So. The rainy season,
right? Yeah, me too. I’ve heard of it. People keep telling me about it. “Whoa,” they say, “We’re sure sorry for you
guys (referring to all the new 2012 starters).
We haven’t seen rain like this for foooooooooooour years. No, sirree, no rain, not like this, uh huh,
mmm hmm.” Then they spit into a spittoon
and continue to rock on their creaky rocking chairs in the staff room. Most of them wear checked shirts and have a
tobacco pouch squashed up in their breast pocket.
But, y’know… I’m British and we kinda, y’know, “get”
rain. The Swedes have 50 different words
for snow; so too do we for rain. We’ve
got cats and dogs in our rain. We’ve got
aristocracy named after wellies and puddles in which to put them to good
use. We’ve got that misty-type rain that
sooaaaks ya raaaight through. We’ve got
wet playtime and downpours and the light sprinkly rain that seems oblivious of
the otherwise pleasant weather and therefore results in rainbows over meadows
through which we can frolic. We’ve got
brollies and macs-in-sacs and anoraks and ducks that quack. We’ve got rain on Christmas day every year
when what we really want is snow. We’ve
got waterproof mascara for all of these occasions that never works. We’ve got rain scheduled for every bank
holiday for the last and next four millennia.
We’ve got insurance companies intelligent enough not to insure against
flood damage. Rain is so abundant in our
country that our indigenous peoples didn’t even invent a god for it. It wasn’t desired: it was just there
and always will be.
So, Vietnam ,
you might have been trying to impress me with all this water and stuff and I’ll
admit, your thunder is cool, as is your dry lightening. Sometimes I even stop my lessons to point it
out to the kids who shrug, disinterestedly.
If this happened at the Monkey, Hunter, Banana
Academy , you’d have a riot on your
hands: the boys would probably throw themselves out of top floor windows in
their excitement over thunder such as you have, Vietnam .
Riding around on a moped with your eyes closed because the
rain is driving into your face and it stings is less cool though, but it’s okay
because your people are such sensible drivers, that I trust them not to career
into me.
This is what I thought until this:
Wow.
I am completely way impressed by this and will be talking to
my students about it tomorrow.
Especially my extra English kids, because I managed to convince them
that when the streets flood like this we will all get cholera and pooh
ourselves to death. True say, guys. True say.
I love that you managed to include a poo reference in this post. xxx
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