Sekolah Bogor Raya |
Miss Amy going to school |
So ya, a week in Bogor. The biggest piece
of the puzzle is the fact that we both work full time, which like most people
with full time jobs, pretty much defines the Monday to Friday routine. Weekends
are a toss-up, again like most humans. Bike ride, climb a volcano, hit the
coast? Long weekends are always fun obviously because it means we can actually
go (fly) somewhere. But let’s deal with the mundane.
Amy’s
day
After a leisurely coffee in bed, brought to
her by her wonderful and ever-loving husband, Amy’s on her bike and 3.5 minutes
later (we really could not live much closer) finds herself at Sekolah Bogor Raya, the school where she
teaches. Classes start at 8 am, Amy’s there by 7:30. Amy’s the “Language Arts”
teacher for grades 3 and 4. “Miss Amy” to the kids, she’s pretty much a rock
star in their eyes.
The school is a private school, aimed
primarily at well-off Indonesians who want their kids to receive an internationally
accredited curriculum in English – all languages other than English are
discouraged on campus (it’s a “campus”, complete with 2 pools and hydroponic
rooftop garden). The good news is that Amy perfectly suits her role as the
resident English-language expert. The bad news is that her Indonesian language
skills have flat-lined at about 10 words. Pros and cons.
With 20+ contact hours a week, and 140 students,
they keep her busy. Too busy for her liking. It seems to be the Indo way with
expats. Since we’re relatively expensive (i.e., our salaries, normal by western
standards, are considered a small fortune here), they like to squeeze every
drop of effort out of us. So ya, she’s a busy beaver, and comes home exhausted
at about 4 pm. Highlights of the day include a daily lunch prepared by a lovely
Indonesian Ibu (literally means “mother”) for the outrageous price of $1.60.
The Office |
After making coffee for my lovely wife (Ok,
I have some too), I too am on my bike heading for the office. It’s a 15-min
ride through the streets of Bogor (check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZRRXAMGxzE).
The first time I did it, I was shaking and thought I would never get back on
the bike. Now I could do it with my eyes closed. Indo traffic chaos has become
normal. What chaos?
My office is on the 3rd floor of
a 6-story building, in “downtown” Bogor. Downtown means we are across the
street from the central botanical gardens that marks the dead center of Bogor.
There really is no downtown Bogor. It’s just a bunch of buildings and houses as
far as you can see. At 6 stories, our building is one of the tallest, if not the tallest in town. The office is right out of The Office. Welcome
to 1964. It’s a mass of desks meticulously arranged into rows of cubicles. Yes,
it’s a call center. The kind you see on TV. I refer to it as the mosh pit, or
just the mosh (but no one gets it). Being the senior bule, I have an actual
office (i.e., walls and a door). While that sounds very colonial and elitist,
which it is, I have no windows. So basically I work in a pale white box with
florescent lighting, peeling paint and all. Imagine a customs officer in
Uzbekistan. That’s me. Although, I do have my own air conditioner, with remote!
Ah, the power I wield! Shall I set it at 20, 22, maybe 24! And the wind speed,
mode, swing…endless options! Now I know what Donald Trump is feeling!
I usually work till about 4:30, and if I’m
lucky, beat the afternoon rain on my bike ride back to base. If not, whatever,
I get wet. Hey, it’s the tropics, no problaimo!
Rob's sweaty man gym |
Amy's big shiny gym |
Evenings are a toss-up. Like most Monday to
Friday shifts, once you get home from work, you really don’t feel like leaving.
The exception is our gym schedules. We usually hit the gym a couple times a
week. Me, I go to my sweaty man gym down the street. Pretty classic: no
ventilation, sweaty, smelly, and equipment that looks like it was rounded up at
garage sales. At 15 bucks a month though, it’s basically free. Amy wouldn’t be
caught dead in my gym, and frequents the infinitely posher “Celebrity Fitness”
big shiny gym at the Mall, where she’s become addicted to the spin classes. You
get what you pay for: 50 bucks a month! (rock star prices here)
Rice anyone? |
'er, how much? |
Of course there are the grocery store runs,
and the beer runs (in this city of 1 million+ people, there are 2 places to buy
beer). Our go-to for those survival items, and everything from toothpaste to
super glue is a pseudo-Walmarty place called “Giant”. It’s pretty much your
Indonesian version of Walmart. Sure, I suppose we could go to the traditional
market and bargain with the ladies over the price of mangos, but you know, it’s
just easy and seamless going to Giant. And here, keeping things easy is the
priority. So ya, we’ll stick to the marked prices and one-stop-shopping, at
least until we know enough Indonesian to negotiate that extra 50 cents they
tack on for “bule tax” in the markets.
Other mid-week diversions are trips into
the big haze, AKA Jakarta, for evening networking events. The JKT
Indonesia-Canada Chamber of Commerce is quite active and puts on monthly
networking events for local expats, and specifically Canadians. Since it’s
“work” it’s free (i.e., paid for), and along with a car and driver, it’s pretty
much a free night out on the town for us. The huge bonus for us is the
all-you-can-drink wine (and, believe it or not, often BC wines! Last time was
Burrowing Owl!) and fantastic 5-star gourmet food. Rubbing shoulders with the
likes of the Canadian Ambassador to Indonesia is pretty cool too. Ah yes,
drivers, Canadian Ambassadors….the expat life, gotta love it.
The Salak crew |
Friday brings the weekend, which means beer
night at our local watering hole, the Salak Sunset Café (see previous post). Basically
a backpacker bar, without the backpackers, cuz there are none in Bogor. The
Salak crew is a younger expat crowd consisting of mostly Euros (lots of Dutch
here!), the odd Aussie, an American or two, and we actually have a fellow
Canadian in the crew (Margaret from Cape Breton). It’s always fun to have a
real conversation about the important things in life, like cheap flights to
Singapore, where you can buy cheese, and…Donald Trump?…WTF??!!
So, life in Bogor, can’t complain. If you
ask Amy, the single best thing about Bogor: the weather. “I love the weather
here!” is her mantra. Every day is summer. She may never readjust to sub
20-degree weather. Sub-20…hmmmm, that would pretty much be an ice-age here J
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