Thursday, October 29, 2015

Peace Corps Home

The volunteers who live in my old house are now preparing to leave.  They are both going back to the United States and had a goodbye party yesterday.  I went for a bit - obviously giving them their space to say goodbye to our mutual friends and community.

As soon as I got there I found this project beneficiary with his tablet and his friends!  I have to do a lot of encouraging and technical support, but the format of the project was thought of with the context of the local culture in mind.  It's very cool to see something working with relatively little foreign intervention.



It's a weird feeling.  I've already said goodbye, but I'm back.  This time, because the goodbye feels more permanent...it's harder.  There is no way to keep in touch with the majority of my students, and the neighbor kids aren't old enough for cell phones.  Even for my students and friends who have cell phones - robbery is common, many live without electricity (therefore not having a phone that's turned on very much) and they lend phones to other people all the time (so when I call, sometimes I talk to someone I don't know).  Leaving is going to smash my heart into a million little pieces, but I keep having to remind myself that it is time to go.  My wise aunt Janet and I were talking about being of public service while I was at home and she had a very good point for mental health: it's important to do things for fun, to do things that aren't in the service of those you are helping.  Go swimming, not to teach anyone to swim, just to hang out in the water.  Go out to dinner - not to start a new project, not to fix current issues, just to have a pizza (and beer).  It's time for me to do that - but it doesn't mean that I wont miss the mountains every day.


Thursday, October 15, 2015

It's October?!

Yes, it's October.  After a whirlwind trip back home to see my brother get married (Success!) and a week waiting around New York for the Mozambureaucracy to get its act together (with a brief and lovely encounter with Amtrak, Philadelphia, and my grandparents), I got back to Mozambique with just enough time to...sit around? Since I'm still working on transportation I've been more or less stuck in Gurue.

I'm still battling to get a car for the project (definitely making progress) and in the last week, I've managed to put grates on my new house (pictures forthcoming), install new locks (when the house sitter lost all of the old ones), hire a wonderful woman to wash my clothes (because it is really no fun to hand wash jeans), get a contract for a new project driver, almost get my company to pay back salary to the previous driver, and eat a lot of wonderful mountain samosas.

It's been quite an African week and in order to be completely honest (because the internet needs more honesty) I am very proud of myself (and grateful to all of the moral supporters and africa magic intervention that helped make all of the above happen in a week of being back.

In the next few weeks, there will be beneficiary training, maybe a business trip or two, and more pictures!

Thank you to everyone who made my stay in the United States such a success!