I thought it was about time to give an update. A lot has been happening as of late!
We are approaching the end of Pre-Service Training, which cumulates in Model School, where we all practice the teaching methods we have been learning on local kids, mostly our host brothers and sisters. I teach a double lesson on Friday about Pursuing Personal Goals so wish me luck.
Its strange to think that in two weeks I will be in Tete. I already feel so much better about my site placement than I did at first. I am looking forward to living on my own again and being able to set my own schedule. As much as I love my host family, I don't always feel like getting up at 5:30 and sometimes I just want to sit and read without my sister and her friend tugging on my sleeve. But I can't be annoyed with them for very long because they are so endearing. Every night my sisters teach me Changana words and I teach them English ones. They are quick learners.
At the end of training in we have a swearing in ceremony and we all wear matching capulana clothes. This means that we all bought matching capulana cloth and we are taking it to local tailors and seamstresses to get dresses, shirts, vests etc made so that we can be matchy matchy for our ceremony. My friend Veronica and I designed a dress together that we are both having made for us. Its so exciting!
Well, that's about all I have for right now. I will try to update again before swearing in. In less than two weeks I will be in Mavudzi-Ponte!
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Site Placement........... eeeeehhhhhh
Just got our site placements. I am not sure how to feel about it. I told myself going in that I was going to expect the "worst", living by myself in the middle of nowhere in the hottest site with a Mozambican family with children far from all the other volunteers... And that is kind of what I got. On the plus side, there is one other volunteer near me (we're going to be best friends!) and I am inheriting a dog from the previous volunteer, and we live near Tete city, so I'll be able to get there easily. Unfortunately all the other volunteers in my province are older married couples except Szasha. And we are going to be in the hottest part of the country. And I am sharing a house with two other teachers and their families. Peace Corps expectation 1 says you will serve where they tell you to and I am fully prepared to do that, but it's hard to be excited about living in the middle of nowhere when the people around me are celebrating their ideal beach-front sites in Inhambane less than an hour from a dozen other volunteers.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Tomorrow is a Very Big Day
Tomorrow is a very big day. At the end of the day, Peace Corps staff will reveal to us where we are assigned to live for the next 2 years. Its exhilirating and terrifying, because it also means we will find out which of the friends we've just spent the last ten weeks making we are going to be living near and which ones are going to be clear across the country. We are all hanging on by the threads of our sanity. I have no idea what mix of emotions await me tomorrow but I just hope the good ones outweigh the sad ones.
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Warning: Reliable Internet = Monstrously Long Post (with pictures!)
Aaah, finally I am able to coherently put my thoughts together while sitting at home under my warm blanket, happily spooning spoonful after spoonful of Black Cat peanut butter into my mouth, instead of hurriedly typing out random thoughts that happen to occur to me at the internet café as fifteen other internet-hungry volunteers stare me down. I can also finally upload some pictures, which I have been getting many requests for. So let's start:
I was one of the lucky ones who got to go to a site far enough away to merit a plane ticket. Mozambique is pretty big, and a direct flight from Maputo to Chimoio is about two hours. Chimoio is the fifth largest city in Mozambique and is the capital of the central province of Manica, which borders Zimbabwe. Chimoio is pretty flat but the horizon is filled by mountains that mark the Mozambique-Zimbabwe border. Our final destination, Sussundenga, is just 45 minutes drive southwest of Chimoio, just past Mount Zembe, which looks like a profile of a face from pretty much every angle.
As Sussundenga is a very small place, there's not all that much to do there, which was totally fine with me and Sam. We had a blast getting to know Jamie's friends and hanging out. Jamie has some very close Mozambican friends that are really personable and we got to know them over the course of the few days that we were there. Many hours were spent lounging on the bamboo mat on the front porch playing cards (I have been taught Canasta and am now addicted). Sam started a rock collection, which fascinated the local kids, who started showing daily with offerings of pretty rocks they had found for Sam.
As Sussundenga is a very small place, there's not all that much to do there, which was totally fine with me and Sam. We had a blast getting to know Jamie's friends and hanging out. Jamie has some very close Mozambican friends that are really personable and we got to know them over the course of the few days that we were there. Many hours were spent lounging on the bamboo mat on the front porch playing cards (I have been taught Canasta and am now addicted). Sam started a rock collection, which fascinated the local kids, who started showing daily with offerings of pretty rocks they had found for Sam.
We decided to make chocolate chip cookies together for the Mozambicans to try -- they were less thrilled than us ("It's good, I guess, but it's just... very different from Mozambican cookies...") and they were somewhat mortified when we started eating half-baked cookies and *GASP* unbaked cookie batter. It was worth it, though, because it tasted like home and we discovered that yes, you CAN fry a chocolate chip cookie in a non-stick pan.
All in all, we had a fantastic time in Sussundenga. I really liked the central area of Mozambique. The weather was like an oven, reaching 30 celcius by 9 a.m., but it was a refreshing change from the super-glue like mud and rain that is a permanent fixture in Namaacha during the wet season. Plus I got to hang out with Jamie and Sam, who are really fun to be around. There was much jovial laughter as well as fofoca (idle gossip).
Well, that's all I've got for now -- I'm so glad I was finally able to upload some pictures and put together some thought-out sentences about life here. All I had to do to get this wifi was buy coffee, which I am ALWAYS a fan of, so I think this worked out nicely for everyone involved.
In less than one week, I find out where I am going to be for the next two years of my life!
Part 1: Pictures from Namaacha
This is me being a dork. |
'Me in front of the waterfalls in Namaacha -- sunburn in progress. |
Part Two: VIsit to Sussundenga
As I alluded to previously, I just spent about a week outside of Namaacha and it was super refreshing. Training is pretty grueling, so to have the Peace Corps say "Here's a plane ticket, go to central Mozambique and hang out with some cool people for a while -- oh, and here's some money" is pretty cool. It wasn't all play, as we did have some assignments to do and questions to answer, but I'm not going to lie -- it was a lot of play.I was one of the lucky ones who got to go to a site far enough away to merit a plane ticket. Mozambique is pretty big, and a direct flight from Maputo to Chimoio is about two hours. Chimoio is the fifth largest city in Mozambique and is the capital of the central province of Manica, which borders Zimbabwe. Chimoio is pretty flat but the horizon is filled by mountains that mark the Mozambique-Zimbabwe border. Our final destination, Sussundenga, is just 45 minutes drive southwest of Chimoio, just past Mount Zembe, which looks like a profile of a face from pretty much every angle.
Sussundenga |
Jamie's House |
As Sussundenga is a very small place, there's not all that much to do there, which was totally fine with me and Sam. We had a blast getting to know Jamie's friends and hanging out. Jamie has some very close Mozambican friends that are really personable and we got to know them over the course of the few days that we were there. Many hours were spent lounging on the bamboo mat on the front porch playing cards (I have been taught Canasta and am now addicted). Sam started a rock collection, which fascinated the local kids, who started showing daily with offerings of pretty rocks they had found for Sam.
Mount Zembe |
As Sussundenga is a very small place, there's not all that much to do there, which was totally fine with me and Sam. We had a blast getting to know Jamie's friends and hanging out. Jamie has some very close Mozambican friends that are really personable and we got to know them over the course of the few days that we were there. Many hours were spent lounging on the bamboo mat on the front porch playing cards (I have been taught Canasta and am now addicted). Sam started a rock collection, which fascinated the local kids, who started showing daily with offerings of pretty rocks they had found for Sam.
Hangin' out, playing games, waiting for the hottest part of the day to pass. |
Manu Sam (a.k.a. Samanu) bonds with the local crianças (Kids). |
We decided to make chocolate chip cookies together for the Mozambicans to try -- they were less thrilled than us ("It's good, I guess, but it's just... very different from Mozambican cookies...") and they were somewhat mortified when we started eating half-baked cookies and *GASP* unbaked cookie batter. It was worth it, though, because it tasted like home and we discovered that yes, you CAN fry a chocolate chip cookie in a non-stick pan.
Making cookies. |
All in all, we had a fantastic time in Sussundenga. I really liked the central area of Mozambique. The weather was like an oven, reaching 30 celcius by 9 a.m., but it was a refreshing change from the super-glue like mud and rain that is a permanent fixture in Namaacha during the wet season. Plus I got to hang out with Jamie and Sam, who are really fun to be around. There was much jovial laughter as well as fofoca (idle gossip).
Well, that's all I've got for now -- I'm so glad I was finally able to upload some pictures and put together some thought-out sentences about life here. All I had to do to get this wifi was buy coffee, which I am ALWAYS a fan of, so I think this worked out nicely for everyone involved.
In less than one week, I find out where I am going to be for the next two years of my life!
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Hello from Chimoio!
5 weeks into training, Peace Corps sends all the trainees on site visits to visit currently serving volunteers. They do this primarily so we can see what its going to be like for us when we get to site, but I have a sneaking suspicion its also to give us a breather and help us retain that one fragment of sanity that we have left after five weeks of training.
This week, I went to central Mozambique, near the city of Chimoio in a small village called Sussundenga with another volunteer, Sam. We had a fantastic time, got to know the volunteer that lives there now, Jamie, who introduced us to all her friends and showed us around her site. It was really nice to actually see how she lives and how her daily life is. She has some really close Mozambican friends that we got to know. Sam is my new best friend now, by the way. I will update more about site visits once I get back to Namaacha. There is actually a hotel in town that has wifi that they will let you use if you buy a coffee or a drink there, so my days of hurridly spewing out random information about my life are coming to a close -- I swear, the next entry I post will actually have some thought that went into it, and it wont just be word vomit of whatever comes to my head first.
But as this time of thinking things out first has not come to pass yet, here are some random parting thoughts that I will leave you with.
1. Canasta is a fun gcard game and its not just for old ladies.
2. I want a pet goat or burro. It is happening.
3. Any green leafy vegetable cooked with peanut and coconut is delicious. There are many varieties of this in Mozambique and I love them all.
4. It is possible to fry chocolate chip cookies in a frying pan. You do not need an oven. All I need is a non-stick frying pan. This is going to be one of my mail requests.
5. Riding in chapas is not as terrifying as you would think. It calms me that if it flips over in the middle of the road, there are so many people crowded in there that you'd be padded on all sides and not much could really happen to you.
6. Manu Sam e o meu melhor amigo!
Until later, with more coherent thoughts and pictures.
This week, I went to central Mozambique, near the city of Chimoio in a small village called Sussundenga with another volunteer, Sam. We had a fantastic time, got to know the volunteer that lives there now, Jamie, who introduced us to all her friends and showed us around her site. It was really nice to actually see how she lives and how her daily life is. She has some really close Mozambican friends that we got to know. Sam is my new best friend now, by the way. I will update more about site visits once I get back to Namaacha. There is actually a hotel in town that has wifi that they will let you use if you buy a coffee or a drink there, so my days of hurridly spewing out random information about my life are coming to a close -- I swear, the next entry I post will actually have some thought that went into it, and it wont just be word vomit of whatever comes to my head first.
But as this time of thinking things out first has not come to pass yet, here are some random parting thoughts that I will leave you with.
1. Canasta is a fun gcard game and its not just for old ladies.
2. I want a pet goat or burro. It is happening.
3. Any green leafy vegetable cooked with peanut and coconut is delicious. There are many varieties of this in Mozambique and I love them all.
4. It is possible to fry chocolate chip cookies in a frying pan. You do not need an oven. All I need is a non-stick frying pan. This is going to be one of my mail requests.
5. Riding in chapas is not as terrifying as you would think. It calms me that if it flips over in the middle of the road, there are so many people crowded in there that you'd be padded on all sides and not much could really happen to you.
6. Manu Sam e o meu melhor amigo!
Until later, with more coherent thoughts and pictures.
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