Thursday, September 20, 2007

SITE ANNOUNCEMENTS: COPAN




09.18.07

This is it, I’m off to Cabañas, COPAN, to work on projects in tourism, the redesign of Project Citizen materials, and a program called Educatodos, among other things...

The department of Copan is located in the western part of the country, right next to the Guatemalan border. The climate is warm, but not hot, rather fresco (as they say here.)
The best part is that I’m right next to the famous Mayan ruins so it will be beautiful and colonial-esque villages, with the same charming cobblestone streets that are here in Sta Lucia.

I also have a site mate named Sarah, who is currently serving as a health volunteer. (This way I can keep up on the Med School lingo for when I talk to all you soon-to-be doctors back home whom I love!) I met my counterpart today, the mayor of the town, and he and the tech team will be driving me and my enormous suitcases to Cabañas tomorrow. It will be so nice to stay put in one place after this last move! I will never over pack again!


All the new excitement aside, I will miss my training site of El Paraíso a great deal. My family there I truly fell in love with and I was crying like a baby as our bus pulled away and little Angel and Susanita were waving their goodbyes. They called me once I arrived back in the frio Sta. Lucia, and already their voices sounded so far away. Once in Copan, I will be 2 days travel from them. I’m one of the furthest from Tegucigalpa, 9 hours by bus to my site! ¡Pumachica!
Angel called me again tonight begging me to come back to la casa and play with him. Miriam got on the phone and I just got a soft pain in the gut, knowing I wont be talking to her after la cena anymore.

I'm anxious to meet a whole New family tomorrow, and I'm thinking, i just can't be this lucky a Third time!

Here are some websites on Copan:

http://www.copanhonduras.org/

http://www.planetware.com/copan-ruinas-tourism-vacations-hon-cop-cr.htm

Cabanas google satellite maps

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Bye Bye El Paraiso...




09.15.07
The week has been one of the busiest thus far. It’s all coming to a close—the FBT, the Mundi-D Group, the families, El Paraiso, la Yunta, el Parque, Café D’polo, casa de cultura, charlas, cernos, cenas, aspirante-ism. It has been an excellent time, leaving El Paraiso will not be tear-less. Part of me just isn’t ready to walk away from this phase, yet I’m too anxious and excited not to. People in our group I will miss. But there are no good byes now, after all, we still have 2 years of discovering Honduras ahead.


Monday was día cultural with the families en casa de Susan. Each aspirante prepared a traditional Honduran dish for la cena. In contrast to the Honduran food, our group prepared various American cultural-type activities. One group did pin the tail on the donkey; my group did the hokey-pokey; and another group did a charla on their home states. There were also family members that presented different Honduran cultural aspects, such as a traditional dance group, a poetry reading, a few skits, and instruction on how to dance la punta—a dance that originated amongst the Garifunas on the North Coast.

Tuesday we left early for los llanos for our tourism fieldtrip. During the trip we visited a finca, rode horses (some of us rode mules), we cut down sugarcane with machetes to make sugarcane juice, we learned about cows and coffee, we made fishing poles, dug for worms, and did some fishing (I caught my first fish!), did some hiking, shucked some corn, planted some plants, and eventually we got a fire to light to roast marshmallows. The trip was fun, minus sleeping on mats, all in one large room that was once a restaurant. It was freezing and the shower in the morning even colder.
I imagine that was once all Peace Corps training was about—how to be adult girl and boy scouts.

Thursday my group started construction on our bulletin board project in el parque. The current volunteer in El Paraiso designed it, and my group along with Jorge, Junior, and a few people from the community helped us put it in place. We still have the cork to glue, which we’ll finish Sunday.

Friday marked the start to the celebrations for Honduran’s Día de Indepencia. All the students in the lower grades marched in their parade through the town yesterday, and today it will be the colegio students marching in costume while performing their dances and music.
My group did our final presentations for SDP, sharing our ups and downs in integrating into the community and attempting to execute all the projects we were trying to accomplish during the past month. There were a lot of ups and downs and expectations unmet, yet overall everyone seemed to walk away from it with a positive attitude, a lesson learned, and a better understanding of a phrase that Jorge so often says: “It Happens.” (Meaning “Shit Happens.” ie: corruption, unfulfilled promises, human error.)

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

So far septiembre so good


09.12.07__bolsas, breakfast, country home.

So far septiembre so good...
We have less than one week left of Field Based Training. Less than one week until we find out where we will be spending 2 years of our lives. Cannot even imagine. At my third Tech interview today they informed me that I will be helping to illustrate the new Project Citizen Booklets for Peace Corps Honduras, which is a great project to start out with. Also, the Alcalde in my site is eager to develop tourism in the pueblo. There are also schools and other small business in my future site to work with and for. Lastly, I will not have to worry about loneliness because there is another volunteer currently serving there, which means it can’t be all that small! Just a couple of days and I’ll know for sure!



Two Saturdays ago, a group of us girls went with Brianna Bailey’s Empleada to learn how to make bolsas. The bolsa training center (aka some tia’s casa) was apparently in colonia #24 about a 30-minute walk del centro along the main carreterra heading towards Donlí. The weather that weekend was great, and so the walk was very enjoyable fieldtrip-style. Alas, the whole objective of the walk was not quit realized. The woman who was the purse maker was not there when we arrived, and so we waited and played with the freshly born kittens and rabbits until the woman arrived from church. She eventually did arrive on the scene, and showed us her blosas to a less than enthusiastic crowd. Alas, there were no materials there to actually make the purses, and so another date was set for the lessons and we went on our sweaty, merry, mosquito-bite ridden way. Nothing really lost, nothing exceptionally gained, it was really kind of nice to just walk.



That Sunday was great. My host family took me to a nearby aldea where Miriam used to teach, and so everyone there called her la Profe. The people of the aldea were really sweet and generous. We enjoyed talking, snacking on tamales with cheese and hot, sweet coffees as the kids played and little susanita charmed everyone in her cute little vistido w/floras. In the second house we visited the family owned two HUGE cernos (pigs) and their two offspring, which were the biggest pigs I have ever seen that upclose. I mean, the slaughter of those things would feed the entire aldea for a month! After we said our goodbyes and loaded up on the customary departing gifts of fruits and vegetables and plants, we took off just as the daily rain began. We stopped along the way first to offer a jálon to a fellow church member of Wiliam’s who was along the road with her kids. Then we stopped in an outside colonia right near el centro where Miriam and Wiliam bought a house that is still under construction even though it was supposed to be completed a year ago.
Wiliam said this was an example of corruption.
The dealer taking their money without delivering any final product as promised. I can’t believe there is no penalty for that kind of robbery. People seem so patient, so very forgiving. Para mi, with the way I have been raised, if I buy something, or pay for something, that something better be produced or else there would be legal action. Here there just is no such school of thought, take action…and do what?? The results just aren’t that immediate. It’s another case of “break the cycle.” Again, where does one even begin? Regardless, the house so far looks nice and airy with some great views of the surrounding mountainside. They are such a sweet couple, such a preciosa familia, I can imagine them perfectly in their completed country home. One day.



09.05.07__Felix
Huracán Felix is filling up the buckets outside my room.
The downpour will flood many parts of the country. El Paraiso will not be one of them. But there will be no classes hoy. Flooding is possible everywhere and in particular in Tegucigalpa where the drainage system is badly in need of improvement. As for my personal flood factor, the rippling roof of my dormitorio has algunos hoyos, which allow a constant dripping right above my bed…slowly and surely it will be saturated by morning.

All my fellow aspirantes were excited for the potential evacuation, but no, only a level one, and so we remained in El Paraiso, this is all. Only change, no afternoon classes. We went to the little café “la Finca” at el parque that I truly love. The motif is peasant farm girl, lots of wicker and faux moss and clay trinkets. The best part is the big thermos of dark, strong coffee that they give you. The homemade pan is 2 limps and it is sweet yet salty with hints of nutmeg and all spice, it’s strange and good and they serve it in a little basket along side the thermo. These are the places I will miss!



09.08.07__Poetic cigarros y vino de café
Jueves nosotros fuimos al Tabacalero en Paraíso para ver el operacion. It was really interesting visually. The idea of human labor as piece-meal, as people functioning as a machine in a way, as if they were just on earth to be an arm or an eye, a couple finger movements and nothing more, nothing less, oddly enough it has practical aspects. We are all just performing memorized tasks to complete a final product. It’s eerie how this week I and another aspirante Julie (who currently has Dengue) gave Business Fundamental Charlas and in one of the activities we discuss the benefits of assembly line production and one person having just one task and that’s it. I never really considered that kind of work beneficial to anyone, yet in our lecture we illustrate it’s benefits along with the benefits of having individual products based solely on one person’s invention and labor. I wonder what the mental health consequences are.


The workers in the factory did not seem sad, or look worn down. A few had vacant stares, the same kind of stare that I have had at my past office jobs, none too different. Reality is, a few of the positions in the cigar making process demand workers to stand all day, or strain their eyes, a few of them I’m sure can never get the color of tobacco leaves to leave their fingers, their skin. A few of them have cut their own skin with the blades. This is not bad work, it is not fulfilling in the soft generalized definition of what fulfilling work is. But who can say what is or isn’t_ I did not stay with the group. I just wanted to capture it all on film. The symmetry, the lighting, the repetition—all of these mathematical elements are so appealing to the human eye. I wonder if we weren’t meant to be drones? Lemmings?
The workers receive at least minimum wage and higher, vacation time, they have a health clinic in the factory to treat those who are ill, it all seems to be ok-dokay on the surface, but we did not get to interview or speak with the workers…they were all Working...So there you have it. One worker said I looked like his daughter in the states. He had clear blue eyes, so we took a photo, psuedo dad and gringa hija.
After the tabacalero, we went to an ejemplo of a micro-empresa. A woman with a short cut and nice smile, excitedly explained to us all about the various products of café beans and the wine she produces in her home. The benefits of coffee wine were pretty humorous—relieves stress and headaches, good for the blood pressure, and an energy booster! But you don’t have to sell me on anything that’s a coffee derivative. Caffeine is surely a friend of mine. We were treated to a wine tasting w/the dark liquor-like substance, add a scoop of helado and it’s pretty rico. The woman also had a café pastel that was extremely rich and equally rico.




This week was also the end of SDP, which means the end of work in the community of El Paraiso. As I said, Julie and I were to give the Business Fundamentals charla to two of the 6th grade classes on Thursday and Friday. (The classes were canceled on Wednesday because of the huracán. Julie was a trooper and did the charlas with me anyway, even with her Dengue. It was a lot of work between the two classes, but the kids seemed to enjoy themselves and learned a few pointers on how to save money and how to think out an idea to make money. It’s hard to measure what students take away from a lesson. It’s always easier when the students are actually your own and you know their personalities, strengths, and weaknesses. Here we are shooting in the dark. But that is what we are here in FBT to do, practice being volunteers. Next week, we will actually swear in and aspirante school will be out.

Saturday, September 1, 2007

High highs_Low lows



08.26.07__Señor Tigre v. Dengue Fever
It’s nice to hear señor tigre once again, growling from his favorite hiding place beneath my bed. Little Angel is finally back to his old self after contracting Dengue fever last week. Glenda said he got it from swimming in the river. Miriam said there is bastante Dengue in el Paraiso. There is high alert in the country. We had a scare on Wednesday, when he could not use his legs. I don’t think they hurt him, it was more like paralysis, and when he tried to walk, they just buckled from underneath him and he fell. Every time he got up, he fell. Just the night previously he seemed to be recovering fast, but then this…Miriam and Wiliam took him to the clinic across the street, and then to Donlí were they were able to run some tests. It seems it was just a result of the Dengue running through his little veins and not a more serious cancer that the doctors has suspected. Thanks to all, señor tigre is back on the prowl.

The past week and a half has been very busy and emotionally charged:


08.16.07__Alauca, Jacaleapa, El Paraiso.
Thursay was the first day of SDP, self defined project. We are broken into three groups, two of which travel 20 minutes out of El Paraiso a few days of the week to work in the municipalities of Alauca and Jacaleapa. This means, no more sitting and listening to lecture after lecture…even though I know it was all necessary. But still, I am so ready to be in my site and get to work! Not that I want to say goodbye to any of these people, fellow aspirantes and families alike. Everyone here I have grown to really appreciate for all they are. I had a nice heart to heart with my host mom today, with little Susan passing between our laps—She is quickly becoming a real ally that I hope to keep for a longtime. She was joking around w/her friend about having a mountain of meat in the fridge and a gringa who only wants vegetables! Yep, that’s me, bien compliqué. Or, “tough” as my father puts it. I guess dads are sometimes right.
Wiliam, my host dad and I also spoke about life in the US. He thinks it is too centered around money and the business of increasing it, possessions and such. Perhaps it is, at some point…but not everywhere. It can’t be.

08.17.07__Legal Resident Jam Session
Friday was good day, good night.
There’s a big old blister on my thumb begging to be popped. A group of us went to the small Café d’apolo by the parque. There’s live music on weekend nights, which is really just the talented owner, se llama Carlos, and his friends playing guitar + flute. Carlos, I just happened to have met at La Casa de la Cultura the day prior b/c I found his guitar in the music room and took it upon myself to try it out. Well, he heard me singing Ben’s waiting on an angel, and liked my voice...So he lent me his guitar again to play at the café. It was nice and therapeutic, just playing and singing, not that I am any good, but I like to do it anyway! The owner even joined in w/his flute while I was playing Leaving on a Jet Plane, my first jam session in Honduras—very special.

Earlier that day we made the trip to Teguc to get our official residency cards for the country and so I am officially here! Two years, here I come…
It was really nice to get to see other people from the other two groups! It’s odd, but we wont get to see each other all in one place again until we swear in for the 2 yr service. Crazy.

After the paper work was done we got to walk around the mall for an hour and a half. I got mint chocolate chip ice cream and double minutes for my cell phone. The mall was eerie, a bit over stimulating and unnecessary. The idea of shopping was tempting, but without any money to dispense and nowhere to wear potentially cute purchases, the fun of it is not so …eh fun. I also ran into my first host dad, Don Wil and he scolded me for not calling! The time just goes so fast!
I also got a letter from Trish and a very special package from Jo! Packages are way more fun than shopping malls!


08.20.07__Honduran Time + Strikes
This Monday, my SDP group stationed in El Paraiso, made good progress—setting all our dates for the charlas we need to give at the schools and the Alcaldia. There were problems with scheduling b/c of the teacher strikes going on next week. It would seem that the teachers are upset over not receiving the money promised to them by the government during the previous campaign. There is mixed opinion over the teacher strike amongst my group as well as amongst the Hondurans. The teachers may not be paid a great deal, but their employment is seen as stable and with some benefits; thus, the people are not as sympathetic to their cause. Plus, it creates a setback in the education of the children. Then again, there is no excuse for the lying and corruption that is blatantly at work in this situation, and so I tend to side with the teachers position. Hoping that at least some of them are not as upset over the lack of monetary compensation, as the corruption at work in the governmental system. Empty promise-technique gets them every time.


08.22.07__Mountain of Tamales
Un día muy divertido! Las clases de espanol were in mi casa y we cooked tamalas de pelotes y guacamol ricisimo! (See Pics!)
Brian was our fearless culinary líder and I taught the group a traditional Honduran folk song that Miriam sang for me the night prior.
We all gathered in my kitchen to shuck the corn, peel away the first layer of husk and then cut off the remainder to guard for the eventual formulation of the tamales. We cleaned the naked ears of corn before sawing away all of the corn kernels into one large plastic basin. We then all piled into a PC vehicle to bring the corn grains to a place that grinds corn—there is only One in the entire city of el paraiso, and it ain’t pretty.



Well it’s just a very dark and noisy room where the grains are poured into one end of a machine and the mush comes out the other end. The two workers then scoop the mush back into the container for transport. Thus, we returned back to my house to continue the process. Next we added some salt and a bunch of butter to the corn goop, stirred, and poured into the folded-up shells made from the saved inner husks. Once a tamale was folded, we placed them one by one into a large pot of near-boiling water to steam. Eventually our pot was overflowing with the tamales and we placed the lid on top of the pile to leave it sit for an hour. My group then prepared guacamole, which was excellent. The group managed to demolish the entire pot of green spicy delicious chunkiness in less then 5 minutes. Then everyone enjoyed the mountain of tamales we had created. A bunch of people took them home to the families, but here at the house we still have a mini mountain of solidified corn mush chilling out in the fridge.



08.24.07__Tree Love
It’s pouring in Honduras—lightening—thunder—la tormenta verdad. Hope we don’t loose la luz.
The rain always sounds more intense upon my metal roof, braced for some collapse. Here there is no stability in these situations, as in other places in the world, everything can just be washed away with the blink of an eye. One day your roof is noisy, and the next, it is silent and gone. The idea of death and going with the flow of life is just the way people roll with the punches. It is laid back, yet smiling at the happenstance. I think of the wise eyes of our fearless leader Jorge and know that he knows. Whatever it is, he just knows...

Earlier today we all piled into the big white PC vehicles and headed to Alauca, where we had a date to plant trees w/some students from the colegio. Once we reached the town, which was about 30 minutes from el Paraiso, we gathered in a large schoolroom with wooden desks covered in simple pencil graffiti etchings. Students from the colegio joined us for a discussion about the importance of planting trees and what resources and functions trees provide for the ambiente. It was interesting, the differences in the two cultures, in how we all perceived these brown and green things that grow and get cut down, again and again. There are so many varieties of trees, it made me think of my mom and her endless knowledge of plants and tree types. She would make a great volunteer, if she could get a hot water shower ever day.
After the charla we got to the real dirty work of actually planting some trees. We had to clear off two sections of ground for the planting, breaking the soil up and leveling the area. The two plots were then roped off using branches shortened and sharpened with machetes. We then cleaned and broke up the fresh topsoil that Jorge had provided. Once that was dumped, we used a wheel barrel to make two large piles, while others filled bags with dirt and dropped the large, flat seeds within. In the midst of all the exchanging of dirt it began to pour, and we all enjoyed the strong downpour turning our dirty selves into muddy messes. There was a good four inches of dirt and twigs caked into all of our shoes, and dirt deeply embedded under our nails We finished the planting pretty quickly and so cleaned up a bit and took some group shots to commemorate our tree love. It was fun working with the Hondurans and most people really enjoyed the activity. We piled back into the vans and sped off again—a bit smellier, wetter and wiser than when we had arrived.


08.25.07__Corn Festival_Donlí
So today we embarked on a mission to be merry and eat corn—the infamous corn festival at Donlí. The town is a 20 minute bus ride from El Paraiso and is larger with real super markets and a decent amount of shopping. There is even a bank where you can use an America ATM card!
I headed towards the bus stop around 10:40am and I met up with the rest of the group across from the bumping gas station, which sells mixed drinks right outside the entrance. It seems the party starts and ends at the gas station in Honduras.
The bus to Donlí was packed! Good (sweaty) times. Once at the festival we met up with other PAM volunteers and chilled out in the “gardens” for the majority of the afternoon--plenty of smiles and quality group bonding...

The sun was brutal the entire day, and while we took shelter under our colorful umbrellas, I for one did not escape the burn! There was a Rodeo, Soccer matches, a Parade, tons and tons of food stands on every corner and crammed into the various plazas and parques where hot corn treats were steaming away atop the grills. And while there was not a lack of opportunity, I managed to leave the corn festival without eating a single ounce of corn! (But believe me, i get my share of the stuff on any given day!) Perhaps I missed out because of the downpour that came out of nowhere and forced us to haul ass to the gas station to catch our ride back as soggy burnt gringos...



08.27.07_Month DEEP
We are a month deep into FBT and I know the time will continue to fly. The group dynamic is pretty good, though tends to waver depending on peoples´ health issues. I for one am now trying to stay focused on why I am here, and try to keep positive and open to everyone. I miss people though. I really do.

08.31.07_una noche mas de augosto…
Today was an emotional day. High highs, low lows. Time and reality checks. Yesterday we started preparation for the VIH/SIDA charla. We divided up into teams of three/four and went over to the colegio this morning to present. The volunteers who came to instruct us on how to deliver the information about SIDA called it a: “charla in a box,” which is basically how it sounds—all the necessary pieces provided, instructions included, it’s just a matter of putting it together. My group consisted of Jennifer, Drew, Nicole and myself. I thought we did a pretty bang up job. The first part that I was in charge of was called: “lenguage poplular—palabres de la calle,” which is a dinamica that deals with the slang people use to refer to parts of the body, or other sexual terminology. The scientific terms for the body were written on several pieces of paper that were then taped to the wall where the students were to add their “palabres de la calle” for each one. I learned a few useful terms from that dinamica. The point, was to break the ice about the language that we would be required to use throughout the course. The next dinamica I had to lead is known as¨kati flauty, and it’s as dumb as it sounds. It’s basically a song and dance that requires people to get extremely too close while doing a few slightly provocative dance moves. The kids absolutely love this one! Finally, the last dinamica I led had to do with RESPECT. The guys formed a line on one side of the room, while the girls lined up facing the boys. We then had the guys say un frase de presion en voz alta en una manera agresiva, while the girls had to give the correct repuesta mastiza. This the guys were a little better at then the girls, but with little encouragement, the girls got into it as well.
Drew led the kiddies in the condón demonstration and he did a really great job w/a sweet potato that was the perfect vegetable replica of a phallic member complete with potato juevos. The girls learned a lot during this demonstration, and when it was all said and done, and every last saggy latex was chucked into the garbage, I think everyone had gotten something out of it. At the end of the two-hour course each student received a diploma stating they had successfully completed the course.

Afterwards we had a guest speaker come share her life story as a Honduran woman living with VIH/SIDA. Her words came fast and a veces overwhelming with emotion and painful memories. She did not look sick, she looked pretty with long think hair and a soft smile and face. She was the mother of four. Three boys with her first husband who was abusive and left them, and one little girl with the husband who had given her the disease. The later husband left her and took off to the United States where he has infected other women. The speaker spoke to us of her life before the disease and after she had been diagnosed. The worst part I think was her initial fears about the malady. She did not want to infect her children, nor family and so she was afraid to touch them, share food or drinks with them, exist in the same space as them. Her children found out at school that their mother was sick, and it killed her to have to finally tell them the truth when they came home from school with the worst question possible. Her mother also could not believe her daughter could of possibly contracted such a disease, thinking that only prostitutes, or drug users could contract VIH. It was the woman’s brother who helped start her real education about the disease, and how it is and is not transmitted. There is still much uncertainty and ignorance about these facts. This woman is a true hero for this country, speaking about her story even though there is great discrimination against people who are VIH positive. There is not much you can say besides thank you as she was heading back to Tegucigalpa. There is no pity, just a profound respect and a chilling reality check of how injustice and ignorance are always to blame and are such abstract culprits, that the only thing we can do is give these charlas in hopes that some of the children will be lucky enough to defend themselves with the imparted knowledge. low lows.