Sunday, January 25, 2009

Peace Corps Lifestyle Moments - 1st edition

Ok fans, as promised...(drum roll please)...welcome to Peace Corps Lifestyle Moments - 1st ed. To reiterate, PC lifestyle moments will focus on randomly selected aspects of my lifestyle and thoughts surrounding the topic of discussion. For our first segment we will give our attention to the latrine or as we here in Panama like to call it, the ¨servicio.¨ I have included a picture of my host family´s latrine for your viewing pleasure.

Peace Corps Lifestyle Moments-
  • Holding your bladder throughout the night to avoid getting up in the cold (yes cold) and walking through the dangers of snakes and all kinds of night rodents including the roaches waiting for you in the latrine.
  • Seeing all the roaches and not really caring at this point. You made it all the way here, when you got to go, you got to go.
  • As you sleepily stumble to the latrine which requires you walking up a hill with a million places to trip, you startle awake at the sound of a giant pig snorting as he sleeps (after which you find another route to your destination).
  • Stepping out of the latrine to realize that a horse is blocking your path back to the house.
  • Thanking God that when you dropped your flashlight it hit the ground and didn´t go down the hole leaving you to trek back to the house through the woods Blair Witch style.
  • Having your host mom offer you a bowl to pee in so you don´t have to worry about getting to the latrine at 2am. You know, in case you like the idea of everyone in the house waking up to the sound of your pee in a bowl.
  • Realizing all the gallons of water I´ve saved since I don´t have to flush (priceless).

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I hope to have more lifestyle moments in the near future but let me take some time to show you more pics from my new site.

(above) This is my host family´s house. The family consists of an elderly couple with their 2 adult sons, and 2 adult daughters with their combined 5 kids. The only reason I have my own room is because one of the daughters and her 2 kids are in Panama City for the time being. I live in an area of the community where the closest 20 houses are all family of my host family in some form or fashion. This includes about enough kids for me to start a school which I WON´T be doing.

(above) This is a waterfall that took us about an hour to hike/climb to. Serious climbing and hiking I´ll go ahead and add there. I was sore for about a week afterward.

(above) So I asked some of the kids to get me some mandarinas (mandarin oranges) and before I new it, I had them climbing trees. The background shows sugar cane and banana trees but I swear there is a manadarina tree right next to where I was standing to take the pic.

(above) Time for a culture lesson. In the campo (interior part of the country where people live off the land far from any major city) people host whats called a junta (pronounced hoonta) where they will provide chicha (pronounced cheecha, juice of some sort, in this case, with alcohol in it) and invite men in the community to help them with a project needing a lot of manual labor. In this case, the pit for the old latrine was getting pretty full of you know what (yes, trust me I KNOW how gross that it) so they dug a new hole (about 9 ft deep) and moved the latrine. All fresh and deep!

(above) So I would like to make this blog a little more interactive and besides creating my PC Lifestyle Moments, I would like to introduce you to this chicken. She has a very unique hair do which makes me crack up each time it rains because it just looks like she has had a long hard day. I have been calling her Shirley in the mean time but I wanted to get some input from the fans on ideas for her name. I have already received the suggestion of Elvis Poultry (wa.wa.waaa...) but would like some more suggestions. Comment on the blog and get me some good names!
(above) These are some of the kids playing Loteria which is a game played similarly to bingo. It comes from Mexico and is in Spanish so the kids love it. My mom sent it and in the month that I have been in my site, there has probably been 2 days max that the kids haven´t asked me to borrow the game to play.
(above) Me taking advantage of the scenery and the time I had to take pictures while waiting for the next truck to take me to my site which ended up being 2.5 hours. I was up the mountain visiting my closest PC volunteer neighbors.

And last but definitely not least...


(above) Me with my future husband.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Things are starting to look up.

Hello there fans. This blog entry will not be anything close to what I want to post since my time is severely limited but to give you a quick update. I am doing absolutely fabulous. For the first time in over 5 months, I am genuinely glad to be here and feel like I am getting the Peace Corps experience that I wanted. I live in a community of about 500 people. I have to walk a lot on many hills, I have some great mountain views, the people are really great (meaning nice and open), and for being in site for a little under 3 weeks, I already feel so much better than I did at my old place.

My new host family consists of an elderly couple with their 3 adult children living at home. The surrounding 15 to 20 houses are also family relatives so that makes it really easy to meet a lot of other people. I actually have my own room in the house which is amazing. The house is made of mud up to about 3 feet then wood boards the rest of the way and of course the typical zinc roof. I will have to post pictures later. This is also the first time in my life that I live without a refrigerator which surprisingly isn´t that big of a deal but when I get my own place in March, I hope to have one for myself. The water situation is pretty much the same as my old site. There is one faucet outside of the house and the water comes once a day in the morning so when it actually comes, we fill buckets with water and use that for everything we need during that day.

My mom sent me some bingo cards so I have started to play with the kids who now use rocks to mark their cards after first attempting to use dry corn kernels but getting tired of the chickens sabotaging our games trying to eat the bingo markers! I´m in the process of making some bingo cards to help teach the kids english vocab before they go back to school.

I have to go now but I want to let you know that I am going to start a segment on my blog called Peace Corps Lifestyle Moments where I will descriptively talk about various experiences that I have gone through as a Peace Corps volunteer. It´ll be great, look forward to it. So long for now my friends. Please note the new cell phone number on the left side of the screen.