An account of my experience as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Eastern Caribbean-St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG).
Thursday, April 19, 2012
A Day in the Life...
Friday, March 16, 2012
And if you believe in love, then free up your mind, let this flow within
I suppose I have a reached a turning point in my Peace Corps
service as well as in my life. As I reach the one year mark, I thought things
would get easier; I also thought things would be different. Accepting the reality of your service and coming
to terms with the fact that it is nothing like you imagined (this inevitably
happens to all PCVs) has been difficult, but not entirely unwelcomed. And
although I have begun to feel as though SVG is my home now and this is where I
belong and I am starting to feel ‘integrated’, other aspects of my
experience/life seem to be spiraling out of control. In particular, my primary work assignment. I
feel inadequate, incompetent, or feel as though I lack the necessary skills, or
unable to relate to and manage the students.
Either I do something that I feel competent and comfortable teaching,
and have no control over the classroom, or I try to teach something I have no passion for and no skills to
teach, but have full control over the students, as it is a one on one setting. Either
I conform to the ‘local’ beliefs (sacrificing my own), or I continue to be
disrespected and feel helpless, hopeless. It’s a lose lose situation all
around. No matter what I do, I lose. If I
conform, I feel horrible about myself.
If I stand for what I believe, I get no where. I don’t feel like I am
making an [positive] impact in either scenario. I constantly feel as though I
have no support. I feel neglected and unappreciated by both students and staff.
I am hurt. I am confused. I am fed up. Above all, I am sad.
Every one has a breaking point. Normally (what is normal, anyways?) I would
have said my breaking point would have been a long long time ago. I have been (in my opinion) doing an
outstanding job at keeping an optimistic as well as a realistic outlook (or so
I thought), focusing only on the positives and getting creative in addressing
issues that I am faced with. But there comes a point when you can no longer
deal with it all. I think I have reached that point. I constantly am faced with
circumstances that never once crossed my mind. Never once did I think of these
things. Not once. How naïve I was! I am exposed to circumstances that no one
should ever have to consider let alone live through (and I'm not talking about
me-I am merely made aware of them, and for me that is enough). I am faced with
heartbreak everyday. I am made aware of
hurt, despair, anguish, and issues that never cross our privileged little
minds. Things, even when we reach our deepest, darkest moments, do not even
compare to the things that people face in other parts of the world. Having to
make unthinkable, unimaginable decisions. There is so much beyond my control; a
feeling I really really dislike, but have grown used to. At times, I have lost all hope. It is easy to lose motivation when you are
surrounded by apathy and such hopelessness. But alternatively, that gives me
motivation and the drive to instill the hopes and dreams I have for my students
in them. I believe in them.
However, the constant barrage starts to take a toll on
you. On one hand, these issues are the
exact reason why I decided to pursue Peace Corps-to a degree. However, the issues are exacerbated by the
circumstances. And I feel helpless, powerless. Something must change. What that is, I dont know as yet.
I believe in love. I really have grown to love these students, even though they probably dont know it or wouldnt believe it. I love my work and
my purpose. And I will continue to show them love and respect and the love I have for them.
And I believe that goodness will prevail.
I will not let these feelings get me down and I will continue to have an open
mind. I will let all the positivity flow freely within me and out into the
world. And in return, I will openly accept and reflect on anything that comes my way.
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
By The Numbers
I really miss working exclusively with numbers, so here is a
recap of my first year as a Peace Corps Volunteer in St. Vincent and the
Grenadines.
1 bat living in my house
1 trip to the Tobago Cays
1 week in the US
1 Nine Mornings Festival attended
1 haircut given
1 earthquake experienced
1 time swimming with sea turtles
1 hammock on my porch J
1 mash up camera
1 Christmas Light Up attended
1 beauty pageant attended
1 grant proposal written
1 dead chicken being eaten by my dog on my porch
1 1/2 dogs-mine and my neighbors, sort of
2 fashion shows attended
2 mash up internet modems
2 weeks with CRD
2 times carrying 6 children to the beach
3 stool samples
3 cans of Bop
2 concerts attended and 2 all-nighters pulled as a result
3 tarantulas found [dead]
3 doctors appointments
3 ascents to the top of Soufriere
3 subjects taught: reading, math, information technology
3 weeks of art camp
3 all-nighters for Carnival
4 times I have been told I “look like a true Vincy” J
4 gas tanks
4 times slept past 8am
4 inches my hair has grown
4 trips to Bequia
4 vaccines
4 times I have been offered someone’s child or baby
5 times partied until the sun came up
5 planes to get back to the states
6 weeks of adult education classes taught
8 weeks without a gas tank (8 weeks on a raw food diet)
8 weeks of no internet!
8 packages from friends
8 cans of Off! Bug spray used
9 new vegetables tried-dasheen, christophene, pigeon peas,
callaloo, breadfruit, cassava, pumpkin (different from ours), eddoes, yams
(which are not sweet potatoes)
9 months living alone and surviving
10 cards from my grandparents
10:1 the ratio of people who know my name to the names of
people I know
12 months living in SVG
15 packages from my mommy
16 boxes of crystal lite packets drank
17 new fruits tried-sour sop, sugar apple, plum rose, guava,
passion fruit, golden apple, wax apple, sorrel, sugar cane, cocoa, star fruit,
papaya, plum (not the same as ours), 3 different types of bananas, tamarind, mangoes,
coconut, I think there may be more (and some of these I have had, just not in
their natural existence.)
33 books read completely
tens of days with out water
tens of marriage proposals
tens of chickens in my yard
tens of goats seen on the way to school every morning
tens of days with brown water
plenty times limed on the beach
60+ new students’ reading assessments conducted
107 letters written
145 days of school
hundreds of inches of rain
hundreds of van rides, literally
hundreds of guavas, mangoes and bananas eaten J
200+ students taught
300 lbs of books and educational material from IACL
500 new books for the school library from Hands Across the Sea
Over 5000 pictures taken (don’t judge me)
More than I’d like to admit: rides taken by strangers
Friday, January 27, 2012
The Fighter
By S.E. Kiser
I FIGHT a battle everyday
Against discouragement and fear;
Some foe stands always in my way,
The path ahead is never clear!
I must forever be on guard
Against the doubts that skulk along;
I get ahead by fighting hard,
But fighting keeps my spirit strong.
I hear the croakings of Despair,
The dark predictions of the weak;
I find myself pursued by Care,
No matter what the end I seek;
My victories are small and few,
It matters not how hard I strive;
Each day the fight begins anew,
But fighting keeps my hopes alive.
My dreams are spoiled by circumstance,
My plans are wrecked by Fate or Luck;
Some hour, perhaps, will bring my chance,
But that great hour has never struck;
My progress has been slow and hard,
I’ve had to climb and crawl and swim,
Fighting for every stubborn yard;
But I have kept in fighting trim.
I have to fight my doubts away
And be on guard against my fears;
The feeble croaking of Dismay
Has been familiar through the years;
My dearest plans keep going wrong,
Events combine to thwart my will;
But fighting keeps my spirit strong,
And I am undefeated still!
To commemorate the 1 year anniversary of officially embarking on this crazy (and I really do mean crazy) adventure known as the Peace Corps, I wanted to share this truly motivational poem. A very dear friend who served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Jamaica shared this poem with me when I first began the process to start my Peace Corps adventure over 2.5 years ago. It hangs where I can see it everyday, to serve as a reminder that perseverance will get me thru the day. I find this to be very timely, given this past week of school.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Highs and Lows
As of the second term, I am now the Maths teacher for two
Form 3 classes. This poses plenty
challenges. For one, that is 80+ more names
I need to learn. It also means trying to
control 40 15-17 year old students, most of which are male, at any given
time. That’s just the beginning of the
challenges. But I love math. Math is what I know and love. It should be easier, right? I also really
love these kids, even though they trouble me and vex me.
Last week I had given the two classes an Ex. There really is
no excuse why they should have done poorly.
I taught the lesson and then retaught the lesson. I offered to hold a
review session after school. I gave examples. I gave more examples. I brought in demonstrations. Turns out, I failed
them; and they failed the Ex. Most did
pretty poorly, and I don’t know if it was something I did, or didn’t do. I wanted to go over the Ex questions in class
before moving on so I had carried home 80 books to mark instead of waiting to
mark them during school. When I showed up to class with their Ex books and
ready to give them answers no one would listen, everyone was out of their seat,
being very rude and very disrespectful to me. I was so upset. I was there ready
to help them and they seemingly didn’t want my help. They didn’t care
whatsoever. I was so disappointed in their behavior I actually walked out of
class. This same scenario happened in
both classes. The whole rest of the day
and that night, I felt so terrible. Terrible that they didn’t even care that
they failed. Terrible that they didn’t care that I was there to help them, that
I want them to understand maths. Terrible for letting them down, by giving up
on them and walking out.
I knew I had to do something. Their behavior was so disappointing;
I decided to have a motivational talk with them. I first explained that they really upset me
and how they upset me. I also explained
to them that I did not have to come to school every morning and that I only do
so because I want to. I told them that I do not get paid like other teachers,
that I do this because I want to, not for the money, not because I have to. I want them to do well. I want them to succeed. I know they have so much potential. I am not
giving them homework to punish them. I
am there to help them. I am there for them.
I decided to give each student a piece of colored paper; on
which they were to write one way that I show them respect, one way they show me
respect and a short term and long term goal. These are some of the responses I got :-) :
You show us respect by (I show respect to students):
- · Coming to class everyday
- · Saying good morning/afternoon
- · Taking your time and teaching us
- · Trying to help us
- · Staying in class when we are making noise
- · Speaking good to us
- · Using kind words to us
- · You understand me
- · You help me when I call you
- · Answering my questions when I ask
- · Helping me understand my work
- · Talking to students in a proper way
- · Telling students to be quiet instead of saying shut up
- · You always listen to us
- · You don’t tell me to shut up
- · Show kindness to us
- · Coming to class even when no one listens
- · Going over the exercises more than one time so that we can get it
- · Teach slow
- · Being nice
- · The way you teach us all
- · “I should show you respect”
- · Smiling
- · You teach slow and explain
- · By not shouting
- · You make sure we understand
- · You want us to learn and be the best person
- · “You always respect us”
I show you respect by (students show respect to me):
(This list is shorter because most students had similar responses)
(This list is shorter because most students had similar responses)
- · Listening
- · Raising my hand and waiting until you come to me
- · Being ready for class
- · Doing my work
- · Speaking properly to you
- · Not disrupting class
- · Paying attention
- · Sitting and listening to you teaching
- · Being friendly
- · By having [good] behavior
- · Doing your homework
- · Doing your classwork
- · Doing what you say
- · “I will stop talking plenty and listen more”
- · “Because I have respect for myself and I want to learn because it not for you it is for me”
Goals:
- · Plan my career
- · Be something good in life
- · Become a sailor
- · Meet Justin Bieber
- · Start my own business
- · I want to be an engineer (this may have been after I said I am an engineer)
- · Become a lawyer
- · Do better in my school work
- · Go to college and come out something good in life
- · Read books to increase knowledge
- · Live happily ever after
- · Be independent and creative
- · Become educated
- · Get a diploma
- · “Get a job to take care of my family and let the rest of my life lead my way"
- · "I want to be my own independent woman so that no one can show their self on me”
- · Become a chef
- · I want to have a hospital for animals
- · Become a medical doctor
- · Travel the world
- · Go to college to be an artist
- · Finish school and become something good in life
- · Travel the word and pick all different fruits
- · Become a nurse
- · Strive for excellence every time
- · Become a pilot
- · Achieve good education and work for my own money to be independent
- · Be the greatest engineer and architect
- · Get a job
- · Go to school
- · Become a coast guard
- · Own my own business and be rich and help poor people
These are all actual responses. I only edited the grammar a little bit, but not content.
I also got this response:
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Vincy Christmas Traditions
In
the last post, I mostly talked about what I did to celebrate the Christmas
Season. However, I should point out the
very distinct Vincy Christmas Traditions.
In addition to the Nine Mornings Festival, which I briefly
covered in the last post, there are many other celebrations that are unique to
SVG. First off, Christmas is an important season. It’s a time when family and friends come over
to visit. That means, the house must be
in tip top shape. Many people repaint the exterior of their homes and
redecorate the interiors. Women often hang new curtains, buy new “carpet” (more
like wall paper, but for the floor).
Remember in the last post when I said Town was crazy from every one
shopping. This mostly included people
selling carpet on the street; it comes in a giant roll and you just cut how
much you want, similar to buying fabric at a craft store. Other big-ticket
items being sold in Town were dolls, and other toys, curtains, and other
housewares.
Food is a critical part of Caribbean Culture. Christmastime is no exception. Christmas is
NOT Christmas without the Ham. That’s
all there is to that. Furthermore there
are other unique foods that are prepared for Christmas lunch. These include: ginger beer, sorrel juice,
black cake, and fruitcake. Before you gawk at the fruitcake, believe me, its
nothing like American fruitcake. This
has no chunks of candied jellied artificially colored “fruit” bits. Ginger beer is an interesting experience,
depending on how strong it’s made. It is made from grating fresh ginger and
mixing it with water and sugar and some whole cloves and other spices and
letting it ferment? in the sun for a few days, then straining out the grated
ginger and serving over ice. Depending on how much ginger is added, it may have
a strong bite. The ginger beer my neighbor
made nearly killed me it was so hot. When I went by my school’s counselor’s
house, she served me some ginger beer that was much more mild. In fact it was more sweet than hot. Another
Christmas drink is sorrel juice. This is
made from sorrel or hibiscus flowers that are boiled and or by pouring boiling
water over them. It’s then mixed with
sugar and cloves. I do not entirely know
how to describe the taste of this juice other than very fruity and sweet. Sometimes fresh ginger is added to this as
well. The first time I made this, I made
the mistake of adding too much ginger.
Who knew you only needed a tiny bit.
Well, I added about half of a whole root. Needless to say, I nearly died from the
intensity of the ginger and lack of sugar I added. I should have known there was something wrong
with my juice when it was the color of a deep red rose, and everyone else’s is
a pretty light fuchsia color. Black cake
is made from black wine. I don’t know
much else about it other than that, but it tastes delicious. It’s not sweet, but it’s pretty dense and
moist. The fruitcake was nice because all the fruit (raisins, currants, and
mixed peel) is blended up first, so it’s like regular cake with a hint of fruit
flavor. Very tasty!
Boxing day is celebrated in
SVG. In my opinion it is just a
continuation of Christmas; a time to visit everyone you did not have time to
pass by on Christmas Day. You eat, you
drink and you are merry.
Between Nine Mornings (9 days of street parties), CanFest
(carnival type fetes), Food, Drink, Boxing Day (more Food and More Drink), what’s
not to love about Christmas time in SVG?
Christmastime in St. Vincent
Although it was weird to celebrate Christmas without 10F
degree weather and snow (and my family and friends, of course), I had one of
the absolute best Christmas’s in recent memory.
Before I detail my happenings on Christmas day let me rewind to the
weeks leading up to Christmas, because those are just as important as Christmas
day itself.
First, the school schedule in SVG follows a similar schedule
as colleges in the States. The first
term ends in mid December after 2 weeks of final exams. About this time many
villages have annual Light Up celebrations.
A lot of villages hang up tons of Christmas lights and decorations in
the village center. About two weeks before Christmas they are Lit Up accompanied
by a full street party with caroling, dancing, music, competitions and contests,
and general family fun. The Christmas season officially commences with the
village Light Up. Shortly after all the
villages have their Light Ups, the Nine Mornings Festival begins. For the 9
days leading up to Christmas day there are fetes, street concerts, caroling,
music, steel pan, singing, competitions, beach limes, contests, and games beginning
at 4am until dawn in many of the villages and in Town. This festival is unique to St. Vincent and is
akin to Carnival in many ways. My village held its own Nine Mornings Festival,
and although I did not attend, the loud music, still going strong, woke me up
every morning around 730am.
Lets jump now to 4 days before Christmas. I was spending
Christmas by my next-door neighbor. We
had devised a menu and planned everything out. I spent the 3 days leading up to
Christmas Eve in town, trying to run errands and buy food and supplies needed
for Christmas. Town was totally chaotic with people such as myself doing last
minute Christmas shopping. The markets
were totally insane, as food is a big part of Vincentian culture, not just as
Christmas time. I had absolutely no food to cook in my house let alone stuff I
needed to bake cookies for all my neighbors and food needed for Christmas
lunch. The next day I spent liming in Town with my neighbor’s daughter and her
friend. We got lunch, shopped, and limed. It was nice to go to Town and not be
on a mission to get a zillion things done.
For once I walked around and actually took in all that was going on
around me, rather than just running around like a typical New Yorker. However, since my neighbor and I spent too
much time liming, we didn’t have time to pick up the rest of the groceries
needed for Christmas lunch. That meant
the next day we had to go back to Town to get food for Christmas Day
Lunch. This was an interesting trip to
Town, as we got a ride with our other next-door neighbor.
After coming home and preparing some of the food (cleaning
the fish-descaling it, gutting it, and chopping it up), cleaning up a bit, and
taking a nap, my neighbor’s daughter and I went to a Concert in the
evening. It was free with the donation
of 3 cans of food and it was known as CanFest.
It was basically Carnival all over again. Unfortunately my camera mash up, so I don’t
have any pictures L. Well, CanFest started at 9pmish. Shortly after it started my host sister txted
me to remind me about going to Nine Mornings on Christmas Eve and that she
would pick me up at 330am. Confusing the
days because of the time, I thought we were going on Sunday morning, which
would have actually been Christmas day.
This meant I would have to meet here in town, as there was no way to get
home before 330am. My neighbor’s
daughter and I left CanFest around 230am and walked around Town and got some
food at KFC (well she did, not me), of course it was open. We hung out until 4am when my host sister
came for Nine Mornings. Needless to say
I was exhausted, not expecting to be out until 8am the following day! I spent all of Christmas Eve sleeping. I think I woke up around 7pm to bake some
cookies and brownies for Christmas lunch and then went back to sleep.
Christmas day finally arrived and we set up the dining table
with my neighbor’s fine china, and I brought over the Christmas Tree my mom
sent me. IT was just lovely. My
neighbor’s daughter and I spent the morning cooking and hanging out. On our
menu: macaroni pie, potato salad, regular salad, fried fish, BBQ chicken, BBQ
pork, callaloo soup, ground provisions, ginger beer, sorrel juice, beer,
wine. It was a splendid day filled with
tons of food and love.
St. Vincent also celebrates Boxing
Day. Although I’m still not entirely
sure of the true purpose of Boxing Day, it is celebrated in SVG by going to all
your friends, family, and neighbors to visit, eat and drink. I spent Boxing Day
by my Landlord and his family having lunch.
I have eaten more food in those two days that the whole week prior
combined. More fish, lobster salad,
potato salad, macaroni pie, salad, stew peas, beer. My landlord has a son and a grandson who was
visiting from Trinidad around my age so it was a lot of fun to hang out with
people close to my age. After lunch, I
went by another neighbors for a beer, and then afterwards went to a salt pond
for a sea bath with my Landlord’s son and grandson. The season’s festivities did not end after
Boxing Day.
The following day I spent with the
school counselor and her family. Again I
was fed and given drinks. We had a great
time and I was very thankful to be included in her family’s celebrations.
In addition to spending time with
new family and friends and sharing in their traditions, my Christmas from home
has yet to end. I am still receiving Christmas
cards and Christmas/birthday packages.
I hope everyone felt even a fraction
of the joy and happiness I felt this Christmas season. No offense mom, but I was so busy and
surrounded by so many great people filled with love I didn’t even miss home!
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