Sunday, September 23, 2012

Patience Really Is a Virtue

 
I think over the next several months, patience and I are going to have
 a little battle. It is already very apparent that in order to survive
 here, patience is going to be needed!

What the typical day has been looking like so far:
 Wake up, tie the mosquito net up and get ready for the day. Go
 downstairs have some cornflakes and soy milk which I have come to
 love, and get ready for Kreyol class.
 Then for three hours M-F we have Kreyol.  Due to the amazing spanish
 teacher I had at DGS, I don't consider myself to have ever taken a
 language class.... getting used being a student and learning a new
 language is a whole new world to me. The class has been nothing but
 difficult, but good things don't come easy I suppose. I am trying to
 tell myself, I can't learn it over night. Our teacher is really great,
 except sometimes my intelligence is insulted a little as he explains
 how to tell time, explains what a verb is, and he wanted to double
 check to see if I could count to ten in english....After I get past
 the frustrations part, and try to remember to have patience, I  get
 really impatient and wish I could already know the language so I
 didn't have to sit in this class that I didn't understand.
 Then we eat lunch, and do random things around the house, prepare
 dinner, eat, and have reflection. The days have been pretty cookie
 cutter for me the past few weeks. Unlike me Jen has started to get
 involved with a scholarship program, and she has done a few things for
 that in the past weeks. I have been given a few ideas, but I can't
 really do much of it until I can speak. So while I am wanting to get
 right into things, I have to remind myself to be patient and really
 focus on the language.

Variations to the day:

We have gone on a few hikes in the afternoons when it is a little bit
 (3 degrees maybe) cooler, or on a Saturday and Sunday. We've gone
 exploring to the river which we walked through, and we went through
 the market as well, which was very cool. Just like a Haitian farmers
 market, but not really.The streets are filled with girls and children
 carrying buckets of water on their heads or in wheel barrels. Men
 driving on motos. Donkeys carrying loads of goods, directed by
 someone. People selling things like mangos, bread, and other goods.
 Along with the people there are dogs running around, garbage and
 liquid that you have to convince yourself that is water. Along the way
 we still get yelled at by children, and stared at by many. Most will
 stare until say hello to them first, they then light up and return the
 greeting.
            Here is one of the roads in town. The only paved road
 within the whole town.


 
We went to a celebration/ goodbye for a sister who has been here for
 many years. There was a lot of loud music, singing of songs, thanking
 her for all she has done, and sharing a meal (pretty much in the
 dark).  When we were leaving, we ended up driving some people back
 including the sister what was leaving. We were walking to the car, and
 in front of us was a strange man carrying a live turkey. This wasn't
 bothersome until we realized he was wanting to put the turkey into our
 car. He ended up putting it in the back of the van under the seat
 where I was supposed to be sitting. It was dark, a man wanted to put a
 live bird under me where my feet and legs were vulnerable and waiting
 to be eaten. I instantly started tearing up. (for those of you who
 don't know me very well, I have a GREAT fear of birds). This man
 expected me just to act normal as we drove an hour with a turkey under
 my seat... I don't think so.

 
 
Jen was kind enough to inform everyone of my fear so I got to sit in
 the front of the van. Some of the Haitians just came up to me tried to
 console me and told me he was sleeping. I know better. Thats something
 you tell a five year old. As we were driving home I decide you don't
 get to drive with a live turkey everyday... so I decided that I wanted
 to pick it up when we took it out. Well here it is. Me scared out of
 my mind. Holding a live bird. I can now cross that off my list of things to do.
 

We had a mango eating contest which was really interesting. Jen and I
 along with two Haitians. They won. It was a lot of fun though. The
 mangos here are amazing, but the way you eat them, is with your teeth,
 even the skin. Haitians eat them in no time. We learned comparisons
 one day in Kreyol and the joke was that Jen can speak better Kreyol
 than Aileen, but Aileen can eat better mangos than Jen. That was the
 day we decided for a competition. It was pretty official and we taped
 it. Jen put it on youtube, so if you would like to watch it, heres the
 link. Mango Eating
 
 

We've gone out and had some fun a few times. We went to a place called
 Tidens for dinner one night, in hopes to hear a new music group, but
 they didn't show. We still had fun enjoying each others company,
 having a few drinks, eating a meal, and getting out of the house for a
 few hours. The bar is by a river, and there was a bridge, so Jen and I
 went exploring, and the next few pictures are from on the bridge.
 
 
 

It defiantly feels like I am on a vacation, meeting great people,
 having a wonderful time and will be coming home soon. This doesn't
 feel completely real yet. Missing things at home like my moms surgery,
 and simply a family party sets in the reality that this is more than a
 vacation, this is my life for the next 11 months. Slowly I think the
 bucket showers, hot weather, the people, sleeping under a mosquito
 net, and the frequent noises of animals, people and music are going to
 feel more like home. It has been nice starting to get a feel for where
 places are, who the people who visit the house frequently are, and
 beginning to get a feel for what will consume my time when I can
 communicate. Slowly Gros-Morne is starting to feel like my second
 home.

This is Jen and I with one of the sisters living here, and Gardyne. A
 woman who has been living here for a few weeks helping out. She's been
 a lot of fun to hang out with, practice Kreyol, and learn from.
Sr. Pat, Gardyne, Jen, and I
 

 

A soccer team Jen and I  took some pictures for.
 
 Jen likes having her picture taken. So I took one for her. This is
 just a pretty picture of Jen sitting on a bridge.
Just two friends loving Haiti!






Monday, September 10, 2012

Welcome to Gro-Morne!!

The day I have been waiting for finally arrived. The beginning of fulfilling a desire I have had since high school. I have now been living in Haiti for almost two weeks.  Most of what we have been doing up to this point is adjusting, exploring, and getting accustomed to the house routines,the people and places around. Right now it feels as if I am coming home to the states in just a week or so.... like I am on vacation. It doesnt feel as if this is my home for the next year!!! 
There is so much to say, I have been asked by several people to give an update, but for the beginning its such a change, its hard to describe it all right now. So I am going to try and give a brief summary to start.
 Our travel here was very interesting. Although we were two very excited girls (Jen and I) getting up at 2:45 am to arrive at the airport by 4am was not fun. When we were checking in they pretty much told us we may not get into the country because we had no Visa or proof of return. After an hour, they let us go, but told us it was our risk to take.The rest of the travel time I was a little nervous and very ready to be in Haiti. Needless to say we arrived, made it though customs, and “into” the country ok. 
As we walked out of the airport (which is a big open warehouse looking place) we were greeted by the fresh hot air, and A LOT of men in red shirts. I was warned about men who want to take your bags to whoever you were meeting, so that you would pay them for doing so. I didnt think it was going to be as crazy as they made it sound, but it was. They tried saying they know who was meeting me, trying to grab my bags, and they walked with me trying to convince me to let them carry my bags. After a lot of ignoring and saying no thanks, we were finally greeted at the end of the walkway by the sisters!
The drive to Gro-Morne was a very interesting. It was a good preface to the year for me. There are really no rules of the road, so a few times I held my breath because of the oncoming traffic, thinking we were going to run over a person, die, or hit something on the side of the road exct.  It was all just an eye opening, and crazy experience. It was about a 3.5 hour drive. Including the 30 minutes we had to wait in traffic (people all over the road, in and out of their cars) because a bus was being pulled out of a ditch. My first impressions were nothing that I could have ever expected. I think I was pretty silent the whole drive down, and pretty quiet the first few days. I dont think  even at this point I have even processed the drive and the things I have seen in Gro-Morne completely. It was an experience that began to break my heart. Pictures couldn't begin describe what I was seeing on the outside of the van.  
So far the free time that we have, Jen and I have been going on walks or hikes. We have been trying to begin getting familiar with places around the town. This has been fun getting out of the americanized house, and observe the way people live in Gro-Morne. Most of these walks make me very grateful for the life I have been given. A lot of the walks include walking over piles of garbage, seeing people hungry walking the street, seeing people bathe in the river, people carrying containers to get water, and people sitting in the blistering sun trying to sell their goods. I have enjoyed going on these walks because when we have seen children, they either stare, follow you, talk to you, one walked us home, or my favorite they tell "BLAN" which simply means white. The best part is they say it in a scared, alarming or excited voice. For a mere second I feel awkward or famous haha. 
Our kreyol lessons started this past week. Our teacher is very interesting, and is very passionate about his language. The lessons are very frustrating and fun at the same time. Our teacher uses the phrase, its the “its the beauty of the language” as explanations sometimes, right now its frustrating, but hopefully I will be able to understand its beauty in time.  Today we learned parts of the body. I wanted to say " tet" meaning head, but I said " teet" so that was fun...I anticipate things like that are only going to continue to happen. 
       Being a person who likes to talk to people, it is hard when I am not even able to communicate with a child. So far I think that has been the most frustrating part. Although there are people I can communicate with, it is already very lonely and discouraging not being able to simply communicate to those that work around the house and people within the community around us. It is a beautiful language to listen to, so I cant wait until I can speak it. It will obviously be easier as I have more classes and practice.        
       So far life here is great. I am getting used to living here, and really enjoying building a foundation for the rest of the year. 
Lots of love from Haiti. Where the avocados are huge and fresh, where you fall asleep to the sounds of donkeys "HEE-HAW", Roosters koukouyoukou-ing, and really annoying men singing and preaching on a microphone. 



Part of the town Gro-Morne