Also related to blackboards: DROPPING THE CHALK. Even before France, I think I already spent about 70% of my day picking up things that I dropped. Keys, cutlery, keys, my iPod, keys. And now I have to add chalk to the mix. The problem is that when the students are talking and good things are happening, I kind of start to toss the chalk up and down in my palm, you know, to encourage them to keep the momentum up, and for the love of god to KEEP TALKING because I have no idea how I'm going to fill the WHOLE HOUR... and then I inevitably give a little too much enthusiasm to my tossing, and the chalk goes flying and I have to go get it and my Teacher's Authority Rating dives to about zero.
I think I am going to stop writing on the blackboard altogether and start using that sneaky teacher trick that I learned in university: "That's a good question, Jimmy. Can anyone tell Jimmy how to spell Connecticut [please please please please]?"
Part Two of this blog is entirely unrelated to Part One, and so I will give it a new title:
"Why I Love Cheese Now (Alternative Title: Christina Was Right All Along - see comments on the last blog post)"
Before I start: let me just say that while yes, it's true, I've begun to actually LIKE cheese that isn't mozzerella or cheddar, I stand firm on my belief that some cheese is beyond even the remotest contemplation of consumption. Example: my roommate Nate has this wheel of cheese that smells like a Victorian sewer and clears the kitchen every time he unwraps it. Well... to be fair, it only clears ME from the kitchen. I run to my room and inhale a noseful of shampoo to get my balance back. If cheese violently assaults every available sense like that, it can't really be all that good for your insides, can it? I think I've figured out the essential problem, though. I like a nice, tender side of denial with all of my meals. I like my chicken to look nothing like a chicken, and my shrimp to taste nothing like seafood, and my cheese to smell nothing like what it is: curdled milk with a film of mould.
BUT!
I am now 25 years old. By some accounts, a capital-A Adult. So it's time that I put aside my old cheese prejudice and give some (SOME!) of it a try. And thus I found myself at a dinner party the featured cheese! Melted cheese! Delicious, gooey, hot, stinky CHEESE! And I liked it!! The meal was Raclette, the mood was merry, the conversation went far and wide.
What I learned about enjoying Raclette, a step-by-step guide:
1. Pet the dog.
2. Open the champagne.


That little oven works really hard! Not only does it melt the cheese and cook the eggs, it also keeps the Mr. Potato Heads warm on top!

btw, I fixed the problem that was preventing non-registered users from commenting on this blog. The last couple of posts have had mega comments (ha, MEGAN comments)!! That makes me feel all bright and sunny inside!
Aside: I just saw a fantastic student play at Faidherbe that involved ABBA and a lot of spandex. Got me thinking: how did I go from living at the Zoo in London to teaching undergrads in Montreal to listening to ABBA in Lille? Life is weird.
4 comments:
are you sure that you're not dropping your chalk (keys, ipod etc) so frequently so your students will check out your ass? Geez, France is making you narcissistic!
this is a test to see if you really did fix it. I'm still in therapy from my previous rejections. H.
Jen: stop giving away my secrets!
H: success! tell your therapist he/she can send the bills to me and I will make short order of them!
Megan!
Andrew mentionned your blog a few weeks ago and I must say that reading it is a delight!
Those look like quail eggs by the way...
Maia
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