Stasia : (pointing) What the heck kind of dog is that?
Hermanito : That´s a pig.
Monday, April 30, 2012
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Here, There, and Everywhere 2
We had an official song for the second part of our trip. It´s called "Day Bus" sung to the tune of "Day Man" from It´s Always Sunny.
Day bus! aaaAAAaaa!
Followed by a night bus! aaaAAAaaa!
Mancora was blessedly less eventful. We had a 6 hour bus ride through the desert
to the beach town and arrived at our beautiful Posh Corps beach house. We went down to a ceviche restaurant by the
beach and Matteo and I jumped in the ocean while we were waiting for our
food. It turns out that our waiter was
high as the stars and it ended up being an almost 2 hour wait. He would come to our table, then run/scurry
over to the kitchen, only to stand listlessly as soon as the door shut, unaware
that we were watching him through the window.
It was funny until we got really hungry.
We spent the next day on the beach playing
in the waves and buying incredible mozzarella, tomato, basil empanadas from a
lady with a basket who walked by at perfect intervals. It had felt like forever since I’d seen the
sun and the ocean. Something about the
beach turns me back into an 8 year old.
I can spend hours just swimming around and jumping in the waves. All day if I have a boogie board.
Sadly, despite repeated sunscreen
reapplications, I paid for my full day of nearly equatorial sunshine with a
crazy sunburn. I spent the next day
reading or watching It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia in the hammock and
rubbing overpriced aloe over my sun-dried tomato skin. The peeling didn’t start until a few days
later. It was unsightly, but good bus
entertainment. It’s been several weeks
and it still looks like I’m wearing a white bathing suit when I’m naked.
Anyway, the next day we were up early and
on a bus to go back to Chiclayo to catch a night bus to Chachapoyas. The Mancora-Chiclayo bus took several hours
longer than it should have. It was
cramped and hot as hell and thankfully, even the Peruvians wanted to open the
windows. We were accompanied by a vocal
rooster and vendors selling ceviche and jello.
We had a few hours to kill when we finally got to Chiclayo and all went
out for Chinese food. Then I went
walking with Baber and Ivan. We got ice
cream, then found a street where there were a dozen people selling puppies who
were willing to let me pick almost all of them up. Awesome.
The hour finally rolled around and we piled
on our night bus to Chachapoyas in Amazonas.
We were stopped several times during the night for landslides and
unexpected rivers in the road. At around
5 in the morning I was woken up from Dramamine-tinted sleep to hear Baber, my
seat mate, yelling for me from outside the bus and telling me to bring
water. I grabbed my 2L bottle and
stumbled out half-awake with my hair all askew.
Babes was sitting by the side of the road with a good deal of blood
dripping from his hand. It turns out
that, good guy that he is, he woke up and went out to help move rocks from a
recent landslide that was blocking our bus.
Someone rolled a rock on top of one of his fingers, which was covered in
blood and had a good deal of skin and nail separated from their proper
places. He was brave when I poured water
on it to clean it out and half the skin on his finger went flapping around. It turns out that in the dingy hospital in
Chacha, they pulled the nail off with pliers and cut the liberated skin
off. He’s ok, though. And he took a lot of pleasure in wagging the
finger in our faces for the rest of the trip, especially during dinner.
We eventually arrived in Chachapoyas and to
my favorite leg of the trip. Amazonas is
a beautiful department. It’s like
Jurassic Park and Narnia combined with worse transportation. We went hiking to pre-Incan ruins, cliffs,
and waterfalls, many times in pouring rain and came back to the city and had
wonderful dinners. The only downside was
the several hour combi rides on twisty, bumpy roads to get anyplace, but it was
through incredible landscapes and my belly behaved most of the time. I don’t think it would to be too interesting
to describe all the places we went, so check out Facebook for lots of
pictures. I couldn’t convey how
beautiful it was with words, and the pictures only do a little better.
You know the beginning of the first Indiana
Jones movie where he’s in the temple, touches the idol, and is chased by a
giant boulder? That’s a Chachapoyan
ruin. Pretty cool!
We were in Chacha for 4 days and then it
was time for yet another long bus ride back to Lima. While carrying my big backpack on my back, my
smaller one on my front, another bag and hurrying to the bus station, I managed
to hit a curb wrong and sprained my ankle.
I went down like a ton of bricks and came up with a mouth full of
swears. Poor Grant had to run carrying
my backpacking bag while I hobbled to a cab with bloody ripped pants. We all made it with plenty of time to hurry
up and wait since the bus was a half hour late.
The curves coming down from the Amazonan mountains made reading
impossible for most of us. The bus
entertainment was dubbed Sandra Bullock movies and Peruvian music videos on
tiny screens. Grant was sitting next to
me and we had some nice chats and a discussion of religion before he mercifully
passed out from the Dramamine I gave him.
I spent the majority of the time listening to music or podcasts and
looking out the window. If nothing else,
the Peace Corps makes you more tranquil and able to deal with waiting or doing
nothing for long periods of time. I
didn’t get antsy until the end. We had
an uneventful night and a breakdown in the desert 150k from Lima in the morning. The whole ride ended up being 26 hours
instead of 22, but we made it and nobody lost their minds.
We had a nice time in Lima with wandering
around (limping for me) and cappuccinos.
Nicole and I took a bus up to Junin the next day. We were ready and it felt like coming
home. It seemed right that there would
be snow and wind lashing the sides of the bus as it climbed.
I’m getting back into the rhythm of
things. All the schoolkids ask me where
I’ve been. I’m motivated to work and get
new projects going. We’re going to start
a recycling contest in one of the colegios and I’m hoping the money raised from
that will get the municipality to sit up and take notice. It turns out that a paper for my master’s
that I thought was due at the end of May is due at the end of April, so that
has been taking up a lot of my time.
It’s refreshing to use that part of my mind again. Research, analysis, and above middle school level
English. Though it took me a full 5 minutes
the other day to come up with the word “juxtaposed.” That’s a long time to sit and scour your
brain for something you know is there, but can’t put your hands on.
I hope to get some good work done before
our next training, which is already coming up at the end of May. We’ll see!
Here, There, and Everywhere 1
-Disclaimer- There won´t be any photos to go with these vacation posts. I´m sorry. I know a Peace Corps blog without photos is a just a shade of it´s potentia. But they´re all on Facebook! With more to come this weekend! It just take so g.d. long to post photos that I can´t bear to put the same ones in two different places. I´d rather teach children and go medicinal plant collecting. Sorry! I promise that there are still good stories below.
This long trip started with PDM (Project
Development something) and EIST (Early In Service Training) in Olmos,
Lambayeque. But we had to get there
first. My sister/social Jenny and I left
on a Saturday morning from Carhuamayo to catch a bus to Lima. Despite repeated remindings and phone calls
the morning of, she was late for the bus and made me hold it and argue with an
angry cobrador. I was feeling equally
murderous with Jenny as we sat down, but she was unfazed by my scolding and
harried look. I calmed down and we had
an uneventful trip to Lima. We traveled
through the town where I had training and it was funny to see everything
again. The plaza, the crappy pizza
place, the favorite discoteca.
Everything was greener with the passing of the rainy season. It seems like we were there forever ago,
though it was only a few months. What I
thought about then, what I knew and felt, how unknown and foreign everything
was, is so far away. Things are still
surprising and strange, but I know how to roll with them now.
We caught a night bus and were in Chiclayo
12 bleary hours later. Other volunteers
trickled in throughout the day to lots of smiles and hugs. We spent a good part of the day on the sunny
roof of the hostel catching up, playing music, and sitting on each other’s
laps. I didn’t even realize how much I
missed and liked everyone until I saw them again.
We were supposed to start the 2 hour drive
to Olmos from Chiclayo at 6pm. The vans
showed up at 6:30 and we started off into the dusky desert. After a few miles, one of the vans
mysteriously slowed to a crawl on the shoulder of the highway. It continued, only to pull over for a moment
every quarter mile or so. We continued
our halting journey for another hour with many unanswered questions and guesses
from the volunteers. Finally, we pulled
over at a plaza and all the drivers got out of their vans to confer. It turned out that the van’s battery was bad
and we waited for the drivers to find a mechanic to replace it. It was long dark by this time with a sorry
lack of street food vendors in the plaza.
We eventually got on our way and arrived in Olmos late.
Now, we were grumpy. Most of us had been traveling for at least 24
hours, spent the last night on a bus, and hadn’t had any dinner, a shower, or a
good teeth brushing for a while. We were
all looking forward to a chance to get cleaned up and have a nice bed. Sadly, this wasn’t available at Hostel
Romanzo. We disembarked from our vans to
find that the older, open-shirted, slightly addled proprietor had no idea we were arriving that night. He hustled his sparse staff to get sheets on
beds and rooms cleaned up. The place was
filthy, even by Peace Corps standards.
And the bugs. Even the locals
described it as a plague. It turns out
that jillions of black cockroach-sized beetles emerge during the rainy season
and invade. They were everywhere. If you stood in the open, they crawled over
your feet, especially liking the space between the arch of your foot and your
sandal. If you stood under a tree, they
fell in your hair and occasionally down the back of your shirt. They made a horrible buzzing sound when they
flew and had no respect for privacy.
I was eventually led to my room and there
were dozens of them creeping in the entryway.
I shooed a couple off my bed and tried to sleep. The beetles were everywhere as soon as the
light shut off. They flew around my head
and crawled over me in bed. I tried to
deal by burrito-ing myself in my sheets, but the desert heat was too much even
at night. I was sweating and breathing
shallowly. If I’d open up a breathing
hole, they’d crawl in an over my neck or face.
Intermittently, I’d wake up and clear off my bed, but it was
hopeless. It was the most miserable I’ve
been in my Peace Corps experience so far.
In the wee hours of the morning, I gave up and went and knocked on my
socia’s door. I slept for a few hours on
a quilt on her concrete floor.
We moved rooms the next day and it turns
out that I had the buggiest spot in the whole hotel. Though they didn’t go away. One morning, I had 5 beetles in one shoe and
a grasshopper in the other. Once, I put
on a shirt without careful inspection and found out that I was sharing it. We got more accostumed to the fellow hotel
guests. At first, I was my normal gentle
self, not wanting to kill things. After
a few days, I was the Jackie Chan of beetle murder. Swift.
Using anything as a weapon: shoes, bars of soap, Kindles, condiment
bottles. I grew familiar with the satisfying
crunch of exoskeleton that meant that it was dead. Sounds brutal and unlike me, but you’d have
to be there to understand.
As soon as we got used to the beetles, then
came the flood. It rained one night and
it seemed like the walkways immediately became rivers. People piled their things on their beds as
water rose to ankle depth in some rooms.
Thankfully the desert soil sucked the rain up quickly and we only had
one soggy night.
For all the biblical level problems we had,
our time in Olmos wasn’t all bad. It was
a novelty to me to be hot. I’d walk to
the market at 7am and arrive with sweat down to my belly. The volunteers got to hang out at night. I hadn’t been outside at night since I got to
site. We played music, ate ice cream,
and wandered around. We visited the zoo
Tina works at. It was pretty sad, but
she’s working hard to make it better for the animals and I got to hold a
monkey’s hand. At the end of training,
we had a fantastic talent show with belly dancing and recycling reggaeton. The four of us in Los Maximos wrote an
original song together and everyone loved it.
It was called Olmos Home, get it?
We were demanded an encore immediately and everyone got up to
dance. It was wonderful.
I wasn’t sure if we’d make it, but then all
of the sudden the week was done and it was vacation time!
Sunday, April 22, 2012
High Flyin
This is nothing but rumor and chisme, but I might just be the highest Peace Corps Volunteer in the world! Pretty cool, right? The girl who is supposedly the highest and I compared town elevations and the info I had said that mine was higher. But really, who the heck knows what data is right? And I`ve heard rumors that Nepal is going to beat us in elevation once they get up and running.
I´ll cautiously accept the title for now. At least it`ll be something cool to tell the kids when I`m 45 and they assume I´ve always been lame.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Spanglish
I was a voracious reader when I was a kid. I was friends with Mrs. Neff, the elementary school librarian and was always pestering her for recommendations. I devoured all of E. B. White, Roald Dahl, heavy Brian Jaques books, and just about anything with adventure or animals. I think I almost always won the accelerated reader contests in school. Not because I wanted to win, it was a by-product of loving to read.
I´ve been reading less as I´ve gotten older and my life more cluttered. Especially in grad school when I was doing hours of reading every day for class and research. I´ve picked it up again in the Peace Corps and have gone through a handful of books already. I´ve found myself drawn to more fantasy or escapist books. I loved re-reading the Hobbit and am now finishing the Grapes of Wrath that I somehow missed during high school and like a lot despite its darkness.
The point of all this is that I think I´ve always had a good vocabulary because I read so much when I was little. When you read a lot, language worms its way into crevasses of your brain without you even noticing. I was pretty eloquent for a kid and as an adult have pulled out words that have surprised people. Not because I´m trying to be fancy, but it just seems like the best word for the moment. It´s nice to have such a large toolbox to use to express myself.
But I feel like I´m losing some if it being here in Peru. I speak English a few times a week and am finding myself searching for words. I see it in my fellow volunteers as well. Sometimes, all activity will stop as we collectively search for a word that we know we know somewhere in the dusty parts of our language centers, but can´t find. It usually ends up being some high school level vocab word. I try to write here or lyrics for songs or work on my grad school papers, and it´s difficult. I feel like my writing is 80% of what it could be because my upper level English is fuzzing out.
Of course my Spanish has improved in this time. I speak smoothly and rapidly and can give a good speech or charla when I need to. But it´s not sophisticated or beautiful. It´s not everything that language can be. It´s still utilitarian. I think it´ll continue to improve with my time here, but I don´t believe it will ever be at the level that my English was.
My conclusion is that I´m a Spanglish speaker. I have competence, but lack mastery in both. I´m hoping that my English will come back when I get back to the states, and that my Spanish will improve in the year and a half I have left. In the meantime, I´m going to keep reading and hopefully that will bolster my vocab. We´ll see. Until then, we´ll continue with elaborate descriptions of the words we´re trying to find.
Stay tuned for the story of my trip! There are some good parts. I´ll be writing it up at home and bringing in installments when they´re ready.
I´ve been reading less as I´ve gotten older and my life more cluttered. Especially in grad school when I was doing hours of reading every day for class and research. I´ve picked it up again in the Peace Corps and have gone through a handful of books already. I´ve found myself drawn to more fantasy or escapist books. I loved re-reading the Hobbit and am now finishing the Grapes of Wrath that I somehow missed during high school and like a lot despite its darkness.
The point of all this is that I think I´ve always had a good vocabulary because I read so much when I was little. When you read a lot, language worms its way into crevasses of your brain without you even noticing. I was pretty eloquent for a kid and as an adult have pulled out words that have surprised people. Not because I´m trying to be fancy, but it just seems like the best word for the moment. It´s nice to have such a large toolbox to use to express myself.
But I feel like I´m losing some if it being here in Peru. I speak English a few times a week and am finding myself searching for words. I see it in my fellow volunteers as well. Sometimes, all activity will stop as we collectively search for a word that we know we know somewhere in the dusty parts of our language centers, but can´t find. It usually ends up being some high school level vocab word. I try to write here or lyrics for songs or work on my grad school papers, and it´s difficult. I feel like my writing is 80% of what it could be because my upper level English is fuzzing out.
Of course my Spanish has improved in this time. I speak smoothly and rapidly and can give a good speech or charla when I need to. But it´s not sophisticated or beautiful. It´s not everything that language can be. It´s still utilitarian. I think it´ll continue to improve with my time here, but I don´t believe it will ever be at the level that my English was.
My conclusion is that I´m a Spanglish speaker. I have competence, but lack mastery in both. I´m hoping that my English will come back when I get back to the states, and that my Spanish will improve in the year and a half I have left. In the meantime, I´m going to keep reading and hopefully that will bolster my vocab. We´ll see. Until then, we´ll continue with elaborate descriptions of the words we´re trying to find.
Stay tuned for the story of my trip! There are some good parts. I´ll be writing it up at home and bringing in installments when they´re ready.
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