Purpose:

"Peace requires the simple but powerful recognition that what we have in common as human beings is more important and crucial than what divides us."
-Sargent Shriver


Monday, October 17, 2011

Don't Come to Tanzania a South Paw

Hujambo!  Habaria gani? 
I have made it to Tanzania and absolutely LOVE it!  We arrived at the Msimbazi Center late Wednesday night and got a quick lowdown on safety, security and malaria.  The Msimbazi Center is a compound run by Catholic nuns within Dar-es-Salaam.  It comes complete with an orphanage, church, bars, an internet cafe, and MANY weddings.  We're talking weddings EVERY night, and they know how to party.

We have been getting adjusted to life in TZ which includes: chai every day and sometimes served with a hot dog, learning how to properly use the choo complete with a demonstration, huge beers for $1, chicken gizzards and fried everything, jet lag, laughing at each others mistakes, loud gatherings, and Coca-cola by the bottled glass.  An important part I learned was that being left handed can get in the way.  In Tanzania we don't have the porcelin god, we have a choo.  We also don't have toliet paper, we have a bucket of water and our left hand.  Therefore, no matter how much I clean my hands, it is looked at as dirty to eat, give, or receive with your left hand.  Being a dominate south paw is difficult to say the least.

Sasa ninajifunza kwa Kiswahili.  I can't believe how much Swahili I have learned in just 3 short sessions.  I held a long conversation with a nun this morning and she thought I'd been here since June.  I also practiced talking to a young boy yesterday and we started playing catch with a bottle cap.  All was well and we were laughing until his parents came by to get him (they were planning a festival nearby) and he started to cry.  So yea, I definietly already made a little kid cry.  When his mom said, 'Sawa, Kwaheri'/'Okay, Goodbye' and began to pretend to leave him, he just looked at me and smiled.  So she laughed, came back, picked him up, and the tears came a flowin'!

I also know enough Kiswahili now to make some of my infamous lame jokes.  There are cats all over the center, as they help maintain the rat problem (yes, I'm definitely getting a cat when I'm on site).  Cats cost lest than $1 here and just as much to get all of their shots.  Pretty cheap to keep me rat free for 2 years, now all I need are name suggestions.  As I was walking with other trainees through the courtyard we saw one and instead of saying 'Paka' or 'cat,' I said 'Mtoto Simba,' which means 'young lion.'  I know, I'm hilarious.

Yesterday we learned about our host families and CBT (Community Based Training).  Peace Corps loves their acronyms.  I will be in a CBT with 5 others in a village near Muheza in the Tanga region.  My host family has had a PC before, and my Baba is said to be the 'sweetest man on Earth' and very tall.  I don't know much else other than I'll have a Dada (sister) and Mama.  I will also be jirani (neighbors) with one of my fellow CBTs, so I will have a male to escort me on my runs in the morning. 

We leave for our host families tomorrow, so this will be goodbye for a while.  I absolutely love this country and learning everything about it.  Ninapenda kujifunza Kiswahili!  Our training group is wonderful and I feel really lucky with the people in my CBT.  It is only up from here!

Salama.
Kwaheri!


Health and Environment Class 2011-2013.
We look so clean!

Monday, October 10, 2011

Puzzles Are the Best

It was t-minus 5 hours from leaving the airport and what do I crave to do?  A 500 piece puzzle.  Accompanied by Lamars Doughnut Holes, a Caribou Latte, and some brave souls we took on a candy puzzle.

I have never had a more perfect idea.

The last week leading up to leaving for the Peace Corps is insane (in the membrane)!  You don't sleep, you run your packing list through your head over and over, you create 18 lists, and you find yourself incredibly nostalgic and sentimental.  Not to mention the goodbyes.  Those are just overwhelming.  You know those emotion magnets where you select a emotion face for the day?  Yep, I'm ALL of them for several days, even smug.  It is such a whirlwind that finally sitting in your airplane chair is the most comforting thing possible.  Well, that and puzzles.

Doing a puzzle for my last few hours in Kansas City was, I repeat, the best idea ever.  It completely took my mind off of all the crazy shenanigans.  Not only was my mind occupied by finding the border pieces and putting together the eye on the rock candy canister, but I was surrounded by friends and family, eating comfort food, and laughing.  Especially when we were looking for the final piece and Brett pulled it out of his pocket, thief.

To top it all off, we finished the puzzle and were able to celebrate with pizza and a Chiefs come from behind win.

Let me be clear.  I usually HATE puzzles.  My mind doesn't work that way, and I get too frustrated to finish them.  Now for the gushy metaphor.  Finishing that puzzle was not only therapeutic, but reflective of the next two years.  My last hours in Kansas I had to practice patience, communication, determination, and goal setting.  All skills I hope to gain, mature, and improve in Tanzania.  Furthermore, with the support of those around me, I was able to do that.  Of course I'm every emotion you could feel about leaving for Tanzania.  Yet I am fairly confident that I have all I need to do my best, and the support to back it up.

In the end, puzzles aren't so bad.  They're actually the best.


With Lori, Brett, Cara, Katie and Marc

How to Look Awkward in the Philly Airport

This is for all of the future Peace Corps Volunteers who worry, fret, and simply don't know what to do about packing.  Yes you can pack for two years with less than 80 pounds of stuff.  Yes you can stuff multiple items into that one duffle.  Yes you can look awkward in the Philadelphia airport with your life on your back.

For my two years I have packed:

Clothes
-2 pairs of jeans
-1 khaki pant
-1 mesh pant
-1 set of pjs
-2 sweaters
-1 fleece top
-2 hats
-1 pair of sunglasses
-swim suit
-1 raincoat
-2 long sleeve shirts
-3 polyester ankle skirts
-1 long dress
-1 set of long underwear
-1 knee yoga pant
-1 long yoga pant
-3 blouses
-12 pairs of socks
-12 pairs of underwear
-4 bras
-3 sports bras
-1 slip
-6 short sleeve shirts
-3 tank tops
-1 pair of comfy professional shoes
-1 dressy sandal
-1 pair of walking/hiking boots
-1 Chacos sandal (these are INCREDIBLE!)
-1 pair of sneakers
-watch
-jewelry (stud earrings and 2 necklaces)

Games
-LRC
-Bananagrams
-1 deck of cards
-1 deck of UNO
-Frisbee
-Coloring book

Camp
-Sleeping bag
-Hammock
-LED headlight
-Leatherman
-Nalgene
-SteriPEN (this will save you EVERY DAY)

Kitchen
-measuring cups
-1 good ceramic kitchen knife (this is the item that several volunteers have wanted to steal from me)
-3 different sizes of plastic ziploc bags (use to store toiletries and protect food from critters)
-1 veggie peeler
-1 non-stick pan
-1 set of travel cutlery

Electronic
-kindle with charger
-mac with charger
-two TZ outlet plugs and fridge guard (TZ electrical current is very dirty)
-ipod
-digital camera
-3 suitcase locks, 1 padlock
-travel alarm clock
-USB

Other
-1 quick dry towel
-3 mini anti bacterials
-4 toothbrushes/2 toothpaste tubes
-2 deodorants
-3 razors (venus with the soap attached)
-1 facewash
-3 combs
-hairscissors
-medicines (AZO, OneADay, Imodium, Tylenol, Claritan, Monistat, Iron, B12)
-3 mini body sprays
-2 boxes of tampons (PC no longer provides this, and I would suggest using a divacup instead if you've used them before)
-homestay gift (2 Wizard of Oz reusable bags and UNO cards for the kiddos)
-helmet
-3 packs of titanium AAA batteries
-2 things of duct tape
-egg carrier
-2 photo albums
-1 sewing kit
-1 set of double sheets/pillowcase
-1 pack of Luna/1 pack of Zone bars
-2 journals
-1 pack of pens/1 pack of pencils/1 pack of Sharpies
-1 set of stationary
-2 pairs of glasses
-guitar
-Nigel the bear


YES, YOU CAN DO IT!  And I put all of this in a dayback, backpackers pack (Eagle Creek), and large duffle (Eagle Creek)

BEFORE


Nigel is lookin' good.



AFTER


Duffle Weight: 44 pounds    Backpacker Bag: 30 pounds


You can also look awkward with your life on your back in a room full of Pez dispensers.