Thursday 18 December 2014

In school

Because I am white I am contracted out to local secondary schools some mornings to teach English. Since the kids there care less an I do that just means I get to play on my phone in the corner while they watch films on their laptops and ignore the word searches I give them. One of them produced tgis animal from his bag and told me it was a cat.

Wednesday 19 November 2014

Immi-negotiation

Petrol prices have just gone up by 2000 rupiah a litre ( about 10p). This has happened after the election of the new Obama-esque president Jokowi. The petrol prices used to be subsidised by the government so they actually lost money from selling it. Petrol is still cheap at under 50p a litre even after the price increase.

A day before this I received a call at about 9 o'clock in the evening from my co-worker. She told me not to go outside because she was just arrested in a blaze of camera flashes. She sounded a bit shocked and was in a bus full of other foreign people being taken to a 'shelter.' She said she had no idea what it was about. After I hung up I called an Indonesian friend who was on their way to my apartment and told them if there were any police on the floor to not bother knocking and also to lie if anybody asked her any questions on the way in. Next I phoned up my manager to ask what was happening.

My manager told me there was an 'immigration check' going on and that it was nothing to worry about. I continued to check in on my co-worker by text to make sure she was OK. Turns out the 'immigration check' is just the police teaming up with immigration to round up as many foreign looking people as they can then scare the shit out of them. Once everybody is suitably terrified with whispers of 'detention' time because of the long process involved to check visas a 'deal' is offered. My co worker was eventually released at 3:30am after my manager arrived and chatted with the officers for hours before paying an undisclosed bribe.

For some reason I escaped the check. I took a taxi to the door that day as I was feeling lazy and that may be why escaped it. The officers did knock on people's doors but as I am high in the building I suppose they were feeling lazy too. I'm glad that in the UK people can't get rounded into buses for looking different to the ethnic norm because that 'immigration check' is about the most corrupt thing I have ever witnessed. Some of my Indonesian friends told me that those immigration officers may lose their jobs soon under the new government and that the money they make will work towards a retirement fund. It is also possible that they needed to reach an end of year target that they hadn't achieved. Either way if any of the new petrol money went towards reducing corruption like this I think everyone living in this 'developing' country would be happier. Well, the foreign people at least.  

Friday 25 July 2014

First bribe

I was thrilled to experience my first bribe yesterday. My friend was driving us to get dinner in the evening. As we pulled onto the main road a policeman waved us down. My friend had forgotten to turn her lights on. Since it was a woman driving I was expecting the guy to just tell us to be careful and wave us on. Instead he smiled at us both and said. 'Wow, you have a very handsome boyfriend.' For some reason I instantly took to the guy and smiled right back.  He chatted to us for a bit about where we were going and recommended a few restaurants.
Then the policeman told us he would unfortunately have to give my friend a fine and set a court date for her to appear at next week because she wasn't using her lights. Poor guy looked pretty cut up about it but he said he really didn't want to do that and gave us a wink. When he asked for my friends driving license he gave a subtle nod towards her purse. As soon as she withdrew 50,000 (£2.50) a couple of cm past the edge of the leather it had disappeared up his sleeve with an action that looked like a magic trick. Then he glanced at the driving license and told us to have a safe journey.

Tuesday 27 May 2014

My favorite websites were blocked the other day (imgur and reddit). When I tried to access them a little message popped up up saying that I could call the provider if I thought it was blocked wrongly. Since neither of the sites contain pornographic material (which is always blocked in Indonesia) I called up the provider and asked them to unblock it. The woman on the phone said the block had come from the government and that there was nothing she could do. I used a proxy to go on reddit and try to find out what had happened. Turns out that a conservative Muslim minister (Tifatul Sembiring) was about to go out of power and decided to fuck up the internet before he got ousted. It also had a link to an article about the politician that showed various tweets and statements from him saying he was too pure to ever touch a woman who wasn't a family member of his. He then accused Michelle Obama of forcing him to shake hands with him when she visited Indonesia. A video showed him jabbing someone else out of the way in order to shake her hand. Since I found all this out through reddit, the block probably had nothing to do with pornography. It was just a political attempt to choke free press.
Sembiring came up again later that week in one of my lessons. According to my students he is part of the same muslim union that banned Lady Gaga from entering the country because of satanic symbols in her performances. He was also instrumental in jailing a an Indonesian singer after a personal sex tape was found on his computer by someone who stole it from him. Then my students showed me images on the computer of 'Paris Hilton-y' type Indonesian celebrities in scantily clad clothes next to campaign posters. In some of the photos they looked like they were in bars. The women were very popular on Indonesian TV. Can't help but think if they got some decent porn in they could get rid of that shit.

Sunday 4 May 2014

Last weekend I went to a '4d' cinema. It engineers the fourth dimension by wiggling the seat around in a way that makes my amateur chiropractor/hairdresser appear to have the fingers of an angel. It also squirts you in the face with water every time something wet comes on the screen.  Towards the end of the film this seemed to have a deliberate delay so that when I put my hand over  the nozzle to block the jet of water nothing came. As soon as I thought it was safe and put my hand down it let a big squirt rip into my face.

To further satisfy my lust for water I also went to sea world with one of my students and his friends from work. At the petting aquarium I got to hold a starfish and even touch a shark. There are some photos floating around somewhere from one of the guys we went with but he has yet to upload them anywhere. This is despite the fact he took about 1000 photos a minute like a true Indonesian. The student works with a fashion company and all his fashionista friends and him were too nervous to touch the sharks. There were some instructions in Indonesian I didn't understand but I decided to have a go. When a sizeable one swam past I leant over the edge and ran my hand down its back. As I turned around to smile at everyone the bugger snapped around so quickly with its teeth bared I leapt about two meters away from the tank. 

After sea world we walked down 'The Bridge of Love,' which had a much nicer Indonesian name that I've forgotten. It was a big heart shaped bridge out into the ocean which a load of lovers had painted there names on or carved them into the wood. It was totally gay. When we stopped for coffee some of the fashionistas showed some concern about what I was wearing. They said the tattered shorts and poorly fitting 'I Love Singapore' T-shirt just didn't accentuate my natural style. I looked at my student and asked him if he knew what time it was. 'Makeover time,' we said in unison.

The sight of all the fish in the aquarium and our time by the sea got us hankering for sea food. We went to a fancy place in Ancol Mall where you could choose your own fish or crab/lobster from the tank. I saw a particularly large crab make a bid for freedom and manage to flop out of its container. I immediately knew that this was the bastard I wanted to eat and told the waiter to take it to the kitchen straight away. The satisfaction of seeing the same crab on my plate a few minutes later was profound. It was pretty expensive for Jakarta though at around £8.

The next weekend I saw the new Spiderman film with my fashion designer student and he acted as my stylist and picked me out a new 'semi-format' outfit for after the film. I proudly wore my new style out of the mall and  showed it to my housemate who said it was 'all right.' I later wore it out with a female friend and she told me I looked 'very gay,' so I might just pop the outfit in a drawer for a while.

Monday 14 April 2014

I had a hair cut the other day in a nearby mall. At £4 it wasn't the cheapest place on offer but the signs were written on the wall and I'm sick of paying the 'bule' price for everything. A taxi costs £1.50 to Puri from Tanjung Duren. I know because I took one the other day. When I was waiting for a taxi back an Ojek (motobike taxi) driver called me over and asked where I was going. I told him and he said it would cost £6. I laughed in his face. When I tried to barter down he refused to budge at all. While we were chatting an Indonesian walked up and asked the driver's mate to go to a location that was even further than Tanjung Duren and he got offered a price of £1. The driver spoke zero English and unfortunately my grasp of Indonesian isn't good enough to explain why he was being a prick so I walked away and he didn't try to call me back with a reasonable price. I waited for a taxi and the price was £1.50 on the meter again when I arrived back home. Even though I get paid double what non-native teachers at work get the Chinese Indonesian who took an Ojek for a lower price than I could get probably earns more than me as Puri is a very rich area.

The haircut I got was worth paying a little extra for though. The hairdresser cut throat razored the peach fuzz off my face and even turned out to be an amateur chiropractor. When he finished cutting and shaving me he gave me a massage on my neck and face then suddenly without any warning snapped my neck around like you see action heroes do to villains in films. The difference was that when I opened my eyes I wasn't hell, I was in Jakarta, so kind of a little bit in hell. I felt three clicks in my neck like when I click my knuckles but in places that I didn't even know existed till he cracked them. I was still reeling from the experience when he snapped my neck round the other way and cracked the other side. I've woken up with a stiff neck every morning since and will never go back there again but it was still an interesting experience. 
Another interesting experience was taking the bus. When I read leaflets and my companies' information packet about the city they said that buses are only 7p. 'Wow' I thought, 'How fantastic, such cheap public transport!' I didn't realise that a 'bus' is just some dick head with a gutted out minivan that's been painted red with 15 people shoved in it and often with about 12 people hanging off the side. One such bus pulled up alongside my house-mate one day when he was on his way to the gym and the driver pointed to the roof. He got off at the first sharp corner and wasn't charged at all.  

Sitting on the bus to Puri one day, my nuts sweated so that my trousers became a bowl of bakso (look it up) and I thought to myself 'I can't bear another second of this shit.' Everyone who's view wasn't blocked by a sweaty body was staring at me for being white. The 'bus' stopped every time someone grunted and one person squeezed off and another two squeezed on. The driver snatched 7p from everyone who got off and spent every second he wasn't snatching thumbing through the notes and mouthing numbers as he counted the stack of money that he kept clenched in his hand. We passed a huge heap of rubbish over an open drain and the smell of sweat blasted away with the smell of old nappies and food rotting in the heat. Through a haze wafting from someone's armpit I looked through the window and saw some boys who looked no more than thirteen years old sifting through the rubbish looking for valuables then loading it onto carts that they wheeled away. Many of them weren't wearing gloves and it was thirty three degrees. The driver stopped for about 15 minutes to wait for more customers but as I looked at the kids and sweated a pool onto the floor I thought that life could always be worse. I called out when my stop came up and the driver pulled over and I paid the fee- 20p. Fucking bastard.

Monday 24 March 2014

The same week I went to Singapore I went to Taman Safari with my housemate and two of our students. The animals there seemed much happier than at Taman Mini. They mostly had free roam of the park. As we drove up to the safari we went past about one million ragged villagers who stepped out into the road to wave carrots at the car. We stopped and bought a bag from the one who clawed his way to the window first.
As we drove to the different enclosures I stopped eating my carrot mid-chew when a zebra stuck its head through the window. Elephants and what looked like Ankole-Watusi wandered down the road and grabbed them from every car down the lines of traffic that formed whenever people stopped to look at an animal. I was having great fun stroking all the stragglers and it looked like everyone else was doing the same. I couldn't decide whether it would be miserable walking down lines of cars all day eating carrots and having people poke at you or whether it would be awesome.


When we arrived at the event area there was a sea lion show. We arrived five minutes late so we were amazed to see that the entire front row was free. We were amazed right up to the point that the sea-lions completely soaked us with a spray so powerful it blasted my wallet out of my pocket. Other people had clearly been before.
The only miserable part of the safari park was the petting zoo where you could pay to take photos with a lion tiger or leopard that had been doped up. Whenever they made a weak attempt to bite a customer who teased or stoked them too aggressively an attendant jabbed a stick in their mouth. All the guys tried to persuade me to take a photo with one but I refused because I didn't want to promote the practice in any way. My flat mate tried to argue the lion he took a photo with wasn't drugged but his argument was made redundant when he lifted the lions head and it half-opened its eyes instead of ripping his face off.  I did take a photo with a baby orangutan that looked happy enough.
Other than the petting zoo the contact with the animals was delightful. I had to stifle tears of joy after watching a small child crawl under a fence into the kangaroo enclosure. It stepped on a baby kangaroo's tail and received a savage kick to the face. This was particularly wonderful to see after a week of teaching the little treasures. 


  

Monday 17 March 2014

Because of bureaucracy in Jakarta the way to get a work visa isn't through an embassy. Instead you have to fly to Singapore and give your passport to some bloke in Mc Donalds who gives it back four hours later with a visa inside. My DOS needed his visa done at the same time as me so we set off at 3am on Friday morning. The school booked the tickets with the cheapest airline possible. They are also notorious for being the worst airline in the world. They hold the record for most engines blown upon landing because of inexperienced pilots landing too fast. One of the girls at work has a boyfriend who works for Lion Air and he said they had a pilot working there who was fired in New Zealand for drinking on the job. When talking to the boyfriend at a works dinner, he told me proudly how it took him only two years to train. 'My literature degree took longer than that' I thought 'and I still don't get Jane Austin.' I asked him if you still needed 20/20 vision and he laughed and said he needed glasses nearly as thick as the bottom of the beer he was holding. He then pulled them out and put them on.
'Wow, you have green eyes?' he asked, before walking into a table. 
'Not really.' I said. Then his girlfriend came along and told him to stop drinking because he didn't want another incident at work. I hoped to myself that I would never have him as a pilot. This was a hope I would come to sorely regret. I would gladly have had him or the pilot who was fired for drinking over who I had on Saturday.
I was very glad to have the DOS with me the morning we left because I don't function without sleep. I miss-spelled my name on the departure card and kept drifting off while I was walking around. I might as well have been reading 'Pride and Prejudice.' I had no idea what was going on but it was making me more sleepy with every minute. When we got on the plane I plugged my ears and put a blindfold on. There was no safety announcement and no bullshit. The pilot whopped that plane into gear and made for the runway. I ignored normal take off protocol and reclined my seat. Then I started dreaming about a City that doesn't smell like shit all the time. My peace was short lived.

As the plane wound up for the take off and rammed us all back into our seats there was a big clunk a group of women screamed near the front of the plane. The plane wound down. One of the doors had fallen off.
'Standard Lion Air take off.' I joked.
'I'm glad we aren't sitting there,' said my DOS 'We'd be holding the door on for the next one!' We laughed with another white person who overheard us. Then the pilot came over the speakers to reassure us all about the 'rejected launch' and each of our smiles was wiped. I looked over at my DOS and he had gone very pale. Everyone on board was suddenly frozen as the cabin crew exchanged nervous glances. The babies stopped crying. By the time the announcement was finished you could have heard a pin drop on the carpet. People didn't need to understand English to get the message. It was a woman's voice coming through the speakers. The pilot was a woman.
Understandably a few poor bastards couldn't take it anymore and made a dash to get off. It was no use. Our fate was sealed. It would have delayed the plane so much to let them off that the passengers who were crazy enough/ needed to get to Singapore so badly they would risk there lives gave them such stares that the shame was too much for them to bear. This was particularly true with Asian culture as it is.  We waited for the door repair and the paper work then set off again. Of course nobody could get any sleep after finding out about the pilot so we were forced to endure a flight where everyone jumped out of their seat at the faintest hint of turbulence. Thank God we made it.

Changi airport in Singapore is incredible. It has a free cinema, free water, free phone calls, a snooze lounge and many other wonderful features. After we dropped off our passports with the most stressed man to walk the earth,  we took a walk through the city. There were hardly any cars on the roads because apparently there is a kind of lottery to get driving licenses. Every road, pavement and toilet seemed cleaner than most tables in Jakarta. We wandered around a huge market place and I bought a fridge magnet for my nan and an 'I love Singapore,' t-shirt. When we got our passports back we went straight back to the airport and tried to get some sleep in the snooze lounge before the return flight. We were both still a bit shaken from the flight over.




Sunday 9 March 2014

Little Trouble in Big Jakarta

I've had a friend visit a few times over the last few weeks. The penultimate time they visited I walked her back to her car, which she left just behind the security gate, and someone had smashed the back window. She said not to worry and got her to insurance company to repair it. The last time she visited I walked her to her car at about 11pm and started to chatting to the security guys when she pulled up alongside us because someone had slashed two of her tyres. The security man said that the area was rife with vandalism and that she should park inside the gate in the future to avoid more mishaps. He then sent one of his boys on a motorbike to drive to a nearby garage.
             It took about an hour for the guy from the garage to unscrew each of the wheels drive them up the road on the back of his motorbike, repair the sidewalls -which is illegal in the UK- pump them up, then screw them back on again. On the last run we followed him up the garage for the bill and I clenched my teeth in anticipation of the rip off. As soon as he said the bill was £3.50 I became a gentleman and offered to pay for the repairs because I felt guilty it happened in my area.
          When she dropped back at the house I thought about the infamous double puncture I got from a pot hole in Birmingham. I ran down to a nearby tyre shop and they refused to serve me because it was 4:55pm. I offered them £30 to wait for me to take the wheel and off and they muttered something about 'company policy' and said 'unlucky mate.' All I wanted to do was buy tyres from them and give them money but they looked at me as if I had just walked in the room and farted then demanded someone stick their tongue up my nostril. Eventually I had to pay my breakdown cover company £75 because of some loophole in the contract I signed and they sent a bloke out, who arrived in two hours, and who dumped me and the useless car back at my flat.
           That experience was a long way off the bloke who worked for over an hour for £3.50 to get the car functioning again. Initially he asked what we'd like to pay and when we said whatever you want that was the first price he gave. The poor guy probably doesn't have a lot and looking back maybe I should have given him a tip but I was tired and not thinking straight as it was a hot night. Maybe having people like that around is a bit extreme but I did find myself laughing when I thought back to the service I received in the UK.
In the UK I always drink 100% fruit juice. Many companies try to hide the bullshit they stick in their drinks with titles like 'juice drink' or 'orange flavor' and there's always some chemical in the ingredients list with a warning that it affects the concentration and behavior of children. I'm wise to every trick and I can safely say that there is no 100% juice anywhere in Jakarta. Every ingredients list starts 'water, sugar.' Being lazy I find it pretty annoying that I now have to peel or wash or fruit instead of just pouring out an unwashed glass for myself but at least tropical fruit is readily available.
             Imitations and fakes are popular throughout Indonesia. My flat mate recently bought a new phone. While he was researching local brands like 'smartfren,' he came across a phone made by lenovo which is only available in Southeast Asia. The reason it's only available in this part of the world is because it's a samsung note 3 and contains all the exact same parts and has all the same specifications. This means they can't release it anywhere else because of copy-write restrictions. It's under half the price of a normal samsung.
             The charms of cheap technology come at a price however. Jakarta is a disgusting city. I love walking and nature. I just went out for a walk and I feel sick and have a nasty headache. All the crowded car and motorbike stuffed roads look the same. The smell of shit blasts up from every open drain and the roads are littered with decaying dead rats, cats and the occasional dog. Thirty seconds after setting off I was dizzy with petrol fumes and after a few minutes I was retching intermittently. The only respite from the strong smell of shit or dead animal is when you pass one of the many restaurants or a big bus or car which overpowers the smell by choking you. On my way back a lizard clearly couldn't take it anymore either because it died and fell out withered tree in front of me. I can't imagine what kind of hell it must be to work as a vendor on one of these roads as a short walk was enough to make me see why nobody walks anywhere here. I had a quick look at the sea in Pluit (North Jakarta) the other day and somehow even that was black and had lots of dead fish floating in it. If I ever get a Saturday off it would be wonderful to see a part of Indonesia without concrete on it.

Saturday 1 March 2014

Here I am ice skating with a work colleague earlier today in one of Jakarta's many, many malls. As I left the rink I was approached by two girls who asked to have a photo taken with me.

Last weekend I went on a laser tag event organized by work and came second last. I took the random picture on the way because my phone is finally back in working order. After samsung tried to charge me a fortune, I gave it to one of my students who handed it back two days later with a jolly roger where the warranty sticker used to be and the SIM card wedged in with a piece of tissue. The screen displays more colours than black now though and I couldn't find the part it needed online for cheaper than the repair cost.
I thought about the picture while I was cutting out materials for a co-workers lesson. The reason she couldn't cut them out herself was because she was pregnant. Half way through cutting out the materials I asked her again why she couldn't do it herself and she told me it was a superstition. My other co-worker refuses to cut her toenails at night because then she won't be able to see her parents in the after life. I thought superstitions that stop you from doing something generally had a reason behind them. 'Don't walk under a ladder,' because a brick might fall on your head. 'If the wind changes direction your face will stick like that,' because the face that kid is pulling is really fucking me off. Why would anyone want to stop you from clipping your toenails at night when that is the most convenient time? I hardly have time to open my eyes in the morning and I start work at 3pm. What's the story behind cutting things while pregnant? I've tried to ask around but I haven't had any definite answers about it.
That's probably because their aren't any. In the picture there is a baby sandwiched between the two adults that you can't see, and that isn't the most people I've seen on a scooter. Maybe a better superstition would be don't take your baby on a motorbike? At least people are free to do so. There may be a nanny for every child at work but at least people can be spared being nannied by their government.

On my way to laser tag

Wednesday 19 February 2014

This Saturday I finally tried 'rendang,' with a student and his two friends. It was a slice of beef about the width of my fingernail coated in a ball of red spices the size of a bulls testicle. Like all the food in Indonesia it induced a healthy sweat and tasted like flames. After I ate rendang, which wasn't 'the best food in the world,' me and the guys went and played pool. It cost about £1.50 an hour and there was a lady who sets up the balls when the game finishes. It struck me that pool costs more in the UK and you have to set up your own balls like an animal. But, as I know from the maid, people are cheap in Jakarta. It seems like there is someone to do everything for you. Someone always packs your bags at the supermarket and every time you reverse into the road a little man pops out and stops the traffic. I even saw a guy do this in an empty car park. The custom is to always give them about 10p.
Apparently the people directing traffic have nothing and the parking system works like an unofficial tax. My AC constantly explodes and sometimes I have to make the 30 second walk to the house during my break to point at part of a mechanism I don't understand and mutter in English to the 'technician' so he can scratch his head look out the window. Rather than walk though, the manager always gets the office boy to drive me on his scooter. I've hardly got on before I have to get off again. Trying to stop the service is impossible. In those same breaks it's possible to watch the 'delightful' children of the school being spoon fed by their maids. Some of them are aged 8 years old...
As we drove down to Burger King after pool my student opened the window so I could look at the prostitutes.  Some of them looked very young and my student told me that was because they were very young. Many were underage girls from the villages who get sucked into it because of poverty. He pointed to a hotel which sold rooms by the hour. While we ate our burger a couple of guys sat down and ate with prostitutes before walking over towards one of the hotels.
A weird thing I found out today is that the native Indonesian teachers at the school get paid less than half the salary of the white teachers, despite the fact we have the exact same job. They don't get medical insurance either. Personally I think the severity of equal rights movements in the UK often undermine what they set out to protect by making unnecessary allowances. I think a rule is fair only if it applies to everyone. For instance I think everyone should expose their face in petrol stations. The pay difference is uncomfortable because it's a direct contradiction of my ethical beliefs. Still, I'm the one who gets paid double, so I'm not going to complain too much for now.

Thursday 13 February 2014

I've had a request to write something about the food. When I'm at work I order in 'nasi goreng' pretty much every day, mainly due to the office girl looking at me blankly when I try to order anything else. Nasi goreng is fried rice and extremely popular in Indonesia. It normally has chicken and chillies but sometimes it has egg and even vegetables if you get lucky. It varies day to day even though it comes from the same place. You always get an inflated plastic cylinder of chilli sauce too. I'm pretty good with hot stuff but sometimes two drips of the sauce is enough to render the hole thing inedible.  Other times the hole packet does nothing but water down the rice. Using the sauce is a roulette that can leave you sneezing blood and belching flames during your next lesson. The whole thing including delivery costs about 70p.
Food on the street is everywhere. Carts that can be cycled around line just about every road. Even our house, which is in the middle of nowhere, has a 'ketaprak' bloke right next to our gate manning a little cart. Ketaprak, from what I've seen of it, seems to be like a cold potato and noodle salad but despite the bloke outside looking at me wide eyed and offering me food every time I walk in I've yet to try it.        
This is because when I first arrived and my house mate was throwing up every five minutes he'd shout from the bathroom 'It was that bastard ketoprak man! I ate there yesterday,' and I haven't been brave enough to try any. This week one of our students is hopefully going to take me to try 'rendang' which is apparently 'the best food in the world.' It has been recommended to me about 84 times and it's some kind of spiced beef. If I don't get to try it, maybe I'll man up and speak to the ketoprak man.

Sunday 9 February 2014


I'm still nursing the cold from hell so I haven't been up to a lot this week. I've been a bit lazy uploading photos because my phone fell victim to the marble floor the day I arrived so I need to plug in my camera. Above is a rare picture of a green area in Jakarta which was taken at 'Little Indonesia.' Sadly, because Indonesia is a 'developing country,' the mentality seems to be to build anywhere and everywhere and worry about the consequences later. I've yet to have seen anything that resembles a park apart from a little area around Monas and I'm sure that's the reason why it floods every time it rains.
Here's a picture of me at a health spa a few weeks ago when I was strapping and healthy, or at least healthy. It cost less than a pound to get in and you have access to pool tables, a gym and a swimming pool (obviously) for as long as you like. The pool ques had a little ball of leaves on the end instead of a tip. 
This weekend one of the teachers, who is Chinese descent, took me to a performance of the 'Lion Dance' at a local mall. She said it was 'to ward away evil spirits or something for the Chinese new year.' It's the year of the horse which is the year I was born so she said that was a good omen. The dance wasn't the best but contained some impressive athleticism when they walked over high bars with the suit on. It would have been incredible if it was over some spikes or fire but apparently that never happens. It's very good luck to rip one of those beard hairs off and wear it but they don't come easily. I leaped over the barrier at the end of the performance and tried to yank one out but three men lifted me back over before I even got close.


Wednesday 5 February 2014

My throat feels like it was stabbed by the devil. I thought it would be impossible to get a cold when its 24 degrees but I suppose it's unsurprising that I'm ill considering how filthy the Jakarta is. Yesterday when I was coming down the lift from school I looked in the mirror and discovered there was a cockroach on my neck. My house mate said he'd never seen anything like that before but it wasn't particularly encouraging considering it had just happened.
Since I've been ill I haven't been up to much apart from winding up my roomie. Our maid has left us because she somehow 'lost face' after some of my room mates clothes went missing for a month. They are back now but before she left she sent us an apologetic note written in Bahasa. While I was sitting around I offered to tap it into google translate so we could work out what it said. It came out with a load of gibberish so I wrote this message out and showed it to him.
'Mr Cam,
 I have always been a modest with you but please stop making semen party on your underpants. It is very sad face for me to washing.
Maid'
He blushed.

Saturday 1 February 2014

My first week is now officially over and I have a six day schedule next week to look forward to.
A view of 'Little Indonesia' from a cable car. One of the students was kind enough to take me and my house mate for Chinese New Year.


I naively believed what I had read about mosquitoes. Namely that they were only active at dusk and dawn and that a little repellent would keep them at bay. In fact they will happily suck your blood, and fuck you off, at any time. They will even bite you through clothing if they have too. I know this because I'm currently nursing eleven bites on my left foot and six on my right. I often exaggerate but that is the honest truth. They seem to love my feet even when I wear socks to sleep and taking a step now, despite a liberal dose of anti-itch cream, is excruciating.  It doesn't help that my AC is broken. At least I have the noisiest fan on the planet to put on every night until it gets fixed, so I can't complain too much.
Mosquitoes aren't the only irritant in Jakarta. There is a drain in the corner of our bathroom floor that all the shower water, and the occasional rouge shit, flows into. It's also an entry point for over half the cockroaches in the house. There's one huge one that frequents kitchen. He's white and about an inch bigger than average. Somehow he's managed to survive two direct hits from a shoe which has left him with a tell-tale limp. A few times it's been possible to pick out the distinctive trail he leaves in the dried suds after the maid has mopped. I have to think back to Ahab and his crew and lay my shoe back down before my obsession with that roach gets the better of me. He isn't the most famous white thing in the neighborhood.
That prize goes to me and my roommate. There are many places in Jakarta where just being white is enough to make you a sort of local celebrity. A few days ago the shop attendant in our local supermarket waved his camera at me hopefully. After I nodded his friend snapped a quick photo. Then they swapped places so we could take one with the friend. Then, seeing her opportunity, a woman in line at the checkout leaped in between us for a third photo on her camera phone. Just the other day when I was running away from a bat on my way home I got lost in a thatch of houses and got to know half the neighborhood after shaking their hands while they shouted 'bule' at me (slang term for 'white'). I don't mind it, but I can't help but wonder what attention white people who were born here get.  
A Komodo Dragon from Komodo Island. This was alive but sadly many of the animals in the 'Little Indonesia' enclosures were just carcasses that had been left to moulder. Indonesia is famed for Surabaya Zoo which has the worst animal care in the world. Animal care didn't seem to be valued here either. 


Thursday 30 January 2014

It seems like only yesterday I was fretting over my first day of teaching but it's four days later now and my feet hurt. It takes a while to adjust to anything new I suppose but I'm alive and so, hopefully, are most of my students so it can't have gone too badly.
In between my teaching schedule I found time to take a trip to the mall with my room mate and go shopping. Despite my protests he managed to persuade me to take a motorbike taxi. Driving a car through Jakarta is terrifying enough so I didn't want to petrify myself any more than necessary by leaping on the back of someone's bike. The journey was still horrible but not what I imagined.
'Pavement' and 'road' seem to be synonymous in Jakarta. Man and machine weave together in death defying ways. We only spent about seven seconds on what could possibly be described as a road though before speeding off down a network of alleyways. These were concrete strips about the width of a pencil with an open drain on either side. These alleyways also seem to be a popular hang out spot for half of Jakarta who wander along getting nudged around by motorcycles. At one point some poor bloke actually got shunted into one of the open drains by the bike and splashed up something that smelled like ammonia. The driver stoically looked onwards and I glanced around just long enough to see the man in the drain trying to wrestle an eel off his trouser leg. Before too long we were belched out somewhere near the mall and giving the driver the equivalent of about 40p. That was no where near the worst thing that happened to me that night however.
         Before I left the UK I called Lloyds TSB to notify them that I was going abroad. After the usual hour of security questions they assured me that it would be no problem and that I could use my card worry free, they also said in the 'unlikely' event of a problem I could call them on the reverse charge number. So, with my first week nearly down, I thought I'd take out a bit of cash to tide me over. After scouring every ATM in the mall I discovered that the first thing they had told me was a huge lie. Thanks Lloyds, great service, as ever. That's OK though, mistakes happen.
The next day a quick phone call determined that the reverse charges are a lie as well! Even better. So I called the bastards up and asked them to call me back which was obviously 'impossible.' Then I reluctantly answered an hour of security questions before running out of credit. Hopefully that money will go towards lining a poor investment banker's pockets at least. Wouldn't want the poor bankers going hungry.  

Saturday 25 January 2014

I was shocked at how healthy my bowel movements have been since I arrived in Jakarta. I had read up that the City was hard on guts. I was shocked right up to the point two days ago when I was taking a pee first thing in the morning and a surprise jet of shit blasted out across the bathroom behind me. Things have been along those lines ever since.
Tonight I went out with my housemate and a couple of students to see pretty much the worst film I have ever seen in my life. One of the guys we saw it with was crying after an emotional scene which I can't even remember. Everyone here seems to listen to One Direction. When we were driving down in the car both students (who are young men) were playing an album and singing along to the words. They asked me if One Direction were popular in the UK and I said that I honestly couldn't think of a single young man who listens to them. I thought it was listened to exclusively by young girls but apparantly that isn't the case the world over.
Afterwards we visited Jakarta's only landmark the 'Monas' and I'll include a picture of us all in front of it. You can just see the monument poking out from behind some traditional masked figures which everyone insisted should be included in the photo. Then we went out to eat and I had my first taste of Durian fruit, which tastes like feet smeared with cheesy fish, and some banana chocolate cheese bread which tasted exactly as it sounds.
I start teaching properly on Monday which is a fairly daunting and nerve racking prospect but I'm trying to play it as cool as possible. Wish me luck. 

Wednesday 22 January 2014

It said in an email that there was a maid included with the accomodation.
'I know it's a bit weird,' the manager said. He then went on to tell me that a 'hippie' American a few years ago had been completely opposed to the idea and gave him some spiel about socialism. A few weeks down the line the American was complaining about the state of his shirts and asking for a new maid. We both had a bit of a laugh.

I admitted to the manager that having a maid came as a bit of a relief to me since I'd always had either a Mum or a girlfriend around. We both had a bit of a chuckle again and I didn't think anything else of it. I've started to think about after my house mate told me that our maid is only 14 years old and gets paid the equivalent of about £10 per month. My housemate also said that he thought about complaining to the school about her age but all it would do would lose the poor girl her job.

Her life is a far stretch from mine when I was 14 and maybe that's why my first reaction was to side with the original attitude of the 'hippie' American. If I had an easy time of it why shouldn't she? But it's a lot to think about and I'm still jet lagged. I don't want to become as big of a hypocrite as that American so for now I'll just accept things as they are.



Monday 20 January 2014

My DOS told me to try and avoid street food for the first few weeks but my house mate said he actually thinks food on the street is safer than food you get in restaurants. He has been rushing to the toilet every five minutes since I arrived and needed to take the day off work with stomach pains though so I'll probably try and stick to restaurants for a while.

As for the job I haven't taught yet, just observing lessons for my induction week. Hopefully that will take some of the sting out of my first day of paid TEFLing. A bloke at the school gave me a lift back on his motorbike after my first day because I didn't know the way back. So far everyone seems to be quite friendly but I haven't seen much of Jakarta yet. Since my flat mate is ill I've been playing a bit of his chipped xbox 360 where all games seem to be 25p. You can order everything delivery here and we tried to order some Macky Ds yesterday but since neither of us has a phone it never arrived. Well, it might have done but neither of us ever found out about it if it did.  
The picture of 'My Place' doesn't really do the accommodation any favors. The DOS (Director of Studies) assured me when we arrived that all the barbed wire was to keep intruders out and not to keep the teachers in. Weird though that I've made 300+ handbags since arriving and I haven't been allowed outside yet.

Thursday 16 January 2014

I will hopefully be in Jakarta on Saturday though so, even though my name won't be Jack Arthur, the blog may not be a complete loss. At the moment I'm in the most boring town on the planet. I won't name the town out of what little respect I have left for the place (St-Leonards-on-Sea) but I have a TEFL job lined up and if all goes well St Lennys will be a distant memory from the sweaty throes of dengue fever in just a few weeks time.
This blog is a lie. My name isn't Jack Arthur and I'm not in Jakarta.