Search the site...

Paphos Theatre Archaeological Project
  • Home
  • The Project
    • Our approaches
    • Visualising the Site >
      • Paphos Theatre in VR
      • STARC 3D Visualisation >
        • STARC 3D Visualisation
      • Drone Footage 2017
      • Drone Footage 2018
      • Orthographic
    • 2018 Public Lecture
  • Archaeological History
  • The Team
    • Join as a Student team member
    • Volunteer Program
    • The Team in pictures
  • Research Projects
    • Zooarchaeology at Paphos
    • Recycling Paphos
    • Digital Artistic Documentation
  • Publications
    • Posters
  • Paphos Theatre Education Blog
  • The Archive
    • The Archive: Season reports and media >
      • 2019 Season Press Release
      • 2017 Season Report
    • The Archive: News and Events
    • The Archive: Cultural collaborations
  • Merchandise
  • Project Patron
  • Latest news
  • Contact Us
  • Support Us
  • Nea Paphos Colloquium III
    • Conference program
    • Abstracts
  • Images
    • Drone
    • VR
    • Excavation
    • Griffin Inv 9101
    • Griffin 9144
    • Aerial
  • Puzzles
  • Dig Life
  • Home
  • The Project
    • Our approaches
    • Visualising the Site >
      • Paphos Theatre in VR
      • STARC 3D Visualisation >
        • STARC 3D Visualisation
      • Drone Footage 2017
      • Drone Footage 2018
      • Orthographic
    • 2018 Public Lecture
  • Archaeological History
  • The Team
    • Join as a Student team member
    • Volunteer Program
    • The Team in pictures
  • Research Projects
    • Zooarchaeology at Paphos
    • Recycling Paphos
    • Digital Artistic Documentation
  • Publications
    • Posters
  • Paphos Theatre Education Blog
  • The Archive
    • The Archive: Season reports and media >
      • 2019 Season Press Release
      • 2017 Season Report
    • The Archive: News and Events
    • The Archive: Cultural collaborations
  • Merchandise
  • Project Patron
  • Latest news
  • Contact Us
  • Support Us
  • Nea Paphos Colloquium III
    • Conference program
    • Abstracts
  • Images
    • Drone
    • VR
    • Excavation
    • Griffin Inv 9101
    • Griffin 9144
    • Aerial
  • Puzzles
  • Dig Life

education blog

How To Survive Your First Dig

6/9/2014

1 Comment

 
When you first show up at a dig site, jet-lagged, weighted down with gear, and wondering just what sort of people you’ll be meeting, try to step back and just give yourself a break.  Expectations may be frustrated.  

You may be burdened with all sorts of mental baggage, all poised and read to give you a rough time.  So just try to leave behind all such onerous tendencies and embark on your new adventure!

A thousand new things will come your way when you start your dig.  You will certainly not like all of them.  And be forewarned!  All of the new people, facts, and events, when blended with any of the aforementioned mental baggage, can lead to the infamous “dig ennui,” or just plain grumpiness.  This brings us to the subject of this post:  How to Survive?

I like to break it down into 3 very easy words.  Please don’t scoff, but just bear with me. The words are: 

Faith, Duty, Compassion.

This magic 3-step formula contains within it everything you need in order to stay balanced, healthy, and positive on your dig.  It goes something like this:

Faith - Ask yourself, “Why am I here?  How did I wind up way out here, so far from home?  Is it really just an accident, a coincidence, or was it meant to be?“ 

I like to think of people like fingers on a hand.  They all wiggle this way and that, comparing themselves to each other and saying things like “Oh, well I’m the tallest one!” or “Oh yeah? Well I’m the thumb and best at grasping things!”  But in reality, we are all connected in one seamless whole, just as the fingers are connected to the hand.  So when you start to get grumpy, sad, lonely, or anything else, just remind yourself to have faith.  Every event, good or bad, presents a test, each an opportunity for you to practice your virtue.  Now is your Olympics!

I certainly realize that this 1st step in the magic 3-step formula can be a bit off-putting, and difficult to cling to for most people when things get tough, which brings us to step 2:

Duty - Now, what is duty while on a dig?  Well, digs are intensely team-oriented.  Each person  works in a small group,relying on your fellow teammates, staying in constant, immediate contact, and seeing immediate results from your labor.  Duty thrives in this environment.  Members of the armed services experience the very same thing:  put your teammates above yourself.  You might be tired, sore, sad, and sunburned, but what about your mate?  You would do anything for your mate, and they need you!  So when faith fails you, turn to duty and try to loose yourself in that most honorable and utilitarian act of placing the needs of the team above your own.  Rendering service to others can be a quick and powerful salve for whatever ails you!  Duty can feel just plain good, and provides you with an easy way to just ‘tune out’ whatever is nattering away at your mind.

Compassion -  Ok, now you’ve had it.  You’re faith has worn away, you’re just not having any of that wishy-washy stuff that says that everything in the universe led you up to this moment in this place.  And, you’re tired of your teammates and think the whole idea of honoring them with your duty to be asking just a bit too much of yourself.  Well, then it’s time to turn to the most ancient and revered faculty of the truest self - compassion.


Yes, life is hard and short.  Yes, you walk across only a tiny part of a tiny planet in a big galaxy for only a little blip of time.  And yes, the brief, fragile passage of human life has a way of expanding personal events to truly cosmic importance.  But!  In the end, setting aside every hope or dream, every grudge or regret, just take a deep breath, look deep inside yourself, and dip into your well of compassion.  And first and foremost, have compassion for yourself.  No one knows you better that you know yourself, and yet dear reader, we are not so different, you and I, where it counts anyway.

So there we have it - the easy-as-pie, 3-step magic formula to surviving your first dig:  Faith, then Duty, then Compassion.  Try out each in turn until you come to rest on the one that helps get you back on your feet, and good luck! Be well!  We are all in this together!

“Don’t demand that things happen as you wish, but wish that they happen as they do happen, and you will go well.”  -Epictetus

Kitty
Picture
1 Comment

An Ancient Pottery Masterclass

4/9/2014

1 Comment

 
Picture
Today the excavation project's founder and Emeritus Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Sydney, J Richard Green gave the team a masterclass in recognising ceramic forms, decorations and pot profiles.
Picture
We discussed a range of Roman and medieval ceramic forms found on the site, including medieval sgraffito production in Paphos.
The team learned about the importance of ceramic interpretation to our understanding of the site.  Although most of our ceramics specialist team are not in Cyprus this season, the preliminary sorting done now will be of great benefit to them next season.
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
1 Comment

Keeping Up Appearances

3/9/2014

0 Comments

 
The presentation and aesthetic of the Paphos theatre excavations are very  important on many levels. 

A clean site shows that we take great care in the process of our excavation of both trench 14A, situated  at the top edge of the theatre and 14B on the lower east.
 
From  day one we've  been giving the site a clean up of all weeds, and rubbish where noticeable. 

To the naked eye the weeds don't look fantastic , blocking the views of the archaeological theatre but its also impacts upon what happens underneath the soil as the plant's roots dislodge the archaeological remains - this then becomes bioterbation.

Archaeological sites in Cyprus are of major importance to society and the country's economy, providing a great opportunity for the tourism industry today.  So its of vital to keep the site clean for the future.

Picture
Picture
0 Comments

International Relations

1/9/2014

2 Comments

 
Picture
One of the great things about working in Paphos at this time of year is that there are a number of other excavations taking place as well as our project.  We recently hosted a visit to our site by our colleagues and the students of the Paphos Agora Project from the Jagiellonian University Institute of Archaeology in Poland.  Here is their project website.  The Polish students were given a tour of the theatre site.  We shall visit their excavati in coming weeks. In the meantime it gave the two teams a chance to meet over an informal drink and compare universities, and experiences excavating in Cyprus.
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
2 Comments
Forward>>

    Bloggers

    Each season our team including the directors, students, architects, volunteers, ceramicists and other finds specialists will blog about the day to day sweat and adventures that come with life on an archaeological dig.

    Each post will be signed off by the team member and together these posts will represent the variety of expertise and experiences that happen when working overseas on a dig. 

    ​Please join in and ask any questions about the archaeological excavations, research, field methods, the island of Cyprus, food on a dig, or anything else you’re interested to know in our comments section.

    Archives

    November 2019
    October 2019
    November 2017
    October 2017
    February 2017
    November 2016
    October 2016
    March 2016
    September 2014
    August 2014
    August 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010

    Categories

    All
    Blogs
    Cypriot Archaeology
    Other Foreign Teams
    Photographs Of Excavation
    Pottery Analysis
    Science In Archaeology
    Videos

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly