Alright well February went by fast. I think I have come to the point where I kind of accept this culture. My life is very different here, and I am past the stage of looking at this as a vacation. I have become pretty annoyed with my 7 am alarm clock recently. As I have become closer with my Egyptian friends they want to hang out more and more. I dont know if I have talked about this before, but Cairo is a major night life city. You can order food 24/7 and the city literally never sleeps. There are car honks and people yelling outside during all hours of the night. Anyways my core group of four Egyptian friends love to stay up till about 2am every night, which usually as most of you know I would love, but when I have to be at class at 9 am its kinda tough. I have to wake up at around 730 and make it to the metro by about 815. I then ride the good ole metro for half an hour then walk/sprint to make it to class on time. Its pretty hard to get my brain "thinking" in Arabic when I am really tired, but its fun learning new stuff each day.
So lately our 2 am nights have revolved around hanging out at coffee shops while playing boards games and just chatting. Last week I played about 6 hours of dominoes. Dominoes is honestly the most boring game I have ever played, except maybe Apples to Apples, that one is pretty boring. They stinking love dominoes here. The funny thing is that I beat all of my friends the first night we played, and I didnt really know what I was doing. Well I take that back, its extremely easy and 90 % luck. I don't understand why everyone likes this game here, they play backgammon a lot too.
Mashi, lets see my Arabic level has grown a whole lot over the last month. I feel pretty confident in a lot of basic conversations, and I am finally getting over the transition from Modern Standard Arabic to the Egyptian dialect. This language is so strange, I dont understand a lot of grammar, so I may shift my focus away from reading and writing.
Basketball was cool this week, we played some full court and one guy bent one of the rims pretty bad while dunking. It was totally worth it though because we were all really pumped up that he dunked! I learned a cool phrase recently, "ya basha" . It means like king or captain, but you say to your friends " ya basha izzayak?". So its pretty fun to say, and its basically like saying "Hey captain, whats up? "
You may have heard about the recent bomb the went off here in Cairo. It happened at a really famous market named Khan el Khalili. I have been there a few times and to the cafes where it happened. I probably wont go back though, the security there never seemed all that great anyways in my opinion. The people here despise terrorism, I honestly think they have been more outspoken against it than many in the States. A top Muslim leader in Egypt came out and said the attackers were "cowards and traitors to their religion and country." I think the media has done a perplexingly poor job of representing the majority of Muslims in the world.
Alright well I am about to head out with some friends, hopefully not to play more dominoes.
Oh I made scrambled eggs for the first time this morning, I know its kinda embarrassing I have never done that. My roommate has a Betty Crocker cookbook and it taught me how to scramble em pretty well. Food is something I haven't mentioned much, but I get by on a lot of tuna and peanut butter&jelly sandwiches. I do get kosheri quite a bit which is sort of like pasta, but its got a weird Middle East twist to it.
Mashi, keep me in your prayers, I am not hanging out with people for no reason. I am learning a lot, I know thats cliche to say but I do mean it.
Tayyib , kifaya m3assalama.