Saturday, January 31, 2009

Right.....so, I'm trying to get acclimated......

.....few weird things that I have encountered, followed by a few pics -


  • Tuesday evening, Tuan invited Jerry The Gordie and myself to dinner at the house of his future son-in-law's family (daughter's boyfriend), whose name is Nam. I had been walking out about Hai Phong Tuesday Afternoon and had decided that it would be nice to pick up a bottle of vino for the hosts.

Well, I found a bottle of what appeared to be local stuff from a region called Dalat. 'K, I figured, I'll grab that (I ALWAYS try to drink locally) for 50,000 Dong. Took it back to the skool to show Tuan, and he laffed to absolutely no end......


....errrrmmmm.......


.....uhhhhh...........


.....apparently, The Vietnamese drink American or French wines, and this Dalat stuff is regarded to be some serious-ass rotgut!

Decided that if I brought it over, it would bring much dishonour to the house of future son-in-law's family. Kept it at home.

But hell, if I had known that they prefer American vino, I woulda brought over a case of Ernest & julio Gallo's best vinegar!! Shit.....probably coulda sold that over here forra full year's rent on my pad! I couldn't stoop THAT low, however, as to give my hosts E-J!!! Naw....thass bad form.......



  • If I hear ANOTHER FUCKING ROOSTER screaming at 5AM, I swear, I'm gonna lose it.....


  • Those goddamm little tiny red ants are STILL here from last time (see post of April, 2008)

  • Took my very first ever ride in a Lada a couple days ago. THIS was a treat!! I mean, imaging thee, thee shittiest car that you have EVER bought for $150 when you were 16 years old and you'll still have a better car than a Lada!

A Lada is a Soviet-built car that makes the Yugo look like a Lexus by compare. This particular beauty that I rode in (THINK it may have been early nineties, not sure, though) featured wires hanging everywhere, windows that fell out of the track (so one could not open the windows), NO seatbelts whatsoever, and had NO keys for the ignition. No, it wasn't thefted at one time, but rather it WAS DESIGNED LIKE THAT......utilising a push-button ignition system to start the thing (I can only imagine that no sane person would want to steal it). In traffic of pedestrians, bicycles, skooters and God knows what else in a large Vietnamese city......it was certainly an interesting ride.


  • The Vietnamese concept of boys and girls. Very interesting.....yet rather disconcerting. During coffee and bia with my friend Tam here in Hai Phong, she had asked me when I plan to get married. I had stated that I have no plans anytime soon to do so, and proceeded to explain the U.S. trend (for lack of a better term) of people either waiting to get married at a later age, or never getting married at all.

“But doesn't that bring unhappiness?? Not getting married and not having a family?”

“Well, no.....actually, it brings much happiness to a lot of people. I have several friends who are happy being single and childless.”

“But they are so lonely! It is so sad........”

“Waaaai........waaaai a sec. NOT necessarily! I mean, people in America do shack up and....”

“.....'shack-up'?? I do not understand?”

“I mean, like boyfriend-girlfriend, but they live in the same house together and sleep together and sometimes even have children together!!!!”

(Insert Jerry Brown look on Tam's face here)

“Errrmmm......you look stunned......”

“That is so unusual!!”

“Errmmm......not to Americans. Why, how does it go here, then?”

“We are very traditional here, and very reserved. We have no sleeping together until marriage. Until that time, we live at parent's house. And to 'shack-up together', as you say, brings great dishonour upon one's family....."

(Insert Jerry Brown look on MY face here)

“Shit!!! My parents COULDN'T WAIT to git rid of me when I left their house and had my first shack-up!! They even bought me a used car for that milestone in my life!”

It really seems a lot like high school....except that in America, it is a lot easier to get laid in High School before you're married than it as a unmarried adult in Vietnam!

Also, everybody is expected to spawn, as that bring much happiness. In addition, The State will arrest you and send you to a re-education camp if you are not married by age 30!


  • The Vietnamese are SOOOO hospitable, that I suspect that there is really no such concept as a stranger to them. During the Tet holidays, I have been invited to so many dinners and parties, that it is really beginning to wear thin. I mean, if I am asked to go to another fucking party hosted by Tuan's nephew's cousin's brother's dentist's golf caddy....where literally dozens of fotograffs are snapped of me (a very Asian thing....I feel like a D-List celebrity and I have learned how to do The Queen's Wave very well)....I swear to God, I'm gonna fucking lose it!

The strangers that I see on the street smile and try to say “Hello” I respond back with a snappy “Xin Chow!” and that puts 'em off-guard a bit! People always wave and smile at me when I'm riding around town on a skooter.......The Vietnamese are very nice, good folk.


  • Rode a skooter to a seaside town yesterday called Do Son. It is about 20 Kilometres from Hai Phong. Thought that I'd grab a nice waterfront hotel and hang on the balcony and have a few pints and finally have some time alone (a VERY uniquely North American/European concept). Well........that didn't happen.

The hotels that I found on the waterfront had used condoms lying all over the street, and unused ones on the floor in the hotel room (GROSS!!!) and the rooms were fairly dirty. I was warned that this is the Thailand of Viet Nam (Shit!! Even Bangkok was nicer than these places). Found a nice, clean one that is owned by an elderly couple closer inland towards the town for 200,000 Dong a night (like, twelve bucks) and figured that I can deal with not having the South China Sea underneath my balcony in exchange for a clean room and a decent area where I'm not asked everywhere I go if I would like “Boom Boom!”.

Then I fucked up and later found out that there ARE THREE ENTIRE SECTIONS to Do Son....each separated from each other by four mies of jungle. Screwed that up and thought that the first built-up section was the ENTIRE town and grabbed the hotel there. But still, it's a nice hotel (save for the overpowering blast of mildew scent emittng from the bafroom)....but, since it's the Tet holiday, I am thee only person in this entire hotel (of, like, 50-plus rooms).....feels a bit like “The Shining”, but without the snow.

Plus, it's like 50 degrees and humid (so it feels very cold).....so the idea of hanging on the beach can wait until the 35 degree (CENTIGRADE) days arrive.

Ripped open the Dalat vino whilst typing this in my room. It's NOT fatal....but it does have the power to strip old paint offa walls, soooo......it'll work if you're having the DT's........


Oh yeah, the pics......



















Arrival at Hanoi Airport....




















The staff in front of the school....





















Riding back into town with the Tet peach tree.....

























Dalat wine....




















I couldn't quite grasp this one. I mean, I saw this tabletop at the clean hotel in Do Son run by the nice elderly couple. Is it saying that condoms often surf on top of dolphins in area waters whilst holding a life preserver?





  • My friend Tam and I were looking for food. Vietnam is kinda weird in that you can generally only find food around mealtimes, as cafes and such shut down the kitchen during 9 to 11AM and 2 to 5PM and 8PM - onwards.

Well, Tam took me to an American food place and asked me if I wanted to go in. I figured that she could use a bit of fattening up......so we headed in .....




















































Wings and ribs....oooooh man, MUCH better then pig's lung and goat's feet!! I sure got that -itis once again.




I begin one week of observing classes (thank Christ) on Monday.....then, next Monday, I'm going to attempt to teach.

Pray for me.....I'll keep ya posted on how that goes!!

-E-

8 comments:

HRD said...

Ya need to learn how to work the self-timer on that camera and git yerself into those pix.

So .... find a wife yet? And I don't speak Vietnames, but I assume that pic means that condoms are a life saver against the HIVs.

Glad all is well, looking forward to hearing more!

Anonymous said...

Errrmmm......I try to avoid being fotograffed, actually....

"Condoms are a life-saver against HIV" Damm, HRD! Well done! Seriously!! Jesus, NO WONDERS I always sucked badly at Pictionary!!!

Errmmm.....wife?? Whassa "wife"??

-E-

Anonymous said...

Hello E,
I was just looking around the web for info on working in Vietnam and found your blog. So if you don't mind, could you please tell me more about the job, how you got it and benefits promised to you. I read some of your previous posts and it seems like you got the job like in a snap of a finger. Also, how old are you? What kind of qualifications do you have or were asked of you? Thank you so much.

(Sorry for the 20 questions).

CN250 said...

No worries. I did all negotiations by E-Mail over a two-month period. I have a bachelor's degree, no T.E.F.L. certificate or C.E.L.T.A. or anything like that (though, to git into a $17 - $22U.S.D./per classroom hour school in Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City, you is gonna need one of those....otherwise, it's a $13 - $16U.S.D./per classroom hour "back-packer" school for you)!

But, shit.,.,..then again, I really enjoy wearing T-Shirts and shorts when I teach, so, personally, I prefer the so-called "back-packer" institutions to the shirt and tie so-called "legitimate" schools.

Here's where you can dig up E.S.L. jobs .....


- Dave's ESL Cafe www.daveseslcafe.com
- ESL Jobs www.esljobs.com

For further research:

www.saigonesl.com

Hope this helps.....and good luck!!

-E-

Anonymous said...

Thank you E for your info. So, I got a job offer to teach English in Vietnam, but the pay is dirt cheap! Like you, I have no certificates or anything, only a BA in a non-related field. So I understand that I will be getting less than what is usually advertised on the web (since most of those require CELTA cert.), but still, I still feel like I'm selling myself for next to nothing.

Anyways, the point of this post is to ask you how much you're getting paid. I know, I know; Sensitive subject. But I figure I don't know you, and you don't know me... so who cares if I know how much you make... Right? Ha ha. Correct me if I'm wrong. I just want to be well informed... taking into considerations how much Vietnamese people haggle...

So please let me know... through here or via: emailnikki2003@yahoo.com.
Muchos Gracias.

Anonymous said...

Well, truthfully, it depends on WHERE you were offered a job. If it's Saigon.....no certificates or anything with a BA in a non-related field, it's really, really not worth you while to take anything less than $16/hr. unqualified.....cost of living's higher there!!

Ha Noi?? Really wouldn't fly over here to teach in Ha Noi for less then $14/hr unqualified!!

Anywhere else in Vet Nam?? $12/hr and you'll live like a queen! Below that......why bother?? Ride out the Economic Depression.

BUT....you have to factor in that the U.S. dollar continues to climb strongly against the Vietnamese Dong......so they will QUOTE YOU salary in U.S dollars, BUT you will be paid current exchange rate in Dong.....which, right now, should NEVER BE LESS than 17,000 Dong to the U.S. Dollar....but, again, shit's CHEAP here, sooooo......

I got a reasonably good offer in Hai Phong, and the standard of living I can pay for with that is good.....BUT, BUT, as the World Economic situation gets shittier and shittier, and more people look to hop over here to teach......supply and demand dictates that salaries will fall as well...

Hope this helps.

-E-

Anonymous said...

Well E, thank you so much for putting up with my endless questions. I've decided to turn down the job offer. I'd rather be a homeless beggar in the US than take what they're offering me, economic depression or not. Hope you have a great time in Vietnam though.

Anonymous said...

NO WORRIES....ask me anytime or anything that you like!!

Just hope you're having a laff at the blog.....

Seriously, though, again, if they are offering you LESS than the guidelines that I told you in the last comment, then really, you are better off in terms of standard of living to stay in The States. Now, IF, IF, you can line up some private tutoring lessons ON THE SIDE (usually at 250,000 - 300,000 VND - 15/$18 USD an hour)....then, ten....eleven USD an hour possibly will work for you in any area outside of Ha Noi or Saigon......

....otherwise, again, it really isn't worth the cost of the flight if they aren't offering the guidelines that I mentioned or higher!

My pleasure!!!

-Ernie-