A Very Lila
Community Analysis
After stressing out and over-planning for my community
analysis, the meeting ran completely smoothly.
I followed my program director’s strict structure, adapting it and
adding my own style as I found necessary, and she seemed very pleased with
it. The written report of it can be
found here:
http://lilabailapeacecorps.blogspot.com/2012/09/community-analysis-report-given-to.html
in (
campo) Spanish. I will eventually translate it both into
English and more formal Spanish as required by Peace Corps. This current version is what I’m giving to
community members.
The gist of it is that together we reviewed several general
community characteristics to gain a comprehensive understanding of how we’re doing
-- How are families structured? What is the education system like? How is
income generated? What are the gender
roles like? When are certain crops
harvested/planted? Etc.
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Making an Agriculture Calendar. Apparently all I will have to consume in November is coffee. |
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Community Map. People were more or less able to figure out where they all live on here. I drew the main road straight instead of its true curvy nature, so this seemed to confuse some. |
Then we analyzed our strengths and weaknesses and evaluated
which agriculturally-related weakness within our control is considered most
important. The 19 people present voted “lack
of food with nutrients” as a top priority.
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Strengths, Opportunities, Weaknesses, Threats |
We then discussed the causes and effects of this problem and
developed the beginning steps of an action plan and timeline to address and
improve it.
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Causes & Effects of not getting enough nutrients |
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Planning activities to achieve our new goal |
Whew! It was a lot to
cover and the meeting lasted about three and a half hours. We celebrated after by trying the foreign
American delicacy: peanut butter & jelly sandwiches!
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The whole crew lasted through the whole meeting. |
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PB & J = a hit with my community members |
So now I am pumped to continue working with everyone to
achieve our goal of obtaining a more balanced diet (i.e. mixing in more
nutrients to the standard rice and yucca straight carb baseline). I am currently busy preparing for my first
step coming up on Tuesday. Along with an
awesome neighboring volunteer Jim who is extending for a 3rd year
here, I’ll host a training session on both basic nutrition concepts and also
how to compost. In three months when the
compost is ready (things degrade fast out here), we can use it to plant more
nutritious food!
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Publicity for upcoming event |
Learning Moments
& Observations
- Information gathering is a tricky thing in the development
field. I am trying to record a baseline
regarding El Harino’s current diet in order to later evaluate if we are
achieving our goal of consuming more nutritious foods. I thought about asking people how many times
a week (or day) they eat certain foods like rice, but realized quickly that no
one thinks of things that way. I’m going
with asking what foods they eat the most.
They always say rice and yucca first, so I only record when they can
think of anything else. In a year we’ll
see how many name a vegetable, fruit, or protein along with those two staples …
The overall lesson here is that quantifying our progress will be a challenge.
- Rice production = seriously hard work!
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Harvesting rice: You strap a knife to your hand and grab the top of the rice stalks to snip them off. Yes, I fell a few times with the knife still strapped to my hand. No, I didn't cut myself. |
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Harvesting rice: Bundles are tied together and left around the farm to gather up at the end of the day. |
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Rice post-harvest step 1: Degraining. My fingers went numb doing this. |
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Rice post-harvest step 2: Toasting. I accidentally threw a spoonful of rice into the air trying to stir the pot so the rice doesn't burn. |
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Rice post-harvest step 3: Dehusking. I nearly hit myself in the head with these heavy mallets. |
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Rice post-harvest step 4: Shaking out the husks, leaving behind the rice ready to cook! I did not even attempt this step. |
- One of my favorite things to see out here is when people
on horseback pass by blasting reggaetón on their phones. Something about it just seems like such a
funny contradiction
- I now love doing laundry.
These are usually the only few hours a week I spend listening to my
iPod. I’ve been told that people can
hear my singing from the road, but I guess I don’t care. Fortunately, they can’t see me dancing.
- Some days I really feel like Katniss in the Hunger
Games. I hike through the forest, with
my hair in one long braid, wearing boots, and planning when I can replenish my
supply of clean water. Except I don’t
have a bow & arrow, and no one is trying to kill me.
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hiking around |
- The term “licenciada”
here is used for anyone with a college degree.
The term “ingeniera” is
confusingly used to describe “engineers” or people considered experts in their
fields. I have been uncomfortable using
these terms, because in many ways, I feel inexperienced in comparison to the
local producers who’ve spent their lives working in the field. However the fact is that I have received a
high level of education and this does qualify me to give advice on certain
topics. When my education occasionally
comes up (a bachelor’s in “Environmental Engineering” indeed earns me both
titles of “licenciada” and “ingeniera”), people seem both impressed
but also a little uncomfortable. It’s
just a weird feeling that while my education qualifies me to be here, it also
distances me from the community members with whom I’m trying to integrate.
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"Engineer Lila?" Excited about eating Panamanian tree grapes. |
- Among my other roles, I’ve recently taken on babysitter
and cheerer-upper of older folks. I play
with kids a lot while their parents are busy cooking, etc. The awkward teens are even warming up to me
and now include me in soccer games (fun!).
I’ve been visiting some of the older “abuelos/as” around town.
While I realize these visits will never result in interest in my home-garden
projects, I still feel they are worthwhile just because they seem to make them
happy. I listen to them vent about their
health issues and about how alone they are.
We discuss the weather, how happy I am to be in Panama, and how
beautiful it is. They tell me about how
things used to be here before the road when there were “tigres” everywhere (“tigre”
= general term for scary, wild animals).
It’s cute.
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Hanging with kids playing dress-up |
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simply gorgeous sunrise |
- I’ve been dreaming in Spanish! According to my host-family
I’ve even been sleep-talking in Spanish haha.
(I blame this on the side effects of Malaria-meds – I never used to be a
sleep-talker). I am feeling very good
about my Spanish, but finding it hard to balance wanting to integrate and be
understood by locals with wanting to maintain my more city/formal manner of
speaking. It’s like trying to spend two
years in some small, southern US town and come out without an accent. Hmm. Even so I can’t imagine how much harder this
must be for volunteers who come in with low language levels. My obsession with Spanish over the past 9
years has definitely paid off!
- I anticipated that people out here would not use
tissues. I assumed people would use handkerchiefs,
and I brought a few. But I was wrong …
they’re all about the snot rockets! And
when it comes to little kids, parents grab their noses and tell them to blow,
later flinging the snot from their fingertips.
I think I’ll stick with handkerchiefs.
How far will Peace
Corps Volunteers go for a party?
Far. A neighboring
volunteer is finishing up his two years, and his community threw him a going
away party. I met a few of my closer
neighbors and we hiked for nearly three hours through some intense mud and
including a river-crossing to meet up with a few other gringos (some who had
traveled from much farther away) to attend this party. In order to not hike back at night, I slept
on a friend’s cement floor. Was it worth
it? I suppose. It was my first typical
campo house party. There was
a fair amount of sitting in awkward silence.
A lot of Seco shots (Panamanian cheap liquor) being poured. Much Peace Corps gossip with the
gringos. It’s always interesting to
compare our sites, which in some ways are really quite different, while somehow
our experiences still feel pretty similar.
In any case, it’s nice to be able to share. My favorite part was getting to dance some
típico (I said no to super drunk
Panamanians, but yes to more sober ones and to my Peace Corps friends). My least favorite part was that they cut up
and cooked pig face into the rice. Yes,
pig face. I tried to pick around the
pieces, but gave most of it to a more carnivorous friend. This was the first night that a few members
of my community who also attended saw me drink alcohol. I have discussed with some community members
that the US drinking culture is different from the
campo’s in that it is normal for women to drink, and that it does
not center around men getting plastered and violent. I am hoping to show by example what
responsible drinking looks like. I was
mildly concerned that the next day I would become the talk of the town for
having those couple drinks, but so far so good.
The few who saw me there continue to talk to me and treat me with the
same respect as always. Whew.
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Who would want to eat those faces? |
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