Sunday, November 15, 2015

How do you measure a year?



In daylights, in sunsets
In midnights, in cups of coffee
In inches, in miles, in laughter, in strife
In five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred minutes
How do you measure a year in the life?  

                                                                                                                                                                               RENT 
                                                                                                                                                                       Seasons of Love 
 
 
Good question!  I have been serving as a volunteer in Peace Corps Uganda for one year and as I'm feeling a bit reflective right now,  I decided to look back at all the photos I've taken since I arrived on November 12, 2014.  Oh my, there's a lot!  But if I had to choose one single photo to represent my year, this would be the one.  
 
Here's the story.

It was a stifling hot day in July. A soccer match between the teams from my school, Kibingo, and another village school called Mamita, was taking place on the pitch across from the college where I live.  To be honest, I'm not much of a sports enthusiast, it was hot, I was tired and I didn't really want to go. But I'm glad I did.
 
When I got there all the students in my school were excitedly cheering, chanting, singing and even drumming for our team. While the other teachers found a shady spot to sit and watch, I wanted to be down on the field, in the mix of it all with the kids behind our goal.  I walked into the crowd and that's when it happened. A  group of giggling girls, grinning ear to ear, came running over to show me their simple elastic finger rings as if they were wearing dazzling diamonds. I oohed and ahhed, admiring their beautiful rings. I said, "Let's call them friendship rings." Next thing you know, I was given a dazzling friendship ring. I proudly slipped it on, we arranged our hands in a circle and...
 
So how do I measure a year in my Peace Corps life?
 
 In smiles, in sharing
 In friendships, in acts of kindness
In acceptance and in peace
In five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred minutes
Measure, measure in moments held dear.
 
 
 
 We won the game too!

 
 
 
 
 
 


Monday, October 12, 2015

Girl Power!

International Day of the Girl Child
October 11, 2015



"Today is the Day when we focus our attention on the Girl Child, but it is not a day in isolation.  It is part of a massive and relentless drive towards a world of equality: a Planet 50-50 by 2030." 

                                 UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka


Girls are our future! Since 2012 the United Nations marks October 11 as the International Day of the Girl Child to raise awareness about all issues concerning gender inequality around the world.  It's a day when activist groups come together under the same goal to highlight, discuss and take action to advance rights and opportunities for girls everywhere.  October 11 is not just a day; it's a movement and a global effort to ensure a world free of discrimination for young women and girls.  UN Women

As a Peace Corps volunteer, working in a rural village primary school in Uganda I see the discrimination and the challenges these girls face.  In my school the number of girls in the upper grades slowly declines so by P7, only six girls are in attendance.  I've wanted to start this significant conversation with all my girls and boys so this day gave me the perfect opportunity to begin.  But I also wanted to bring awareness to the global aspect of this movement so I reached out to my friend and colleague, who teaches 4th grade in the US, to partner with me in a simple yet powerful project.

One word affirmations of hope, strength and empowerment for girls were shared by the students on both continents. The conversations have begun!

 Mr. J created a moving video of our efforts and I am beyond grateful for his enthusiastic participation, his support and his friendship. "You're the best!"


Please click on the link below to see the video.



"Empowerment of and investment in girls are key in breaking the cycle of discrimination and violence and in promoting and protecting the full and effective enjoyment of their human rights." 
-United Nations Resolution 66/170







Friday, October 2, 2015

The last two months in 5 words...and how to make a cow cry

August was amazing.  
September sucked.

Here's why in a few more words.

August was a month of fulfilling Peace Corps work, satisfying accomplishments, followed by a whole lot of fun with PC friends and topped off with a romantic vacation getaway.  It doesn't get much better folks!


 I held a successful two-day My Pads workshop on youth development and health education.  We trained four teachers at my primary school under the guidance of another amazing PCV who created this program.  My teachers did a fantastic job lesson planning and leading model lessons on puberty and HIV/AIDS.  I taught the Life Skill lesson, we learned how to make RUMPS, reusable menstrual pads, and now my teachers are ready to bring this entire program to our whole school.






Before

After



Two classrooms have a brighter learning environment thanks to a new coat of plaster on the walls.









My beloved P4 students and I celebrated their weeks of hard work in reading intervention groups by watching the Reading Rainbow video of Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain. I used this book for all my lessons.  Then it was time for Reader's Theater.  Bravo!



The end of the term brought a day of sports for the girls and the boys and even the teachers with games of netball, volleyball and football (soccer in the US).  The local news station filmed the football game and I was interviewed at the end, most likely because I kinda stand out from the rest of the crowd.  Anyway, the boys and I made the 8 o'clock news that night.   Ha, yep, I'm famous...in a little village in the southwest region of a little country on the huge continent of Africa.
"Teachah Sandra"



That journey deserved a beer.



FIVE BOXES OF BOOKS ARRIVED FOR MY LIBRARY!  My daughter celebrated my twin granddaughter's 1st birthday in June and instead of gifts for the girls she asked the guests to bring books for my school. My heart is overflowing with gratitude and love. Book by book we are bringing a reading culture to Uganda.  I wish everyone could see what I see when a child opens up a book, some for the very first time, and smiles or giggles or gets lost in the pictures.  These books are a gift from the heart.










Other care packages arrived and if you zoom in you'll see a pocket shower. This is LIFE CHANGING.  Inside the case is a black bag that opens up, holds 10L of water that is warmed by solar energy (if you've got a sunny day, and when isn't it sunny in Uganda).  I've been taking cold showers for almost a year.  Yeah, this is huge. And the Velveeta cheese is equally amazing!






School's out!  Three weeks of vacation!  First stop, Kampala for the All-Volunteer Conference. Once a year the PCV's from all over Uganda and from every sector, including education, agriculture and health, come together for four days of networking, learning, sharing and oh, some crazy fun. The US Ambassador to Uganda, Scott DeLisi, gave his final address to us before he retired.


I'm way in the back, as usual.








I'm a member of the Peace Corps Peer Support Network (PSN) and we had an informative meeting.





I got my retail therapy fix and did some
kitenge gift shopping. All for a great cause too.














 Morning yoga class.  Namaste!












                     

                        Even did a little bleach tie-dye!
                  This shirt used to be blue.  Huh?










The highlight of All-Vol was the much anticipated Uganda Peace Corps Prom 2015.
Being voted Prom Princess was a big surprise and having Elvis as my Prom Prince...well equally surprising. (I think it was just "Be Kind to the Older Volunteers Day)    







After All-Vol this prom princess retired her crown and boarded a plane headed for Seychelles, the archipelago African island nation in the Indian Ocean, to spend nine glorious days with her man.


St. Anne Island = paradise!

 
I could get used to this.

We did lots of hiking.  This one required a rope and a prayer the frayed rope didn't break.

 The view from the top of St. Anne .

  

All this with a man I love who takes me on long, sweaty, sometimes perilous, 
"I could have been swept out to sea!" 
geocaching adventures, who always puts a smile on my face...
and buys me cold beers.

Holding on to every moment.


August was amazing!  


But then September came. 


Vacations must end. Tearful airport goodbyes must happen. And after 30 hours of travel back to Uganda feeling incredibly sad and wishing I had a gallon of Ben and Jerry's ice cream and a box of wine I arrived back at my site.





With swollen ankles as big as grapefruit.






And I was sick, really sick with the worst     African cold virus of my life. One infection led to another but I'll spare you the details.





Things just snowballed from there.

I found bugs in my flour and bugs in my popcorn. And I'd been EATING the bugs!




My powermatic died so I couldn't charge
my phone or computer.  CRISIS!




The campus dairy cow died.  I'm sad for the poor cow who swallowed the compass that punctured its intestines (and I don't want to know how the college knows this) and selfishly sad for me because I won't get fresh milk anymore.











I saw a poor live rabbit being carried by its ears
and I knew it would soon be somebody's dinner. Yes, I know the goats and the cows and the chickens I see everyday are going to be eaten. But not the cute furry bunnies, come on!

















    I missed a beautiful wedding attended by everyone I love.





                                               

                                          And I'm really gonna miss this guy.  A true friend.

    

                                

On top of all that, on the first day of the new school term I was greeted by a male teacher who remarked, "Ah, teacher Sandra, your stomach has popped."  I'll just add the fat joke to the other one when he said, "Oh, I didn't know people like you could get gray hair."




                       

I was so down even the cows I met on my walk home from school seemed to be crying.














Yes, September sucked.  It was a month when I started saying, "Ya know God, I just can't handle one more thing."  And then I'd get one more thing.






                        So I spent a lot of time,
                        too much time,
                        in my head.


  



           Most days I wanted to crawl up
           into a tree and just be
           left a lion.













Some of my trials and tribulations seem trivial and I share them with a sense of humor and even a bit of sarcasm, but not all of them because  this  $&%+  ain't easy!  I guess when I think about all these frustrations and how they are combined with my crazy inconvenient life in a developing country where I'm trying so hard to do some good and where I feel every emotion just about every day... yeah, bugs in my popcorn could be the "one more thing" that sends me over the top. So I've never been more eager to turn the page on the calendar to October. October, one of my favorite months of the year. It's GOT to be better. It WILL be better. It IS better.

They say there is some truth to the so-called Peace Corps mid-service slump; with data to back it up.  If it is true, then I slumped a little early, as mid-service for me isn't until November. God, I sure hope that was my slump because I don't want to make the cows cry anymore. Okay?


"Life doesn't get easier or more forgiving; 
we get stronger and more resilient." 
Steve Maraboli






















 


Monday, July 27, 2015

A Day in the Life...

Up at sunrise
"Good morning" text
Coffee, toast
Crossword puzzle
Email check

Smartly dressed
Walk to school
Dusty, dusty, dirty feet

















Reading groups
I love these kids
They try so hard
My heart I give

Break tea time
The teachers talk
Tindikumanya
I don't understand

Library lessons
Read aloud
More reading groups
We're quite a crowd

Matooke, rice and beans for lunch
Every.
Single.
Day.

Walking home
Dodging bodas
"Osiibire ota?"
"Nsiibire gye."
Said many, many times

Unlock my door...and
Privacy is mine once more

Hang the clothes outside to dry
Sweep gecko poop off the floor
Filter water
Burn the trash (sorry)
Watch out for snakes in the grass






















Goats bleat
Cows moo
Voices sing
Drums beat
Repeatedly
Incessantly
I will go CRAZY!

Close the windows at sunset
Malaria we must prevent
Dinner, movie, glass of wine (okay maybe two)
Cold shower
Warm bed
Time to dream
And clear my head

















Yes, there are other things
I could do instead
But not right now
Not just yet

So, one last Viber text
"Good night"
"I love you"

Time for bed.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

This is for the birds!

Literally!

"I don't ask for the meaning of the song of a bird or the rising of the sun on a misty morning.  There they are, and they are beautiful."

Each morning I open my front door, sit down with a cup of fresh brewed coffee, and watch iridescent blue and green sunbirds sip the sweet nectar of my trumpet flower shrub.  I might see a slender black-headed heron gracefully walk through the tall grass field or catch a glimpse of a red-billed fire finch flying by.  The birds of Uganda are fascinating!

According to Birds of East Africa by Terry Stevenson and John Fanshawe (I totally recommend this book if you're into birding) there are 1388 bird species in the countries of Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

I'd like to share a few pictures, (okay, maybe more than a few) taken by my boyfriend and me.  They were taken in southwest Uganda along the Kazinga Channel, near Queen Elizabeth National Park and out my front door.  We used a Kodak Easyshare camera and I edited with iPhoto.

Red-billed Firefinch

Goliath Heron

Yellow Billed Stork

Malachite Kingfisher

Striated Heron

Egyptian Goose

Pied Kingfisher

Long-tailed Cormorant

African Fish Eagle

African Fish Eagle

African Fish Eagle

Spur-winged Lapwing


Hamerkop (with lunch!)

Hamerkop
African Wattled Lapwing

Weaver Bird Nests
 Male weaver birds build several nests to entice their future mates.  The female picks the one nest she likes the best then cuts down the rest. Sorry guys, but you gotta please the ladies.

Baglafecht Weaver

Pin-tailed Whydah

Speckled Mousebird

White-brown Robin-Chat

Grey Wren-Warbler

Black-and-while Minnikin

Red-billed Firefinch (female)

Puffback

African Golden Oriole (I think)

Variable Sunbird

Variable Sunbird

Hadada Ibis (NOISIEST BIRD ON THE PLANET)

Black-headed Heron

Uganda's National Bird, The Grey Crowned Crane


 "A bird does not sing because it has an answer.  It sings because it has a song." Chinese Proverb