The opinions expressed in this blog are my own and do not reflect those of the United States, others or the Peace Corps.
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Super Bowl Sunday.... in Paraguay?
What a disappointing night for Tom Brady.... Que Lastima!! A second loss to the under dog a team that went 9 and 7 in the regular season.... Que lastima. You might be wondering how I watched possibly the most popular American sporting event in a country where most people do not even know what an American football looks like. Thats where TGIF comes in. Yes there is a TGIF in the capital a a particularly fancy part of town and that was where more than 30 PC volunteers met today to watch the epic sporting event. It made for a great environment and a great time. As those of you who know me would know, I dont really follow football but that didn't stop me from asking my two really good friends to give me the pregame. The TGIF was packed and filled with a lot of English speakers as you might imagine. Unfortunately nothing was really open after the game because it was Sunday, and the Super Bowl, and Paraguay. And that was the Superbowl in Paraguay.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Another New Year?
Diez, Nueve, Ocho, Siete, Seis ,… Tres, Dos
Uno FELIZ ANO NUEVO!!!!!! I
celebrated the new year at midnight with all the essential ingredients,
friends, drinking, loud music, firecrackers, shouting and an exhausting trip
home as the sun rose. A typical new year…. Minus the typical and add
Paraguayan. Perhaps it was the Spanish countdown, or the traditional Paraguayan
polka music that followed the countdown, or the fact that I was in the middle
of a farm in rural Paraguay drinking cider and joking around in Spanish I cant
seem to ever master. Was it the bbq dinner I ate at midnight (common for the
new year) or maybe that my trip home was actually walking 40 minutes from the
neighboring compania to my compania. All in all I had a good time, I hung out
with my Paraguayan friends, ate great food and saw how another culture celebrates
a holiday we too celebrate in the US. I did miss my brothers and home friends.
The new years reminded me of new years past which made me nostalgic but again,
a great experience.
Fast forward to the
past 3 days. It was Chinese New Year this past week, a tidbit I needed to be
reminded of out here and was glad to hear. To celebratre I went to visit my
friend an hour bike ride away in a town called Santa Maria. If you read my
Diana story, it was this Diana. Diana is an Education volunteer and the town
she lives in is much more developed than where I live, think Paraguay’s version
of a nice suburb. Town has one major paved road and cobblestone for all other
roads. There is a dispensa on almost every corner mixed with bread places meat
shops and other trade shops. Ice cream is readily available as are vegetables.
There is a music institution and Paraguayan version of small universities. The
people in Santa Maria tend to be wealthier, nicer houses, more disposable
income and more free time. Quite different than little old Santa Librada.
Anyway, Upon arrival we immediately set to work planning meals. This was the
result:
Saturday breakfast:
Pancakes with bananas and bacon
Saturday lunch: Ja Ja
mein with pearl milk tea
Saturday Dinner: Left over noodles (still delicious cold) with
pumpkin pie for desert
Sunday Breakfast: Pork
congee with spring onion
Sunday lunch: Cant
remember right now, probably left overs.
Sunday Dinner: Thai
chicken curry
Monday breakfast:
yogurt and banana (had to go to Diana’s
reading camp)
Monday Lunch: Left
over Curry and congee
Monday Dinner: pork
dumplings and pumpkin pie (a whole new pie)
Everything was made
from scratch because frankly, there was nothing preprepared to buy.
I had a great time
with Diana and it was fun to celebrate a holiday that reminded me of home with
a lot of delicious food that reminded me of home. So thank you Diana. Tomorrow
morning (7am to avoid the heat) I ride back to my site with all my sauces
barely fitting into my minibackpack. The whole weekend was a great reminder or
why friends are important and what can really lift your spirits.
Bonuses:
Got to see Diana teach
2 classes
See another volunteers
site
Have good fast
internet
Eat great food!
Teach a womens
exercise group a mix of hip hop and exercise
PS. Everything was
great up until we realized the empanada skins we bought to use as dumpling
skins were already a little spoiled before we even started using them. Then we
remembered we were in Paraguay and it all made sense.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
A Glimpse into my Paraguayan life.
List of whats on my table:
Large poster paper
house keys
kitchen knife
toilet paper roll
cell phone
2 white board pens
1 homemade whiteboard
white paint
1 tomato, 3 onions and 2 bell peppers
cilantro in a cup of water
Mexican hot sauce from Mexico
2 limes
a cutting board with discarded pieces
of lime, tomato and onion
a Tupperware of unfinished picco de
gallo
a Spanish to English dictionary
2 MCAT book
2 notebooks
3 seed packets for napa cabbage,
cucumber and broccoli
plastic cups
2 rag
a USB stick
axe deodorant spray
a bus ticket receipt
my watch
a pen
mp3 player
eraser
pencil sharpener
instant milk tea packets
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
A Taste of Home
Just one cha siu bow, 1 roast duck cha
siu fan, or just one bowl of mom's mapo tofu. What I would give for
those foods now. As you might imagine, getting a taste of home for me
is particularly difficult. Sure there are a couple Chinese and Korean
restaurants in Asuncion (run by immigrants that have been here 15-30
yrs and whose food tastes awesomely authentic) but I can only relish
those in Asuncion. When I am stuck at home I do the best I can,
scrounging up whatever Asian sauces I have left from home and
stirfrying the few ingredients I have (rice, green pepper, onion,
tomato, egg and soy sauce) It makes for an okay fried rice especially
if I have a little meat but honestly I almost never cook meat. Too
much hassel with prepping the raw meat plus the raw meat is sold
quite unsanitarily here. Meat hangs for unknown intervals of time in
unrefrigerated or only slightly refrigerated areas with butchers
never washing their hands, never using cloves and usually handling
other products and money with the same hands touching the meat. Thus
meat has a sort of ominous “im gunna be spewing liquid out both
sides” feeling to it. As I was saying, as a result of my isolation
I have done a lot of experimenting trying to come up with different
things that taste good. Honestly, I have not been particularly
successful. Most of my food tastes similar despite my efforts but I
like it. I always start with garlic and ginger with a bit of oil.
Then add my onions or potatoes followed by green pepper. Thats
usually the start of everything. I have been a bit lucky as I made
friends with a leaving Koica (Korean Peace Corps) volunteer who
handed off his rice cooker and lots of sauces. Yes I have been eating
everything with that Korean red bean paste that is so delicious.
Note: red paste, hot dog onion and rice is delicious. Long story
short, nothing really tastes as good as anything from home, the only
thing stable being oyaku don. But im good and always have my runs to
asunsion for good beef noodle soup or bim bim bap. That will have to
do.
Oh one more thing, I miss stir fried
leafy vegetables so much it is killing me. I can sometimes get one
type of leafy vegetable in town but thats it. People only eat lettuce
and cabbage here!!!!
The Arroyo
Arroyo means stream in Spanish. When
its 100 degrees outside, an ocean, lake, river or even stream could
be considered a dream. Paraguay being a land locked country, that
rules out oceans. Having a total of zero lakes in my department rules
out lakes, all one can hope for is a small river or stream.
Amazingly our community happens to have such a stream and equally
amazing is the “piscina” which mean pool in spanish. When I first
heard of the arroyo and so called piscina I was skeptical. I had seen
the stream before and it was shallow and maybe 3 feet across. But by
extreme luck or something this one part is for all intensive
purposes an all natural pool. The small stream widens to pool width
and deepens enough to jump off 10 foot rocky edges and be perfectly
safe. The pool comes with plenty on different level jumping points, a
nice grassy areas to lay out on and a shallow side for the
youngsters. It is truly an amazing place. With this natural treasure
available, most of the teenages in my community rush to the stream at
about 1:30 and finish at 4ish. It is a greta place to relax, cool off
and mess around with friends. Sitting on the grassy knoll overlooking
the piscina is quite a site. Young people doing the exact same thing
American kids would be doing without all the money it costs to have a
pool, without the cute, sexy or hip swim suits or pool toys. Just
worn shorts, and old holey volley balls to toss around. Although
some of the girls have bikinis, no one seems to shed the shirts they
wear for fear of the sun. Its a refreshing site, a pool like no
other.
Good News!!! In the words of Professor Farnsworth....
Good news!! my projects seem to be
making progress. If you are still following this blog, props,
seriously. You could be looking at Cracked, Reddit or a kitten
falling asleep but instead you are validating my existence so thank
you. To give you all an update, my main project right now is
obtaining the materials for fogons (brick stoves that use wood). Our
commission was formalized and we have already had one meeting with
the Intendente of the municipality, think County Supervisor. He told
us that the money would be available at the end of this month and
that we should return close to then with an official document asking
for and outlining the costs of the materials. Our president and I are
going to turn this in in 2 days. Woohoo! In other news it is summer
here. Since November it has averaged about 37-9 degrees Celsius here
during midday. That is about 100 degrees for us Americans. The heat
combined with the humidity makes doing any manual labor, visiting
families, playing sports, walking around or moving in general, highly
unpleasant. Here in Paraguay, the locals wake up at five and work
until about 10. After that, all effective work slows to a crawl or
simply stops until about 5. The system totally works for them. At 10
ish they drink terrere, and prepare lunch. After eating lunch there
is a 1-2 hour nap time usually lasting till 2 or 3. Then there is
more relaxing and any activity that can be done in the shade and
sitting down until about 5 when it starts to cool. Then after that
there is soccer and volley ball.
Today I woke up at 9 being awakened by
clapping (Paraguayan version of door knocking) of a neighbor asking
for a minicarga. Which means he wanted to know if I could give him
the equal of 75 cents in cell phone credit (enough to send like ____
messages or talk for maybe 3 minutes.) After sweeping my house,which
I have to do because of dust and insects that accumulate every night,
and other random cleaning, I ate breakfast (some of yesterday's
dinner food). Then I headed out of my house around 10 to go work on
my garden. As you may recall, I had planned to make my own garden
long ago but had been putting it off on the excuse that I didn't have
a shovel. Finally, when I went to clear a patch of land for the
garden, I worked hard and did a good job clearing the plot when the
land lord came and told me not to put it there. Sadness.... Anyway, I
told myself id put the garden somewhere sometime and left it at that.
I was mentioning my continued desire to start a garden to a local
family I hang out with when they told me I could use their space for
a garden. They had the fence (halved bamboo sticks stuck into the
ground) already in place and all I needed to do was do a little
reparation and prepare the seed beds. So today, in the 11 o clock
heat, I prepared 4 seed beds with one of my closer Paraguayan youth
friends and planted cucumber, broccoli, napa cabbage, cilantro and
basil. Now normally im all down to do manual labor but in this case
my little friend enthusiastically did most of the soil turning and
seed planting. Anyway, in this heat the gardening manual says
cucumbers and napa cabbage will grow well but the other stuff might
not. F the manual lol. I have to ensure the fence stays well kept and
water everything all the time. I hope it all works out. It would be
great to have the cilantro, basil, and napa cabbage readily
available. Its hard to get those 3 here in Paraguay. Cilantro is
available in town but basil and napa cabbage no.
Back to my day, then I ate lunch at
the house where my garden is. We ate a soup made with beef bones
locra and other vegetables. It was awesome and a nice change from my
own cooked food. The soups kinda remind me of the chinese soups my
mom makes at home which is cool After lunch it was pretty much hang
out and digest food time for me and sleep time for the mom and dad of
the house. I spent the time chatting with the Paraguayan boy (13) and
catching up with some other volunteers on their holidays. At about 4
I headed back to my house to eat a little bit and do a little of what
im doing now, journal/blog but on my way I saw a lady shelling beans.
(most people eat red colored beans here.-no idea what they are
actually called- They grow it in their fields and de-shell them by
hand.) It was a perfect way to pass time. I stopped and offered to
help. It was a family about 5 houses from my house, but one I did not
spend very much time at. I spent the next hour chatting about my
horrible guarani and de shelling beans. It was very enjoyable. I will
probably go back tomorrow. As usual I was asked if I was American and
my racial background. After that there was the question about the
weather in the United States with the ever present assumption that
all of the US has the same weather. After that I took to my house to
relax, eat some food and write this blog entry. I hung out for about
40 minutes until it was nice and cool to go play volley ball. Right
now volley ball and soccer are the primary past times for after 6
ish. The house I go to play has a nice dirt court and there are
usually at least about 10 teens there. Some of the young kids are
ridiculously good at the game. Volley takes me to sun down around
8ish when I teach English usually one on one or one on two with 2
pretty cool students. One is Derlis, this 17 year old dude who can
already answer my questions in English and write paragraphs about his
day in English. It is awesome. In fact I taught him today. We
practiced future tense. Then at about 9:30 or 1o come 3-6 teens who
come to learn basic break dancing and use my place as a hangout in
the night. Today I had to tell them that I needed some space because
they always come every day and mostly stay till midnight. It was cool
to teach the dance but I cant handle it being endless.
Monday, December 26, 2011
Just another entry
Being the Peace Corps has proven to be
similar to what we were told. Slow and Steady. There are definitely
down periods, when nothing seems to be working and frustration builds
up. Then the inevitable thought pops up, “Its so hard to work with
people. If they dont want to work why am I even here? Why should I be
trying?” I tackled this thought pretty recently and I have to tell
you sometimes it takes all your strength to wake up and keep getting
out there. Fortunately for me and other volunteers, I hope, this
period passes and you are reminded by the super guapa<--- hard
working ladies in the community who still come to those meetings and
are happy to see you every time you come around. In my case, my
conditions were at a seemingly permanent standstill and nothing
seemed to be changing that. Now my fogon commission has met with the
local government and is on track to continue doing fundraisers. My
other commission is due to meet and make some awesome soap and
shampoo and I have an ambitious idea about loaning money to start a
small chicken business with a family. I have also been teaching
English which is particularly interesting because you get to see the
skill level, strengths and weaknesses of students of different ages.
I have this one 9 year old student whose memory is incredible and a
19 year old student who can complete my tasks after showing her only
once. Its a fun activity. Anyway ive been trying to think of posts
that would be more creative, funny or interesting but I just cant
come up with anything good. Its sad really. I used to consider myself
a creative person. Sigh. Until next time, or I come up with something
interesting. Adios.
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