Squeeky Shoes

This morning half my class was missing.  Do I teach a class when half of them won’t get the lesson?  How do I teach the other half later without boring the first half?  I wasn’t sure what to do.  Of course, they just wanted to play games instead of have class.  Then I thought, I’m the teacher, I can do what I want.  I don’t want to teach to half the class.  So, we played scrabble and bingo.  I had two classes in the afternoon and neither class showed up.  Well, that means less lesson planning, but still, where were they?  I texted Noi to tell her they hadn’t showed up since they were her classes too.  She was at a seminar.  She texted back that they went to join the mountain bike festival and they were all riding bikes all afternoon.  She said I should have gone.  They had enough bikes for teachers too.  Then she sent me photos of the students and teachers riding.  And this was the straw that broke the camel’s back.  I am so over this place and the end of September is not soon enough to leave.  There is nothing to do here.  I work too much and when there is something to do, no one tells me.  Pat and I talked about this in February and I told her I wanted to race when the festival happened.  She didn’t see fit to tell me.  Robin knows I want to bike, but he doesn’t see fit to tell me even though he’s already signed up to race in the road bike race.  Noi tells me I should have gone with my class as if I’m some mind reader.  How the fuck was I supposed to know my classes were doing this?  Wouldn’t they learn more English by have an everyday conversation while riding bikes with their teacher instead of me sitting in an empty classroom by myself?  How difficult is to send a text message – “no class today, go bike riding with them.”?  And then everyone seems so surprised to hear I’m leaving.  How is that surprising?  Am I supposed to love living here when all I do is work or sit alone in my house?  I would think people from a communal culture would get it.

Noi just kept sending me pictures of the fun I missed.  I sat in the coffee shop crying for 20 minutes.  I’ve been holding back so many tears.  I haven’t been trying to hold them back, they just seem to hang out beneath the surface and never quite come up.  I decided to go home and see if I could cry more.  I felt like I could cry for days.  I got home and no crying came.  Huh, ok, so we’re done with that for the day.  Then I decided to drive up to the dam and see what was going on.  There was supposed to be a market and other festival activities.  There was a massage tent set up and all four of the masseuses in town were there so I was able to get a massage from the man I usually go to on the weekends.  There was a small child with squeeky shoes running around outside the massage tent.  The shoes have squeekers like dog toy squeekers in them.  She ran up and down the street for about 45 minutes.  Squeek squeek squeek squeeeee squeek squeek squeeeeeeee squeek.  There was also bad Thai music.  So, I found some sort of relief in the fact that I had a massage to the sounds of bad Thai music and squeeky shoes. Then I found Tip and her family and hung out with them for a little bit.  They went home kind of early (little children).  I was intrigued by the shake that Dam (Tip’s son) got.  It had condensed milk, some white cream I can only guess was white sugar in liquid form, ice and grape jello.  She put everything in a blender and mixed up real good before adding the jello.  That she barely hit the blender for so that it was still in chunks.  Then she threw powdered ovaltine in the cup at the halfway mark and on top.  I’m not sure if this would be good or horrible.  I should have ordered one just to see what it was all about, but I didn’t.  I have no idea how to order it now.

I ate dinner alone by the river.  It was kind of sad, but also quite relaxing.  I’ve had enough people for the day.  The lights on the bridge lit up the water below.  That brought lots of bugs and that brought lots of fish.  The surface of the water moved an rippled as bugs moved on top and things moved underneath.  It wasn’t fish jumping.  It was more like snakes or river monsters gliding just below the surface.  It was fascinating to watch.  I vowed never to swim in the river – ever.

There was a beer garden and a stage so I went to check that out after eating.  The beer garden looked very uninviting as it was only groups of people at reserved tables so I stood near the stage for a while.  There’s no place to go hang out at night here so I was determined to hang out.  A German guy walked by me and asked where I was from.  He was kind of creepy and I didn’t really want to talk  to him, but I couldn’t run away either.  I told him I lived here and taught English as Sam Ngao Witt.  He said that was a terrible school.  He lives here and his son can’t speak English.  I asked if his son could speak German.  Oh yes.  He told me about 6 or 7 times that that was a bad school and shook his head like I should leave school before I got killed.  Ok, I’m not a fan of the school right now, but the fact that his son doesn’t speak English is just as much his fault as the school’s fault or his son’s fault and it doesn’t make the school a scary place.  The conversation just got more difficult and awkward.  Finally, he left and I decide that hanging out alone standing next to the beer garden listening to Thai music did not qualify as hanging out. I went home.

At home I wrote a facebook post about how frustrated I was and how, even though there are some wonderful things about living here, I’m ready to move on.  I got a lot of responses telling me there’s no shame in giving up and moving on and a lot of “oh I’m sorry you have to suffer so much”.  This is not the response I wanted.  I don’t regret my decision to move here at all.  I’m angry, but not suffering.  I have no shame in moving on. I never mentioned shame.  So, I realized that my facebook post did not paint the right picture.  Or, people are so use to suffering and drama that they read what they want and use it to feed their need for drama.  Or facebook is just not the right venue for such thoughts.  So, I questioned why I wrote it in the first place.  I know facebook works in this way.  I know that most of the people reading it don’t know the rest of the story because they haven’t read my blogs.  The people who read my blogs seemed to get it and respond in a way that showed they got it.  I didn’t want the pity party or the “look on the bright side” or “here’s my advice because I know more than you”, but I knew I would get some of that.  So, what did I want?  Here’s what I figured out.  1.  I was angry so I wanted to vent and there’s no one here to talk to.  2.  I’m tired of people on facebook that say things like “oh you live in Thailand, how lucky” as if I’m sitting on a beach drinking Mai Thais instead of working my ass off and terrified of my own bathroom.  I’m mad at these people.  3.  I have friends that can’t be bothered to send me a text or email and say “hi, how are you?”.  They only want to see me post pretty pictures so they can like them.  I’m mad at these people.  4. I know I can’t confront Pat directly for the ways she has set me up for failure and for the fact that she can’t be bothered to spend 10 seconds to send me a text to tell me what’s going on.  I know she doesn’t do it on purpose and that she is very stressed, but that doesn’t change the fact that I’m mad about this too.  I can’t confront her because you don’t confront people here and it would do more damage than good.  Thai people deal with negative feelings mostly through passive aggressive behavior.  Most of them truly don’t have negative feelings, but when they do, it’s socially unacceptable to show them.  So, I think I was also hoping she’d see the post and know how I feel.  Punish passive aggressive behavior with passive aggressive behavior.  Well, that’s a shitty plan.  So, no more pity party and no more posting things on facebook other than the pretty pictures.  I deleted the post.  If you really want to know what I think, tune in here.  You’ll get plenty of it.

It is wonderful to be able to have an issue, feel like shit, question it and go “Oh, I was angry, that’s what was going on”.  Then it’s over and there’s no guilt, no regret, no beating myself up.  I have spent a lot of my life beating myself up and I no longer do that.  I didn’t think I shouldn’t have written the facebook post or I shouldn’t be angry or poor me.  This is why I deleted the post.  I figured out why it wasn’t working for me, because people want to see all this drama that I just don’t see.  I was angry long enough to cry for 20 minutes and long enough to write the post, but then once I wrote the words, I’m not angry anymore and moved on.  So, by the time I got the responses the responses didn’t fit the situation anymore because my view of the situation had already changed.  It just seemed silly to leave the post up.  So, in other blogs when I talk about where I don’t think enlightenment is something that happens once and then you live happily ever after, this is what I’m talking about.  I still get angry.  I still have feelings.  I still think things should be different than they are.  Then I notice that something doesn’t fit, something is off and I question it.  Then I learn and the whole body/system/process or what ever you want to call it is reset to a new place of balance or a new point of normal.  Then you do it all again and again and again.  Over time this process happens faster and faster.  By the time you read this you are thinking, “Oh poor Rraine, she is suffering so much” and I’ve moved on and am thinking “What are you talking about?  I’m not suffering.  That was a whole minute ago.  Everything is fine.”  Living in the present doesn’t mean not having feelings, it just means not buying into the concept that those feelings define you.  It means not buying into the concept that something is wrong if your feelings aren’t always happy, peaceful or some other thing we define positive to be.  It’s not buying into the concept that something needs fixing.  There’s nothing to be fixed, because nothing is wrong.  And my decision is still to leave here in October, not because I want to end the suffering or because I’m miserable, or because the grass is greener over there.  If I left for any of those reasons, I guarantee you there would be suffering and misery over there because if there’s suffering or misery, I’m the source of it, not the situation or location. I am leaving because this is no longer where I need to be.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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If you are a mother of a little girl, you probably have a unicorn in your purse
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Tip, Fai and Dam
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Yes, my face is this greasy 24/7 here
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Fai is not loving the stationary bike

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The Future

I notice that biggest thing standing in my way of being completely present is the future. I imagine this is a common problem.  I spend about 70 to 80 percent of my waking day present and the rest of the time I live in the future.  This is a huge improvement over the rest of my life where I probably spent 90 percent of my time or more in the future.  There’s a time for planning and preparing, but not at the expense of living now.  But, I think most of us live in the past, reliving good times or replaying horrible heart breaks.  Or we live in the future thinking “if the weekend would just get here”.  “When I get that better job, when I get that great boyfriend, when I make more money, when I get invited to that party, when I get to go on vacation…….then I will be happy”.  I know I have done this most of my life.  My childhood was very unhappy and sometimes just too much for a child to have to deal with.  The easiest way to deal with that was to live in the future, a time when life would be bearable.  These defenses we learn early on stick with us and get hard wired into our nervous systems.  They become the automatic way of being and it takes a lot of focus and concentration to see the automatic pilot, much less to get it to change.  In theory, it shouldn’t take a lot of work – just notice that you are not living in the present moment and shift your focus to now.  But, for most of us the automatic pilot is so strong that it takes time and work.  I’ve have worked on this for many years which is why it is much better than it used to be.  I use to also split my thoughts into 20 different directions at once.  If I’m having 20 different thoughts or story lines going on in my head at once, the one that is unhappy with the present moment can get drowned out by all the noise of the rest of the thoughts.  It’s a very effective method of protection.  However, I am not a little child and I don’t need protection any more.  Then the noise is just noise and it’s exhausting.  Through the many years of work, I have almost gotten rid of the different tracks of thinking.  At most, there is only 2 or 3.  I notice as I’m getting closer to the end of my teaching contract, my thoughts are running to the future more often.  I have no plan of what to do next.  This scares me and I feel like I need to have a plan by now.  It’s very difficult to just be here now and trust that something wonderful will happen and I will make decisions when they need to be made, not sooner.  So, I’m no closer to making any decisions because just thinking about the future is not actually helpful in making decisions.  I went through this strongly before I decided on living in Thailand and I’m going through it again.  It’s quite a battle – I’m in the future, I notice and bring myself back to present, then one minute later I’m back in the future, back to now, future, now, future, now.

So, I open my book and yes, you guessed it, the subject is the future.  And once again, I think Almaas describes the topic at hand so well.

“We are always going somewhere, internally or externally – to the store, the movies, the beach, the office, the restaurant, the television, the internet, the newspaper, the latest spiritual teacher to come to town, our partners, our children, our friends, our parents, our worries, our concerns, our fears, our hopes. And on and on. We are in motion, going after, seeking out, restless, never satisfied, never at peace. This seems to be the central dilemma of human life – that it is easier to desire what is over there than to appreciate what is right here. In fact, what is here seems to be so fundamentally inferior, less than, or inadequate compared to what is apparently over there, that it hardly seems worth the effort to look here. Why not just go over there?”

“Spiritual paths and techniques thus become ways of getting there – to the place where you feel real, where you will become all these wonderful things. So you meditate, attempting to empty your mind or calm yourself or focus on an image or let go of all attachment. Or you chant and dance to invoke your spirit. Or you say prayers and go vision quests. Yet all these techniques of finding your deeper self subtly imply that where you are now in yourself is not where you need to be. You are seeking some ideal of the spiritual self and using these methods to attempt to reach that. The result is that the spiritual search can evoke the same dilemma that all other aspects of your life do”.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

The Unfolding No

For a couple of months now, I’ve been getting periods of light headedness.  It’s usually in the afternoon to early evening.  I don’t feel like I’m going to faint or fall over, but I do feel like doing anything other standing, sitting or walking might not go well.  My vision goes a little blurry and I don’t feel equipped to make decisions or have conversations.  It was strong about a month ago, but doesn’t happen every day anymore.  Of course, my first though was, oh no, I have some horrible mosquito borne disease and I’m going to die.  Then I wondered if it was too much exposure to the bug spray I’ve used to kill house invaders.  It seems to kill everything.  Or, maybe I have a brain tumor and only have one week to live.  Once I’m done with the dooms day thinking then I settle on a new theory.  I think it might be a combination of stress, bad diet and nervous system changes trying to happen.  I think there is re-wiring going on in the brain and my body is trying physically to change the way it takes in and processes information.  Then the stress of what am I going to do next, how am I going to pay for it, teaching, what creature will I find in my house next, how am I going to pack up all my stuff, will my house sell, why is my car such a drama…….blah blah blah…..then all this stress stops the physical process from finishing.  Or maybe some of the stress is a result of the physical process.  Maybe the drama needs to be flushed out first.  So, now whenever I feel the light headedness, I just try to relax into it and just experience it instead of worrying about it.  I’m also trying to eat more veggies.  I would like to drink less coffee and eat less sugar, but I’m not there yet.  They are both very addictive.

As always, when I read one of Almaas’ books, he’s describing exactly what I’m experiencing.  I started a new book called the Unfolding Now.  I found it quite funny that when I opened the book in my nook (Barnes and Noble’s version of a kindle), it split the pages of the cover sheet so that the title of the book appeared as The Unfolding No.  I found this very funny.

So, I leave you with a quote from Almaas that describe things I am experiencing right now.

“In our work, each of us will encounter challenges; we will arrive at Crossroads where we have to make changes. These challenges and Crossroads will help us to develop. They will enable us to realize the life of Truth. The more of those challenges we have, the more chances we have to realize the true perspective. If your life is comfortable, if you are always getting what you want, you might think it’s great. You might think “everything is going wonderfully. Now I can do my spiritual work”. In reality, it doesn’t work that way. The more comfortable you are, the less chance you have to make the choice, and the less chances you have for the choice to be clear”.
(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Doraemon

It was kind of a normal week except I was done with lesson planning on Saturday instead of Sunday!  Whoa!

One of my M6 classes (12 grade) always wants me to sing or dance.  They love music.  So I brought in music related to the doctor since my lesson was on health.  They went nuts and got up and started dancing.  Then after the first song they wanted to play Doraemon songs.  I knew Doraemon was a cartoon, but had no idea Doraemon also had electronic dance music too.  Huh….Who knew?  The other M6 class was a bit different.  They sat on the edge of their seats watching the video that went with the song and had little interest in dancing.  The first class was oblivious there was a video.  So far most, if not all Thai music I have heard is horrible.  It’s like bad walmart sappy love song lounge music.  Doraemon throwing down the beats was a welcome change.  When I told Noi about the M6 class loving to dance she said that was because that class had a lot of boy girls in it. I assumed this was like a very effeminate boy. It does seem that is true.

I’m still amazed by the restaurants here.  It’s a wonder I’ve only gotten sick twice.  Not one place I have eaten in since I got to Thailand would pass a health department inspection in the US.  Yet, it all seems to be just fine.  All of them in my area are outdoor kitchens.  The number of chickens I saw running around kitchens this week alone was mind boggling.  We went back to one of the places I wrote about before where there were so many chickens and flies.  I’m now naming this food shop, House of Chicken.  No food shops appear to have names and if they did, I couldn’t read the sign anyway, so House of Chicken it is.  They were everywhere, pecking at a bag of food, playing in the sink of dirty dishes, pecking at the frying pan, running in the street.  The kitchens are like camping kitchens.  I feel like I’m just camping 24/7, but with a lot more chickens.  Yet, no one seems to get sick, including myself so maybe we are just over paranoid in the US?

I went to Tak with Noi one day after school.  I went to the bank to find out why I can’t transfer money on line.  The lady helped me register for on-line banking, but I don’t know she understood my concern and I don’t think it changed anything.  I also went to the store to buy cheese and cereal – both things I can’t get in my village and can’t live without.  I ran into the western teacher I had met in Chiang Rai.  That was kind of funny.  We stopped at a teacher’s credit union / co-op type thing after the store.  There was a younger kid in there.  I assumed his mom was one of the ladies working there.  All the ladies encouraged him and cheered him on as he tried to speak English with me.  He asked my name and where I was from, my favorite food, and a few other questions.  Very cute.

Of course there were no classes Friday afternoon because it was National Thai Language Day so there were speeches, dances and other performances all afternoon.  No one told me until about lunch time.  Oh well, that’s just one less lesson plan I have to do for next week.  There was a going away party for one of the teachers after school.  I was told about this in the afternoon.  I felt funny going since I didn’t even know who was leaving until she got up after dinner for all the speeches and photos.  But, I didn’t want to offend anyone by not going and I was curious what a going away party would be like.  It had lots of Thai music, spicy food, rice, sugary sweet sodas, whiskey, speeches, giving of gifts, lots of photos, lots of selfies, and karaoke.  I managed to find some food that I could eat.  I probably should have tried the whiskey, but I don’t really like whiskey.  I tried the atomic fallout green soda.  It was quite delicious.  They love to take photos of gifting.  So there is a overly posed photo of every gift she received being handed over by the giver.  Still, as I sat there and looked around, I felt very strongly like I was a guest at someone’s family dinner.  This is a family and they truly care about each other.  I did get a not so good video of my next door neighbor, Q, singing karaoke.  A lot of people asked if I did karaoke, but I don’t know any of the songs and I can’t read the words on the screen.

I left my motorbike at school because it was raining so hard when I left.  So, I walked up to get it Saturday morning.  The janitor, Q, and some of the other male teachers were sitting in front of the school office around the drink cooler obviously working on the left over whiskey.  They wanted to know where I was going.  “Teacher Rraine, where you go?”  They also wanted to know where I was going in October.  Then the janitor proceeded to say he loved me about 7 or 8 times.  “Teacher Rraine, I love you.”  I’m going to guess he thinks that means he likes me or he will miss seeing me when I leave, not that he actually loves me, but who knows.  He barely speaks English so I’ll chalk it up to that, that and whiskey.

The coffee shop was closed so I texted the lady that makes salads and burgers to see if she was open because I know she has coffee and wifi.  She was open so I spent most of the day there.  The tables and chairs were very uncomfortable, but there’s more than sugar on the menu so I got an egg ham and cheese sandwich was was delicious.  A lot of students came in while I was there.  It was a nice change of pace.  I did massage yesterday too.  It was one of the most painful yet.  When he worked on my shoulders I cried.  I was glad this was near the end of the massage because it felt like there was so much crying and screaming wailing wanting to come up.  I just don’t feel safe letting that volume of emotion out in that atmosphere.  After he gave me his phone number.  I think he was trying to tell me he would work on me at my home or his or come get me if it was raining.  He was either trying to give me a safe place to work next time or he was hitting on me.  I really have no idea.  I went home after and tried to release some of emotions I’m holding in my shoulders, but nothing came up.  How can that be?  I know it’s there.  Even as I write this, I can feel so much crying stuck in there, but I can’t reach it.  Maybe tomorrow….

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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The best crispy pork is made here
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The Ping River from Crispy Pork Restaurant
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House of Chicken Restaurant
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House of Chicken Restaurant
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She is cooking my lunch right now at House of Chicken
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Chicken
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What?  There’s a chicken behind me?
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This is a restaurant

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Teacher’s Party
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Giving of the gifts
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New Coffee Shop
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New Coffee Shop

Short Week

I came back from Chiang Mai with Noi and Chelon.  We stopped in Lampang and I got to see some of Noi’s home there.  After I got home, the rest of the day was laundry and cleaning.  It was nice to have a short week – 2 days.

Somehow, Pat realized that I wasn’t the right person to be creating the curriculum for the Mini English Program and she assigned different parts to all the other English teachers.  I will proof read what she writes though.

My MEP students did horrible on their tests.  I didn’t think the test were that hard.  Pat suggested I re-test them.  In America, they would fail and if they failed enough, they would be held back a year.  But, here, they help them by re-testing or giving them other ways to make better marks.  I think I will re-test them, but then average the scores of the two tests.

I got home Friday and just decided to go to bed early.  I slept 12 hours.  I needed that.  I know a huge part of why I don’t like teaching is that being in a school setting is reminding me how much I hated my childhood.  It’s exhausting, but it’s also good to be facing it head on.  I know that much of what I feel isn’t real.  There is absolutely no reason to feel negatively about any of this – it’s old stories.  I’ve known this for a long time, but it feels like I’m looking at it from a different angle as if I’m not actually feeling this childhood stuff, but watching myself feeling it.  It is very detailed as if I am looking at it under a microscope.  This is what most, if not all, humans do to themselves.  We spend so much time feeling things that aren’t even real.  They may not have even been real in the past the first time we felt them.  But we keep pushing play over and over and over on an old recording of a bad feeling.

I notice that music helps break the cycle of old feelings.  So, I’ve been playing music more often when at home.

Here’s some pictures and video of the students cheering and some pictures of Jetson, the village next to mine.  Even though it seems run down, there’s so much beauty in this area.

(c) all rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

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Dis-identification

Not much new.  Lesson plans, teaching, market, too tired in the evening to do anything, sleep, repeat.

So, I leave you with another Almass quote that I read today.  I’m having more and more moments of feeling fuzzy and feeling like nothing is quite real.  I think this is dis-identification of the body.  So, of course, this chapter has perfect timing, again.

“We are continuously concerned about what happens to the body – about whether the body is comfortable or not, whether the body is getting what it wants or not.  Is the body getting comfort and pleasure, or is it in pain?  Is it secure from threat?  Is the body liked or not liked?  Is it thin or fat?  Tall or short?  All these are big concerns in our minds.  Our deepest issues are based on physical concerns, rather than concerns about whether we are loving, compassionate, or free.  Even though we might have these latter concerns, they are not as fundamental as our involvement with our physical body and our physical world”.

Oh, and random photos, I leave you with random photos.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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Crepe Cake

Recent Investigations

Lately my spiritual investigation is about living in the future.  I find myself thinking about the future a lot.  When I’m living in the future, I’m missing now.  When your house scares you and your job overwhelms you it’s easy to assume the future will be better and to think about that.  But, then that adds stress too because I have no idea what I’m going to do in the future and I feel like I should have a plan since it’s only a few months away.  I can’t stop it from happening – my mind jumping to the future, but I can notice it when it happens.  Just the practice of noticing is helping me to bring my attention back to now.  I don’t want to miss all that is going on now.  I’ve been able to relax more.  I’ve been able to enjoy what I do like about here more.  I want to spend more time with my friends here and more time exploring Thailand before I have to leave.  And of course, I want to spend more time everyday present instead of in the future.  I already spend a lot of my time in presence, but little bit by little bit, it’s more time spent in presence.

Hand in hand with the future is the need for a to-do list.  I’ve always used a to-do list to keep things in order.  If I didn’t, I’d forget so much or I’d drive myself nuts trying to not forget.  I learned a long time ago that if I kept a to-do list I could relax more.  When I set out on this adventure one of the things I so looked forward to was not having a to-do list.  If I didn’t have a social life, an engineering job, and the the busy life I had in the US, the to-do list would disappear.  I would teach and in the evenings I’d read or sit and watch life happen.  The to-do list followed me here and it’s as long as it ever was.  There’s a lot to do to get my furniture out of my house, sell my house, deal with the car drama, make hotel reservations for next weekend, research how to get a book published, research possible jobs for the future, lesson planning, engineering work, this blog, laundry, cleaning, cooking, call mom, and on and on.  The list may be even longer because I don’t have much free time.  On one hand the list helps me not worry as much about the future.  On the other hand, it is the future.  Tricky…..

Movement helps.  I’m trying to find the time for conscious movement every day.  I try to get massage at least once a week too.  My fingers are still feeling numb.  I’m wondering if it is my diet or if I have some nerve damage from something.  No clear answer on that yet.  Massage is still so painful, but I think it’s getting slightly better.  Reading Almass helps the most though.  He still has a way of writing a long time ago exactly what I needed to write today.  He might as well be sitting across from me when I read his books.  I can’t read a whole chapter in one sitting because half way through a chapter I am no longer able to understand words.  My thinking brain no longer works and I am just here.  Nothing else.

Here are a couple Almass quotes that I liked this week.  In what I’m reading now he’s talking about how we take the physical world we see to be reality.  It’s not.  It’s all concepts in our mind and we’ve taken it to be reality.  Reality is more than just the physical world.  And as long as we believe that we are our bodies and our thoughts and the only thing that exists is the world we see, then we are missing reality.

“Reality is so mysterious, so amazing, so magical, that seeing it is bound to change us and change our lives.  Knowing what is real, we can’t continue to live in the same way”.

“Our belief in the fundamentalness of physical reality remain solidly entrenched in our souls.  In any authentic spiritual work, this conviction must eventually be confronted, shaken, and dismantled.  It must be shattered before we can perceive totally, completely, what is actually there”.

I feel like I’m in the middle of this shattering.  My body is holding on to being all there is to reality so tightly that all my muscles are so tight.  If I give up on the physical world being reality, I fear that it won’t exist at all.  Part of me knows this isn’t true, but the part that has that fear is what is in the process of shattering.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

Exams

All my free time in school to do lesson planning was taken up rewriting exams.  After I was told I needed 40 questions per exam instead of 20 I turned in my exams.  Then I was told I needed to re-format my directions and put a specific cover sheet on it.  I can’t have multiple choice A, B, C, D and E.  That’s too hard.  So I have to get rid of all the E’s.  Then I turn in my exams again.  Now I’m told I need to have an objective for each section of the exam.  But, if I have more than 3 objectives, it will make more work for me later when I have to do end of the semester reporting on my semester’s objectives.  So, why wasn’t all of this conveyed to me at the beginning of the semester instead of the middle?  I don’t think “Teach some English and get the hell out of Thailand” is an acceptable objective.  And they wonder why I don’t want to stay another semester.  I have now spent over 20 hours trying to write two 40 question exams.  It’s Thursday evening and I haven’t done one lesson plan for next week.  I really don’t understand how anything gets accomplished in this country.

The rest of my free time that wasn’t spent on exams was spent with students that want to come into my office and speak English with me.  Even though it makes it harder for me to get lesson planning done, that’s so important that I can’t say no.  Those are the students that will learn the most because they want to learn.  I can’t damage that desire to learn.  The students I was helping tutor to get ready for the English competition did ok in the competition.  They didn’t do great, but they were excited to come back Wednesday and tell me all about it.  They also questioned why I wasn’t there with them.  Good question.  Don’t you think the native speaker should be the one at the competition with them?  I just told them that I had to teach classes.  It was great to see that they wanted to come tell me about it.  One of them loves talking to me and spent a whole hour asking me questions.  He also asked if he could Line or Facebook me to practice English, even after I have left.

Last week, one day, everyone wore yellow again and no one told me ahead of time.  No one explained why, after the fact.  So, all I know is something happened and everyone wore yellow to memorialize it.  But, I’m getting use to having no idea what is going on. I spend quite a bit of time every day standing around having no idea what’s happening or what I should be doing.

I’m still at a loss for what to teach.  The information I think should be easy is not and stuff I think they should know, they don’t.  I have some lessons where they know what I’m teaching and I feel like I wasted all this time preparing for it and teaching it.  This week I taught what to say at the doctor’s and it was so difficult for them.  I taught giving directions a couple weeks ago and it was almost a total fail in every class.  Don’t get lost in Thailand, no one will be able to give you accurate directions.  However, if you ask for directions in Thailand, they will probably take you there personally.  Then I had one class that was introducing yourself and others.  This was part of the curriculum given to me for one of the older classes.  I thought, how do they not know this already?  This is too easy and boring.  They were laughing and cracking up the whole class.  My most boring class was a hit.  Then for the class one younger than that  I’m supposed to teach Illegal Imports.  So the older kids get “Hi this is my friend Bob” and the younger kids get “You can’t take products made from endangered animals into another country”.  wtf Thailand?

Before one of my classes, I was standing in the hall and watched a small bird take down another bird in flight, pin it to the floor and kill it.  Then after class, I checked, yes, the bird was dead.  Then after the next class, I came out to find the killer bird eating the dead bird.  I know that this is all just part of life – life, death, change, circle of life, etc.  But, I just can’t get it out of my head – bird cannibalism.  Why is ok when we eat meat or a lion kills for it’s food, but it’s disturbing when it’s bird cannibalism?

Speaking of food….. I discovered a delightful dessert.  It’s called Roti Sai Mai.  Tip gave me some a few weeks ago.  I found it at the market this week and bought it.  It’s a thin sweet crepe, so thin you can almost see through it.  Then you take this sweet stuff that looks like colored hair and put it on the crepe and roll it up.  The hair stuff is kind of like cotton candy with the consistency of fiberglass insulation.  Fascinating.  And very delicious.  And not dangerous to eat because there is no actual fiberglass in it.  Now longans are in season.  They are a clearish whitish fruit in a hard shell, kind of like lychee.  They remind me of lychee in that they kind of taste like you can’t tell if they are going bad or not.  I was given a bunch as a gift.  I decided I won’t buy them in the future.

I’ve been investigating further into what position I’m in when I wake up in the morning.  I stretch out and see if it changes my desire to get up in the morning.  I find that I’m not as curled up as I use to be in years past.  Some mornings stretching out helps.  Some mornings it doesn’t.  I’m half asleep and half awake from 5:30 when the birds start squawking to 6:40 when my alarm goes off.  I thought, maybe it would be more useful to just get up and start my day earlier than to toss and turn, not quite awake and not quite asleep.  I got up around 6:00 two days and did some of my conscious movement in the morning instead of after school.  The other mornings, I didn’t manage to get up early.   Baby steps….

The sale of my house is actually moving forward.  I received the start of contract paperwork last night and have been trying to work out moving my furniture out.  Fingers crossed that this goes smoothly.  It should close in August.

I’ve been investigating how I always have a long to-do-list that never seems to get any shorter.  I’ve also been investigating living in the future instead of now.  And, as usual, as I read AH Almass, he’s talking about seeing reality instead of the physical world we think is reality.  All fabulous stuff that’s not new, but is starting to shift and change as how I see reality is shifting and changing.  So, all that needs to be a blog of it’s own.  Hopefully, I can put some of it to words tomorrow night.  This type of spiritual work is very difficult to put into words.  And as I write this, I find my brain going all fuzzy because enough words have already been used for the day.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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One of these is the cannibal
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Legal Items you can take on Holiday (mostly)
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Roti Sai Mai
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Pineapple, mango and longan

More Chiang Mai

So, I found out I need to make two mid term exams.  When am I going to do that?  Ugh.  I’m exhausted and working on lesson plans all the time as it is now.

A friend of mine is traveling in Asia and is in Chiang Mai this weekend so I went up to hang out with her there.  Friday after my last class, Noi took me up to the highway and dropped me off.  I’ve never left late in the day before, but was told it should not be a problem getting a bus.   I got to where the lady who sells bus tickets usually sits and see her stuff there, but not her.  Noi had called ahead and said I could get on a 3:00 bus, maybe sooner.  A small amount of questioning set in as I wondered if this would work.  I had to remind myself that it always does.  A little later and the lady rides up on her scooter and says “Teacher Chiang Mai”.  She makes a phone call and before I can pay her she motions me and this other guy to hurry.  All three of us run across the highway to the median.  We pay her there while we wait for the bus.  Not sure why we had to rush as the bus didn’t come for another 20 minutes, but standing on the median of a highway is as good a place to wait for a bus as any place, I guess.  I decided that would be the name of my book, “Standing on the median waiting for a bus”.  It was a long bus ride, but I got most of one exam written.

I got to the hotel in Chiang Mai and went out to eat with CJ.  It was great to see a friendly face and have good company and conversation.  She had been traveling in Myanmar and was still quite in shock over the poverty and living conditions she saw there.   She says she is going to write an article about it later.  I’ll post a link to it when she does.

The next day, after breakfast, we went up to Doi Suthep which is a temple and large shiny gold thing on a mountain.  As is typical with temples, there were a lot of steps, some dragons, a lot of shiny gold things, and a bunch of people.  It was definitely one of the prettier temples I’ve seen.  I enjoyed it.  We came back down and did lunch and wandered around Chiang Mai the rest of the day and evening.  CJ tried the fish pedicure where you put your feet in a fish tank and the fish eat the dead skin off your feet.  I’ve seen this a lot, but I’m still not sold that this is something I want to try.  I opted for a body scrub since I never feel like I can get clean here.  After dinner we went to the night market.  I bought a funny eye mask at the night market.

Sunday was breakfast with CJ and then we parted ways.  It was real nice to spend that time with her.  I went shopping for cheese and cereal, which I can’t get here.  Then off to the bus station to make my way home.  I finished my exams on the way home.

Today I learned that I need to ask 40 questions on each exam, not 20.  That would have been useful information before.  So, I spent all my free time today working on exams again.  I’m still not done.

CJ noted how calm she thought I was so, I guess some of the changes I’ve made are becoming permanent if other people can see it.  Now, I need to find time from all the lesson planning to start exercising again.  I haven’t felt well lately and I’ve lost so much weight.  It’s time to get back in shape so I can feel better.  I don’t feel sick, but I get fuzzy brain easily, I feel weak and I feel tired a lot.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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Wild tuk tuk ride

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Yep – Stairs

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Durian Tree

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Big bell behind CJ

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Cute restaurant
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I asked for a scoop of ice cream

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Triple the Butterflies

Earlier this week, Pat came to me and told me we needed to tutor a student to help him get ready for an English competition in two weeks.  So now one free period a day for the next two weeks is taken up doing this.  I’m exhausted thinking about it, but how do you say no to that?  We met with him on Friday.  Still, I feel bad for him as he didn’t have any more notice than we did and the school he will be competing at has known for over a month.  He has to do an impromptu speech on any number of subjects he might draw from a hat.  It’s not very impromptu as they have given us the subjects and most kids just memorize all the possible speeches they might have to do.  The speech is 5 minutes.  I’d have trouble talking for 5 minutes on any of the subjects….  The other category is storytelling and a girl is doing that one.  She was memorizing an Aesop’s fable.  I read over it and it was grammatically wrong.  Ugh, Thailand.

I’m caught up on lesson planning for this week and one ahead for next week.  I was hoping to a whole week ahead, but I had some engineering work available so I worked on that most of the weekend.  It pays better.  I think I can get everything done for next week before the weekend.  I’m going to Chaing Mai next weekend.  One of my friends from Colorado is on vacation and will be there.  It will be nice to play tourist for the weekend.  Plus I will get to try my hand at catching a bus on the side of the highway late in the day on Friday.  I’ve only left in the morning.  Fingers crossed.

I did another reading lesson for Fai on Friday night.  She really doesn’t want to do this for more than a half hour.  I can’t blame her.  She’s in kindergarten, drawing and coloring is far more fun than reading.  But I did learn how to tell the difference between a girl dragon and a boy dragon.  The girl dragon has a bow on her head.  Similar for boy and girl cars – the girl car has the bling.  Just in case you were wondering.

My sink has decided to pull away from the wall and looks like it might fall at any moment.  I was told maybe someone would come look at it on Saturday.  I stayed home most of the day and no one came.  I gave up and went to get a massage in the afternoon.  I got there and the guy was in and no other people.  I’ve been lucky lately.  Well, he’s been working on me for a month now and I’m still just as tight.  I think he decided he’d had enough of it.  He got out the oil (traditional Thai massage doesn’t use oil) and dug so deep into my lats that I thought he might snap my spine.  Then he went to town on my calves.  It was so painful and even though I cried, he didn’t let up.  He did ask if I was ok.  He was going to work the knots out of my calves no matter what.  I could barely walk last night and it’s still difficult when I first stand up today.  I almost fell just getting out of be this morning.  Then he worked on my diaphragm and psoas.  I’ve never had Thai massage that worked on those muscles directly.  OMG those were tight.  As painful as it was, I found it fascinating to watch him basically go “ok no more fooling around, we are going get down to business”.  I also feel even more confident that he knows what he’s doing (not that I didn’t already), but knowing that the back of the hips won’t relax if the calves and the psoas are tight…..  I think that maybe the shoes I’ve been wearing to work are part of the problem.  They don’t have a huge high heel, but they have a heel.  They are very comfortable so I don’t notice they are making my calves tight.  Then add on top of that that I’m not loving my job and that stress probably gets transferred to my calves and is getting stuck in there.  Some teachers wear slippers in the classroom.  I have slippers.  I’m going to try wearing them this week and see what happens.

I had a conversation this weekend with Xploreasia about the whole agent issue and I feel much better after that.  Also, they will help me find a job somewhere else next semester if I want.  I don’t think I want to teach anymore, but if I haven’t figured something else out, I’ll see what options they may have and decide then.

I don’t want to say it out loud in case I jinx it, but the weather was comfortable all weekend.  Between the cooler weather and the butterflies, I’m a fan of the rainy season.  Now we have orange butterflies too.  Triple the butterflies!  They are so pretty, but it does make for quite painful motorbike riding.  I did find a very large dead yellow centepede under my table in the kitchen.  I saw it, shuttered, sprayed it with bug spray just in case and decided to deal with it tomorrow.  It seems like a task for the daylight hours.

(c) All rights reserved Kimberly Fiore

 

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One of my advanced classes and one of the math teachers
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mosquitoes 😦
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The girl dragon has a bow
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The girl car has bling, although the boy car has hearts and flowers?

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