martes, 26 de marzo de 2013

Old Ladies

In the States, the place I'd see old ladies in my everyday life were at church, at the ATM, in the grocery store, and in the car. 
The problem was when you depended on them to finish before you did something. 

I'll just go ahead and say this evil thing that's been brewing in my mind: I think old ladies take excessive advantage of the common courtesies society offers them
We hold doors for them. 
We let them go first. 
We let them have the last one. 
How can you say no to an old lady? 

They behaved themselves in church, usually. 

The most common place to get annoyed with old ladies is on the road
As you're pulling into aparking lot, a little old blue-haired lady cuts you off because she either can't see over the steering wheel or she hasn't gotten her glasses prescription updated since Jimmy Carter was president. 
But you don't honk because it's an old lady
You can imagine her giving you a chocolate chip cookie and a shiny nickel and she makes you feel bad about having almost t-boned her car. 

Then, there's the line at the ATM... and the grocery store
You don't go to the store very often, so when you do, you have to buy a truckload. 
When you're standing in line with your cart, here comes Miss Daisy and she asks if she can break in line
All she's got in her hands is a can of Aqua Net, some Lipton's and a romance novel. 
You don't think she'll take long, so you let her. 
But you're badly mistaken. 
The clock grinds to a halt with every step of the operation. 
She decides to write a check. 
The adolescent looks up from his Smartphone and says "what's THAT?".
She proceeds to write what seems to be the Declaration of Independence. 
When the transaction finally comes to a close, Beavis tells her to have a nice day, and everyone behind her in line watches her meticulously put her reciept in her fake Coach wallet.  
But you don't complain because it's an old lady

In Madrid, you can be sitting on an empty bus and an old lady will ask to sit in the seat next to you, of all the other seats, obliging you to get up to let her in. 
But you don't make a comment because it's an old lady

I'll see them walking three abreast walking 2 MPH down a crowded sidewalk with their furs and their helmet hair oblivious that other people exist. 
One big problem is that if you're jogging coming at them head on, these old ladies can't decide which way to turn and they start to do the Harlem Shake. 
Being in Spain, the first thing that came into my head was to try to act like a bullfighter and signal them to one side
They usually follow instructions. 
That way they avoid getting covered in sweat and I avoid getting covered in fake animal hair. 

Poor things. 
They've been loving, patient and responsable mothers. 
Most of the time, they're just lonely and want some company. 
And their tranquility should probably remind us to slow down a little.
Curiously, old ladies treat me like gold. 
Probably because I love homemade food so much and I'm so vocal about it. 

sábado, 16 de marzo de 2013

Stereotypical Contradictions

I'd like to discuss American stereotypes the the incoherent people that perpetuate them.
I'm going to present this as a conversation between this here southern boy and them.

- Americans are ignorant, they don't travel, they love guns, they're too religious, their coffee is awful and their food is, too.
But damn, they make a good pair of jeans.
- If you're so anti-American, then don't support the American economy by purchasing those Levi's skinny jeans with the pre-worn holes.

- I don't like celebrating Santa Claus. I'd rather celebrate Reyes Magos.
- Nobody twists your arm into giving gifts on Christmas Day instead of Reyes Magos.
- But if I give my kids the gifts on Christmas Day, they have the whole Christmas Break to play with them.
- You've made your choice.
   Now pick up your kid's toys made by Mattel.

- Americans aren't very well traveled.
- Try not to trip over them next time you go to Rome, Paris, London...
   But you don't see as many on Gran Via, huh?
   You see more Chinese people and Russians.
   Does that give you an indication of what's happening to the Spanish economy?

- American Customs Security is too much.
   Retina scan, fingerprints, questioning....
- We were attacked by Al Qaeda on September 11th, 2001.
   You'd think Spain would want to protect itself a little better after its attack, too.

- Americans don't know where Spain is on the map.
- Do you know where Illinois is on the map?
   In case you didn't know, it's where Chicago is.
   It's the third largest city in the US, comparable to Madrid in just about everything.
    Corruption included.

- I admire Americans for having the patriotism to display their flag.
- Do you care so much about what other people think that you are afraid to fly your flag?

- American commercialism is ruining society.
- Go Tweet about it on your iPhone, hipster.

I'm not trying to say that people should choose to go in one radical direction or another.
People don't live extremist lives.
Nothing is completely one way or the other.
No one is completely capitalist or socialist.
Political parties aren't completely pro-regulation or anti-regulation.
It depends on the issue at hand.
Democrats want freedom of expression but limitation on places you can smoke, beverages you can drink and more gun control.
Republicans want freedom from taxation, gun control and financial regulation, but restrictions on abortions and immigration.

We all live in a blurry grey area where ideas converge into a puree.
We are all walking sets of hypocritical contradictions.
Show me someone who isn't and I'd say that you are ill-informed.

lunes, 11 de marzo de 2013

American Holidays

A couple years ago, I got tired of people making false generalizations about American culture.
So, when people would ask "Do you really...?", I started to say "everything you've seen in the movies is true" because you can't argue with everything a person has ever known, let alone change the tides by yourself.
Like telling someone the right way to pronounce "Tom Cruise", "South Carolina", "Tennessee", "Johnny Depp", or "Mel Gibson".
They won't believe you.
And if they do, they won't remember anyway.
So just accept that Lethal Weapon actually stars "Mel Jeebson".

But I really get a kick out of people's perceptions of American holidays.

One time, a co-worker said to me "Happy Halloween! Are you going home to celebrate?".
This person evidently thought that Halloween is a huge holiday for Americans like Carnaval in Brazil or the Canary Islands or Mardi Gras in New Orleans.
Yes, I'm going to buy a plane ticket home to dress up like a pirate and trick-or-treat, then me and my family will kill a baby goat and drink its blood in a Pagan / heretical Protestant ritual and give each other beads for whoever drinks the most blood.

Here's another: "You don't get any days off at Easter?".
"Easter is on Sunday. It's already a day off."
These are people that aren't familiar enough with Protestant churches to know that Maundy Thursday and Good Friday aren't as emphasized.
Not as if Spaniards go to church those days anyhow.

Speaking of religion: "Thanksgiving is a religious holiday, right?"
At first, I used to explain the story of the pilgrims and the Native Americans that we all heard in kindergarten.
But people still weren't satisfied.
Until I finally got to the root of the issue.
"In the movies, you always see a family at a dinner table with a turkey praying."
News flash: if a family blesses a meal at Thanksgiving, they probably do it every other day of the year.
But you don't see Mom getting her potato salad recipe out of a Bible or the kids making a nativity scene with Elmer Fudd, a turkey and Sitting Bull.

And while some people say:
"Americans are very family-oriented because they get together at Christmas",
I hear those same people, many times in the same breath, say:
"Americans don't care about family because they move all over the country".
These people have seen both A) any number of American Christmas movies where the family comes home for the holidays, and B) any number of American college movies where the kids move away and leaves the parents crying in their driveway.
Which one are you, then? family-oriented or not?
Yes.
I agree.
Bartender?

"Americans have very little vacation time"
Your average American has two weeks of vacation time.
Spain gets 20 - 25 days (work days).
That's five weeks.
I admit, two weeks isn't that much, but five weeks is unreal.
How can a company make profits?

I get a chuckle when people are surprised that we don't do something that is only done in Spain.
"You don't eat grapes on New Year's? How can you not eat grapes on New Year's?"
What connection do grapes have to New Years?
They're not even in season!
It's winter!

No, we don't celebrate virgins or saints.

On the other hand, I bet Spaniards in the United States get asked "What are you doing for Cinco de Mayo?"
"When is it, anyway?"





viernes, 1 de marzo de 2013

Favors

If you're a lawyer or a doctor, then I can relate to you.
How many times have you been at a dinner or a party and someone says "Oh! You're a doctor? Can you take a look at this puss-filled, rancid growth on my fat roll?".
Or if you're a lawyer, it goes "Oh! you're a lawyer? Well, I've got a question for you... you see, I'm going through a divorce and my wife kidnapped my kids and tried to poison me with anti-freeze. Who gets the lake house?"
Well, I can tell you from personal experience that this happens to English teachers, too.
At the same cocktail party with Mr. Anti-Freeze and Ms. Rancid Growth, we meet MEESTER I LIKE PRACTEES.
Not only does he spend 30 minutes trying to put together a pathetic sentence about his trip to New York in 1985...
But he also wants me to teach his kids English.
Let's not kid ourselves.
He really just wants you to be a babysitter and talk to his kids in English.
Because they just absorb it, right?
That's how it works, right?
Right?



Normally, in Spain, if you meet an Anglophone, it's a freelance teacher.
Student turnover is fast because people always manage to find a reason to stop having class.
So freelance teachers are always looking for more students.
Most English speakers stay in Spain for two years.
In the first year, you're having a blast.
In the second year, you start to miss home.
In the third year, people who wanted a little adventure go back home and those that stay are the ones with binding ties - such as spouses and thriving businesses.
I stayed - I've got a wife and a full-time job.

So that's what I tell MEESTER I LIKE PRACTEES.
"Look, man, I've got a job and I'm really not looking for any more work right now, but thanks."
"DO YOU.... YOU HAS FRIENDS THAT IS CAN?"

Remember the people that went back after two years?
That's my English-speaking friends.
Now, my friends here are mostly Spanish.

A similar thing happens to translators.
A friend calls you and says "hey, would you mind translating something for me?".
This means you're not going to get paid.
Let's minimize the damage.
"OK, I guess. How long is it?"
"Not long at all... like three pages or so. I'll send it to you tomorrow."
When you get the document, it's a 25 page engineering report in PDF.
Your "friend" has just dicked you out of a week of work and around 1000 bones.



So, no, I don't want to teach your snot-nosed, spoiled brat, hellraising rugrat kids.
And no, I don't want to translate your Bible-sized doctoral thesis for free.
Go find some other young, ambitious, Justin Beiber-looking American fresh of the boat to take advantage of.
Lesson learned.
This isn't this redneck's first rodeo.