Reflections on YogyaBy Adelle Neary, s22 Adelaide
University See photos from Adelle's semester
I have now been in this country for three and a half months. It occurred to me
today that there are loads of crazy things that happen around me, some not so
crazy but still pretty weird, whose impact have been dulled by the passing of
time. With about five weeks left in Yogya before I move on to Jakarta, I have
been reflecting once more on the many peculiar phenomena which are inherent features
of daily life in Indonesia and in the life of foreign students generally. For
a start, there's the fact that I have friends from many countries here including
Japan, Germany, Korea, Turkey, New Zealand. The peculiar thing about our friendships
however is that, excluding obviously the English speakers, we all speak to each
other in Indonesian. Of course, that is probably rather an obvious thing to most
of you, however picture this scenario: a bunch of Australians, Japanese, Koreans
and a German go out for dinner and spend the whole evening speaking Indonesian.
White people and foreigners generally already get stared at anyway by Indonesians
without needing to draw further attention to ourselves by speaking their language
in their absence! They seem to find that scenario rather hilarious, but in a nice
way.
Another dominant lifestyle-affecting characteristic of this place
is the weather. I wake up in the morning usually to a clear blue sky and it feels
about 30 degrees by about 9am. However, more often than not, I get out of class
in mid-afternoon and it is torrentially down-pouring which inevitably means -
in a country with an average sewerage system, motorbikes as the dominant form
of transport, and a generally, erm, flexible attitude to time - the only way to
deal with such conditions is to either make friends with someone who has a car,
or wait. An example: on the way to the movies the other day, in a period
of five minutes, a massive storm developed and purged itself with equally impressive
speed. We were on motorbikes at the time and had no option but to park them in
the middle of nowhere and huddle under the eaves of a translation shop and plough
through the usual questions (Where are you from? Why are you here? etc, etc) with
the owner. We waited for an hour and when we eventually decided to resume our
journey, still ended up quite soaked. You have no choice but to wait. I am developing
remarkable patience in this country. Other circumstances that require patience... The
bus continues to provide me with great amusement. A new phenomena that I have
observed is the proclivity of the driver to just randomly stop for a rest and
drink a cup of tea or chat to his fellow bus-driving mates for as long as he sees
fit. This seldom occurs when I am on the way to campus (thankfully, because I
rarely allocate enough time for such unexpected occurrences in my morning schedule)
but often happens on the way home when I am about 1km from the kos. I always have
to toss up whether to just get off and walk or hope that his conversation is sufficiently
boring that he drinks his tea quickly and gets moving! It occurred to me
the other day also that when we all go home to Australia we are quite likely to
develop psychological paranoia about being ignored by the people around us, because
we will be able to once more walk down the street and not have anyone care less
about where we have come from (Dari mana?), where we are going (Mau
ke mana?), are we studying in Yogya (Kuliah di sini?) and why we are
walking alone (Kok sendirian?). It is absolutely mustahil, impossible,
to go anywhere incognito in this place. I went down to the bakery near my
kos today, "Parsley", to buy some bread and realized how that although
I used to find it weird to see cheese and chocolate used in the same baked good
or to see for example cheese as a topping on cake, I hadn't even thought about
it for two months as being anything other than normal. In Bandung, where Brownies
are apparently a specialty, they make a cheese version (eww). The absolute over-sweetness
of everything here would also be normal if it wasn't for the fact that I am constantly
reminded when I smile at myself in the mirror how bad my teeth will be when I
get home. The default taste of hot drinks here (Milo, coffee, tea, green tea)
is hyper-sweet. Out of control, cavity-inducing, stomach-churning sweet. Alas,
being an adaptable creature and one who is not prone to being fussy, I have learnt
to accept it. This is in lieu of other options other than the rather unpalatable
"don't have a drink" option. Oh and by the way, I eat rice and
sambal (chilli sauce) for breakfast. The girls in the kos think it's hilarious.
But they all do it too. Anyway, that's a pot pourri of random tidbits. *Taken
from a weblog Adelle
kept during her semester in Indonesia |