Thursday, March 3, 2011

Very good, I must say, I'm amazed!


I’m alive and well in Guyana! It’s been a crazy few weeks already!
We had our staging event in Philadelphia on February 13th and flew out of JFK on the night of the 14th, it was my first time in New York and I was more than a little sad to be driving past everything in a bus but excited to be going to Guyana! We had a short 5 ½ hour flight from New York City to Georgetown, Guyana. To put that in perspective, the direct flight I used to take from Dallas to Anchorage is 6 hours!
We were greeted by the welcome committee of Peace Corps Staff and current PCV’s with coconuts and bananas! Orientation took place in the Regency hotel in Georgetown, I got sick, not sure what it was, and had to stay a few extra days in Georgetown for observation and medical treatment and arrived at my host families in Vergenoegen, West Demerera on Sunday February 20th.
My host family is Granny (Cotill) and Aunt Grace, 2 older ladies; they’re sisters and remind me so much of June and Barbara! Lots of silk flowers and doilies on every surface of the house! The house itself is pretty much what I expected; we don’t have running water all the time, no shower so I have to take a “bucket bath” with a 5 gallon bucket in a shower stall. I’m getting pretty good at it and can bathe with ½ a bucket of water now! In the mornings there’s all kinds of frogs in the shower with me, I’ve named them, Loretta, Patsy, and Dolly.
We have chickens and a garden in the “back dam”; I’m still not clear as to whether or not the chicken I’ve been eating is one of the chickens I hear in the back yard… gross. The food is… different. TONS of salt and MSG that they call Agie, which I’ve explained to Granny, is horrible for me and gives me terrible headaches and will make me sick. But she still sneaks it into the food when she thinks I’m not looking. Anti-Malaria meds give me crazy nightmares but I’ll take nightmares over malaria any night! The house is not sealed, has no ceiling, and is very much open to the elements. We have about a dozen bats in the house at night, flying around the rafters and running into my mosquito net! Recently, in the last 36 hours I’ve seen 7 HUGE spiders, I took a picture of one that is the size of my hand and its eyes reflected the flash! Granny and Grace laughed at me and called it a “Nancy” whatever that means. There’s tons of other animals, chickens, cows, goats, horses, dogs, all wandering around the neighborhoods and along the main roads.
We had a wedding reception here at the house last Saturday. Granny’s Grandson Mark got married and we had about 150 people here! They rented red lawn chairs and put a big blue tarp over the front yard, and had speakers the size of a Honda and a DJ, it was awkward for people to walk up to me and ask who I am and explain to them that I live here lol.
Training is going well, a little slow sometimes and we do a lot of waiting on people, but the things we are actually learning is going great. Lots of review in the health sessions and we started volunteering at our village Health Centers, so 2 days a week I go to the Vergenoegen Health Center for 3-4 hours and get to weigh people and babies, take blood pressure, help with their charts and we give health talks on whatever clinic is going on that day like diabetes or hypertension or ante natal/family planning. We’re finishing our 3rd week of training, the end of week 5 we will go to a counterpart conference and meet our counterparts for our final work site and then travel with them back to the site to stay for a week! Our swearing in ceremony is scheduled for April 13th and we will be sworn in as Peace Corps Volunteers!
Overall I’m doing well, I get a little homesick every once in a while. Not as much at night like I expected, mostly because I’m freaking out about bats and spiders, but mornings are hard when I wake up and realize everything is changing more and more every day. I really miss talking to my friends all day every day about every little detail of our lives. It has been hard to go from such constant communication to limited access. I miss American food and I miss driving Paul! The mini busses are pretty scary, I have a 35 minute bus ride from Granny’s to training every day, one day I counted 22 people in a John and Kate +8 style “mini bus”!!! There’s not a whole lot to do around here after training, Granny and I cook dinner and she watches the “obit channel” which is a channel on basic cable dedicated to showing the death announcements/obituaries of who died and lists every person they ever came in contact with! The first couple days I sat and watched it with her but its too depressing. I’ve been writing a lot of letters and I hope you have too?!?! Other trainees have been getting mail this week but I haven’t gotten anything, I hope I get something soon.
Grace just got home from work and brought me some sort of cassava cake, I can’t pronounce the name, much less spell it, but it’s good. Next time you start your car, turn on the TV, or eat a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, I hope you think of me riding the mini bus, watching the obits, and eating curry rice.

Cross my heart and kiss my elbow,
Love and Peace

1 comment:

  1. Lauren,

    I am amazed and astonished at how new, exciting, and blessed your life is. Embarking on an unpredictable experience like this is completely you and reminds me of how far we have both come. I remember laying in the dark in your dorm, talking about anything and everything. One night in particular, when you told me that you would be in the Peace Corps one day.

    I watch Off The Map, which reminds me what you are doing in Guyana, especially the health awareness stuff. I will always think of you when I watch it. I wish you the very best and am proud of you for embracing the bugs. I couldn't imagine it!

    L&M,

    Ashley

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