It might be the fastest the consultant has ever seen, but it seems like it's taken forever!
Then I don't guess you will be popping over for a bear viewing expedition to the Smoky Mountains any weekend soon. Aleta
The school year is just too long here.
(Is it really longer [190 days/38 teaching weeks] or do we have more days off throughout the year - a minimum seven weeks off between September and July, including half-term hols?)
"Linguistic competence" can certainly be shaped by perception, and I perceive Jo Brand as seeing herself as valiant and special precisely BECAUSE she is a rebel in a man's world, which I sometimes view as being smug. But that's OK. Sometimes I find it brave, but sometimes I find it, well, smug. She can be unkind, and I don't believe that raging against a stereotype should give her special permission to be so. But as I think about this a bit more, there is something about the quality of her voice, perhaps its timbre, that aurally conveys smugness. Yes, I think that's what it is. It's not so much what she says but, rather, HOW she says it. She is monotonal, and that is not a criticism. It's merely my own personal observation. In some people, monotonality conveys dullness, but that is certainly not the case with Jo Brand. To my ear, she SOUNDS smug. On some days, I find this amusing. On other days, I don't. But she never fails to entertain me on some level!
I don't need you to understand why this bothers me so much. All I can say is get back to me after you've lived there for 20 years. You already have an established family. I did not. I was pretty much on my own.
And the things I heard were most assuredly NOT "taking the piss" nor as silly as jokes about who shags the most sheep. Has anyone yet approached you out of the blue to ask you to justify American foreign policy in some country or another? Have you yet heard that conversation on the bus about, say, how of course Americans are going to side with Amanda Knox? Or how about the talk with your GP when he says that Americans think they can throw money at a health issue and think it will go away when all you've done is ask if you could have a second opinion about a dire diagnosis? As you know, I'm a big sports fan and listened to sports talk radio while living in the UK, so it was always such fun when, every damn year, some radio host would rage about how it was illustrative of Americans' arrogance when they called their baseball championship "The World Series"!!! (And of course he never thought to research WHY it's called that.) Oh, and my God...the Ryder Cup! Yes, the wives of the American players were always the personifications of Barbie. As you see, I can go on and on and on and on. Stephen Fry's comments in and of themselves were just one small piece of a much bigger picture of arrogance/smugness/inferiority/superiority (whichever term you'd like to use) that I got to experience during my years as a resident of the UK. Suffice it to say, it really got on my wick. (Off topic rant, I know.)
I DO feel sorry for Stephen Fry and for his struggles. It must be hard to be him.
1. "Are you from England?" Or, "are you from England or Australia?" Or are you from "England, Australia or South Africa?" Followed by:2. "I love your accent", or If their guess is correct, "oh, I am so good at accents", or "I knew that it was one of them", or "I can't tell the difference".
When my In-laws visit from Wales they get the same questions, and in their innocence tell the person asking the question how they are not from England, but from Wales, and then continue to tell that person, in great detail, all about the place, whilst completely failing to see the blank look on peoples' faces. I am from England, but even if I wasn't for simplicity's sake, would say that I did.
3. "Where are you from?"When I reply, I get the same blank expression. May just make up some strange name and see if I get a response. Then there are some pretty strange place names in the UK anyway, so I could just try one of them. Usually I just say London, because most people have a) been there, b) want to go there, c) have a friend or relative who lives there or at least know it's relative location, and so we have an instant connection. Mind you, when I tell people in the UK that I live in The US, I get comments such as "I know someone who lives in New York" as I have should know them (I live in Georgia, have lived in California and have never been to New York).
Often it gets onto the Royal Family, who, like many Brits, I am not a huge supporter of. In fact, I am certain that I have met more Ametican supporters than I have British ones. The assumption seems to be that I love to talk about them.4. As Conversation opener about Royal Family, "I was so sad when Diana died". My reply, "I didn't like her". Talk about Diana continues, moves onto Kate and baby. Meanwhile, my brain is glazing over, while I still to keep a look of interest on my face.
On a slightly less pleasant level, I had heard so much misinformation about the NHS, and how crap Brirish people's' teeth are. Funnily enough, I don't know many people my age in the UK who have a full set of dentures, but I have seen plenty of Americans (always poor ones) who clearlly do.
Despite my brain numbing up slightly when I get the same questions, we are happily settled here, have a lovely home in a beautiful neighborhood, my son was born here, and goes to a great school. We don't have any plans to live in the UK in the near future, although we still have a house there that is currently rented out.
My father in law is actually English but has lived in Wales most of his life. To the Welsh, he is still English.
My mother in law and my husband are from South Wales, so to those in a North Wales would barely consider them Welsh anyway! .
Britain is so small when compared to some of the States in the US, so giving a standard reply that I am from near London, when adked Where I am from, is not to far from the truth anyway.
What a delight to read! I'm so glad that things are coming together and life is treating you well. Aleta
Well, this sounds like a pain in the hat, especially during the Easter break. Hope you can get it sorted!
Received a knock on the door yesterday. It was FedEx with tubes and paperwork from Chicago. I did say I would have chimerism testing done here is they desired, but they were supposed to email me and let me know that it was on its way. I feel strangely overwhelmed by this - we have lots going on here right now and I have no idea if I can trust the local hospital to not muck this up. Past experience says no. I also don't know if the chemicals in the tubes are time sensitive so if I don't get round to this for a month, will it render the results invalid? Sigh. I know I need to just go through all the paperwork and suss out how to proceed. It appears that they don't need Gwyn's blood so at least we don't have to schedule that (it has to be drawn at the same time). I just hope they'll hand the blood over to me so I can ship it back, otherwise there is no way I can trust that it will be done. The local hospital reminds me of USC in the way they seem to have some sort of black hole that all of my results get sucked into for all eternity.