Friday, 10 March 2017
S Make indirect requests and
suggestions. (Examples: I wouldn’t do that
if I were you; You might want to
reconsider; I don’t think
smoking is allowed here.)
Indirect requests are often used to enhance politeness. Think of three terrible habits that are dangerous to one's driving or health. Record your indirect suggestions on www.chirbit.com, and place the link on your blog, together with this questions.
http://vocaroo.com/i/s1GNKjFMS5G3
Friday, 3 March 2017
My Volunteering
Experience
(Draft 3, final
correction)
I live in a rural area and I don’t have any developed
infrastructure such as grocery stores, banks, pharmacies, libraries, hospitals,
and gas stations. So one day my husband decided to move to the closest city,
which is located 30 km away, in hopes of finding a job for me and reducing his
commute.
It was January 2016. We rented an apartment in the centre of
the city. The location was perfect because I could reach any place on foot in
5-10 minutes. After a few months of living there I started to think about
finding a job. I sent my resume to two grocery stores but did not get any
responses. One day, I met our neighbor, who suggested that I find some
volunteer work. She sad that there was a thrift shop (in my country of origin
we call it second hand) in the city looking for volunteers. I went there the
next day, talked to the general manager, and left my application. I started
working there after three days, from Monday to Friday, from 12 am to 4pm. Every
day there was a new team of four to five people. So I met around 20-25 new
people just during one week. In that team was one woman from Japan, one from
Vietnam, and a few people with German, Russian, and Ukrainian backgrounds. The
oldest member of the team was 92 years old.
The business model of our store was to receive donations
from people, set low prices, and sell it. We sold everything: adult clothes,
kid’s clothes, shoes, kitchenware, books, DVDs, wall pictures, toys, different
accessories. That was an interesting but very intense job because we had to
process a lot of donations every day!
My main responsibilities were: receiving donations, sorting,
and putting clothes on hungers. Despite the intense work, we always had some
time for a break and drinking tea or coffee, gossiping, exchanging recipes, and
joking. I had worked for three summer month before we came back to our rural
area. I often miss my volunteering job. And now when I go to the city for any
reason I always visit that thrift shop just to say “Hello”.
I would say that was a simple but a very useful job. I got
some benefits since working as a volunteer, such as meeting new people and
friends, understanding team work better, becoming more self-confident, and
improving my language skills.
P.S. Here is the latest good news which I had heard about
the thrift shop. Approximately 1,120 square feet will be added to the back of existing
building because donations have progressively increased over the past five
years and there is no room to store all the items received!
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