Friday, May 18, 2007

pics from mpika

and, some more pics of kids in mpika. these are some of the kids that are at my house pretty much whenever i'm there. i've tried to set up SOME boundaries... for example, they can't play soccer before 8 am, and they have to leave by 18. and then some of these kids are just kids who were there that day. but they're cuties.

also, i've put a bunch of these up on snapfish now. if you want to see more, e-mail me and i'll forward you the link. kisses!



























yay, so i've finally figured out how to get my pics up a bit more quickly. here are some of my favorites.




the sunset from my house in mpika. doesn't it make you want to come visit?! :-)



me and my sisters, chola and peggy, and christina's sister, erica



my little nephew, isn't he the cutest thing in the world?



me and my sister chola



peggy and my cousin



my mom and cousin




my sister getting her hair done



me and my mom




my sisters and their friends dancing outside my hut



me and my sister peggy



the sunset at my homestay family in chongwe



me and keli at swearing in



lindsay, lisa, and me at chishimba falls



chishimba falls



Rex



cibwabwa

Thursday, May 17, 2007

two interesting articles

so, in my endless time while i sit and wait for test results i thought i'd put up these two articles... they are pretty interesting. sorry, i couldn't figure out how to get them as links, so copy and paste. it's realllllly not hard!

first: an article about conflicting positions and arguments in today's world of microfinance. who does microfinance serve and how do we do that best? it's an article from the new yorker, oct 30th 2006. enjoy.

http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/10/30/061030fa_fact1

second: another new yorker article about water in india. after reading that the average american uses 400-600 litres of water A DAY, i calculated how much i use in my village and that maybe, maybe, if i do dishes, laundry, it's hot and i drink a lot, AND i bathe, i would use about 20. crazy. i don't, however, carry it on my head. though everyone else does. it's from oct 23rd, 2006. enjoy.

http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2006/10/23/061023fa_fact1

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

lusaka...

so, after 7 days and many many trips to my cimbusu (toilet) i am in lusaka for medical tests for a runny tummy... :-/ i'm still not sure what it is and it's definitely a bizarre sickness because mostly i'm feeling better except for my stomach just not feeling "right." i'm hoping to get test results today and head back up to kasama for peace corps meetings tomorrow and then back up to my site by sunday! :-) we'll see. fingers crossed.

that said... a description of my adventure down here might be amusing. i talked to the peace corps medical officer on sunday morning. all the buses from mpika to lusaka leave around 8 in the morning, so as i looked at my watch i realized i had missed all of them. so, sick, on a sunday morning i was going to try to hitch the 7 hours to lusaka.

i packed stuffed up, got my soccer balls back from the kids, got my cats to a new friend in town and walked down to the gas station. i waited for about an hour with about 5 cars passing me, until finally two guys in a white van stopped and asked where i was going. i said lusaka, a bit anxiously, hoping that they wouldn't laugh that i thought i could possibly go that far. to my amazement they said "well, today we're heading to serenje (about two and a half hours south of mpika) and then are continuing on to kabwe (two hours north of lusaka) tomorrow. but, if you want to come to serenje and continue on from there, you're welcome." i hopped in and got to serenje where i decided to spend the night at the peace corps house instead of sitting by the roadside with my fingers crossed and that i would have another ride at least half of the way the next day.

so, i hung out at the PC house where i took one of the hottest showers i've ever taken in my life. it was amazing. honestly, i know i've talked about showers before, but i think a hot shower is truly something i will forever be thankful for from now on. standing under running water, even as i know how much less water i CAN bathe with, is amazing.

then, i continued on the next day with chris, my new friend the driver, to kabwe. we spent the entire ride chatting, which was really nice... about zambia, about american political candidates, about egypt (which he travelled to for the africa cup last year and loved), about marriage and having children. he laughed that i thought i would start having kids around the age of 30. he said "that's when we STOP here in zambia!" then he dropped me off at the bus stop in kabwe and i waited to catch one of the many buses on their way to lusaka. luckily it only took about 20 minutes and i was in lusaka by 2 in the afternoon, only 28 hours after i had left my house in mpika. oy. and then made it quickly to the pc office.

since being in lusaka i've been staying with a family, which has been really nice. the peace corps has a bed and breakfast program that sets us up with american families in lusaka, which is so nice. it's nice to be in a house and the family i'm staying with has an almost 3 year old daughter who is the cutest thing. they are so sweet and worried about my tummy, which as it settles a bit can actually eat the food that they are feeding me! i've moved on from soup which is what i ate for most of last week. and they are just interesting to talk to and it's interesting to imagine a life as an ex-pat in lusaka...

lusaka has developed so much in the last 5-10 years that i think living here is pretty easy. a lot of the comforts that americans are used to are becoming easy to access in lusaka. whether that's reliable electricity and running water or spices from the new south african brand grocery stores or soft serve ice cream, you can find it. but lusaka is also a bit strange... each house is guarded and gated, each family seems to have a maid, a gardener, a guard, and struggles with how to be employers but not development workers but also kind and caring. it's definitely a strange world to try to navigate.

anyway, i'll close there and maybe get another update up soon. kisses! oh, also, i got SOME (very few!) pics up and unfortunately they are on facebook. so, check them out. but the computers even here can only put up pics slowly and one at a time. so that might be slow forever. but i might get a couple more up today. so, if you don't have facebook, get a kid to show you how to use it! haha.

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

adventures and mishaps

ah, so i tried to update this yesterday and wrote up about a page and a half of what i had written and then somehow erased it. and the internet is so slow that i just gave up and came back in today!

things get better here each day; though they are still filled with so much up and down that it can really be exhausting at times. i feel like i am making friends and am at the same time lonely, i am starting to love cooking on my little brazier but get frustrated when i can't light it fast enough (i'm getting better at it!), i start to feel that i have ideas and/or plans for what i can do and offer here and then i go to a meeting in bemba and feel incompetent. all of it is, i know, a lesson in patience and i know that thigns are feeling better overall... but there re moments of such confusion and missing people that it definitely doesn't feel like home yet.

that said, i've had a bunch of adventures in the last couple weeks, one of which ended with me coming back to my village and feeling such relief that i was coming back to MY house... my bed, my dishes, my cats, my routines. so, that's nice. and, i now have furniture! which is amazing. sitting in a chair to read and listen to music is sooooo much better and makes it feel so much more settled.

so, adventures: two weeks ago i went down to visit another volunteer who lives about 25 km south of me, or so. she's a health volunteer who lvies near a mission hospital and i went down for the last week of the month when the hospital does outreach in far away villages for the under-5 clinics. we went to 4 villages and probably weighed over 300 babies! crazy. while we did that, there was a hospital nurse who was doing ante-natal and VCT (volunteer testing and counseling) for HIV counseling and results. it was all really interesting and also, at times, frustrating. sometimes it felt that the mothers have just created this monthly or bi-monthly routine, or which they don't understand much... go weigh baby, don't understand the graph or what to do if your baby is malnourished, and come back next month. maybe i'm wrong. i hope so because this is a very amateur observation... but it was def something i thought about a couple times over the three days.

who, you might ask, was the we in this situation? me and the other PC volunteer went with two hospital workers both days and then the first day also went with two dutch medical student volunteers who are doing a study on malnutrition and a zambian music/drama group that does outreach and education. watching them made me really really want to speak bemba better.

the last night that i was down there was actually one of the dutch volunteers birthdays, so we stayed in the hospital compound to celebrate. we made a yummy hamburger curry, took a warm bucket bath, watched a movie, charged our phones, and listened to music. amazing!

i got back to my house with a cemented floor in the front room, which is also amazing. it's so much easier to sweep and take care of and the house just feels much cleaner. unfortunately it was followed the next day by a random, fluke rainstorm (the rainy season is over!) which proved that my roof will, and does, leak. a lot. since then the windy season has also come in in full force and my roof now has a very clear hole in it. i think someone might fix it today, and i have plastic over my bed now, so i think my bed, at least, will be dry and junk free. that day though, my bed, my newly cemented floor, my clothes were all wet. and while attemping to nail some plastic to my walls to cover it all i stepped into a candle and my skirt caught on fire!! in retrospect, it was all pretty hilarious because i noticed right away and didn't get burned at all. but i know have one less skirt and i lespt in my sleeping bag that night so that my sheets could dry. :-)

another adventure, i went to a zambian wedding! which, in the midst of, i realized was either the same day or the day before (turns out the day before) my cousin aaron and denise's wedding in jamaica. it made me feel once again that the earth does little things to remind us of our many little connections. other examples were e-mails from friends literally the day after thinking of them... little, vivid memories of places and then a mention of that person somehow.

anyway, the wedding was interesting... it was at the pentecostal church and then the reception was at a restaurant in town. the wedding ceremony itself had a lot of familiar parts: rings, vows, white dress, veil... in some ways it felt TOO Familiar and reminded me that christianity was brought here and, in many ways, took over leaving little of the old traditions behind. people seem to feel a pressure to give up on the old "african" ways in order to prove their christianity... which seems sad to me. though, the women's clothes and yells and dacing and the beat of the music helped to remind us all that this was an African wedding.

the pastor made a lot of references to the bible and jesus which made me want to read the new testament. i'm putting it on my list. most seemed implausible. one example: he said that adam and eve were married in the garden of eden and that jesus officiated hence proving the divine sanctioning of marriage (old testament, i know) but, um really?! are you really saying that? oy.

the reception was also interseting. pretty structure with people dancing, the bride and groom feeding each other cake, some toasts... a bit bizarre in its structure. and they handed out packaged food because, as another volunteer said, otherwise people would take too much. so we sat and watched the whole thing and then maybe when we left there was dancing... not sure. i wanted to get home before dark.

ok, this is getting really long. since then it has been a bit quiet. this week the schools opened again, which is nice. i'll have more to do. i had several meetings in my village last week which made me feel like i have something to offer here, it was exciting. working with women's groups, doing business training, i'm starting a youth group tomorrow... though i got sick for the first time since being here really, which is frustrating. my stomach is very unhappy and yesterday and today i feel a bit yucky. i went to a meeting at the ministry of ed yesterday morning, then felt so yucky afterwards that i went to see a friend who runs an orphanage in town to see if she had a thermometer and if i could lie down. luckily she did, i didn't have a fever, and i feel asleep for two hours, waking up feeling, though not perfect, much better! so... hopefully tomorrow i'll be even better!

we have meetings in the provincial capital with all the peace corps volunteers in northern province next week, which i'm excited for. i'm excited to see the other people in my intake and here their stories and adventures. and it'll be nice to be somewhere else for a couple days.

anyway, i think i should stop. if you've read this far, amazing! people have been asking me if i need anything from america and i'm not sure what to say... i know it's expensive to send packages and i feel a bit silly asking for things. at the same time, mail is amazing! i've never felt so dependent on that little connection. so some simple ideas: boxed food (mac and cheese, cous cous), granola bars and snacks, chocolate, music, anything to read, anything that makes me feel pretty and clean (both very rare occurrences!), candles, things to give the kids to play with (games, balls, art supplies), batteries, pictures of you! but, really, letters are also just as good. i think if everyone reading this blog wrote a letter every two or three months i'd have a letter almost everyday! hehe, yay!

ok, i miss you all a lot. sooooo many kisses and some zambian love.