Monday 22 December 2014

Christmas Time!

Hello everyone!

So Christmas is finally upon us! Although I'll be spending it in the UK, here's a video of what you can do if you found yourself in Madrid!



In other news:

The school year has now finished. It's been such a good one! I absolutely adore my kids and my colleagues, however I think it is good to have a bit of a rest now... It's so tiring being a teacher!

I'm earning money, but I'm spending money. I am now Ticketmaster's most valued customer. However 2015 will be amazing, because I'll see:

  • Robbie Williams. He's hanging out in Madrid in March...
  • Pentatonix. My latest obsession. They decided to come back to Europe, and for the 1st time in Madrid, during my Year Abroad! They'll be here in April
  • Madrid Open Masters. I've got tickets for all the quarterfinals in May. I can't wait!
  • One Direction. They are NOT coming to Madrid, however I'll be joining them in Newcastle (with the bestie Katy) in October. Finally!!!

I can't wait to go back to England (tomorrow!). I love Spain, I really do, but it'll be the chance of hearing people speak at a normal volume level and stuff myself with mince pies!


I don't know if I have anything else to say now. I hope, wherever you are, that you have a great Christmas and a fantastic 2015!

See ya later!!!
xx

Monday 8 December 2014

A Tour of Segovia

Hello everyone!!!

Today I've been to Segovia, but instead of boring with a lot of words, today you can relax and enjoy the video.

Happy viewing!!!

xx


Sunday 7 December 2014

Christmas Madness (with some extras)

Helloooooooooo everyone!!!

Oh my God I am being soooo bad at this! I realised that I haven’t written anything about my Year Abroad since the post talking about moving here, and that’s almost two months ago!! However, I’m not too sure what I’ll be writing about, so let’s see how it goes…

Life in the madhouse (also known as Spain) continues as per usual. Work is absolutely brilliant! I love being a Language Assistant… there is something about connecting with young students (who are not that distant from me age-wise!) that creates some kind of complicity and makes lessons ever so fun! I love the fact that, as soon as I walk into the school, students start shouting my name and asking general things about life, I’ve never been so popular before! It’s good to see that I’m doing something right.

Life in the school is so chilled out: the teachers are amazing, so helpful and so kind! We always speak in Spanish (hard at the beginning, but I’m getting there!) and it’s good to have those small social moments in the staff room just talking about everything and anything. It makes me feel appreciated and part of the team! While normally they already have something in mind for me to do with the kids, lately the situation has changed. Using Christmas as an excuse, they asked me if I could prepare something myself for the lessons. Nervous is an understatement! Being the first time I had to do something like this, I wanted it to be perfect and so spent HOURS looking up material online and also trying to create my own resources. Having done this for a week now, I can say it has been a SUCCESS and the kids are loving it! So I’ll be repeating it for another two weeks now… ;)

I’ve also joined a music group, formed by a fellow teacher and three students. It is based on “directed improvisation”, where each instrument improvises within a frame of already given instructions. It’s so fun I can’t even describe it to you! I’m so glad I got to play the piano again, I was seriously missing it…

Outside of school, a few things have happened. On the tourism side, I’ve seen quite a lot of Madrid! People who know me know that my dream place to live is a cottage in a countryside village with the local church, pub, shop, etc. in walking distance, and also a lot of green, so cities aren’t really my thing. However, I could definitely live in Madrid! It’s absolutely beautiful: it’s got everything a capital city should have (so social life, monuments, transport, and whatever you can think of) however it is blended with the Spanish chilled out way of life. The result is an incredibly lively city, but which leaves you alone if you want some peace and quiet! Also, it’s SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO cheap! And, as a student, that’s very nice…

Other than Madrid, I’ve also been down to Alicante so see my besties Katy and Francesca, accompanied by Georgia (she’s in Santander) and Gemma (who’s in Madrid). It was so good to have this reunion! We visited the city, we went to the beach, we ate (a lot!), and just behaved like absolute idiots for the entire weekend! I miss these people so much it was amazing to see them! A couple of weeks later, another good LCS pal (Louise) came to visit all the way up from Albacete, and so we managed to do a lot of tourism (and, again, eating) in the capital together! And then, the following week, Francesca came up and Georgia came down, and part of the Alicante quintet was formed once again in Madrid! I had so much fun during those two weeks…
The best people in the world!

In other news, Christmas has now started in Spain too. However forget those over-the-top Blackpool-lights-on-your-roof kind of situations you see in the UK: here everything is low-key, not over the top at all, some things nice and some not that much. Here are some examples of what I’m talking about…








However, I was wrong. The other day I turned a corner in the city centre and this is what I saw:







Ladies and gentlemen, this is mental! (Also, what is it with Christmas and penguins this year?!?)



Also, being December, temperatures are slowly but steadily falling. Don’t get me wrong, it’s still warm: while everyone in the metro has got a duvet wrapped around their necks, I still go round with a light jacket, not buttoned up. Today was the first day I was a bit chilly, and thought about doing up some of those buttons…

Anyway, I’m not too sure what else to say. I’ve started decorating my room for Christmas (a huge thank you to Poundland for opening a branch just down my street right on my year abroad!), however it is not finished. I’m still deciding what to add next… any ideas?


I’ve also enjoyed writing Christmas cards while listening to Carols and sipping a boiling hot tea. Oh how I love this time of the year! Also a big shout out to Pentatonix, who became my new obsession. They’re this a cappella group from the States, and they’re so good I want to cry and laugh at the same time! They’re currently on repeat on my Spotify… Everyone please buy their album, you'd enjoy it!

I think that’s it for now! I’ll add some photos which might describe what I didn’t say in the text above. See you soon lovelies!!!


xx

Alicante

Alicante


Palacio Real de Aranjuez

Tuesday 4 November 2014

A different theme...

Small pause from the Year Abroad posts. I found an article which I thought very interesting (I love politics), so I thought I would translate it and share it. Let me know your thoughts!

Socialists in No-Man's-Land

The economic turmoil wounded a movement which is losing power

Cecilia Ballesteros, in EL PAIS, 31st October 2014. Translated by Stefano Pollard.
Original article: http://internacional.elpais.com/internacional/2014/10/31/actualidad/1414790129_459349.html

In his social-democratic elegy titled Something's Going Wrong, Tony Judt wrote: "Social-democracy does not represent an ideal future, nor does it represent the ideal past. However among the options available nowadays, it is better than anything else we have at hand". Only 15 years ago, 13 out of the 15 countries which formed the European Union were governed by socialist parties. Now, in a 28-member Europe, only a dozen are left (some in a coalition), and some are getting closer to an electoral catastrophe never seen in their history. The French socialist Prime Minister, Manuel Valls, rang the alarm bells pointing at a very serious matter: "We need to end the "old-fashioned left-wing". Furthermore, isn't it time to stop calling ourselves socialists?" What went wrong? How could the Welfare-State model created after WWII, the basis of the 30 glorious years which made of the old continent a just society, go to pieces?

Globalisation, with its unstoppable process of finance deregulation, job outsourcing, European integration, technological change, including an ageing population and a change in the nature of power, are elements which appear to have conspired against the social-democratic vision. "In the 80s they almost died of success", said Ignacio Urquizu, sociologist, member of Fundación Alternativas and of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies. "It lasted while the good times lasted. But when in the 90s welfare policies were reduces, the Anglo-Saxon branch (Bill Clinton and Tony Blair with their Third Way) decided to deregulate the system and the consumption. It was the beginning of the end, of which the "left" is jointly responsible".

In the age of its maximum glory, in 1981, the French PS with François Mitterrand won 34% of the vote, a similar share of that obtained in 2012. However, very soon, in 2013, it could become the third party, because of the work of François Hollande, the most unpopular president of the 5th Republic (according to opinion polls). In Germany, far away are the times of Willy Brandt, and the SPD has spent a long time not overcoming the 25% mark and two parliaments as a coalition partner with Angela Merkel’s conservatives. In the United Kingdom, a country which in the 70s Harold Wilson hailed as the natural habitat of the Labour Movement, the party obtained in 2010 the worst result since 1918: only 29% of the vote. “We haven’t got any excuse. While the economy was growing, we were asking ourselves: how? Is it sustainable? The wages of the working and middle classes were being held back, but this shortfall was overcome with easy and cheap credit. Home debt reached two billion euros (1.6 billion pounds), or 100% of GDP”, says David Mathieson, analyst and former adviser to the Labour Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook. In Sweden, only now do the social-democrats manage to take back power after eight years of wandering in the wilderness, and in Italy, where the centre-left baptized itself as the Democratic Party following the American example, its leader and Prime Minister, Matteo Renzi, struggles to make his reforms work their way through Parliament.

Consensus is among the analysts that the 2008 global crisis and the harsh policies implemented by left-wing government such as in Greece and Spain made them pay at the ballot box. “The challenges are very big. An ageing population and the universalization of benefits require higher taxes. But if you raise them, then the rich and the businesses will flee. You then decided to go into debt, which leaves you at the mercy of the markets. And if you have a straitjacket, such as a common currency and a strict fiscal policy, you find yourself in no-man’s-land. In other words, the blanket is short: if you cover your feet, you leave your chest uncovered since the rich and the markets will abandon you, and if you leave your feet uncovered, you lose left-wing votes or they move to populist movements”, assures José Ignacio Torreblanca, political scientist and columnist for EL PAIS.

The European Left seems paralysed and the Right carries on dismantling the State, while populist parties, riding the wave of xenophobia gone out of control because of immigration, make themselves at ease, attracting votes from the social sectors which normally backed the social-democratic project. But not only this: part of the young (and not so young) generations don’t feel represented by the conventional left-wing and look for alternative movements. “People want more involvement. In this sense, the social-democratic parties, and all the others, belong to the 20th century. Furthermore, they did not propose an economic alternative to austerity. It seems you can change politicians, but not politics”, affirms analyst Andrés Ortega.

What to do then? To reform or to transform oneself? Would a name change be enough? The crisis, seen at its dawn by some as an opportunity for socialist parties, obtained the opposite effect, by placing them at the edge of an electoral bankruptcy. Inequality, the concept which the Left stopped fighting against and which paradoxically a socialist, the French economist Thomas Piketty, brought into fashion this year, could be its grave. “We need to take a step back and build a type of society which is in line with a left-wing vision”, says Urquizu.

Wednesday 15 October 2014

Adapting (well, kind of) to a New Life

Oh my God I haven’t written anything in over a month!! Sorry sorry sorry I’ve been so bad! Let’s try and make up for it now… you’re warned, it might be long!!

So what happened since the last post? Well, I HAVE MOVED TO SPAIN!!! It finally happened, bags packed (46kg, I travel light…), and off with a plane I go! Then again, it was an awful flight. The ticket was uber-expensive (Iberia, who would have known), and then they charge you €7 on-board for a sandwich. Obviously I just settled with a poor man’s version of a tea (served with cream, they don’t know what milk is), before being shaken 4 times, yes 4, by a turbulence. Now let me rephrase this. I’ve been taking planes for the best part of the last 20 years on a regular basis and I encountered many different situations, however this was genuinely the first time I was scared for my life!!! I never had it so bad ever before, and the fact the flight was 2h40 long didn’t help either (it just wouldn’t stop!).

However I managed to finally land in Madrid (after a final sudden drop that made my stomach have a friendly conversation with my ears) and I could finally touch stable ground. For the first time in my life, I was in Spain! Getting from the airport (huge, but weird) to the city was easy, and I went straight to the holiday flat I had booked for a week, where the nice landlady welcomed me and said I reminded her of her grandson (oh darling!!) and then proceeded to compliment me on my Spanish (as did the taxi driver before her, I already like this country!).

However the term holiday flat shouldn’t fool you, this was not meant to be a holiday at all! Straight away, the search for a permanent flat started! Day after day I took names of the list, not because I liked the places, but because they were dumps. Day after day, I was getting more and more worried. I arrived on Monday 22nd, by the 25th I was crying thinking I would have to live under a bridge and missing the UK so much because there everything is easy! That’s when the internet through at me something unexpected which totally saved my life. If you are reading this and next year you are moving to Madrid (or Barcelona), then listen: there is a website called spotahome.com, where online you already find photos, description and a professional video. The site’s team have already checked the flat out for you and written down what is good and what is bad about it. What you have to do is check their list, find what you like, and then simply book the room online. Within 48 hours (in my case it was 12) the landlord accepts your request and you’re ready to move in! So by Saturday 27th I moved into my new very nice home! Huge flat, 7 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, kitchen and dining area, currently being fitted with a sofa and a TV, bills included, and almost in the centre of Madrid! So finally I could relax and deal with everything else Spain would throw at me…

Hang on, not so fast! What happened next wasn’t AT ALL relaxing! If you want to live and work here for more than 3 months, you have to get the NIE number, a unique number which identifies you as a foreigner (in case your Spanglish didn’t give it away already…). Before going, I checked everything online on the government’s website to make sure I was ready for it. As if!! I went to the office (somewhere in deep suburbia), queued once for 20 minutes, met a man who sent me to another man, who then sent me to a third man, where I queued a further 30 minutes, who after carefully considering my case (for 30 seconds) sent me to another man, who made me wait 10 minutes (he wasn’t doing anything by the way), who then carefully considered my case (for an extra 30 seconds) before telling me I was in the completely wrong place, that I had to book an appointment online to another place 2 metro stations down the line and that I had to pay a tax before going there. Result? After 2 hours, I achieved absolutely nothing except sore feet… by the way there’s a catch, in order to book online you need a Spanish phone number (of course you have one being a foreigner, right?). So I went back home and cried again (I would have got drunk but I didn’t have any alcohol on me to help me through that AWFUL moment…).

Since that wasn’t going to happen, I decided to go and open a bank account. Some require your NIE, they just wanted my passport (thank you I love you!). However, it wouldn’t work. After 2 hours trying the nice lady sent me home and kept on trying on her own: she managed it though at the end, so thank you!

The following day (Tuesday 30th), the first Language Assistant meeting occurred. 4 fun-packed hours with representatives of the Comunidad de Madrid and the Spanish Ministry of Education, where they spoke about (guess what?) how to obtain a NIE. I ALREADY WENT THROUGH THE WHOLE PROCESS THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!! But never mind, I stayed there those few hours, then went home again.

On the 1st, after going to the school to meet the teachers I’ll be working with plus other staff members, I went to a second meeting, just with the Ministry this time, at a hotel just outside Madrid. I thought it was going to be some small dump somewhere on the outskirts of the city (they were paying for all the assistants in Spain to be there), but it wasn’t: officially the biggest hotel in Europe, it was a HUGE 4 star hotel with MASSIVE double bedrooms and THE BIGGEST buffet dinners you could possibly have! I’ve slept like never before and eaten like never before!! The meetings themselves were quite boring, but I had the chance to meet other assistants from Madrid, share stories with them, and then share drinks! This lasted 3 days, so good…

Back in Madrid, I had the weekend to get ready before my first week teaching at the school. Nervous doesn’t even come close to describe my feelings!!! Monday comes and I appear… main comments from students and staff? “Who is this?” “What is he doing in the staff room?” “He looks fifteen!” and so on… I had to introduce myself to all my colleagues before they thought I was stealing some exam papers or changing some marks for fellow students… From then, 16 hours (that’s my week) started in which, hour after hour, I said the same things about myself to all my 16 classes, and replied to the same old questions (what music do you like? Are you a Real or Atletico guy? And the ever present So have you got a girlfriend?). It would have been rude to reply with a “mind your own effing business”, so I just had to answer all of them, 16 times, in a row…

However they kids are mainly nice, the school is a good one, and I love my colleagues! I am now at the end of my second week of teaching, and it’s great being greeted with massive smiles by the kids when you enter school, who start screaming your name and ask you how life is going! It’s a good feeling…

This is getting long, so I’ll now quickly say what else happened/I’ve learned in these first 3 weeks in Spain:

  1. My friend Veronica from Italy was here too, so we managed to do quite a bit of tourism;
  2. It can be really hot, but then it goes down to really cold, and because of this I am now ill;
  3. Fresh milk does not exist. You can find it in selected supermarkets, in a small remote corner covered in cobwebs;
  4. Eating vegetarian isn’t as hard as I thought, most supermarket have a rather good selection of vegetarian food;
  5. Nothing is easy, not even getting a bus pass: I had to book an appointment a week in advance and complete extortionate amounts of paperwork;
  6. I am still waiting for my NIE, and my appointment isn’t until the 30th of this month. The tax form I paid with is now fading of old age;
  7. I have been out every weekend since I’ve arrived, and it’s good;
  8. In 10 days I’m visiting my best pal Katy in Alicante, along with great pal Francesca, and other amazing pals Georgia and Gemma (it wasn’t planned by the way), so we’ll have a massive UEA LCS reunion!!!


This is all I remember at the moment. I need to go to bed because I’m working in the morning (still not used to adult life…) More stories will follow soon I hope.

Until then, HASTA LUEGOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

Saturday 13 September 2014

Languages student: a bigger world (food for thought)


Being a Languages student has some amazing advantages: you can travel and speak to people in their own language, and they’ll let you into a culture “normal” tourists don’t usually get to see. However, all this comes at a price: when the time comes to go back to your “origins” you realise that, while your world got bigger, the previous one hasn’t changed a bit, and you suddenly feel there is simply not enough space for you there.

Every time I go back to Italy I find something new to complain about, and this is just making me sad. This time round it seems to be one of the worst ones. I spent all summer traveling, and the anticipation to move to Spain is killing me, and spending three weeks in a place where there is absolutely nothing to do is not helping my moodiness. And of course the weather isn’t helping: it hasn’t stopped raining a single moment, and it’s got the same temperatures as England in November!!! (Food for thought: I just had to put a throw on my bed in order to keep me warm tonight).

Then of course there’s my friends, whom I’ve only seen once in the past two weeks. And be careful, I’m not at all blaming them: they are simply the victims of the same system I wanted to avoid when I moved to Britain, a system which punishes you just for the fact you are young and a student. That simply isn’t right, and after a series of domino effects I’m the one who finds himself angry for them!

However I do not mind doing things alone: small problem though, around here there is absolutely nothing I can do!! Three weeks is just turning out to be too long to stay here, and I feel the need to leave. Straight away. And of course I still miss my coursemates, everyday a little bit more, and I can’t wait to see them again. I just want something to do to get my mind off things. People who know me know I like to keep busy, and I always am: having nothing to do is turning out to be the most tiring thing ever!

Minus 8. It’s getting here. And I can’t wait. A year of new experiences, some good, some bad, but all to cherish. And I need this moment to arrive, possibly quickly.

In the meantime, STOP BLOODY RAINING!!!

Sorry for the depressed post. The next one will be written from Madrid though, so it should be good!!!

Until then, ¡Hasta luegoooooooooooo!

Tuesday 2 September 2014

Traveling on a different scale


Luggage packed. It currently stands at 44 kg, and that excludes hand luggage. Some people may ask: “are you traveling with a house?” Well technically, yes. Considering I am moving to a different country, that’s not bad going I think! However there is a downside to all of this: they started their journey in Norwich, they followed me to France for the summer, came back up to Leicester, and now they’re following me to Italy before actually going to Spain, where they’ll stay for a fair while. My arms can’t take it anymore!!!

However, other than complaining about weight, I wanted to use this post to reflect a bit on what happened and what’s to come. Starting from this summer, it must have been one of the best I’ve ever had! People close to me know that I don’t like having nothing to do, in fact the busier the better, so spending the summer working on average 15 hours a day suited my character! I did a bit of everything: from assisting teachers in the first few weeks, to doing some revision with small kids after that, to manage a small web radio, and finally to having a French class of my own for 4 weeks! The people I met, adults and kids, have been amazing, and left me wanting to come back, and hopefully I will next year! However, after 10 weeks there, I was happy to leave and enjoy being pampered for a short while.

So what’s next? Well, first of all, I need to get to Leicester station. If you go back to the beginning of the post and look at the weight of my suitcases, you’ll realise it might be a bit of a challenge… Then I need to find some space on the train for them, then I need to carry them around St. Pancras, then in another train down to Gatwick, and then, hopefully, someone will actually help me before I fade away? I think, by the time I get to Italy tonight, I will have lost about 4 stones in weight myself…

After then, preparation for my year abroad begins! I need to book my flights, get in touch with the school and my university, find a house… so, lots to do!!! At least I know where I’m going… I’ll be working in Pinto, a small town in the Comunidad de Madrid about 28km south of the capital. It doesn’t look like anything special really, but I’m curious to see. I’ll probably be living in Getafe though, a city closer to Madrid but with easy transport to the workplace: however, being about 4 times the size of Pinto, there are a lot more things to do, and houses are a lot cheaper! So that’s one of the things I’ll be looking into in the next few weeks…

It’s now been 3 months since I’ve seen my course-mates, and you can’t even imagine how much I miss them! Funny thing though, most of them are moving to Spain, so I’m hoping I’ll see them quite soon!! They’re all preparing to leave as well, so I’m guessing I’m not the only one going through all these issues… (at least, I’m hoping so…)

The next post will probably be in 3 weeks’ time, from my new house in Spain (AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!). Until then…

BON COURAGE!

¡HASTA LUEGO!

A PRESTO!

SEE YOU SOOOOOOOOOOOOOON!!!!!!!!!!!

Thursday 24 July 2014

The Story So Far...

Well hello again!!!

It's been a while since I posted the last time, but oh lord I have never stopped for a single moment!!!

What is there to say... work carries on as usual, although it is always a surprise finding out what I will be doing the following week: the first three weeks I was a French as a Foreign Language teacher, then I became a French French teacher (to the small kiddos, kind of Yr 2 and 3), and now I am managing the radio after a (very short) time spent doing sports (never, EVER, again!!!).

In the past few weeks I have been as moody as I can possibly be... the first 4-5 weeks we had an amazing group of kids: all ages (and yes, even the teenagers!!!) just tried everything that was thrown at them!!! I must admit that with personalities like these work just becomes easy and enjoyable! Everything changed last week: a big school group arrived (10 kids), and honesty I can't wait for the moment they leave. They are rude, noisy, spoilt little sods who are just there to annoy me: most of my day is spent shouting at them, while my free time is spent collecting the food they have in the bedroom (yesterday I managed to confiscate a total of 20kg of anything and everything, which incuded breakfast cereals, sugar and milk powder...). This is becoming a nightmare now, and the sooner they leave the better!!! On the other side, the French kids that arrived this week to study English are a really good bunch, and if you forget the normal teenage issues then you can get along really well with them!!!

In other news...

I still have issues with the French keyboard: whoever thought that these symbols ,;:!&é"'(-_çà were more useful than these ?./12345677890 was probably eating to many escargots at the time and had some serious judgement issues!!!! Also all the letters are in the wrong place, and I can't do the accents I want...

I've now been to Paris 4 times, and I'm going again in the next few weeks, and I can't get tired of it!!! Two issues though: no vegetarian food for miles, and impossible to navigate the metro stations with the signs they've put up!!

Still waiting for news from Spain: I'm guessing the Ministerio de la Educacion (can't put the accent on a French keyboard...) is taking a summer-long siesta...

Hopefully there will be photos coming soon, but until then enjoy life!!!!!! :D

Sunday 22 June 2014

La campagne de la Champagne (ou la Champagne de campagne?)

Hello! I must apologise for my silence since the last post, but since I got here I didn't stop for a single second!! But now I've got a day off and time to myself, so I can write down what happened...

The last time I wrote on here I was still in Paris, wondering what to do with my life (especially transport-wise) and getting ready to go to the station. Well, I got to the station! (now that was the easy bit...). Nadine managed to arrive to Gare de Lyon too from Geneva (the only train not to have been cancelled apparently...), and got a snack before starting our journey. Can I just say that €8.50 for a tea and a slice of cheesecake from Starbucks is a bit extortionate?!?!?!? But never mind, that wasn't the most expensive bit of the trip...

We managed to make our way to Gare de l'Est, where someone was supposed to meet us and we would then have taken the train together. Well, that didn't happen... Once there, the amount of people that had already started camping on the floor did not give us any faith at all in the trains that day, and that was soon to be confirmed. After paying €16.50 for a 1-hour one-way train ticket (English people, stop complaining about train fares, you don't know what you're talking about!!!), we found out the train we booked didn't actually exist (yep, you guessed it, it was on strike). Quite panicky, me being used to the relative decency of British trains, Nadine just being Swiss, we started calling the people at the Summer camp for help who, in a very French way, just told us to stay there and wait for A train (hell knows which one...). We later found out that train was 1 hour 20 minutes later than the one we booked, so we just joined the "camp-site" of Parisian commuters... We finally found that person who would take us to Champagne, and immediately told us that we didn't have to buy a train ticket because of the strike. Well, thanks for telling us in advance!! Never mind, the train was there and we could get on!!! Yuppeeeee!!! Pity everybody else had the same idea... Since it was probably the only train out in that direction, half of Paris decided to get on and try to get out of the city. This was the result...

One hour 20 minutes later we could to the train's final stop, which was nowhere close to where we were supposed to be, therefore the director of the company had to drive all the way there to then get us out again. So after incredible amounts of steps (lifts don't exist in France apparently...), we were finally on a car heading towards our destination!!

So now I am here, a tiny village called Troissy, where there are more people buried in the local cemetery than actually alive (quote). However, it's beautiful. The first few days were dedicated to get to know the team and the camp and spend some time together (swimming pool, bring it on!!). Then the arrivals got here on Sunday, the first for the summer! From then on, the week has been dedicated to preparing French classes, evening entertainment and taking way too many photos for the official Facebook page. I had one day off (the kids were in Paris), where me and other colleagues just took a bike and went to the nearest town for lunch. Now it's just a matter of keeping this rhythm going and having clear ideas for the next bunch of arrivals (today, in a few hours, from Spain and Russia) and just get them into the loop of activities we organise!

I'm guessing not many things are going to happen from now on, so updates will be rare. Only if I do some kind of day trip I might do it. Until then, laters!!!

xx

P.S.: here are some photos from Troissy...
















Oh, and this is where I'm actually working:



Friday 13 June 2014

Paris j'arrive!

It should be "Paris je suis déjà arrivé mais tu n'as pas de WiFi", but I wrote the title early yesterday morning...

12 June, 10:30. Location: train Norwich-London.

Well well, it seems the time to leave has finally come! Being a long day I've decided to write bit by bit, I'm guessing many things are going to happen (since it's just 10.50 and they already have...).

So obviously this morning, the only moment in which I wanted my phone to work, it didn't: a 6.30 alarm clock soon became a 7.45 panic wake up moment! Since I still had all the bed and bathroom things to pack plus everything off my bed still had to go in a box, I found myself fairly stressed. Everything was packed LITERALLY at the same time the taxi arrived!!! Never, ever, again...

At last I thought "finally I can relax!". Yep, you wish... with two suitcases and a man bag (totally probably 30kg altogether) not only did I have to try and fit through the ticket barriers, but I also needed to walk the FULL LENGTH of the train, as you can see in this photo (Norwich station is at the very back, you can't even see it!):


But finally I am in the train!! I found a very cheap first class ticket, so at least (I thought) I could enjoy my trip to London! Nope, I forgot this is Greater Anglia... my seat is stuck in a semi-reclined position, meaning sitting down is proving an adventure of its own...
At least I can relax now. I'll probably catch up on the week's EastEnders (simple pleasures...), and I look forward to meet up with my friend Giovanna in London in a couple of hours!!!

13 June, 11:00. Location: Paris, 10ème Arr.
No more WiFi after the last bit, so here I start again a day later. Finally managed to get to London, where I met some of the rudest people on the planet: first they wouldn't let me off the train, then they tried pushing into the queue in front of me at the Tube barriers, then they wouldn't help me with my suitcases up the stairs. Oh and another thing: FOR THE LOVE OF GOD TFL INSTALL LIFTS AT LIVERPOOL STREET STATION!!!!!!

However I got to St. Pancras, where I had a nice lunch and a good catch up with my friend Giovanna:

Then off I went, through security and passport control, where I already had to speak French (and I was still in central London!!!). And then up, on the fullest train ever: you can't really see it in this photo, but it was packed...

Of course I was wishing I could sit down and relax, instead I had to rearrange the entire suitcase rack because people don't know how to travel. Proposition for the government: issue a passport only to people who have been on a practical traveller course, following everything from queuing to using a train!!! (right, I'm getting slightly fascist now...let's move on)

The train journey was amazing, incredible service and seriously comfortable. Only problem? It was going too fast!!! My ears weren't used to it and kept going pop...

Finally, I was in Paris! And within a short amount of time there I was at the hotel: BED, SHOWER, BRING IT ON!!!!

After relaxing a bit and a short Skype call, I decided to look for somewhere to eat. The guide recommended the Bastille area, so I headed off that way. I found a nice little bistrot in that area where they prepared a wonderful risotto. At the end I decided to work out where I was, so I looked for a sign on the square: imagine my surprise when I saw this... (Sacré Théâtre people, prepare!!!)

Honestly, I had no idea, and I was seriously shocked!!!

I then headed off to the city centre and enjoyed a nice stroll to Notre Dame, along the Seine to the Louvre, and then off to the Eiffel Tower (all the photos will be at the end of the post).

But being what I am, I couldn't complete the day without being an idiot: a city I've never been before, of course I had to miss the last metro train of the day!!! So there I was, roaming the streets of Paris looking for a bus... At last I managed to get to the hotel, and I good night's sleep was in order...

In the morning I had planned to go and visit Notre Dame cathedral, but destiny had another plan for me apparently: SNCF are on strike (again!), so I'm spending my time browsing for train connections to get to Champagne-Ardenne. I don't know if I'll ever get there, but we'll see...

See you soon!!!
xx