Well, it'll be a little more difficult than the ideal beginner's scope (a 6-8 inch Dobsonian), but far from impossible. First thing first is to polar align the mount. Since it's an EQ mount, this'll have to be done every time you take it out. Rotate the tripod head in azimuth until the telescope counterweight faces north with the tube parallel to the mount head (you can use a compass to get it close, but you'll want to check a magnetic declination map first to get the correct offset from magnetic north). Use the latitude adjustment to set the telescope to the correct latitude, and then set the telescope to 90 degrees declination. More than likely the scope came with a declination setting circle which is mostly useless but helpful here. Once you've done this, you should see Polaris in the eyepiece field. If you don't, adjust the mount head azimuth or the latitude until you do. Congratulations, your mount is now (roughly) polar aligned.
Now that you've done this, you'll need to use the method of right angle sweep to find targets starting from bright stars. Since you can't just push the telescope where you want it to go like an alt-az system, you need to move in one axis, then the other. Figure out how large in degrees the field of the finder or your low power eyepiece is, then consult your star charts (you do have good charts, right?). Measure how far in angle you have to go in each axis, then divide that into field-widths you need to move. Then move the right number of field widths for each axis, and you should hit the target. For the next couple of months, a good target to practice on since it'll be real damn obvious when you hit it is the Orion Nebula. Try getting there from Orion's Belt, Rigel, and Betelgeuse. Other good winter targets are the Double Cluster, Jupiter, M35, the Pleiades, the Beehive (M44), M36, M37, M38, M81 and M82, M31, M32, M110, M33, M15, NGC 7331, and so on.
One other benefit of having the mount polar aligned is that once you have a target in view, you only need to move in the right ascension axis (R.A., the E-W axis) to keep it there. Without polar alignment, this becomes a rather tricky process. This is in fact why EQ mounts are desirable in the first place.
One more thing: if my instructions seem unclear, or you have no idea what I'm talking about, you can google both polar alignment and right angle sweep. Last time I did that, I recall finding pretty good info sources in the first few hits.