Saturday, August 9, 2008

Happy Living on my own!!

After 5 months (exactly) of living out of a suitcase…I am here, in my own house, and although my clothes may still be in a suitcase….I’m here to stay!

Moving in and renovating...


Pre-construction mess


It took 8 kilos of plaster to close up the cracks so the scary scorpions
and spiders wont enter my house

Courtyard


My bathing/water area where I fill water every morning

My finished kitchen!

Me with the stove and the buta. Buta gas tanks are kind of scary to workwith!

Dinner in the Kitchen

Pictures in the Living Room

Living Room with the only seating in the house-a Ponj

Living Room


My bedroom with the amazing mosquito net




Lessons I learned riding my bike to souk on Friday:


  1. Don’t ride your bike to souk.

  2. Walking 5km up a mountain is very different than riding a bike up those same 5km.

  3. If you just moved into a house and need to bring up a lot of groceries, biking may not be the wisest form of transportation.

  4. It actually takes longer to go up the mountain with all of the groceries, biking 2 meters, stopping, biking 2 meters, stopping, getting off to walk the bike, than if you just walk.

  5. It is also much more tiring this way, on and off the bike, walking the bike.

  6. If you absolutely positively HAVE to take the bike to souk, arrange the timing so you will be back home before 10am, so you are not “biking” up the mountain in 120 degree weather.

In other news….while I was vegetable shopping, I spotted this red apple that looked suspiciously American. I ask bulxdert (veggie man), “mnkshk iga tfahad?” (How much is this apple). He responded, “Gwad?! Gwad iga winm! Win tamazirtnm. Iga delicieuse! Azzgag delicieuse!” (This? This is yours! It is from your country! Delicious. Red Delicious!). And I about passed out and paid 6 times more for this apple than the others. Now, don’t get me wrong, I LOVE the fruits and vegetables here……apples, oranges, figs, peaches, pears, plums, EVERYTHING….but it was nice to have a little piece of home!


1 week later……


Well here I am…5pm on a Thursday, trying to move as little as possible to avoid sweating too much in the heat. But I could not care less about the heat. I am in my house! I can walk around dressed however I would like! I can make peanut butter (thanks to Tara and Doris) and jelly sandwiches! I can eat dinner at 7pm and go to bed at 10pm (whereas at homestay, dinner was at 11pm)!


As usual, today I woke up at 5:15am to wait for the water to come on. Fortunately I did not have to wait long, filled up the 100L jug I have, and went back to sleep. When I woke up again, I headed to the sbitar for the morning, where we were quite busy! Lots of discussions about post-natal diets for mommy and baby. The cycle of information that affects the people here is fascinating. For example, people are often in a difficult socioeconomic circumstance; therefore, breast-feeding would be an easier and less expensive option. However, people received information over the years that formula was better; consequently, many women opt to feed their babies’ cow’s milk and soup since formula is expensive and breast-feeding is “bad.” So when mom comes in with a baby who is not growing, it takes a complete realignment of the mother’s post-natal diet understanding.


The same applies for the mother’s diet. Somewhere along the line, people were told that a woman cannot eat regular food after giving birth. This lack of nutrition often causes sickness in the new mother and consequently the breast-feeding baby. Since most women are illiterate, all of this information is passed by word of mouth and occasionally a visual aid. I am lucky to work with a trusted midwife at the sbitar. Women come to her with a variety of questions. However, she has been here 10 years and was just given the opportunity to work in Taroudant, where her family lives, so she will be leaving in a month! L


So after my 5km hike back home in the heat around noon, I made my token PP&J sandwich, and went for a visit to my host family’s house. At around 3, when they were about to have lunch, I headed back home to get lost in some fabulous writing by Barack Obama.

And time to post!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Longest entry ever.

Well, I apologize for the lack of updates recently….my goal was to update my blog once a week, but something happened that hasn’t since in a long time….it is called being busy. I’m quite sure everyone back home is familiar with that concept….however I, personally, was taken aback. And as a disclaimer, this has turned into an extremely long blog entry, so feel free to skim and read what you like!


HOUSE


It all started last week, when I got my house APPROVED by Peace Corps! So exciting! This is the same house I originally looked at…..located in the douar, or community, where I currently live with a host family. Consequently, it is 5 km from the main road, where I can find the sbitar, or health clinic, as well as transportation, the post office and a store. After a heated negotiation with the butigmi, or landlord, we came to a compromise. Well, I guess you could say butigmi got what he wanted, and I gave it because I really want to live there. Ironically, we have a case of mutual distrust. He seems to believe I will refuse to leave his house after two years, and that I am in some way connected with the CIA. I, on the other hand, am suspicious of him keeping his end of our bargains. So he is installing lights and outlets, fixing the drain, and putting in a kitchen counter with a sink (no tap, but I really wanted a somewhat “normal” kitchen). I must buy the electricity meter and the thing, what’s it called? With the electricity switches? Whatever that is. And I have to paint the house myself….hehe that should be fun.


So my little house has a little courtyard out front, where the toilet and bread room (yes, there is a room for making bread the old-fashioned way) are located. In the house, there is a room that will be my bedroom, a “living room,” and a kitchen. Upstairs is the roof, with a room attached. There is one tap in the house, and the man who turns on the water earllllllyyyy in the morning will knock on my door to wake me up when the water is on. Right now, it is only on a few minutes each morning, but once summer is over, water will not be as scarce.


My little house



The courtyard, where the toilet and "bread and couscous" room are located



My one and only tap (water 20 minutes each morning at 5am)



The view toward my host family's house from my roof


ADVENTURES IN MOROCCO


On Friday of last week, I embarked on my cross-Morocco adventure. Friday morning, my boss met me in Tiznit (60k away) to drop off my bike (finally!) which I left with another volunteer in Tiznit. Saturday morning, Meredith and I left on our mini-trip with the final destination of Rabat. We spent Saturday in Marrakech, where we met up with 2 volunteers from our training group. It was great! This was really the first opportunity we have had to enjoy Marrakech. Place Jma Fna is the main market area, and like Megan said when she visited Marrakech last year, it is like a scene out of Aladin. There is everything from snake charmers to people with their monkeys (Abu, anyone?) to woman doing henna on tourists, to rows and rows of fresh orange juice sellers, to infinite windy streets where vendors sell everything from carpets to lamps, to spices, to iguanas. And at night food booths are set up, selling traditional Moroccan food. The festivities last well into the night. I can safely say there are perhaps almost as many tourists as Moroccans in certain parts of Marrakech, so when Meredith and I greeted the vendors in Tashlhit, they were often surprised, and delighted; consequently, we got some fabulous prices in the market.


In Peace Corps Morocco tradition, we stayed at the Sindi Sur, where PCVs can sleep on the roof with a shower included for 30 Dirhams ($4). We also ate “dinner” at Hagen Daz….and had some amazing ice cream. As we squealed with delight walking into Hagen Daz, the Moroccans around us probably thought we were nuts, getting so excited over something we have readily available in the US. Little do they know…..


Marrakech is also a hub of bootleg movies. So instead of being depressed as pop culture slips out of our awareness here, we stocked up on movies like Indiana Jones, Sex and the City and more…..doing our best to stay in touch.


On Sunday we headed to Rabat, where we were able to enjoy the city for the first time. Our first 4 days in Morocco were in Rabat, but we were limited by an 8pm curfew, and scared shitless by the Peace Corps staff. They made it sound like you will walk outside, get mugged, and taken advantage of. Well, we managed to make it through Rabat without any mishaps.


Monday morning was our vaccination at the Peace Corps office, the reason for the entire trip. We thoroughly enjoyed spending the day at the office, chatting with the staff, spending hours in the library, finding books to have the fabulous librarian send to us. For security reasons, the office was recently moved, and the new area is gorgeous! Nice green lawn with tables and chairs, palm trees, just wonderful! On Sunday evening, I experienced Heaven. We went to T.G.I. Fridays. OH YES. FRIDAYS. And although they do not have a liquor license, we still enjoyed every moment. We were greeted by the manager, an American from Virginia, who opened Fridays here about a year ago. Fridays happens to be the ONLY place in the ENTIRE country of Morocco that offers free refills. So we each drank 5 or 6 glasses of Diet Pepsi. Apparently when Jeff, the manager, called up Pepsi and explained free refills, they responded, “you want to do WHAT?!?!? People will drink 10 or 15 glasses of Pepsi!!!” Hehe….Jeff had to assure them that no one can or will drink that much. Too funny. So after a pleasant dinner, 3 trips to the bathroom, a brownie sundae, and an iced coffee (my first in Morocco!) we went back to our hotel full and content.


Tuesday we left to head back home, with another stopover in Marrakech. This time Meredith and I were by ourselves, without Brian and Doug to control our spending desires. We each left with a lamp our houses, Meredith bought a purse, and I bought a pink ponj covering. Wednesday we headed back down south and back to site. I was exhausted from the traveling, but went to the sbitar Thursday morning anyway. Around lunch time a woman came in to give birth. After a bit, it was discovered that the baby’s head was twisted in a strange way, so right as the baby is about to pop out, we had to call the ambulance, drug her, and take her on the hour ride to the hospital in Tiznit. Can you even imagine? Now I know I have never given birth, but for those who have…….you have been in so much pain for so long, pushing, thinking this is about to be over, then the midwife and doctor tell you never mind, there are problems, give you a sedative, and transport you in a hot ambulance on a windy road that is not paved very well….for an HOUR. Then YOU have to get up and into a wheel chair, get into the hospital, and eventually get a C-section. Plus, giving birth in the sbitar is free, but the hospital in Tiznit is not. So this poor couple, who had no idea there could be complications, will go home in a few days with a new baby and significant debt.


MORE BUGS


Oh, and I got to see an interesting insect today…..the midwife found it in her house yesterday. Not sure what it is called in English, never seen such a thing, but the important facts are that it is fairly large, and kills you if it bites you. Good times. Way to help me in my quest to get over the bug thing.


And I guess this makes up for not writing in a while! I hope to paint my house this week, and move in at the end of next. So exciting!!


WEDDING


Currently it is 4:14am…Monday morning. Now, I feel as if this is a perfect opportunity for me to go to bed, but I also feel compelled to record the details of this past evening before they slip away. I went to my first real Moroccan wedding yesterday….and let me tell you, it was quite the spectacle! So you know how when you go to a wedding, well at least females, basically devote the entire day to doing hair, making last minute dress decisions (Stephanie), and whatnot? Well, it was too cute; the same applies here! We all got up Sunday morning full of “timghriwin,” or wedding spirit. First we did henna, and then went back to sleep as it dried. Then, my host sister and I visited some neighbors, in from Rabat, to talk about the wedding. After lunch, we got all ready, and I literally wouldn’t have been able to tell the difference between American girls getting ready for a wedding and Moroccans, except for the obvious difference in clothing. Skirts flying, make-up out, hair getting done and re-done….it was great! I felt so at home. And of course, it ends in our ride to the wedding waiting out front honking the horn because the girls are late. Sound familiar anyone? As we got in the car, I started giggling, just thinking how absurd it would be if I showed up at an American wedding looking like a did. My first layers of clothing were a long black skirt, and a tank top, and a long sleeved top. Then, a “Qaftan,” similar to a djellaba….like a really long dress I guess that tends to be sparkly (these ladies LOVE sequins and sparkles). On top of that, the token black skirt with colorful pom-poms all over that women here wear every day. The difference is the wedding pom-pom skirts happen to have more pom-poms. And then of course to top it off, the large white sheet/scarf thing, that can cover your head and hang down, or be wrapped up so that only your eyes are showing (whenever there are men around). Last but not least, jewelry. I was not wearing much, but tons and tons of heavy sparkly jewelry is the custom.


So yes…..I could barely walk in all of the clothes, and had much trouble trying to maneuver the white scarf. It just didn’t want to stay on my head! But we got to the wedding, and although there were many people in from Casablanca and Rabat, I knew a fair amount of the women from either my douar or the sbitar. This particular wedding was hosted by some rich folk who live in Rabat, so it was EXTREMELY nice, with tables and chairs and everything! There were even waiters! Now none of this is typical of a rural wedding, so I was a bit in shock, trying to reconcile the nice atmosphere that reminded me of home with the fact that we still had to share glasses of water and eat with our hands.


We saw the bride twice the entire night, and by night I mean from 4pm when we arrived until 4am when we left. My friend Hanneke, about 75km away, was at a wedding as well. Knowing that we would be participating in wedding activities waaaay past bedtime, we kept up a text message conversation throughout the night, commenting on the various funny, strange, interesting, and cool things we observed.


Of course in between meals, there is lots of “Ahawaj,” which is Berber dancing and music. Women are completely separated from men at weddings, so the rooms of women can dance and sing and really enjoy themselves. If a man walks in for some reason, those white sheets fly and in 1 second every single woman has nothing but eyes showing. We enjoyed our lamb tajine meals, without ever seeing the bride. Finally, after dinner, at about 2am, we headed outside where the rich family had brought in a men’s Ahawaj group. So all of the women spent the rest of the evening wrapped up like mummies in those white sheets since men were around. Although I really wanted to do everything just like the women for the entire wedding, I just couldn’t handle having my nose and mouth covered with the sheet. I couldn’t breathe! So I cheated and only covered my nose. The men’s Ahawaj group was truly amazing; their singing was quite impressive, and I never thought men could move the way they danced. I have been trying to think of what their dancing looks like, and I have had a bit of trouble. Think about a jelly bean. So, if a jelly bean could jump, imagine what that jump would look like. Kind of a boingy bouncy jump, right? So then imagine that jump, and fast forward. So its not just like boing-bounce, it is a very rapid succession of boing boing boing boing. All the while they are in a long line, clapping their hands and singing as they boing-bounce. At 3am, I was exhausted and my etiquette was flying out the window as I started giggling at the boingy men. Fortunately the white sheet covered my mouth, so I hope too many people didn’t notice. Somewhere around 3:30am the bride was brought in to see and I guess just listen, because she is completely covered from head to toe for most of the wedding. At 4am I was blessed by my host mother, wanting to go home.


Very very interesting night.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Heat etc......

Over 4 months in Morocco now………..really though, it feels like we just arrived.  For example….someone had the movie Juno, and I commented, isn’t that in theaters?  Apparently it has not been in theaters for 4 months now.  Hahaha, amazing how time flies. 

 

So yeah, it is hot.  Really hot.  I believe the highest temperature a volunteer in the region has recorded thus far is 129 degrees Fahrenheit.  Yikes.  But it makes me feel better that I am not the only person uncomfortable in the heat.  All people talk about now is the heat.  Some sleep on the roof, others, like me, just don’t sleep a lot of the time because of the heat.  Yesterday we ate dinner on the roof for the first time…..I was very conscious of the potential presence of insects, but it was an extremely pleasant experience.  Light breeze, stars so close you can almost touch them, TashlHit music playing, and just plain relaxation.  When I get the questions, “Is it hot like this in America?” I have trouble answering….well yes….but there is this thing called air conditioning (anyone know the TashelHit word for air conditioning?). 

 

Overall things are going quite well here…I am still meeting new people almost every day and I am understanding TashlHit better all the time.  Last week I had lunch at my midwife’s house along with a female doctor from a neighboring town.  She seemed quite intrigued by me and my job here.  For a lot of Moroccan professionals, working in the “bled,” or rural areas, is punishment.  Since wealth and consequently education are so unequally distributed between the urban and rural areas, most professionals are from the cities and are forced to work in the “bled.”  Can you even imagine, you are from Chicago, you go to college in Chicago, your family, friends, everything is in Chicago, and the only way to have a job is to work in Appalachia for an indefinite period of time? There is nothing voluntary about their work, so my desire to work in the “bled” is quite puzzling to many people. 

 

This past weekend 9 of us new volunteers met in Agadir for a weekend getaway.  After our Ministry of Health meeting on Friday in Tiznit, the other volunteers in my region and I headed up to meet the rest in Agadir.  Talk about forgetting you are a Peace Corps Volunteer, and that you take bucket showers and dress covered from neck to ankle……it was somewhere between eating Pizza Hut, drinking some wine (for the first time in 6 weeks!), dancing in a club, and wandering the aisles of a giant supermarket (think Walmart), that the incredible contrast hit us.  Many people in our sites have never been to Agadir, let alone heard of McDonalds or Pizza Hut.  We thoroughly enjoyed ourselves, but I am just as happy to be back in my site.  Tomorrow I am planning to go on a hike with the girls in my community into the mountains (after the sun starts to go down, of course).


Oh, and I dyed my hair brown this weekend.....why?  I dunno....just kind of felt like it :) 

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

House

I had a fabulous moment at my site this weekend….which really brought a smile to my face.  On Friday, my host mom and I went to visit a couple of douars (communities) further into the mountains, including Ait Boumzou where she was born and raised.  It was really nice, meeting her aunt, a little lady with no teeth and a big smile, as well as the extended family still living there.  It took about an hour to get there, and we stayed in the area until evening.  Then on Saturday, my host sister, Najma, and I went to souk, or the town center, to do laundry since there is running water there.  For lunch we stopped by some relatives of my host family.  One of the daughters, Fadma, said she heard there was going to be a wedding in Ait Boumzou this summer.  I replied that yes there was, Amina, who is living in Tiznit, will be home to be married.  And Fadma said, “Really?  I didn’t know that.  Very neat!”  And I couldn’t help but smile!  Our main goal for the first six months of service is community integration, and here I am sharing family news with people in the community.  It made me very happy!  One step in the right direction.

 

In other news, I may have a house to live in!  I will be moving out of my host family’s house on August 1st.  It has just been brought to my attention that there is a little pink house available for rent in my douar/community.  It is 5k away from the main road, so transportation would not be too fun, but it is in the same area as all of the people I know from my site.  The only problem is the lack of electricity.  Hopefully I will meet with the house owner this week to see if we can work something out!

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Goats in trees, flies in ears, and a one dollar bill

My new henna...this is the traditional Berber way of doing henna...I feel like a kid with fingerpaints and I love it! :)
The bookshelf in my room....my host family was taken aback by the number of books.  I love books!
On our mountain hike last week


For the first time since arriving in site, I feel as if there are no major events, or incidents to report.  Maybe it is a good sign!  Perhaps I am finding a sense of normalcy in my life here.  I am getting into a routine that granted, can often be interrupted, but that is what keeps life interesting!  This has been an exciting weekend, and although I was not home for it, I think it was still exciting!  Saturday was Mom and Dad’s 28th wedding anniversary!  And then Sunday was Father’s Day.  All weekend I liked to think that my parents were having a fabulous time in Cincinnati at the Brooks and Dunn concert! 

 

Since my daily events are beginning to resemble a routine, I figure I can relate that routine.  One of the things PCV’s told us during training is that we will have a lot of time to sleep when we first arrive at our sites, since our current work is to improve our TashelHit and to integrate into the community.  I, unfortunately, do not agree with the sleep thing.  I often get 6 or 7 hours of sleep in a night, which, as many people know, does not make me happy.  I need 8 hours! 

 

So on Mon, Wed, and Thurs, I head to the sbitar (health clinic) in the morning.  Since it is 5km away, it takes me an hour to get there and an hour to get back.  So each time, I spend about 3 hours there.  At the sbitar, I stay with the nurse/midwife, Saadia, in the consultation room.  Most women in the community prefer to see her over the male nurse and male doctor.  My community is truly blessed with a female member of the health staff.  Women come in for various medical issues, and often to bring their children.  Wednesday is vaccination day, so the morning is filled with BCG, Measles, Polio, DTC and Hep B shots.  I have never spent so much time with such little babies!  Stephanie would go nuts! 

 

Quite often the morning also consists of informal health education to new mothers.  There are many birthing traditions here, including putting a form of make-up on a new baby’s eyes, and henna on the umbilical cord.  Some of the traditions present considerable health risks, so Saadia is able to try and address the issues while the babies are being vaccinated. 

 

I usually head back at around lunch time, and then spend the afternoon working on creating health lessons to use in the future, and spending time with the women and girls in the community. 

 

Sometimes in the evenings I try to watch an episode of House, which my parents graciously sent me, because dinner is not until 10 or 10:30.  And then I sleep….of course, doing a thorough check for creepy crawlies before bed. 

 

On Tuesdays I go to Tafraoute for the day, where I can find internet, a sandwich, some coffee, and chocolate.  Once I live on my own, I will also be going to Tafraoute for food shopping, since their souk day is Tuesdays. 


Fridays are a bit up in the air.  I would like it to be an “in the community” day, where I will spend the day with various families, but I also need to start TashelHit tutoring, so I may do that.  We shall see! 


And of course weekends are weekends.  Time to relax, get some reading done, or go on a weekend trip out of my site. 

Re: The title of this entry

Goats in trees:  Who knew goats could jump?  Let alone jump into trees?  Well they can!  It is the funniest thing to see a herd of goats, half of which are up in trees eating the fruits.  Hehe!

Flies in ears: Yeah a fly just flew into my ear.  SERIOUSLY?  Why me?  Trying to get it out just encouraged it to take up refuge in my ear...but then it finally left.  But yuck!

One dollar bill:  Since the closest store to my community is an hour away, my little host brother (14) has become an entrepreneur.  He started selling candy, gum, and other misc items to the community in the evenings.  Yesterday I bought 2 bags of “Kurrachitos” from him, the closest thing I have found to Cheetos.  J  Together they costed 2 Dirham….which translates to about $.20.  Since I didn’t have change, I brought him a $1 bill instead, and asked if he would accept it as payment.  To see this kid’s eyes light up was priceless.  Something as simple as a dollar bill just absolutely intrigued him.  Now 24 hours later, I am quite sure the whole community has seen Omar’s one dollar bill.   

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Bugs, rabbits and more!

Whether or not I tolerate them, we all know about, or have experienced my ridiculous fear.  So the other night, I was heading to bed, minding my own business, when all of a sudden I saw something strange out of the corner of my eye.  I looked at the black thing on the wall, initially thinking it was a fly.  And when I looked from across the room, I thought, there is no way.  But as I got closer……oh yes way.  There was a black scorpion staring at me.  So I shuddered, grabbed my pink plastic shower sandal, and smooshed it.  I was slightly shaken, but then relaxed, thinking that the chances of me finding another such bug were unlikely.  So I sat on my bed, looked up, and on the wall next to my books was a rather large spider with 8 longggggg legs.  I almost screamed.  Now, this guy was pretty big, and spiders are my weakness, but after 3 or 4 tries (and chickening out), I grabbed my hiking boot and smooshed the spider.  After a few hits, I confirmed that he was dead.  So then I was way freaked.  Like very very very very freaked out.  But I didn’t have a choice.  It was almost 12 and I needed to sleep.  So I reached for one of my bags to grab my toothbrush………….and out comes running an oversized black beetle looking thing.  That time I did scream, and never even got to kill it, it ran away so fast.  Away, and under my bed, never to be seen again.  To make a long story of pain and stress a little shorter, I ended up sleeping in my sleeping bag, tied all up so that only my mouth and nose were exposed.  Granted, I slept on average in 20 minute increments…………….talk about scary!

 

So then the next day, I did my best to express my horror to my host family.  Instead of understanding, they were laughing their heads off!  To them, being afraid of bugs is a ridiculous notion- as ridiculous as being afraid of, I don’t know, a shoe, or a book.  Nonetheless, I convinced them that I will never be able to sleep again if we do not do something.  So, that evening, we all cleaned out my entire room, moving the ponjes (the sponge-y bench things lining the walls of my room), and picking up the carpets.  All in all, I believe we found 3 giant spiders, and about 10 scary big black beetle things.  It was quite a relief for me to see them die, and even better, I now sleep on a cot in the middle of the room….so that the bxoy (bugs) cannot climb up to me.  I was so excited, that night, I thought I would sleep like a baby………except that my bxoy-free room happened to coincide with the worst gastro-intestinal issues I have experienced since arriving in country.  So I didn’t sleep well…in face I woke up 5 times during the night……and proceeded to be incredibly sick for the following 48 hours.  Oh well, you win some and you lose some. 

 

On a positive note, the day of the bxoy-cleaning, in the afternoon the I accompanied 17 girls and women from the community on a 5-hour hike/picnic to the top of one of the mountains nearby and back.  It was spectacular.  Peace Corps emphasizes the importance of community building to its volunteers, and the need to acknowledge that without strong community ties and a desire to work together, sustainable development just is not realistic.  So for me, to see my community want to be together, to “skr ryada” (do sport) and make an afternoon of it, is beyond my wildest dreams.  Not to mention, the view from the top of the mountain was indescribable. 

 

Just on a side note, I would like to mention a little something about laundry and the progression of laundry in my life.  J

 

In USA: Laundry is something that can be done at a moments notice….it takes little time and effort, just moving clothes from the washer to the dryer.  You can even leave the house to get something done while the laundry is being done.  Takes very little time out of the day, and leaves clothes feeling soft and fluffy.

 

In my training site:  Laundry is a bit more obtrusive as an activity.  Takes maybe an hour plus drying time, next to the tap with a constant supply of water.  Includes physical effort, but again, not too bad.  However, it is a bit of a surprise to feel how stiff the clothes are after drying.  I remember thinking, yikes, will my clothes be this stiff for the next two years?

 

At my site: It is called laundry DAY for a reason.  It fills up an entire morning or afternoon….and takes a few hours.  Much more physical, as there is often no water coming from the tap (ur gis waman!) so it is all about conservation.  Rinsing standards are lowered (there are just a few soapy bubbles!) and I now begin to question my previous statement about soft clothes…..these clothes feel fine…I don’t even recall what “softened” clothes are like……….

 

In other news…….I have come to the conclusion that there is something liberating about being elbow deep in cow dung.  Let me explain.

 

I often enjoy accompanying various women to the fields for a bit of work and conversation.  Today, I went with my host mom to one of her gardens down the road.  We brought the mule, and on its back was a very large container full of cow dung.  We arrived, and I realized she would be using this as fertilizer, to mix with the water in her garden.  At first I watched as she scooped up big handfuls of dung, and smooshed it into the dirt, and although I usually participate in the field work, I thought, no way, there are lines, and this is one of them.  There is nothing wrong with me not getting myself full of cow dung.  I will only go so far to participate in community activities.  Lines, there are lines!  And then, I thought, well, what the heck…..forget the lines.  And I rolled up my sleeves, hiked up my skirt, and dug in to the dung.  And instead of being horribly disgusted, I felt good….liberated!  To experience a moment wear I had thrown all inhibition to the wind, and decided there are no lines……….it was nice. J

 

Needless to say, I got back to the house, washed my hands 5 times, changed my clothes, and I still smell cow dung.  Or maybe I am just imagining it.

 

Ps I ate rabbit heart and liver.  Yikes!  They didn’t tell me it was rabbit til later!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

The past week.....

29/5/08

So I will be heading in for dinner in just a moment, but there are a couple of little moments from the past 2 days I want to write down before I forget!

  1. Yesterday I slept in for the first time since arriving to Morocco.  It was great!  9am!  Then I spent the morning organizing my room, since I just got my luggage from Tiznit on Tuesday.  So I am there, enjoying my music, lost in my own little world, when I hear a car pull up.  Interesting…who could that be.  And then, there is a knock on my door, and open in, and who is standing there but the Chief Gendarme!!!!! !?!?  I about had a heart attack, wondering what the heck I did to warrant the chief gendarme driving 30 miles from his station to my site, then another 3 miles of unpaved road to my house!  Well, after I started breathing again, I realized there couldn’t be anything wrong since he and the other gendarme (they are the rural police) were smiling.  Turns out they wanted to get started on my carte de sejour process, and instead of waiting for the 5 volunteers in their precinct to come to them, they came to us, also wanting to see how we were doing with our families. Still though…..very crazy!  Many people in rural communities are a bit hesitant about the gendarmes, so my host mom and sister wouldn’t even come out to greet them; instead, they made tea which I gave to the gendarmes.  Honestly, they are very nice, I feel lucky to be in a region with such nice gendarmes, but really!  It was the news of the douar, and all day after that I had neighbors asking me what I did wrong that the gendarmes had to come for me.  Ha!
  2. Yesterday aftenoon, I was on a bit of a high: I went to see my Khalifa, who answered a million of my questions regarding the community.  There, I found out there were 5 letters, 3 Newsweek magazines, and my monthly mandat waiting for me at the post office!  So I was slowly walking up the hill/mountain to my house, reading my letters one by one, and as I was reading my letter from Nana, the wind picked up a bit, and in the distance, the afternoon prayer call began.  What a peaceful moment.  Now, it may sound a bit corny, but it felt corny!  What a perfect little snapshot of my life.
  3. Today I finally did laundry for the first time since arriving in site…..so there I was in the bit l’ma (bathroom), my ipod blasting, scrubbing away, and one of the neighbor girls came in, and started dancing to my music.  Before long, many of the neighborhood women were over, all dancing to my music, laughing, talking, coming over to greet me…..and all the while I have soap all over me, scrubbing my underwear in a bucket. Hehe
  4. While I was organizing yesterday, I discovered the Frisbee I brought.  So this evening, on my daily walk around the douar with the girls, I brought it along, and boy was it a hit!  First, my host sister and I were playing with it, and then we ran into the neighborhood schoolboys playing soccer.  Well they just about thought my Frisbee was they coolest thing they had ever seen, and we left them playing with it as we kept on walking.  On the way back to our houses, we picked it up and started playing.  There were about 8 girls, who have never seen a Frisbee before, throwing it like pros.  Before we eventually made it back home, the neighborhood little kids (the too young for school kids) also got a lesson on the Frisbee.  Too cute, watching little 3-year old Habiba toss a Frisbee.  At one point we even had Abullah, my host sisters’ father-in-law, tossing it with us.  Whoever suggested putting a Frisbee on the Peace Corps Morocco packing list is a genius.  

 

30/5/08

Today’s too cute to forget moment:  tonight I branched out and spent the evening with the women of the village (again, which just means they are married, anywhere from 17 on up).  It was a nice change from usually staying solely with the girls.  We had some nice conversations, and then one of the little old ladies of the village came up to me and started talking.  Now, you have got to be able to picture this lady.  She is short, about half my size, has very thick glasses, uses a wooden stick as a cane, has more wrinkles than you could possibly imagine, and is absolutely too cute for words.  She smiles a lot, but definitely had trouble seeing me and noticing how different I look.  After the typical introductions, she asked me something I couldn’t quite make out.  One of the women explained that she wanted to know if I have any grandmothers.  So I told her, yes I do.  She then proceeded to say that I should bring them here to Morocco, and she will make my grandmothers good Moroccan food.  I said thank you, and as she was leaving, she reminded me not to forget to say hello to my grandmothers for her, and to tell them to come visit.  J

PS tonight for dinner I ate cow knee.