jueves, 18 de junio de 2015

See you later

I don´t have the feeling that I have taken English classes. I have the feeling that I have been in a course about general culture and so many things that has turned out to be very complete, interesting and fulfilling. Even I have learned about myself.
If it weren´t for the exams, I´d like to repeat the course once more and again, as I think it is different every year. And, if I pass, I wish I could assist to some activities next year.
I have enjoyed a lot with all of you. And, as I have said other times, this year we have faced challenges that has brought out the best in ourselves, and I can´t imagine a better way of teaching.

Thanks Emilio and thanks all of you!
See you soon! 

There's this thing that people do when they leave
I've heard its called "goodbye"
But I hope I get to see you in the morning

And you'll say it was just a lie."

martes, 26 de mayo de 2015

100 words


This school year is being a surprising one.  We are facing the challenges our teacher suggests, like talking in front of all our classmates, writing an aphorism, a poem or a microstory. Firstly, we, or at least I, don´t face these activities with too much happiness… but once done, I strongly believe that these challenges bring out the best in ourselves.

Last Thursday we had the opportunity to assist to the presentation of a book in which we have taken part. It was a really moving and unbeatable journey. I felt like having the book on my hands and when we entered we could take one in order to follow the presentation.
Since the beginning, with Emilio´s introduction, we started to listen to stories. The book includes microstories in four different languages, but all of them translated into Spanish, so everyone can understand them. What is more, every story is illustrated by two students, one of them a classmate. I find it very interesting, knowing the image that has appeared in the mind of another person when has read your story.

On the other hand, apart from the stories, the way the words mixed with the music was really nice, especially during the reading of the three last stories.

All in all, there are really moving microstories in this book and it is special as it is part of us. According to the journey, it was like “a group of people in circle telling stories in different languages”, as in the past. This type of activities makes me feel a little sad about this school year ending. 

jueves, 7 de mayo de 2015

Human relationships - Richard Harvey




“A relationship between two people is the meeting of two stories”
I find this a really beautiful definition. Some days ago, its author, Richard Harvey, gave us some interesting advices in order to have a healthy relationship.

According to Richard, when you have a relationship you communicate some information, you tell a story. But normally, against what you could think, the problem is that you know a part of your story but you don´t know the unconscious part. And the first step is to know yourself and your shadows.

After that, you are ready to have other relationships, which are with the other and with the world.  In this level, you must communicate, and you can do it talking, sharing, touching… and, at the same time, allowing yourself to be touched.

What is more, another important thing is the fact of avoiding problems and becoming emotionally intelligent, which seems to me very difficult. It is wise to learn about your experiences and discover the difference between love, need and desire. In addition, always keep in mind that YOU ARE FREE.

On the other hand, he talked about unhealthy relationships, representing them in a very clearly way with his hands.

All in all, I really enjoyed the lecture, due to not only his pieces of wisdom but also the tone of his voice and the atmosphere he created. I think he is a great orator.  


martes, 5 de mayo de 2015

A different day in The Alhambra

Although I sometimes go for a walk in the Alhambra´s gardens, I enjoy very little this wonderful place, still being so near.

Last Thursday I had a very nice time with my classmates in this beautiful ancient city. I went to Granada by car and parked in the city centre in order to walk through the gardens until the meeting point. In spite of the high temperature, the walk was really comfortable: the trees’ shades, the water running in the canal, the birds cheeping…
When I arrived to the main entrance, I noticed the enormous amount of people that visit this monument every day, which is normal, due to its beauty.

It is hard to choose the most beautiful corner in the Alhambra but what I liked the most was, without any doubt, “El patio de los Leones”.  In addition, I liked “El patio de los arrayanes” too, since I imagined the place at night with the stars reflected on the water, as Emilio said.
But what struck me the most was the big presence of Maths in the Alhambra. I found really interesting the fact that the 17 possible plane crystallographic groups were present in the Alhambra´s walls. What is more, it is incredible because it is known by the specialists that people who created the mosaics could not know how many plane crystallographic groups existed due to the fact that Fedorov demonstrated it in 1891.


All in all, I loved this activity in which we could learn not only English, but also history, art and religion in an unbeatable surroundings. I would say that the more I visit this monument the more I like it. 









martes, 14 de abril de 2015

The 2 faces of technology.



Undoubtedly, technology is actually very useful nowadays. However, it is technology that is weakening our relationships, too.
People, me included, save on a lot of our valuable time by using a computer or a smart phone for everything, as communicating with others, buying almost everything and solving any doubt on the internet, among other things.
This fact causes the lack of social interaction. Most of people don´t go anymore to the bank or to the supermarket. We can make the transactions and buy everything on the internet, even food. And children play alone with their computers instead of playing in the street with other children. 
I remember until very recently that everybody called their friends for their birthdays and now most of us text a “whatsapp” or write a message on Facebook. Maybe more people wish you a happy birthday now, but rarely had you had more cold and impersonal greetings.
What is more, in my opinion, technology is weakening our abilities. Suppose you didn´t have a calculator. Would you be able to solve a difficult division?
 I also remember myself looking information up in the encyclopedia. Some years ago, an encyclopedia and a dictionary were essential things at home and now children don´t use them, even at school, where there are computers.
To conclude, I think it would be a mistake to go back, keeping the advantages of technology in mind, but we should be careful and don´t be so dependent.



jueves, 5 de febrero de 2015

Diseases - Ignored Global Killers




Under this title, Anup Shah analyses the reasons for millions of deaths caused by preventable diseases in the world and some possible tools to tackling it.

“Eleven million people in poor countries will die from infectious diseases this year. Put a different way, it means that by the time you finish reading this column 100 people will have died. Half of them will be children aged under five”. Larry Elliott, Evil triumphs in a sick society, Guardian, February 12, 2001.

Tuberculosis, malaria or simply measles are some of these preventable and curable diseases which cost far more lives than, for example, natural or man-made catastrophes, even thought a measles vaccine and safe injection equipment costs less than 1 US dollars. However, different from this issue, which is often missed by the mainstream media, catastrophes make headlines. There is a little difference with AIDS, which is getting the most attention due to the fact that it remains a threat to developed countries.

Which are the causes of people dying by preventable diseases? Ken Silverstein points out in an article called “Millions for Viagra. Pennies for Diseases of the poor” that “People died because the drugs to treat those illnesses are nonexistent or are no longer effective. They died because it doesn´t pay to keep them alive”.

Furthermore, as Shah points to, increased poverty and debt is resulting in forced cut-backs in health and education. To that, we have to add the cultural and traditional barriers, social issues and taboos that need to be overcome in some parts of the developing world, for treatments to be made readily accessible.

Serving as an example, Ann-Louise Colgan makes a good summary of the situation in Africa. As she says, a substantial progress was made in the 1960s and 1970s. African governments increased spending on the health sector, endeavoring to extend primary health care. However, with the economic crisis of the 1980s, African governments became clients of the World Bank and IMF and the loan conditions of these institutions forced contraction in government spending on health and other social services. By 1990s, most African countries were spending more repaying foreign debts than on health or education for their people.

Another important issue is the privatization in the health sector, recommended by the World Bank, and that has reduced access to necessary services, transforming health care from a public service to a private commodity. Not to mention the fact that private care is less effective at prevention, and is less able to cope with epidemic situations. Considering that infectious diseases constitute the greatest challenge to health in Africa, it is flawed.

Finally, which are the steps to follow in order to tackle this global issue?
According to Africa Action, an organization looking into political, economic and social justice for Africa, “a debt cancellation should be the first step. Additional resources to support health and education programs should be conceived as public investment, not new loans.”

Another important step is pharmaceutical companies focusing on prevention rather than cures. Prevention does not replace treatment, but it does reduce the number of people whose lives will depend on drugs. The problem with this last issue is that pharmaceutical companies judge that they would not get sufficient return on research investment.

Concluding, not until some causes and issues like poverty are addressed, will these steps have much effective impact. 

lunes, 24 de noviembre de 2014

My first quatrain




I looked around with your eyes,
-which claim to see only blackness-
and found colours never seen,
but not the way to show you.