Tuesday, June 30, 2009

A day in the life





























I have now been on my site 2 months and 2 weeks. It feels like I have been here both forever and no time at all. I have moments when I feel as though I can accomplish all the goals of the health sector (HIV/AIDS education, Rooting out adolescent pregnancy, and working to decrease numbers of maternal and infant deaths), and there are times when I question the productivity of my position. The reality is that I am still adjusting and as much as I want to help promote mountains of change in Morrito, I am more likely to affect individual lives in less tangible ways—hopefully for the better. I can give people charlas and information until I am blue in the face; it is their decision what they do with it.
The newest challenge I am facing right now is getting settled into a new house. Yes, even in Nicaragua, moving is a huge pain in the neck. That seems to be a universal phenomenon. I am renting a nice sized house for $35 dollars a month. It consists of a kitchen (and I use that word very loosely), living room and bedroom that is divided into 2 parts, with 2 beds—so there is a space waiting for all of you to come and visit! I share a flimsy latrine with my next-door neighbor and have to carry a 5 gallon bucket of water about 100 yards everyday (don’t worry, I wont’ subject my visitors to this task—unless they are willing). It is more what I would term a “fixer-upper” than a glorious place to live, but it is my space and I am growing attached. I still have no idea where I am going find places to store all my stuff, nor do I know where all this stuff came from. I pass my free time (that is the few hours I’m not wondering the streets looking desperate in hopes more people will befriend me or invite me in for a meal…joking, sort of) relaxing in my newly installed hammock with the fan blowing directly in my face.
As for the work I am doing at the moment, it is sporadic. A usual day consists of a 7 am wake up call in order to clean my house or go and wash some clothes in the river. Somehow neither of these tasks is ever completed. I mosey over to the health center around 9 where I either give a charla, if there are patients, or hang out with the secretary and nurses as we wait around for people to come. Sometimes I fill this time with planning for my next class or youth group meeting. So far I have gone to the schools about 3 times to give classes, which include creative new ways to use plantains…don’t ask. I am hoping to start a series of classes entitled “Life Skills” in the high school, but I can’t decide the best way to get that project started. Luckily I have time, 1 year and 9.5 months to be exact, but who’s counting? After lunch and an unavoidable nap, I pass the time with various activities and end my day with soccer practice and visits to friends’ houses. I’m glad to report these visits have gotten less awkward and I am becoming a fan of the Nicaraguan custom of just getting up whenever you are ready to leave and saying goodbye, without the need to give an excuse for your departure.

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