I brought the wrong shoes. I go to school or training of
some sort from 9-6, six days a week. During this time, we have a
business-casual dress code. Women don’t wear a lot of pants in Azerbaijan, so I
wear skirts and dresses. I brought a pair of comfortable pumps and a pair of
comfortable knee-high boots. Shouldn’t be a problem. It’s a problem. I do a lot
of walking in Sumquayit. A LOT of walking. My short walking days are when I go
to the local “cluster” school for language and technical training. Those days
aren’t bad; only a 15-minute walk each way. At least once a week, the entire
AZ11 group meets at the Hub school, which is more like a 30-minute walk each
way. None of this would be much of an issue, except the roads and sidewalks,
what there are of them, are often crumbling or don’t really exist…many
sidewalks are really just dirt paths next to the streets, so we end up walking
in the streets instead. Again, not an issue….until you realize pedestrians
definitely do NOT have the right-of-way in AZ, and the drivers are pretty much
out for themselves, period. You might occasionally come across a crosswalk here
and there, but it doesn’t mean much; the drivers just blow right through them.
So, basically, the strategy is to walk the fine line between being bold and
being careful. Bolful. That’s pretty
much it. Walking to school or downtown (a 40-minute walk), then, is always an
adventure. At this point I don’t dare wear my tennis shoes; they just aren’t
seen much on women here. I brought the wrong shoes.
Need me to send you a pair of casual dress shoes? Sounds like you need sensible librarian shoes.
ReplyDeleteMy same question. What kind of shoes shd you have taken?
ReplyDeletesensible librarian shoes, for SURE. :)
ReplyDelete