Thursday, June 21, 2012

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

I was recently reading  River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze by Peter Hessler about his two years as an English teacher in China.  He wrote about his father's visit:

“That was perhaps the longest week and a half I spent in China.  It was like seeing a reflection of my entire first year, cut and spliced and crammed into ten days – all of the fear, the annoyances, the fascination, the wonder of the city; everything hit my father in the space of little more than a week.  And I found that it was difficult to predict what would bother him, because I had been in Fuling for so long that I no longer saw it with a true outsider’s eye.  A slow boat that might seem perfectly fine to me was terrifying to him, while other things that I had worried about, like the spiciness of the food, didn’t pose the slightest problem.  Like many Peace Corps volunteers all over the world, I found that the parent visit was a kind of revelation: suddenly I saw how much I had learned and how much I had forgotten.”
                                                                       River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze by Peter Hessler

I had a wonderful visit with my Mom the other week.  At one point I asked her what her favorite blog post was, you know, so I would have an idea of what she likes so I can write to my audience.  Do you know what she said?  The woman that birthed me, raised me, and calls me her own?!  “The one your friends wrote.”  Don’t worry, Mom, I didn’t take it too personally.  She said, “I like to know what you do on a normal day.”  So this one’s for you, Mom!

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

7:30am – I slept in!  But that’s the joy of a flexible schedule, no alarm clocks required.  Made breakfast – tea and oatmeal with cinnamon, peanut butter, and an apple.

8:00am – I’m enjoying said breakfast in my hammock, listening to a This American Life podcast when 4-year-old Dayana walks in and stands next to my hammock.  I give her a bite of my food so she can stop wondering what it tastes like and play.  Her younger sister Chenin walks in and brightly says “Good morning” followed by “give me some.”  I do.  We talk about what's in it and they go play.

9:00am - I head over to the Health Post (next door) to install a weather station.  I realize that the mango tree is going to be an issue.

9:10am - I ask Natividad for permission to cut down one branch.  He says yes and gifts me 11 bananas – guineo chino, the BIG ones!

9:15am - Reyes climbs the tree like a spider monkey and quickly drops the first branch with his machete.  He then chops down 3 more under the counsel of Anabel and Natividad – just to be sure.

9:30am - We clean up the mess – split the branches, separate the firewood, and move the green fallen mangoes to a more convenient spot to rot.

10:30am - I helped remove PVC tubs from their (at least 8 month) intertwined grass prison to a new storage spot.

11:30am - Installed weather station.

Whenever I’m in my house – Kids (on a week-long vacation) ask to borrow a puzzle or a book or the singing cow or the crayons or the dominoes!  My house is pretty much the coolest hangout on the block!

12:00pm - Ate bananas for lunch and read a little bit.

1:30pm – Hiked about 30 minutes to the lower part of my town where I visited the 10 houses to collect a water survey - How much water do you use every day?  Made small talk.  Baby Isabel showed me her new trick – giving kisses.  Modesta gifted me 5 eggs, each marked with the date laid and the chicken responsible.

4:00pm – Hiked back up the hill.  Sweat a LOT.  Stopped in at Rosa’s to see if I could collect baby food jars that she had and I wanted to make mango jam in.

4:30pm – Started to rain just as I got home.  Showered (in the rain), washed laundry and dishes.

5:30pm – Cooked dinner – TVP (textured vegetable protein) tacos with black beans, fried onion and cabbage, shredded carrot and asiago cheese.

6:00pm – Ate dinner over another podcast.  Then wrote in my journal, wrote this blog, read for a while, and did some yoga.

8:30pm – Went to bed!  Tomorrow’s another day.  :)

1 comment:

  1. Hello, your day sounds great. I'm going to come visit soon when I'm not a sicky sick. Love Katy

    ReplyDelete