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Monday, June 26, 2017

Junio

It's been another fast month in Panamá! I've been traveling a lot in the last month. At the end of May I went to Panamá City for a training event. I will be facilitating a few days of training for the new group of Volunteers (G81) who arrive in July! I will spent a few days back in Santa Rita (my training community) training the new group on topics related to identifying and working with counterparts in their communities. Shortly after this training, I had a meeting in Changuinola with all the Volunteers in Bocas. We celebrated by going to Bocas Island for a couple nights and enjoying the beach. It was a bittersweet celebration because it was the last meeting for my regional leader and the G77 Volunteers who will be finishing their service in August.

I can't believe I get to live somewhere this beautiful

Matching nakwas
One of the most interesting weeks of my service happened in early June. I brought a counterpart from my community (who's also my host dad) to a seminar in Penonome about project management and leadership. My counterpart and I traveled from Barranquilla all the way to Penonome (about a 10 hour journey) to take part in the four day seminar. We were joined by the rest of the WASH Volunteers from my group and their counterparts. It was great to see my host dad meet counterparts from all over the country and learn all about managing projects in the community. The Volunteers treated our counterparts to a movie one afternoon and for all of them, it was their first time ever going to a movie theater. We watched the new Pirates of the Caribbean movie (chosen specifically for its high action and intensity) and all the counterparts loved it!! It was a really unique experience for everyone.
My host dad (green shirt) at our seminar








The Bocas group at the leadership seminar














My host dad and another counterpart










In site, I am working with my Water Committee, starting English classes, and hoping to begin a monthly charla series. I'll be spending most of my time in site until the end of July when I will be going to Santa Rita for the training of G81. Then I will be hosting a new Volunteer in my site for a few days so she is able to get a feel for what it is like to be a Volunteer. And then, I will have visitors from the USA!! My aunts will be coming to visit in August and I can't wait to show them my community and all around Panamá!!




A little young for that shirt...









That snake was in my house!!!




On Wednesdays, we wear nakwas!




Peace Corps polo pride

Putting zinc on my house

Helping me with my house



Saturday, May 13, 2017

The Shankars (well, 80% of 'em) in Panamá

One of the highlights of my time in Panamá so far was the last week of March when Mom, Dad, and Ian came to visit me!!! It was a crazy busy week filled with every type of transportation imaginable: planes, boats, the metro, chivas, and multiple busses both big and small. I met them in Panamá at the airport and we immediately set out for my site. After a night in David, we got up early and made it to my entrada. There we caught my chiva and just 24 hours after arriving in Panamá, they were in Barranquilla! It was one of the weirdest moments I've experienced so far; in my head, I've titled that moment "when worlds collide." It was amazing for them to see my house and how I live. I took them to pasear (visit) at all 25 houses in my community in just a couple hours. My gente (community members) were shy, but also curious. It was interesting for me to watch them be uncomfortable and experience some culture shock (although on a small scale). I think now my gente better understand or at least have had a small taste of the shock I experienced upon arriving in Barranquilla.

They made it!

Bus Ride #1

At my house


Shy, but curious
Mom with my baby host sister, Ladi

Ian learned to use a machete, we drank fresh coconut water, and celebrated my hosts sister's 14th birthday! We spent some time with my host family and it was my favorite part of their visit. While neither of my families could directly communicate with each other, they were able to meet and have a brief conversation with my translating. My parents thanked my host family for taking such good care of me and welcoming me into their house and lives. My host dad responded by thanking my parents for letting me come to Panamá and work in their community. This was my favorite exchange of their visit. They got to eat my campo cooking and we all squeezed into my 10ft by 7ft house for the night...Well, I actually slept on the porch in a hammock because my house is that small. I asked my family what they thought of Barranquilla, my gente, and generally my life there. They responded by saying I really seemed happy (even though I've mentioned that in previous conversations) and they already recognized how hard it will be for me to leave in just a year and a half.
Be afraid

When Worlds Collide




































The next morning we packed up and headed out for some quality time on the island of Bastimientos. We spent a few days being beach bums and enjoying the perfect weather. The last stage of out trip was taking an overnight bus back to Panamá for one last day to enjoy in the city. We arrive nice and early (3am) and relaxed in our hotel lobby. When it was actually daytime, we waled the Cinta Costera, visited Casco Viejo, and the Panama Canal. We ended the day with a tour of the Peace Corps Office and having dinner with my Country Director at her house because he and my dad went to grad school together. The next morning, they headed to the airport and back to the US and I made my way back to Barraquilla. It was an amazing week!!

Boat ride #2 of 4
Since my family's visit, I've been working to hold elections for my water committee and begin surveying for repairs to our aqueduct system. I spend a lot of time playing with kids and coloring with them! They also love to practice English with me! I'll be holding water committee elections in a week, and then our main projects should get underway.
































































I spent some time in another Volunteer's site helping her do some surveying and make plans for an aqueduct she will be building. Then I was able to celebrate my birthday on Bastimientos at the beach! It was a lot of fun a great way to ring in year #23.

Yeah, we're working!













































In the next couple weeks, I have a lot of training events that will cause me to be out of site. I have training in Panama City, a meeting in Changuinola, and a Seminar in early June. The seminar should be really interesting because I (along with the other WASH Volunteers) will be bringing a counterpart from my community for this training event. It's a few busy weeks filled with travel all over the country!

My minions







      









My youngest host sisters










Helping me sweep













Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Q&A

As promised, this blog will be dedicated to a Q&A! But first, a quick overview of what I've been doing for the last few weeks.

We clean up pretty good when
we leave the campo
Most of February, I was out of site for a two week long training event and to visit some of my friends in their communities. For the first time since moving to my community, I ventured far east into the Coclé Province. I visited my friend's community and then headed to a week of "office" training. I was reunited with all the Volunteers in my Group and we spent a week in sessions in a classroom setting. And by classroom, I made an outdoor rancho with an awesome penca (thatched) roof!

Visiting Guyabital, Coclé
Yes, I get paid to play in the river!

















The second week of training was hands-on. My group visited a Volunteer's site in the Comarca Ngabe Buglé (she's over a year into her service) and worked to build a tank, rainwater catchment tanks, develop and build a toma (a cement box that captures water from natural spring sources), and were able to practice working with counterparts and facilitating presentations. It was a great, exhausting week and I learned so much that I hope to take back for my community! I lived with a host family for the week and was reminded about the kindness of strangers who welcomed us into their homes without reservation. I also remembered all the reasons I love having my own little house (escape from children, chickens, buchu, etc). Following training, I visited another friend's site for a few days. Then I headed back to Barranquilla after a nearly 3 week absence. It was so nice to finally get home and have a break from traveling with a bunch of stuff.














The ladies after working hard to pour the tank floor






I had a meeting in Changuinola with MINSA (the Health Ministry) to discuss obtaining legal status for my Water Committee and what assistance the government may be able to provide. Then, I had a fun couple of weeks in site. I built a rainwater collection tank made of cement at my house. The water goes out frequently, and so now I will not have to carry water to my house because it rains nearly every day in Bocas. I have a few finishing touches to put on the tank, but it's nearing completion. I also worked with my Water Committee to organize elections that we will hold when I return from vacation.

With my rainwater tank
I will be traveling for the next week because Mom, Dad, and Ian are coming to visit me!! We will be spending time in Bocas (visiting my site) and in Panamá City. In a couple days, I will be heading to the City to get them from the airport and whisk them off to Barranquilla! I cannot wait for their visit!



A cloudy morning in Barranquilla













Q&A

Q: How far is the nearest "store"- your mom said you had pasta your first night in your home, where did you get the pasta?

A: I am lucky because in my community there about 4 different "tiendas." These are small stores in or right next to people's homes that sell the basic essentials. They ALWAYS have things like rice, sugar, oil, soap, and pasta. Some of the nicer tiendas sell eggs (who knew they didn't have to be refrigerated?!), candy, crackers, and pop. One even has a gas powered refrigerator so they sell COLD pop, chicken feet, and chicken neck. Although I can buy many items in site, they are very pricey and not consistently in stock. I bring in most of my food from nearby cities, usually Chiriquí Grande or Changuinola. I try to calculate how much food I'll need for the amount of time that I plan to stay in site without leaving and bring in roughly that amount (while always knowing that I can buy emergency food in site). That pasta was possibly the most anticipated meal I've ever eaten.

Q: What was the hardest thing to adjust to?

A: I think the hardest thing to adjust to was going from training to living in my site with a host family. It was a shock to go from a training community with electricity, reliable water, and living with 4 people to a community with very little water access, no electricity, and living with 15 people. Now, I feel very integrated and well adjusted, but it was a big change to first arrive at my host family's house and not know anybody or how anything worked!

Q: What is the story behind the turtle shirts?

A: The turtle shirts (as featured in photos on my last blog) represent the Bocas province. Everyone Bocas has the shirts to represent our Province and the icon of Bocas is the turtle. That's because every year, groups of endangered sea turtles come to the coastal areas of Bocas to lay their eggs and it's one of the most famous things from the Province. The bonus is that my shirt has my Ngabe name (Buchi) on the back. Volunteers in indigenous sites get local names from their community and that name becomes almost interchangeable with our real names during our service.
  
Q: What's your favorite thing you've eaten? Are you eating more than frijoles (beans)?

A: My favorite thing I've eaten (that's Panamanian) is an hojaldre/a. It's a really simple combination of flour, salt, baking powder, and water that is fried. But, the deceptively simple recipe is quite challenging to get right in practice and the technique for shaping the dough requires a decent amount of practice. Hojaldras are part of a classic breakfast and a well made hojaldra is definitely what I look forward to in a Panamanian restaurant. Because they have to be fried in oil (which is expensive) they are a real treat in my community and I only eat them at special events. And, luckily, I am now eating way more than frijoles! Since moving into my own house, I am in full control of my diet and occasionally make beans or lentils, but am yet to cook rice. After eating rice so much with my host family, I am seeing how long I can go without cooking it myself!
 
Q: Will you be responsible for organizing the local community to work with you on water access or will there be other Volunteers working with you?

A: I am the only Volunteer living in Barranquilla and (as with nearly all communities) so I will be working on my own to organize the community for work. Once my community's Water Committee is reformed and the community is motivated and prepared for a big project, I will certainly need some support from technical coordinators, Peace Corps staff, and other Volunteers with more experience. But, overall, I am the only Volunteer that will be working with my community on water projects.    

Q: Is it everything you expected it to be?

A: I saves the toughest question for last. The answer has to be "yes and no." No, because I had no idea what to expect and all the advice I received said the best thing I could do was have little to no expectations. But, in reality, that's really hard to do. So, I had my expectations, but they were so far off from the reality in Panamá that I quickly realized most things that I thought might happen were completely erroneous. That realization early on made it much easier to have no expectations. So, pretty much everything I told people about what I would be doing in Panamá before leaving the US was either wrong, vague, or made up (sorry!). I say "yes," it is what I expected because I knew it would be quite the adventure. I'd practice Spanish, live in a rural community, and have a lot of hard (yet rewarding) work to do. In that sense (and only that sense), Peace Corps has been exactly what I expected. Overall, despite my incorrect expectations, I couldn't be happier with how the reality of Peace Corps Panamá turned out!

Now for some of the questions that I most frequently get asked by my community members! I try to answer these as honestly and tactfully as possible, but sometimes I just have to move on and come back to it another day.

1. Is Rambo real?
2. Did you know that Chinese people live and breathe under water?
3. What do pilots say on airplanes?
4. Why do I (Emily) have freckles?
5. Why do I have blue eyes? (They call blue eyes "ogo de minchi," which literally means "cat eyes")
6. Why don't I eat chicken neck or feet?
7. How can I only have 2 siblings?!?!?! (The average immediate family is 8-10 people)
8. How does astronomy work? (They're curious about everything: stars, the sun, gravity, and UFOs)
9. What's with my tan lines? Are they tattoos? Do they hurt?

I have some major Chaco tan lines
10. How old is Rambo? Why doesn't he fight anymore? Is he dead? Is Rambo real? (They're obsessed with all things Rambo)

Visiting Cerro Gallina (aka Chicken Hill)

He saved me from the bug he's holding!







Making banana bread with my host siblings