bitofarambler

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 12 hours ago

i see, thanks so much for the guides, i appreciate it.

i'll look at both of those and probably jump into three and see how it goes.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago) (2 children)

okay I trust your judgment because you admitted:

"it doesn't start out the best"

I'm finding it difficult to get past that first interaction between Shakespeare elitist alien and Picard.

when you say start out, do you mean like the first episode, or the first season?

cuz I'll just skip the first episode and go back after I kind of care about the story and characters and find out what they talked about.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

you know what, he really sounded sincere when he said it, and literally every Vietnamese person who welcomed me to their country(which was every single one I was able to communicate with over 3 months) sounded so happy that an American was visiting.

it seemed like they were all as nervous as I was about our relations. but the fact that I was there and trying to poorly speak Vietnamese and just interested in their country really meant a lot to them.

though yeah, winning a war with "the most powerful country in the world" probably soothes a lot of the awkwardness.

there's this crazy site called. the B-52 lake, even though it's only a few dozen meters across, and a B-52 is stuck in this pond in the middle of a residential neighborhood where it was shot down by the Vietnamese during the war, and it's sticking out by one wing the way it landed when it was shot down.

I rented an apartment right next to it and had no idea until I walked out of the building and saw a B-52 sticking out of a pond.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (3 children)

I was very concerned about traveling to Vietnam the first time, and then once I got there I was shocked and relieved at how nice everybody was to me, and then one guy explicitly mentioned he felt bad Vietnam beat the US so bad in the war.

he even shrugged and did a "you know...because the US lost the war...but that's behind us. and you are welcome, it's very nice you are visiting!" and I was like ohhhh of course. i would be gracious too in his situation.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

thanks, I'm really excited to finally get started and I'll definitely go your route.

if there are too many references. I feel like you're flying over my head I'll move on to something earlier and go with what feels right.

I dare say that the incredible volume of ST names on Lemmy have maybe prepared me for some of that?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

great, thanks. as long as I'll be able to follow what's going on, I'll probably start with lower decks since that appeals to me, and then branch out from there.

I feel like I need to live in the modern ST world a bit first before stepping into the past

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

okay, interesting. thanks for the context.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Cool, thanks. I like animation in general, so lower deck seems like a good entry point.

 

I tried starting from the beginning a few years back but the production value is a little too rough for me to ignore its flaws since I have no investment in or dedication to the show yet.

I'm wondering if I can watch lower decks or whatever the new live action show is and get into Star Trek that way.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 6 days ago
[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 week ago (2 children)

you know what, whenever I buy a car I do research how easy it is to repair first, and it's probably one of the largest considerations before I make a purchase, so I guess I'm angling the odds in my favor.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago (8 children)

congrats, that was my first step to YouTubing everything i had to replace and being incredibly surprised that most things on a car are about as simple to replace as the battery.

and even now, a battery replacement is really satisfying for me.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

The demand is a big part of it. Most non-native English speaking countries have hundreds or thousands of job postings available today, so if they're going to attract the relatively few English teachers out there, the hours, pay and benefits have to be competitive.

SEA/South America are wide open markets, but the pay is generally going to be half of what you'll get in East Asia. You'll always make well above the CoL though, wherever you teach, and there are always lots of jobs to pick from, so if you have a preferred country it'll still be a great time just living abroad in general.

I was just looking at jobs in Panama, and there's a beachside town an hour away from the city offering $1100 a month for those same hours and benefits, although they do throw in free housing.

more general points.

you really are helping the students. at this moment in history, english is in demand for students, business and socializing in general, and by learning english they are afforded more real opportunities, so it's a rewarding job in that sense.

every month you teach is a huge boon in terms of experience. if you ever want to go back to teaching and you have any amount of experience, you'll be offered higher pay and better benefits.

A corollary is that once you teach, you'll always have that job available. Want money but don't want to work much? ESL. Need to save up capital or pay off debt back home? ESL. Want to offset all of your globetrotting habits? ESL. Most financial difficulties are fundamentally off the table if you're an English teacher.

you'll have so much free time that you can focus on your hobbies and interests, which was a huge part of me enjoying my time abroad, living my actual life.

 

I was looking for a Nintendo 64 controller on craigslist and found a misplaced ad for teaching English in China.

Completely changed the course of my life, I've been traveling ever since.

 

Robot Question Unsure Angry.

Use my four tone touchstones and you'll be correctly pronouncing Mandarin in a couple minutes.

details here: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/010-robot-question-unsure-angry--65239786

 

very green city, beautiful trees everywhere.

I just got to Panama City, Panama yesterday, buses are a flat $0.25 regardless of distance and the Metro is a flat $0.50 regardless of distance.

took the train for ~8 mi into town to get to my hotel for $0.50.

ate at a Korean BBQ buffet and saw a bunch of mapaches(raccoons) that apparently live along the Pacific Coast here.

with all the fashionable dress, performing arts theaters and bodegas around, it feels a lot like a casual New York City, moreso than any other central city I've been in abroad so far.

it has that "yeah, we're killing it" vibe.

1
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I lived in a 1980 Winnebago Brave for a little under a year and absolutely loved the convenience, comfort and free rent.

I would live in one again because I don't feel like I got all my kicks out the first time.

I still look up prices now and then to make sure they're still pretty cheap in the states.

 

there are three volcanoes ringing this giant lake Atitlan and a mountain range all the way around.

about a dozen smaller towns are ringed around the lake and you can access them via boats from this town, Panajachel.

might stay a few extra days here.

 

Panajachel is next, on the shore of Lake Atitlan

 

I have a hundred of these (beer-fried roast duck, rice tamales, gelato. gelato!) and I'm wondering what foods everyone else discovered or tried later than they wish they had.

 

I always feel like the hands-free bidet is sneaking up on me, I prefer the control and manual aim/pressure of the gun.

1
Running Down Judas (crazypeople.online)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Tomorrow, The Burning of Judas.

every year during semana de la Santa, the holy week, Guatemalans dress up as Roman soldiers and ceremonially chase Judas through the streets for his betrayal.

tomorrow they're going to build effigies of Judas and burn them.

this picture is the front of a procession of 20 or so school children dressed like Roman soldiers ceremonially chasing down Judas.

some of the processions last for a whole street so I had to dodge six different processions today to try and get back to my neighborhood.

1
A Bidet to You (www.spreaker.com)
 

If I ignored every other of the countless reasons I love traveling, bidets alone would be enough.

Bidets have significantly improved my life as well as the hygiene of the entire world, and they're only on the rise!

Get on that hygiene.

 

New episodes Wednesdays and Saturdays.

Any travel questions are welcome, they don't have to be podcast-related

I've been traveling a long time and will try to answer you or at the very least point you in the right direction.

if anyone knows how I can automate lemmy posts from RSS feeds, I owe you a case of beer.

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