weeks Eva!
So I am bored out of my mind. I sleep a lot (I am gaining a better understanding concerning why people sleep until 12 or 1 - they are bored, not lazy). Go for runs around Education City. Pack for my trip to Mexico (but I might be the world's most efficient packer and as a result it takes me basically no time to get my crap together). Read (but I am afraid to read too much because the books I have are supposed to be for my trip). Simplify my stuff (I am always on a quest to organize what I have...it is slightly OCD). Take baths. Kill cockroaches. Paint my nails. Research on the internet (when it is working): Kerala (I am going there for a week in January with my boss to attend a wedding (perhaps I get to wear a sari) and then check out the famous backwaters and hill stations), Lasik (I am so over wearing glasses and thus I want to get my eyeballs fixed this spring), and real estate (I am leaning towards only doing a year here and hence I want to buy my own little abode if I move back to the States this summer).
So there you go.
This might be the last post until I return from Mexico. So happy holidays! And viva Mexico!
Sunday, December 7, 2008
A week of freedom!
Friday, November 28, 2008
What I Am Thankful For
1. Vacation. I leave tonight for the U.K. for a week! I am so looking forward to this break! Thank goodness for good friends who I will be visiting, cold weather (I miss seasons!), and good alcohol. And a stronger dollar. And then in a couple weeks I am going to Mexico with my family! And thank goodness for frequent flyer programs. I am accumulating lots of miles for future travels!
2. Amazing family and friends. This is rather self explanatory, but frankly my relationships sustain me. They really do. The bonds I have with people are the most important things in the world to me. They rule my life - they give me so much joy, but also grief at times. In the end, I would be nothing without the people in my life who I care so much about and vice versa.
3. The cleaners. I have two of the most amazing cleaners working in the buildings that I supervise. These two ladies are pure balls of sunshine even though they work shitty jobs. I love them! They have this amazing aura of goodness. Anyway, I am thankful for them being in my life because they do brighten my day (and I frequently need that) when they stop by to say hello (they rarely clean because I do not make a mess). However, a couple days ago I found this on my desk from them (they have so little, but give so much):
4. My health. Also, rather self explanatory. I feel very blessed to be in the condition I am in. And I am also thankful for having health insurance. Health care is surprisingly decent here, but certain services are not readily available to me because I am a single female. It sort of feels like my rights have been taken away from me. AND THAT PISSES ME OFF. So not only am I thankful for my health, but I am also thankful for the freedoms I have in the United States.
5. Thrift stores. I have quite the extensive wardrobe as well as some great furnishings and such thanks to all the good crap I have bought at thrift stores. Just gotta clean them up and they are good to go! Good for the wallet (no matter how much money I make, I will always be thrifty) and good for the planet (recycling).
6. M.I.A. An amazing. When I need to be fierce, I channel my inner M.I.A. I want to be M.I.A. when I grow up.7. Sunrises and sunsets. I totally love them. They are always unique and new and signify to me an opportunity to reflect and renew. I think this little quote by an unknown author says a lot...or at least it does to me: When the sun rises, it rises for everyone. Take care of our planet! We only got one!
8. Working in student affairs. I love working with students! It is such gratifying work to know that the role I play, a rather small one at that, does have an impact in their journey or story. It is the best feeling in the world to see students hold their heads a little higher (in other words, genuinely believe in themselves more) from the work you do with them and watch them develop into amazing people. Of course, there are difficult students who I want to shake, but I usually find a way to get through to them. Furthermore, I am especially thankful for the girls here who I have become very close with. Words cannot describe how remarkable they are. I feel so lucky to have them in my life. They are the only reason why I am still here.
9. S'mores. I heart s'mores. Especially ones made while camping. A great little treasure of happiness. Other foods I am thankful for: chicken strips, PB (creamy) and J (raspberry) sandwiches, fajitas (no mushrooms), grape soda, pad see ew, pierogies, riesling wine, beer (preferably NOT cheap shit...except Hi Life), cheeseburgers and strawberry milkshakes from Dick's Drive In, sangria, and basically anything made by my momma.
10. The internet. I have no idea how I would do just about anything without the internet. It is so intertwined in my life.
Honorable mention: binder clips because they are useful for so many things!
This was kind of fun!
Sunday, November 23, 2008
My trip to Sealine
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Watch The Doha Debates on BBC World this weekend! I am in the audience!
I have been meaning to write about workers here for a long time. I get so frustrated concerning the treatment of the workers here. They are treated often like they are not even human beings. My dad worries I might get in trouble for talking about the rights of workers (or really, the lack of) here, but I do not care anymore. If I get in trouble for talking about the workers, fine. I would rather do what I believe is morally right then keep my mouth shut concerning something that is so morally wrong, especially considering I work in education. I believe I would be doing the students I work with a massive disservice if I did not challenge them regarding such issues. Anyway, I go running almost nightly around 9:00 p.m. Education City is an extremely safe place, thanks to loads of security, and thus running in the dark here is safer than running in the day almost anywhere in the United States. But around 9:30 p.m. or so you see large groups of workers segregated by gender all in their matching navy and sea blue uniforms waiting for their buses back to their camps. It is a real powerful sight that I cannot get used to. These people, such beautiful people who avoid making eye contact out of fear of getting in trouble, from mostly Asian countries are building this country. They, at least the EC workers, work on average 16 hours of grueling labor a day six days a week (and on the one day they get off, Friday, they are often banned from many stores around the area). Without them, everything would stop. Yet they are invisible. I try every now and then to bring up the workers with my colleagues, but they always want to give Qatar a pass since they say the United States was built on the backs of people of color. True, but that does not make it right. There is a better way! I cannot really change policy on my own, but I can at least treat the workers with respect and dignity and do what I can to lessen their huge load (but a colleague told me once I was taking work away from the workers when I dumped my own damn trash and got my own water...WTF?!), especially the amazing women who work in the buildings I am responsible for. But more than being simply nice to them, I want to know about them - I wonder what their lives are really like? Where are they from? Do they have families? What are their dreams? Do they have joy in their daily lives? I hope so! I really hope they find joy amongest each other since they spend day in and day out together. Ugh. I am now drained. Keep loving, keep fighting!
I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented. - Elie Wiesel
Saturday, November 15, 2008
My s**t
I have my own washer and dryer! It is a beautiful, beautiful thing to have such a luxury! And Gogl is a pretty decent laundry detergent (took me 20 minutes to pick it out a couple months ago because all the detergents were in Arabic or French). And the fabric softener was purchased on my trip to San Diego. There is only one place that sells it here and they charge $10 for a pack of 40!
My bathroom. Again, nothing special except for my beloved tropics shower curtain. It was the lone thing I ever bought for myself (I did buy my mom some silverware from Williams-Sonoma) working at Pottery Barn Kids in college (it was the only job I flat out quit...I only lasted about two months). The bathroom also has a bidet (on the other side of the toilet), but it just collects dust.
My wheels. Probably one of the poopiest rides in Doha (most folks drive new rides (see Lambo post) around here), but it is safe and reliable and barely cost me anything! It even has a tape player!
I figured I would throw in a picture of my office while I was at it. You cannot see it, but there is also a cabinet in this space for books and such, a whiteboard that I write down lots of random things, two chairs, and some plants. Students particularly like my little airplane collection in front of my computer (you cannot see them, but they are there).
So that is my shit. The end.