I have a video but I can't upload it right now! I will try after school some day this week!
I have not had internet for a bit so a lot has happened
since my last blog post. I am currently in Ghana Training and will post this as
soon as I have internet.
I apologize for the terrible grammer/spelling I haven't had much time to edit.
June 4th I went to Washington DC and the next
night I was on a flight to Ghana. So far I have learned a bit of Twi, Completed
the Accra adventure challenge, sat through many training lectures, laughed a
lot, eaten some interesting foods, and am almost done with atlas shrugged
(thank God I am so sick of Ayn Rand right now). While in Accra we also had a
nice party over at the Ambassador’s crib which was a cool experience. We found
a bar on our first day off to watch to Espana
Vs Italia game which was a nice change from the intensive and looong
lectures. I do have a phone now so I can text and call the US for pretty cheap
actually, I will be hopping around from Kuku to shadowing PCV’s in villages and
living with a local family during the rest of training.
I have a lot of first impressions of Ghana, but in a
nutshell I love it here so far and I can’t wait for things to get more intense.
(Right now it’s more like “Posh Corps”) That will continue to change more
though. Washing everything with one bucket is interesting, but extremely
refreshing. Nothing feels better on a hot day than pouring a bucket of rainwater
over yourself.
I live with a Ghanain Family in Asynasin right now and it is
going well so far. Living with a family that you can barely communicate with is
interesting. The majority of the conversation when the daughter is not around
is “Eat AALLLLL!!” “Go Bath” “Go School”. They are very nice though and the
mother lets me cook and clean with her.
So Far I have managed to stay “paleo” I have not had to eat
bread or rice, but I cannot get away with not eating cassava, plantain, and
other starchy veggies. But we sweat constantly and walk everywhere so I doubt I
will put on the weight most PC girls put on especially since I don’t eat the
rice. I did eat a mango the size of a small child for lunch today….I can’t wait
to try a pear, that is what they call the prehistoric avocados from heaven
here. My family doesn’t approve of my diet. According to them all white people
like rice and I eat fu fu totally wrong L I do like the fu fu because it is grain free
and served with spicy stew. My family likes the canned mackerel so all the
aswesome spicy stew my mom makes is ruined by the whole canned fish staring at
you. The Okra stew here has the consistency of snot and is served with Banku…
it also smells fermented…but its not bad, I am sure I will get used to it but
for now I’d rather eat coconuts and street meat.
My family named me qwayaseebeeyah (how I thought it sounded
at first) I later found out they spell it Kwasibea. I am named after their
Mother who is also the wife of the Chief of Anyinasin so basically I am royalty.
We met the chief the other day in a strange ceremony involving a lot of
greetings juju prayer/rituals involving schnapps and lots of yoooooo’s (Yo
means Okay in Twi…. People yo it out a lot).
I learned this week that my watch was not water proof while
taking a bucket bath.
I also learned that boys have it way easier. I am not even
going to go into bathrooms or lack thereof here.
The roosters start at 4am everyone is up by 5am, eat, bath,
clean, leave around 7am for the day to begin. You cannot sleep in in Ghana.
My room has a light and a fan. The light is a nice neon blue
blacklight bulb and is located under the fan. When I want to have the fan on
and the light on I feel like I am at a rave or an epileptics worst nightmare.
When I use my headlamp to read and do work to avoid the flashing blue light my
mom turns the light on and says “Kwasibea You Use Light Keep On”.
Right now I am experiencing “Posh Corps” water is easy to
get, I have a fan, there is an abundance of cheap fresh food everywhere, taxis
and tros cost 20 to 50 cents and can get you around very easily, I have a cell
phone, and well… I like it here.
Training is long, I have no teaching experience and spending
8+ hours in sweaty classrooms after eating Banku can be tough. The kids and
baby animals roaming the village are adorable though. I really can’t complain,
anything negative I have written is funny and interesting to me more than
upsetting.
I should find out soon what language I need to focus on so I
will have an idea what region my permanent placement will be J until then I am
teaching at a JHS Math and Science form 2 for the next two weeks and working on
my nonexistent teaching skills. I built a tippy tap the other day and am
excited tot do science and hands on teaching activities though. Teaching is
much more structured than Wat/San so I am thankful I will have structured
teaching as one of my projects to balance out the lack of structure in
completing my thesis.
Well I love hearing from people and will try to get back to
everyone despite my lack of connectivity. If training ever dies down I will
find my way back to the internet café in New Tafo more often, but for now I
will probably only be going for short periods rarely.
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