This is a post from last year ... around March specifically.
There is pretty much only one thing that really, and I mean REALLY bothers me while I've been living here.
Let's stop with that for a moment though, and go back to it later. Things have been pretty OK lately. I know it's more than half of the time that I'll be here gone, but in reality, it's really just over 60/40. Feels more like I only have 1 month left though. I'm pretty much loving my life. I have a sweet teaching schedule, and my kids worship the ground I walk on. I mean, come on, who doesn't like a little hero worship every once in a while to to feel good about themselves, especially when living on your own abroad?
I get to dive a lot. Like, a lot a lot. I really like it. It is a nice "world" to belong to. Besides the crappy vibe at the dive resort on Pulau Weh, every other place I've been, and person I've met has been pretty awesome. It's like an Ultimate Frisbee community, but in the water. Age, social status, don't really matter. Just a love of the same thing.
Getting back to loving my life. It's paradise here. I live near the coast on a tropical island. It's gorgeous. I have the absolute best house in the entire country (my humble opinion). I have a cool motorcycle. I have some cool new friends that are ALMOST my age. Or, they are the age I forget that I'm not anymore. It's sunny almost every day. It also rains almost every day. It's lush and beautiful. It's hilly, and the roads are curvy. I have the most beautiful commute in the world, I think. It's about an hour. But instead of sitting on the Kennedy in gridlock, I can just look out the window and smile. The taxi drivers think I'm strange, because I'm evidently the only foreigner that doesn't insist on having the windows closed and the AC on. If it isn't pouring on me, I'm happy with the breeze. Or, I can pop in my Learning Indonesian lessons on my iPod, and try and be studious. Usually it's just music though, to relax. You know, from my horribly stressful life.
So, it was on a day like this, during my gorgeous commute, when I was reminded yet again about the one thing I TRULY don't like here. Kids pointing at me and calling me "bule".
Well, first of all, kids aren't my favorite things in the whole world to begin with. Yeah, I think the fact that I reference them as "things" in the previous sentence is a telling sign. There is a very definite reason that the youngest people I have ever taught were 13. Don't get me wrong. I'm not a callous heartless witch of a person, and my cousins and friends who have kids have the sweetest babies in the world, and I love to hold them, and coo at them, and basically make myself into a completely different person while I am around them....but then they leave. Which is fine by me. Nor am I saying that I NEVER want kids. I mean, who would I be to argue with a gorgeous 6 foot something guy wanting to procreate with me and make an absolutely adorable baby? Um, yes please! We never know what the future brings, right?
Anyway, sorry, that was a tangent. Plus, the previous paragraph was more about babies than kids.
Specifically this post is more about Indonesian kids about 7-10 years. It happens all the time. I'll just be minding my own business, bothering no one, and I'll pass a group of the above mentioned kids. One will point towards me (isn't it supposed to be rude to point in this culture anyway?) and shout, "bule!" at me to their friends. This is roughly translated as "outsider" or "foreigner" and is not in itself a bad word or anything like that. This is not accompanied by a smile on their face, however. Usually it's with some sort of snarl, and then cruel laughter shared by the group. It's just so strange, because it's so out of character for every other part of this country. Everyone is SO NICE at like, all times. It's like a slap in the face when this happens to me. Now I have started saying back to them in my best Indonesian accent, that, "I'm not a bule, I'm an Indonesian person." This usually makes the kids stare (and become slightly ashamed, at least I hope they are slightly ashamed) and the the taxi driver roar with laughter. This then makes me feel infinitely better. I mean, at least when that happens, I am TRYING to be entertaining. :)
It also sometimes happens a little differently with younger kids who are with parents. They see me, and then turn to their adult, and say something that I'm assuming is, "Look mama, there's a bule!" This is usually also followed by laughter, but not meanly. I know it's a culture thing. In America, I think you'd be hard pressed to find 2 people that have exactly the same skin color, but you would here too. I just don't understand why a parent would think it's OK for their child to basically point at someone and say, "DIFFERENT!" Call me crazy.
This is my 4th trip to Asia. I am white. No matter how tan I get here, and the fact that my hair really is dark brown, my nose will still be different. I don't have a problem with that. I don't have a problem with people always stopping me and wanting to take a picture with me. I am still a novelty. It is sometimes fun to be a mini celebrity. This is all ok.
The rude little kids though, are not my cup of tea. So, that's my gripe for today, and what really grinds my gears. Am I being petty and oversensitive, probably. Most likely, actually. But, I think that in the grand scheme of things, after 6 months of living here, if this is the one thing I focus my dislike on, I think that's OK. If not, fine. I am a bad person, and all that. They are kids, they don't know any better, blah blah blah. Sue me. ;)
Another year away from home as an English Language Fellow, teaching in Indonesia. --------------------------------- "To while away the idle hours seated before the ink slab, by jotting down whatever trifling thoughts pass through my mind, truly this is a queer and crazy thing to do!" - Yoshida Kenko
Disclaimer
This website is not an official U.S. Department of State website. The views and information presented are the English Language Fellow's own and do not represent the English Language Fellow Program, Georgetown University, or the U.S. Department of State.
Way to call them out on it!
ReplyDeleteStanding out is always an issue when you are a foreigner, it's something you have to live with if you are going to enjoy living in different countries.
ReplyDeleteWe stand out with our looks, our language, our accent, our clothes, etc.
Kids are Kids and when they reach a certain age, in particular boys, they are very cruel. They grow out of it very quickly, normally when someone gives them a clip around the ear and explains the error of their ways.
Re Reading this I feel I need to clarify.
ReplyDeleteKids are Kids and when they reach a certain age, in particular boys, they are very cruel. They grow out of it very quickly, normally when someone gives them a clip around the ear and explains the error of their ways.
Where we have a gang culture, common in many western inner cities then there is no role model providing the disciplinary influence that can demand respect then they never grow out of that phase. The result we can all recognise.