Wednesday, February 26, 2014

A Week in the Life ...

People have asked me what a typical day for me is like.  The truth is “typical” may not exist.  My life is a crazy roller coaster, but I felt like the week beginning Monday, February 17 was as close to an example of “typical” as I can get, so I decided to document it …

I started off the week with a few main goals.  The first was to spread the word about a fast-approaching meeting with the Peace Corps Environmental Health Program Specialist, which would determine if El Harino will receive a follow-up volunteer.  After two volunteers whose work focused on sustainable agriculture, I believe my community will benefit from a program change and support for our mismanaged, lacking aqueduct systems and latrines.  Strong attendance at the meeting was important.  My second goal was to spread the word about an upcoming bridge project work day.  We are in the process of gathering an insane amount of rocks, sand, and gravel so the materials will be ready when construction begins later in March.  The third was to offer my services as photographer to those families who are currently trying to get the official titles to their land and need a photo to complete their paperwork.  This process is costly, so not many have taken me up on the offer yet.  Goal four was to begin gathering data on how much nutrition has improved since it was voted El Harino’s biggest problem in September, 2012.  My strategy was to ask people what foods they eat a lot and to compare to their answers from way back then.  And of course, my permanent goal when I am in site is to be a visible, well-integrated member of the community.  As with most weeks, I set myself a rough schedule, which was bound to change.

Publicity for Environment Health follow-up volunteer meeting

Monday, February 17.

Monday morning I climbed my phone hill to call Panama’s fishery organization.  My contact there helped us get fish for a couple projects here in August 2012, so I thought he might help us get the tubes that MIDA has failed to provide for almost a year (my last inquiry informed me that the only farmer on the short list to receive tubes happens to be the only one who is a member of MIDA’s political party. Hmmm).  Señor Cobas told me his organization doesn’t have tubes, but that he was meeting with MIDA the next day and would plead my case.  I was to call back Wednesday to see how it went.

After the call, I set out on a Power-Pasear route hitting nine houses.  I won’t describe each visit, but just a few highlights.  Three houses gave me food to eat: rice with a little meat; soup with rice, pasta, yucca, and a little meat; and soup with yucca, otoe, ñame, and a little meat.  I don’t eat red meat, nor do I usually eat three lunches, but it was a long day and I managed.  I drank coffee, juice, and tea.  I was gifted yucca, ñame, tomatoes, eggs, and plantains.  I had some good discussions and talked up the Peace Corps meeting.  People agreed with my assessment that they don’t need another agriculture volunteer (saying that even though not everyone is practicing techniques like compost, they at least get the idea) and that getting help with water is a necessary priority.  I found out that a couple more families are backing out of getting their land titled (no hay dinero).  To my incredible excitement I saw that one of my farmers’ dugout fish tank is now full of water and fish and accompanied by a second functioning fish pond.  Apparently the farmer I’d worked with on it let his brother take over and the brother decided to invest his own resources to get the tanks up and running.  Woo!

Tanks finished up by original farmer's brother

Tuesday, February 18.

Tuesday I knew I’d have kids over for reading club in the afternoon so I set out for a “quick” three-house pasear.  One of these families is new in town and the single mom there told me her tough story of leaving her husband after 20+ years and starting over.  We talked about more pleasant things as well, and by the time I left, I had gotten to hold her adorable infant, said hello to her teenager, and set a date to work on making them a compost pile.  House #2 surprised me with another revived fish project.  This farmer had temporarily given up on the project when strong rains caused a nearby creek to overflow and carry away his fish several months ago.  Now that it’s summer here, he got new fish and is strengthening his pond to withstand the next rainy season.  I left there after drinking some coconut water and with a couple eggs in my purse.  We also set a date for him to take me to his farm to take a photo for his land title paperwork. 

Fish tank revival
I got home just in time to scarf down some lunch before the kids arrived to read.  As usual we read a few short stories and then a chapter of a longer one—we finally finished Charlotte’s Web!  They all confirmed they had never read a book that long before.  At the end I gave out a snack and got out some balls to kick around, but to my amazement they all went for the bag of books and read individually for a while.  So great.  Eventually they put the books down and we all played catch for a bit.  Then we headed over to the school to say hi to the teachers who just arrived this week to get organized for the new school year, which was to start February 24.  It was nice to see the teachers back and they invited me to the PTA board meeting the next day at 2:00.  We all played dominos for a while, and then I went home.

Wednesday, February 19.

Wednesday morning I did about an hour and a half’s worth of laundry.  Then up to my phone hill to check in with my fish friend.  He hadn’t had much luck, but reported that our tube request still was in an approved-but-not-yet-filled status.  So the waiting continues.  Before climbing back down the hill, I was asked to play hair dresser and gave two girls French-braided pig tails.  Super cute.  Their grandma then gave me a bunch of tomatoes from her garden.

Heading out for another “quick” two-house pasear before the afternoon PTA meeting, I ran into a community member out telling people that the land-measuring guy would be coming here on February 26 – the same day as my Peace Corps meeting! ARG!  Now I (selfishly?) felt lucky that not many families are actually measuring their land and so hopefully this will not conflict too much with my meeting.  Still frustrating though, considering I’ve been telling everyone about this date for over a month now.  As I headed to visit my first host family’s house, I ran into some city Panamanians who said they were going there too and asked if I would lead the way.  As we hiked, they told me they came out here occasionally to participate in the Evangelist Church’s activities.  They were out here on this particular day to deliver a special vine plant known to cure leishmaniasis.  I remembered a gnarly-looking sore I’d seen on 12-year-old Diana’s arm the week before and my heart sank.  We learned about the flesh-eating parasite called leishmaniasis in training.  Getting "lesh" for a volunteer means three weeks in Panama City with daily intravenous treatments.  What does it mean for people out here?  Sure enough, when we arrived I saw that all the kids had itchy, open, large sores on their skin.  The man I’d led explained to them to keep the sores clean and to apply the salve from within the vine plant twice a day.  He also explained the origins of the parasite carried from sloths to people by way of biting sandflies.  I was horrified by what I saw, but the kids were in good spirits.  They said the sores itched a little but not too bad.  They applied the salve and were soon off playing again. 

Explaining how to get the salve from this vine plant

a sore caused by leishmaniasis

Even the baby got it
I hung out for a while and talked to their parents about community issues like water.  They agreed that an Environmental Health volunteer could help the community, but warned me about some gossip.  Apparently some don’t want another Peace Corps volunteer because my landlord makes too much money.  Seriously?  That’s a legitimate reason to not want another volunteer?  I said that sounded resolvable since after my two years of paying $30/month, my house will have finally paid for itself so maybe the next volunteer would pay less or split the rent between my landlord and a community fund like the school or the town hall.  For lunch they fed me boiled yucca with fried chicken-based hot dog, gave me a couple eggs to go, and then I was on my way. 

Leaving there, I stopped by my second host family where my 25-year-old host “mom” was nursing her one-week-old baby (she had the baby at home instead of going out to a hospital, but everything was fine “gracias a Dios”).  We talked about how she now has two girls and two boys and would like to leave it at that.  She is looking into the paperwork involved to get her tubes tied.  It sounds like a long process, so I attempted to explain the rhythm method for the meantime.

I arrived at the 2:00 PTA meeting around 2:30.  The president of the PTA didn’t get there until 4:00.  Once the meeting finally started we talked about school projects like fixing up the cafeteria, etc.  They need to have a meeting with all the school parents and decided to set it for the 26th, after my meeting ends.  Hopefully that will work to my advantage and get more people to come since they have to be there anyway.  The president told me they were all machete-chopping the school lawn on Friday and that I should come to promote the 26th’s meetings.  By the time I got home I found my sheets and most of my clothes had dried in the hot sun.  I prepared myself a dinner of all things I’d either been given or had grown in my own garden: ñame, eggs, tomato, and mustard greens. YUM!

Colorful, local food bowl

Thursday, February 20.

Thursday morning I woke up early and it wasn’t quite light yet.  I went to turn on my solar lamp and found my hand stung by a bee hiding on the lamp string.  Good morning to you too!  I laughed to myself remembering that in Peace Corps training we’d been reminded that ice is good for stings like this.  Ice.  What a luxury.  I ran cool water over my hand for a few seconds and went on with my day.

Now my day got confusing.  Last week a farmer had told me MIDA was coming to inspect his farm and see how his MIDA-sponsored poroto (bean) project was going.  This proud farmer invited me to come early for breakfast and to see other products he was growing before MIDA got there.  He told me that he did not burn his land, but rather had left cut down debris on top of the land around where he planted his crops and had noticed that the soil was producing well (the nutrients from the debris were returning to the soil as the dead plant material decomposed), the soil was holding moisture better, and that less weeds were coming up.  I told him I was so glad he was able to see these positive results with this experimentation, and that I couldn’t wait to see it myself.  But then when I had passed by his daughter’s house the afternoon before, she told me MIDA wasn’t going to her dad’s and instead wanted me to accompany them and a few other El Harino farmers to see a garden project in a nearby community.  So when MIDA came for me, I hopped in the back of their pickup truck and went.  Except I discovered too late that in fact two different MIDA groups had organized separate events for the same day and expected me to be at both.  Hmm. I had a nice visit to the garden project and took the opportunity to push some more for help getting fish tank tubes, but as soon as I got back I rushed over to the proud bean-farmer’s house to apologize for not showing.  Thankfully he understood the confusion and we set a new date for me to come see his beans.  While there I played with his grandkids, French-braided a 4th grader’s hair, was fed purple-colored rice and coffee and was gifted three bananas for the road.

Pickup truck ride to see a garden project in a nearby community
Learning about simple sticky traps for insects
Farmer's grandbaby who knows my name now!
,
Once I made it to the bean farm early the next week, it was gorgeous!!

The farmer had his son give me the tour (hmmm trying to set me up, perhaps?  no gracias)

Friday, February 21.

I arrived fashionably late to the machete-chopping at the school.  The truth is, my machete could use a more professional sharpening than me and my little file are capable of, and so machete-chopping fields is not my favorite thing to do right now.  My timing worked out well.  I said hello to everyone and then helped peel and cut root vegetables with the only two women present for the soup they were making for the men.  Once the guys finished chopping the field, they switched to mixing concrete for the floor of a new room for the 7th grade teacher (she had complained last year that her old room was too far from the other teachers and that she got scared at night … I find this silly since I live by myself much farther from any human, and I don’t get scared at night, but the school parents are trying to keep her happy).  I like this work better and grabbed a shovel to dig in.  I had a nice day talking, working, and hanging with the guys. One particularly entertaining topic of conversation was that apparently witches have been around a lot lately.  One guy said he felt a witch grab him in the middle of the night and woke up with bruises on his arm.  Witches…  Right…  At the end of the day the PTA president and I made sure everyone knew about the meetings on the 26th.  They began talking about selling fried bread and coffee that day as a school fundraiser.  Sounds good to me!

When I got home, I did a little tidying up and looked through some books I was thinking of donating to the Peace Corps office.  SURPRISE ANTS!  I sprayed some Raid, did some sweeping, and highly doubt I got them all.  Sigh.  Don’t worry mom, my business calc book was safely stored in a Ziploc bag.

I would also like to note, that this day was ERICA GOLDMAN’S BIRTHDAY! HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

Saturday, February 22.

Saturday the district mayor was scheduled to come out.  He actually was supposed to come one week before, but postponed for one reason or another.  Also the meeting location changed.  It was supposed to be at a faraway house and I’d planned to pasear my way over for the noon meeting, but it switched instead to a close by house, leaving me with a newly emptied morning (and the realization that I probably wouldn’t make it to all those houses before the 26th’s meeting).  After breakfast I cleaned the tomato seeds I’d harvested from the previous night’s dinner and let ferment overnight.  As I set them out to dry, I was visited by my 20-year-old neighbor who asked to borrow $20 so he could take his niece out to the city back to her mom’s house.  This family is always responsible when I loan them money and they are always generous with me, so I lent him the money.  A little while later I went up to his house to get signal and check my phone, and my world got rocked just a little.  As Agribusiness Coordinator with a grant sponsored by many of you lovely people, I am organizing three agribusiness seminars, the first of which is coming up in the Veraguas province March 7-10.  But on this morning, I listened to a voice message from the volunteer whose community is hosting the seminar saying he was just informed that there is a big provincial festival called Cristo de Atalaya involving some kind of pilgrimage that same weekend.  He wasn’t sure how many participants would be affected, but considering this seminar is for Veraguas farmers and this is a local Veraguas holiday, this did not sound good.  I made a round of calls to other Veraguas volunteers asking them to confirm their farmers’ desire to attend or if they were all actually busy with the holiday and had somehow failed to realize the dates conflicted.  But of course, none of us have cell signal, so the phone tag began.  ARG!  If I have to postpone this seminar, it will wait until at least April.  FRUSTRATION.  I then called my mom to vent (and just because I like to call home about once a week), and she reminded me in that mom kind of way that in spite of my type-A personality, many things are out of my control here, and that all I can do is my best.  Thanks mom.

At around 11:00 one of my neighbors said she was heading to the mayor’s meeting, so I went with her.  I had seen billboards with this guy’s face, but I think he was even more comical in person.  Fatter (obese, really), darker skinned (he looked orange on the billboard), and with a raspier voice than I expected.  He arrived with a big posse of helpers who immediately set to work cooking lunch, amazing my community’s women with modern technology like a device that cuts hard boiled eggs for you without a knife (“Really Lila?  You’ve seen that before?  This is the first time I’ve ever seen something like that.”).  He and a few members of his posse all took turns addressing the crowd.  This is an election year for Panama (coming up on May 4th) and I’ve seen politicians come in with some pretty strong rhetoric.  This one kept it relatively short and sweet and gave out shoes to all kids present and huge lunch portions to all.  After the speeches, our bridge committee asked for his support following up on a formal solicitation letter they’d already sent to his office.  He agreed he wanted to help, but said he couldn’t exactly make any promises, so we shall see.  In any case it was a good opportunity for us to remind everyone about the upcoming bridge work day.  As the meeting ended, one of the creepy politician guys accompanying the mayor told me he’d been born too early and that if he’d been born at the right time, I would’ve been the mother of his children. GROSS!

Check this guy out

The man in person.  Buying votes with lollipops?
I got back to my house in time to freshen up a bit before heading out again.  One family had invited me over for that evening to celebrate three of their birthdays: father, son, and daughter’s quinceañera.  The daughter had actually turned 15 in November, but they’d decided to wait and group everyone together.  I got there at around 6:15 in time to help with the last bit of cooking.  Then we all hung around waiting for more people to arrive.  The 20-year-old birthday boy kept giving me swigs of the typical fermented corn drink chicha fuerte intermixed with shots of Seco, a Panamanian sugarcane rum that tastes like burning.  The kids around took notice and asked me, “You drink that stuff?”  “Yes, but only a little,” I replied.  “But what if they give you a lot?”  “Then I stop.”  I realize my fight against the macho binge-drinking culture here is probably futile, but I still try to lead by example.  In between taking shots that burned my insides, I mostly played with the kids, who took to playing with my hair, repeatedly commenting that, “Lila has such yellow hair!”  Meanwhile the men, growing in number, were all getting noticeably plastered.  When we finally reached critical mass there were speeches on behalf of the quinceañera (who looked gorgeous in a nice, white dress) and the birthday boys.  We sang feliz cumpleaños and watched a brief father/daughter dance.  Then around 9:30 the food was served and for the second time that day I ate arroz con pollo and potato salad with beets and mayonnaise (I have yet to figure out why Panamanians think that is a typical food of theirs since none of those ingredients are local), and for the second time everyone ate two full plates to my one.  Cake was also served – always the same dry, white cake with sickeningly sweet frosting.  After that the kids started falling asleep on their moms’ laps and the men started getting rowdy.  The most amusing town drunk entertained all by dancing by himself with surprisingly good rhythm.  At 11:00 a few people started trickling out and I jumped on that bandwagon.  The family thanked me for coming and for taking photos and tried to give me more food for the road.  I said no, saying that I didn’t want to get fat, which made them laugh.  “Crazy gringa,” I could read their thoughts.  They sent a random visiting cousin to walk me home, which I told them wasn’t necessary, but it was nice.  I was finally in bed a little before midnight – hours past my normal bedtime.

Quinceanera and kids

Birthday family

Sunday, February 23.

I usually try to save up my housework for Sundays.  Most people in my community either spend Sundays in church or getting drunk and either way, I’d rather stay out of it.  So in the morning I stayed in and spent a few hours of badly needed work in my own neglected garden (clearing out old tomato plants and weeds and adding compost to my terrible soil).  I also spent some time up on the phone hill with my neighbors, but still reached no conclusion on whether or not I’d have to postpone the agribusiness seminar (although I was relieved to hear the holiday might not actually affect too many participants).  

For the afternoon, I’d been invited to yet another birthday celebration, one that I knew would be tamer than the night before.  I’ve seen birthdays here celebrated in a wide variety of ways.  Sometimes with a piñata for small kids.  Sometimes with men getting drunk as on Saturday night.  Sometimes with a small, simple meal as this day would be.  And sometimes people have no idea when their birthday even is.  So around noon I ventured out to one of the farthest houses in my community.  When I got there I helped cook for a bit and then played cards with the kids (I lost “war” twice).  We then set the table to eat, guess what?  Yep, arroz con pollo and that purple potato/beet salad.  Again, all ate two plates to my one.  We took a few photos and I was off again. 


Birthday boy and his step-mom

Family birthday lunch

On my way back I ran into a drunk, sweet farmer who asked me, “You’re not going yet, right?”  Me: “Going …?”  Drunkard: “You’re going in like July, right?  We’re all going to cry.  We don’t want you to go.”  Me: “Ayy, I’m leaving at the end of June, but I still have a lot of time before that, and then I will cry too.”  This went on for a bit before I could excuse myself.

As I passed by my second host family’s house (the one with the one-week old), they asked me to come in.  At church that day they’d received boxes from a Red Cross Christmas project and their box came with a letter in English they wanted me to translate.  So I translated the adorable letter from a girl in Huntington Beach, California.  There was an address listed, so I told this family I’d help them write a thank you letter to send back.  They were very grateful for the box filled with useful school supplies as their 5-year-old gets ready for kindergarten.  Before leaving, they sent me with a portion of squash to take home. Yum.

Just as I arrived home, some neighbors who live 10 minutes away and who don’t have water at their house came by to fill up their daily buckets, so I chatted with them for a bit.  As we talked, an escaped cow stumbled onto my property.  We chased it off, but it came back again later and my uphill neighbors helped me notify the cow’s owners who later came to reclaim it.  They were very worried on my behalf since cows eat everything and likely would have eaten the tarp off my compost or would have trampled my garden had it been left here overnight.  Silly cow.

Example of a cow eating something he shouldn't
Overall

These daily summaries left out a lot.  I didn’t talk about all the pretty birds I see and hear when eating breakfast or dinner on my porch in my hammock.  I didn’t talk about the random rain storms I hear pelting my metal roof.  I didn’t talk about all the gorgeous stars and fireflies I see when I get up to pee in the middle of the night.  I didn’t talk about how I am now used to eating just about anything with only a spoon.  I didn’t talk about how hard it is to not scratch all of my bug bites all of the time.  I didn’t talk about all the cute puppies I played with or the pathetic ones I already see turning mangy and sick.  I didn’t talk about how whenever I pasear/hike around, I marvel at the gorgeous tropical paradise scenery all around me.  I didn’t talk about how I spent much of my time on my phone hill this week coordinating the complicated logistics for a party boat night for my volunteer group to celebrate our Close-Of-Service Conference in March (three months before we actually leave the country).  I didn’t talk about any of the mild boy drama that I somehow manage to get myself into when I am out of site (sorry, those stories will never go on this blog!).  I didn’t talk about how a few emails/Whatsapps/texts from you at home totally brightened my days.

My life is frustrating and weird.  It is also rewarding and incredible.  Many daily challenges that I now consider normal, I realize are bizarre and un-relate-able to most.  Same goes for many of the things that make me happy.  My principal obligation for two years has been simply to help people and to be myself, and I feel so lucky for that.  I know I have a lot to look forward to with my next move, but I also know I will miss this world more than I can explain.  It is a very strange feeling to want time to both hurry up and to freeze.

Extremely high turnout for the meeting to talk about getting an Environmental Health volunteer to follow me up in El Harino.  Exciting!