Friday, May 25, 2012

1 month in. 23 to go.


If Peace Corps is a person, we would have been together for one whole month already. Alas, we are not two high school teenagers so there won’t be a movie date, so I’d just blog about it instead.

The past month has been a roller coaster of emotion.  Yes, that was very cliché, and I don’t regret it. There were tears and there were joy, but I woke up today (May 23rd) completely positive that there is no where else I would rather be.

I’ve talked about my site, a little village in the Upper West Region, named Goli. It is about 4-5 hours away from the Burkina Faso border and positively 15 hours away from the nearest movie theater, on a good day. 
Since I’ve been here, I’ve done a lot of sitting.  Everywhere I go, stools/benches/chairs are placed under my ass without request. My legs would be tired from walking at the end of the day but my ass would be sore from sitting in the equivalent amount. Some other PCVs from my group are placed with partner NGOs, and though I am not sure how their schedule is like, I hear that it can be quiet busy sometime. As for us upper regions people, like the chicken roaming in front of our houses, we are free ranged.  That means we don’t really have a schedule and our days could be as idle or as casual as we want. Which is why it is so important to embrace small successes, when life just seems to  be passing you by meaninglessly while you haven’t done shit for the entire day, the little things in life start to look grand. And they keep you going.

My job as a Health Water and Sanitation (or at least  what I got out of training) is to guide my village to achieve a healthier living environment. And that include getting them to stop pooping in bushes and drinking gross water while making healthy life choices like wearing a condom.

I could be easy if people understand that certain of their behaviors need to change before they stop getting sick all the time. But Peace Corps isn’t ‘the easiest job you’d ever love’ (that was college) so it takes time for us to get them to that point. If you haven’t tried it, going number 2 or even number 1 in the bushes can be a very liberating experience. Old habits die hard, and some/most/the majority of the people in my village are very old.

Anyway, the one month at site has seen greats and grave. Most of the day, I sit in various places in the village and try to learn the local languages by listening to their conversation about me, and make an effort to remember their names. People know me know that I am very bad with names, and it is fortunate that most Ghanaians have English based name like Felicia and Emanuel, but add the Ghanaian accent and it’s a salad of some different sound.  Everyone is someone else’s brother or sister of mother or father because everyone in the village is in a big family so that also need processing and figuring out time.

Someday, it is extremely delightful to see grown men walking around town holding hands from the pinky (because even though homosexuality is illegal here, there is no limit to same sex interaction) or during high noon time, women would be bare chested, hanging low without a care (to the four lovely ladies who flashed me before I left, you got competition).

Other day (the entire duration of the 3rd week at site) all I want to do is sit on my porch and read and try not to drown in my own sweat in the waves of loneliness of being the only foreigner in a 45 minutes radius by car. Or if one more person laughs at me after I’ve spoke Dagaare and greet them, I’d lose it and curse out their mothers.

Roller coaster of emotions. Didn’t I say it?

But I’ll say it again, there is not where else I would rather be. I signed up for this. Waited for it. Excited for it. And now it is all mine, and I’ve just begun. There are latrines to be build, malaria to b prevented, and talking condom mural to be painted – all in the next 23 months. It’ll be the longest relationship to date, but I’m in it to win it. 

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

I had a birthday.

A little Q&A session to update you on my life:

- Why aren't you supper tanned/charcoal black already?
- a. I use sun screen on a daily.
b. As a side effect of the malaria meds I am currently on, tanning is harder. Thus is why I am only light mahogany and not dark chocolate.

- How do you go online?
- This has been addressed before, I have an internet phone, which I use for gmail and facebook. Everything else I have to wait for internet time. Which is why I can't update the blog frequently (it's my excuse and I'm sticking with it)

- How do you get around?
- I have the budget for a bike, but in the mean time, I walk a lot. As a result, my legs are real shapely. Sometime I hitch hike.

- Is it hot there?
- Yes. It's Africa and I'm near the Sahara desert.

- How are you eating?
- Currently, my Counter Part's wife is cooking for me, starting next week, I'm buying a pot and a stove and cooking for myself. So that's gonna be ramen for the next month.

- What work do you do?
- Essentially, I'm a Health, Water and Sanitation Volunteer, so I would do community development/public health, including but not limiting to building latrines, malaria prevention and water sanitation. And telling people to stop shitting in bushes.

- Are you doing any of that now?
- Nope. I'm still trying to get to know my community and win their trust and shit.

- Where do you get $$$??
- Peace Corps issues each Volunteer a modest monthly stipend, and I spend it all on popsicles when I have a chance.

- Do you see other volunteers?
- Yes and no. Some of us live in villages close to each other, and sometime we meet up in the big city, but not always.

- Are there bugs?
- There is a buffet of bugs. Big. Small. Winged. Legged. Crawl. Fly. You name it, it's there.

- Do you have running water?
- No. My village get water from boreholes and wells, and so do I. People fetch water with buckets and basins and carry them on their heads to their house. I don't though. There is a "small girl" (aka. errand girl) who does it for me sometime.

- Not doing work, not fetching water, not cooking... what do you really do?
- Good question. I read sometime while still living out of a bag because I have no furnitures. Most of the day, I greet people and kiss babies' forehand (okay, not really, no kissing.)

- Read? You read?
-  Why yes, I do. So far, I've started and finished 4 books. There are several that are in progress (due to my short attention span). It's therapeutic to read and not sit idly thinking about how isolated I am in my little town and depress myself with it. It's also a healthy distraction.

- Forget books, what about the boys?
- Who needs boys when I'm already a man myself.

- When can we Skype?
- I don't know. When I am awake, you are probably asleep. And I don't get online very often... so we shall see.

- Can I write you?
- Yes! Email or snail mail me! I will always try to write back.
Chau Ngo
P.O Box 5796
Accra North
Ghana

- Do you need something?
- Everything and nothing. You can't send me things I miss, like sushi, bowl of soup, iced cold drinks... but I do enjoy a bag of water melon sour patch and could always use some hand sanitizer and new toothbrushes.

- What do you want for your birthday?
- A fan. Battery operated. Africa is hot.

Well, and now I am 24. The day started out shaky with rain and delays and strenuous hikes but it started rolling once I had my first beer at 3pm haha. Now I'm winding down from a day of indulgences (internet, electricity, fan, ice cream, cold drink) and it feels great, living the simple life and what not.

Anyhow, gonna try to transfer some books. If you have any more questions, shoot them my way! See you next time when I get internet.