It's certainly an odd day so far
1. Pick up visiting callers for the upcoming convention. Wait at the exit from customs for an hour and a half. The plane's been down for 45 minutes now. Where are they? Realize there's ANOTHER exit from customs. Oh, crud. At least I know how to say "I apologize."
2. Take them out to lunch. Fail utterly to explain what "spinach" is.
3. Arrive at work to find three voice mail messages. It's extremely unusual for me to get even one phone call in a day. Discover all of them are from my mother. Call mother back. She had a nightmare involving me being dead. OK. Reassure mother.
4. C'mon, painkillers. C'mooooooooooonnnnnn, painkillers.
Nap soon? Or a break? Or something??
2. Take them out to lunch. Fail utterly to explain what "spinach" is.
3. Arrive at work to find three voice mail messages. It's extremely unusual for me to get even one phone call in a day. Discover all of them are from my mother. Call mother back. She had a nightmare involving me being dead. OK. Reassure mother.
4. C'mon, painkillers. C'mooooooooooonnnnnn, painkillers.
Nap soon? Or a break? Or something??
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I sympathize.
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Another funny language barrier story comes from back in high school when my friend A's mom was putting up some Polish refugees for a couple of weeks. I was at their house once soon after they arrived when A's mom was trying to ask if they were warm enough. She kept repeating the word "warm" and rubbing her own shoulders trying to get the message across. Noting their frustration at understanding, A looked at them and very pointedly said, "Not Cold." They got it immediately. :-)
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Trust me. That's how I managed a lot of my time in Braunschweig, where Germans, further from the tourist-beaten paths, didn't speak much English. And at some of the restaurants and even a game store in Paris. Didn't have to worry in Amsterdam. Wanted to practice some Dutch and was never given a chance - they all know English probably better than we do. :-)
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I've been to Europe too, y'know. Lived there for a while. :)
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The second time was in October of the following year. I went to Amsterdam for two days (visited a sales office in Hilversum), then on to Braunschweig for the rest of the week (where I took a short trip to Wolfsburg to see the big VW plant). Then on the weekend I went to Paris to visit another sales office. Toni met me there on Saturday and we wandered about before taking the EuroStar train through the Chunnel and checked out London for a few days before coming home. Total time in Europe for me that time was two weeks, for Toni one.
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nap.
Re: nap.
Re: nap.
http://tinyurl.com/c66ee
Re: nap.
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(Anonymous) 2005-06-29 10:34 pm (UTC)(link)I'm picking up Sandie tonight. I've already promised her at least 15 minutes of cancer-stick time outside the terminal before heading to the car. [evil grin]
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While I was waiting for Kiyoshi I saw a guy who exited the wrong door from customs -- he wasn't connecting, he was stopping in SFO. He spoke only Japanese. I was able to point him to the elevator ("elevator over there is") and he turned back and pantomimed smoking. I knew exactly what he was asking -- where? -- but since we were on the wrong side, with no obvious path to any outside doors, I couldn't tell him! :-/
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Yeah, okay, that's probably didn't help. I tried. ;)
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