Hey everyone,
I finnally got to an internet cafe. I think that this is the best way for me to get in contact with everyone. Hopefully I should be able to check this about once a week.
I´m doing great. I´m at my training site in Santa Clara. Its a suburb of Panama (about an hour out) the family I´m staying with is very nice. I live in a 3 room house made of concrete block walls and no paint. My parents Jeronimo and Dilsa are both grandparents and very talkative, the father speaks slow and is very patient with my lack of Spanish and poor proneunciation, he also knows a few words in Engish so its very helpful. I have my own room with a desk and and a bed. My bed is has a thin mattress and Spongebob sheets, but he´s BLACK! I think is must be a factory defect of something. I also have my Mosquito net up to protect from Malaria and Dengue fever.
The house has no indoor plumbing only a sink outside used for just about everything from filling up pòts for cooking to washing clothes. The latrine is disgusting. It is just about completly full and I despise going in there. My father has dug out a new one (its like a 20ft hole) and is waiting to purchase the concrete supplies. I told him I would help mix this concrete up. He said he doesn´t know much about it, but the Peace Corps gave us a whole bunch of concrete info that I showed him and he was thrilled. Lastly, the entire time I have been here the elecricity has been broken. This is good and bad. It sucks cause it gets dark at 6 and then its dark, its good because there is not much else to do but talk. Alot of my friends say that their families don´t talk abd only watch TV.
Every day for I wake up around 7:00 shower in the outdoor shower, and go to Spanish class at another house. I´m in the Intermediate medium level and have 2 other people in my class. Class meets for 4 hours. The community has an amazing income disparity because the house I have classes in has a washer and dryer indoor plumbing a bathroom, a big TV and 2 cars. My Spanish has definitly been progressing but Í don´t really attribute that much to the class, its more that i just have to speak all the time.
In the afternoon I have a Tecnical class for 4 more hours. I really like this class, we meet a little out of town under a Ranchero, which is a house with Palm fronds for a roof. This class is tought by a girl names Tess who has served in Panama for 3 years. There is also almost always a current volunteer in Environmental health there to help. We have toured a nearby gravity fed water system, met with a water comittee, and had several engineering demonstrations with tubes called the maquaduct. Yesterday we built an organic garden, and learned how to sharpen and use a machete. Aparently everyone gets very familiar with the machete as you use if for everything in the field.
Outside of classes, I bought a guitar for $40 and I play to my families delight. I don´t go out on weekdays, but on the weekend and thursday night, we go to a bar which is owned by the family of one of my amigos. They have free billards and several kinds of 50 cent beers. I missed out on the soccer game because my family is very religous. I went to church for 3 hours on tuesday and 2 more today. They are a type of evangelical. Besides that everyone here is really cool, the people are much more diverse than I expected. There are people from California, to my boy Jake who´s a frat boy from Washington state, to my buddy Colin who is has a small world but a great guy. I´m the only person from New England.
Lastly I don´t know when I´ll be able to post pictures because I don´t have the chord for my camera and apparently they don´t sell that type in Panama. Yáll can get in touch with me if you write me and email.
Sunday, August 27, 2006
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4 comments:
Duder,
Is your engineering class in Spanish or English? What if they made it in Portugeuse just to fuck with you?
Joe Snakes On A Plane came out last week and its everything you could imagine and more, you're going to love it. The DVD probably comes out around Christmas so if the country of Panama has a DVD player somewhere let me know and I'll send it to you.
And are the mosquitoes crazy bad or is it just that they have the diseases that makes them bad?
Alright man, have fun and Stay Up no matter what.
-Patty G
West Wing, Third Floor, Top Bunk
69 Greenfield
Joe,
I just came across your journal about your adventures in Panama. I added a link to your page to a database I collected of Peace Corps Journals and blogs:
Worldwide PC Blog Directory:
http://www.PeaceCorpsJournals.com/
Features:
1. Contains over 1,500 journals and blogs from Peace Corps Volunteers serving around the world.
2. Each country has its own detailed page, which is easily accessible with a possible slow Internet connection within the field.
3. The map for every country becomes interactive, via Google, once clicked on.
4. Contact information for every Peace Corps staff member worldwide.
5. Official rules and regulations for current PCV online Journals and blogs. Those rules were acquired from Peace Corps Headquarters using the Freedom of Information Act.
6. Links to Graduate School Programs affiliated with Peace Corps, along with RPCVs Regional Associations.
There is also an e-mail link on every page. If you want to add a journal, spotted a dead link, or have a comment.
Thanks for volunteering with the Peace Corps!
-Mike Sheppard
RPCV / The Gambia
http://www.PeaceCorpsJournals.com/
Broseph,
It sounds like Panama is a crazy time. Leave it you to find the bar with 50 cent beers when you don't even have running water in your own home. You make us proud!
It sounds like you've been learning a lot and having an interesting time so far. I hope you keep having a great experience. I'll be sending you a little package soon!
Todo de mi amor,
Heather
Wow man, that's pretty crazy. Sounds like things are going pretty well too. And who can argue with 50 cent beers... although 5 hours of church is a little long...anyways, take care of your machete-wielding, spanish-speaking, pool-playing ass, and I'll look forward to your next update. Peace dude!
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