hey. so im in my second week in togo. things are quite slow. it turns out that volunteers only have to work in the mornings and it seems that even though i have been trying to work in the afternoons there is usually nothing to do. i am going to start looking for other organizations to work for in the afternoon.
i met a really cool kid last week. his name is thomas. he is one of the kids that pdh works with. currently i have to argue his case to get antiviral drugs paid for. it is so frustrating that the organization is willing to pay 5000f for healthy kids to go to school but not 600f for really really sick kids to feel at least a bit better. even though the mission of the ngo is supposed to be to help those who are sick especially with aids it seems that they have drifted really far from their starting point. although back to thomas, he is a lot of fun. we went to his house twice last week and ill go at least once this week which is good because he is quite sick and there is really no one at home during the day to care for him. oh and i get to go meet jaques this week. i am so excited i have been waiting for months to meet him.
i walked into the city of lome yesterday. it took four hours all together but it was fun. i really got to see how life exists for togolese people. people here are nice although sometimes too nice. i thought that i had made friends with a couple of guys last week and i gave them my email only to receive one back in which this guy declared his undying love for me and said that he couldnt sleep or eat because he was thinking about me. i swear we had only talked for five minutes and our conversation only started because he and his friend thought that i was a franciscan nun. i take a walk each evening before sunset and there is this guy who is digging a hole a huge hole. the other day he asked me to come by and look at his hole. it is rectangular in shape and probably seven feet by four feet. i told him it was a nice hole very deep and profound. he then proceeded to invite me down into his hole. yeah it was pretty hilarious.
ive been playing a lot of scrabble with the other volunteers a bunch which is cool and we went to the beach again today. i seem to always get sunburnt no matter how much sunscreen i put on. oh although today i only got burnt on all of the places i forgot to put sunscreen on. haha.
okay that is all for now. it is so awkward to have this blog it is way too much like a public journal.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Saturday, May 23, 2009
first post from africa
hello. sorry if there are any errors i am typing on a french keyboard and it is very different. i am in Togo. it is amazing here but also very different. it is taking awhile for me to get used to the heat. oh and funny story about the plane. on the plane from dc to paris there was a french businessman sitting next to me. he was rather grumpy and when i asked him to get up so that i could get out, and i even asked in french, he just moved his legs to the side a bit so i had to hurdle over him, i felt pretty cool about that one. but on the way back he had fallen asleep in a position that was not condusive to me hurdling again so i tried to climb over him by first climbing onto his armrest and then onto my seat so that i could sit but i think that i ended up kicking him in the stomach, he was very angry at me for the rest of the trip.
so i made all of my flights on time and such. on the plane to lomé i met this guy who is now a us citizen in the military but who grew up in togo and was on his way to visit his family. he hadnt had the yellow fever shot nor had he gotten his visa. for a sum total of $10 he was able to pay off officials. i wish i had known that, it would have saved me $200. the people working for PDH are very nice. i am staying in a room at the center but it is right next door to Antoines house. i eat all of my meals at his house and there is one other volunteer sharing my room although there is somewhat of a partition between our rooms. we have our own bathroom even with a western toilet. to flush the toilet you have to pour water into the bowl and to shower you fill buckets of water and pour them over yourself. it has worked well so far.
the people of Togo are very interesting. many of the women can carry large tubs filled with water or other things on the top of their heads. i would never be able to have that type of balance. i saw a person my age carrying a tray with several dozen eggs on top of her head. the sanitation issue is very much a problem here. i have seen several people use the bathroom on the road and also it seems that most people pile the garbage in the streets. although it is also interesting to see so many goats and chickens running in the streets. i keep wondering how they dont get lost because they literally seem to wander around.
as far as working i havent done much yet. i spent my first morning trying to find an atm that worked, oh and i had my first motorbike ride it was quite interesting. i did a bunch of administrative stuff the rest of the day and now we go back to work on monday. i slept until noon today and when i got up people kept asking me if everything was okay, apparently people do not sleep like that here. i think i am going to the beach tomorrow with one of the other volunteers. i am trying to stick with other people because all of the roads are made of dirt and none of them have names so i am sure to get lost.
that is all for now.
so i made all of my flights on time and such. on the plane to lomé i met this guy who is now a us citizen in the military but who grew up in togo and was on his way to visit his family. he hadnt had the yellow fever shot nor had he gotten his visa. for a sum total of $10 he was able to pay off officials. i wish i had known that, it would have saved me $200. the people working for PDH are very nice. i am staying in a room at the center but it is right next door to Antoines house. i eat all of my meals at his house and there is one other volunteer sharing my room although there is somewhat of a partition between our rooms. we have our own bathroom even with a western toilet. to flush the toilet you have to pour water into the bowl and to shower you fill buckets of water and pour them over yourself. it has worked well so far.
the people of Togo are very interesting. many of the women can carry large tubs filled with water or other things on the top of their heads. i would never be able to have that type of balance. i saw a person my age carrying a tray with several dozen eggs on top of her head. the sanitation issue is very much a problem here. i have seen several people use the bathroom on the road and also it seems that most people pile the garbage in the streets. although it is also interesting to see so many goats and chickens running in the streets. i keep wondering how they dont get lost because they literally seem to wander around.
as far as working i havent done much yet. i spent my first morning trying to find an atm that worked, oh and i had my first motorbike ride it was quite interesting. i did a bunch of administrative stuff the rest of the day and now we go back to work on monday. i slept until noon today and when i got up people kept asking me if everything was okay, apparently people do not sleep like that here. i think i am going to the beach tomorrow with one of the other volunteers. i am trying to stick with other people because all of the roads are made of dirt and none of them have names so i am sure to get lost.
that is all for now.
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Day -1
This is essentially a post to ensure that the blog works. Tomorrow morning, in 10 hours in fact I will be on my way to the airport and in 13 hours I will be on the first part of my plane trip to Togo. The trip starts in Des Moines then to Chicago then to DC and then Paris before arriving in Togo. And now I'm being instructed to go pack. Peace out homies.
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