Monday, June 27, 2011

Wednesday June 22, 2011

VOLUNTEERING
I learned that Eduardo is not developmentally excelling. I took it as learning and body size. He is smaller and I have noticed to be spacey and not participate. Not because he doesn’t want to, he just has a hard time doing some of the activities. He looks more confused than bored. I wondered if they had any program to help him develop/any adaptions to try to help him thrive. He is one of my favorites. He is super kind and loving. He loves attention and never fights with anyone to get it though.

Again I asked Isabelle if she needed help. She asked me to draw a rainbow for Friday’s activity because in spanish rainbow starts with an A (arcoiris). I made sure this time to ask many times how to write the instructions. After I wrote the first one I made sure to have them read it before I made the rest.

As I was sitting writing the instructions Isabelle asked me when I leave. I told her a week from today was my last day. She asked me how I felt about leaving. I told her I wanted to see my friends but I really wanted to stay though. I told her about my job training when I get back. She asked when I would return to Guatemala and I told her I didn’t know. I told her I would love to come back next year but I didn’t know. She told me she could use more volunteers like me. She says she is uncomfortable asking them to help out. Sometimes they don’t play with the kids and just sit. She is doesn’t want to make them do something they don’t want to. It really made me feel good that she wanted me to stay.

While we were playing outside I got the ball stuck on the roof so I had to bring a table out, and but a stool on to of it and use a broom to get it down. Problem was I couldn’t see where the ball was so I was going off what other people were saying. We got it down luckily.

Banana bread was the snack. I was thrilled because the past 3 times were waffer crackers and jello both of which I hate.

ANTIGUA
I went movie shopping at the market and bought 9 DVDs. It took a long time to find ones that were in English and Spanish. Some aren’t fabulous quality but they are good enough. I also found where I bought the coconut from last time. Took some hunting but I eventually found it. I ran out of money but I plan on going back and stocking up on the DVDs

HOME
I bought Rio cause Emily wanted to watch it but couldn’t find her own copy. We watched a little bit of it and she got tired and restless at 8:30 so we left.

Tuesday June 21, 2011--Trip to Mayan Village to view San Simon-a person the mayans pray to

VOLUNTEERING
Usually when the kids have free time, I either draw or play with the legos. This time before I got to work I asked if Isabelle needed any help. She told me that she didn’t have an idea for the second activity of the day for the kids. She needed something that was geared towards the letter A. My idea was to make a tree (arbol) since it started with the letter a and they always say that word when making a list of words that begin with the letter A. Then the kids would draw As on the tree as if they were fruit. I also cut out a letter A for each of the kids to glue on their sheet as an example. Then they got to color it in once their As were all drawn. Also for the instructions, I made every A green so that it stood out and the kids noticed when the A was used in a word. She liked the idea so I made my sheets. Since they don’t have a copier I had to make all 17 of the sheets by hand and 17 of the As. It was funny because I tried writing the insturctions in spanish on the bottom of the sheet. I had to asked twice to make sure I had it correct. Turns out I didn’t. When I see the sheets when the kids have them there are some slight spelling changes. I wrote (dibuja las a adentro el arbol) and on the final sheet was (dibuja las a dentro del arbol).

For snack we had warm milk and cornflakes. Such a weird combo for me. Ate em anyways because I LOVE corn flakes.

TRIP TO SAN ANDRES ITZAPA
I don’t have class today because Paty wanted 3 days off for an unknown reason. I just went with it. I went on the trip of the day with the school. Turned out to be just me and this older guy. He had a really interesting story. He was from Texas. In college he started off his major as business and switched to international business. However a language was required so he took Spanish. When he graduated he had a Spanish major and a International business minor. We went to San Andres Itzapa. Here is another shrine dedicated to San Simon/Maximon, the same guy we saw in Santiago. I guess I have been to the 2 most important places that worship him. It was about a 20 minute drive. We walk into a church where there is a statue of him. People offer liquor, cigars, and money to him in hope that he will help them out. There are placks that line the walls with thanks of his good deeds. I saw a couple of ceremonies being performed. One person was being [blessed] with palm leaves and some sort of oil. Another person was being [blessed] by candles. Both placed on certain parts of the body as the [priest] said something. A blessing can cost around 300. There are also fires that are made where they burn candles, eggs, and other offerings. This is done outside. It was the strangest mix of Mayan and Catholisism because the shrine was in a Catholic Church, but he was said to be of Mayan decent, yet there was alcohol being offered. Also there were some sort of Christian religious tourist family. The women were wearing some awkard ugly skirt. We also stopped at the catholic church in the town square where masses are held.  We tried to get elote asado on the way back but since it was raining there was no one on the side of the street selling it. A teacher said that they eat it will lime and salt and grilled on charcoal. Or they prepare it with mustard, ketchup, and mayonaise and call it Elote Loco.

TRIP TO THE MARKET
I was on my way back from the bank and I ran into Kevin and Maggie, the siblings from the trip. They were on their way to Salsa and tried to convince me to go. First I bought icecream and it was NOT good. Had no flavor and it was really awkardly icey. Had an advertisemnt very similar to Cold Stone so I wonder if they used the same picture. I was lucky enough to convince them to go to the market instead of Salsa because Maggie leaves tomorrow. I bought 2 headbands, booties for me and August and a couple more postcards. I am debating on buying crazy pants.

HOME
Ingrid says I leave really soon. She said that they are going to miss me. She asked if she could adopt me. She asks me how I feel about leaving. I tell her I want to stay really badly but I also miss my friends

MONOLOCO
 I go to Monoloco because Chi-Chan wants to go and he won’t go by himself. It is Maggie’s last horrah before she leaves. I get there and there aren’t enough places to sit and of course I feel awkward. I met a really nice girl though through the other people and we hung out at Monoloco while the people went next door to salsa. Monoloco had THE funniest crowd. Had the locals and tourists of ALL ages. At the other place it was the typical. There was that really good couple that was owning the dance floor and then the awkward people staring. I was the awkward person. It was funny because when I got to the other place Kevin and Maggie were gone because she had a headache. Chi-Chan said he want to take salsa lessons so he could learn how to dance like the good people. I found the MN graduate to hang with. Her friend was dying to dance for at least 20 minutes and she wouldn’t ask the guy that was eying her. IT took forever til he actaully came over and asked. Kevin came back and the MN grad heard he was a bad dancer so we headed to the bathroom. On the way back we ran into this lady. A guy was trying to get her to dance I told her to dance. Her excuse was that she’s old. I go that’s not good. She goes Im married. I was like that’s a good excuse, wheres your husband. She said at home with the kids. She was 35 and had kids. Probably the cutest mom ever. She was so polite to the guy to. She didn’t want to be rude. By the time I get back from the bathroom Chi-Chan and Veronica want to leave already. I was happy since I didn’t want to go out in the first place. But I had a good time. I met two nice girls, chatted with the alumn and had lots of laughs at awkward people in the bar.

Monday June 20, 2011

VOLUNTEERING
Nothing new happened today. Everything was pretty routine. Except for the fact that Isabelle asked me to draw a scared girl in the middle of the big A that they made. The story she told to help them remember was that a little girl saw a snake and when she screamed, she said aaaaaaa and As left her mouth. So I decided to go off the Dora the Explora book they had. They kids ended up loving it.

HOME
Emily ventures back to my room and always asks permission to come in. She has 2 weeks of vacation. She is lonely because Nathaly is with her mom and isnt staying in our house for the week. I found out that her mom is a teacher at La Union and takes a bus 30 minutes everyday to La Union. Emily asks me if I want to watch a movie with her tonight and I say yup! She wants to watch Rio.

CLASS
It is my last day with Paty until our little 3 day break. She gives me some suggestions as where to go and visit in Antigua with my time off.

HOME
I watch Dr. G with Marina, but Emily wants to watch the movie right away. I tell her to wait because I want to get as much Spanish exposure that night. Emily ends up getting tired and we raincheck the movie for the night. Also she couldn’t find Rio so she chose Alvin the Chimpmunk instead. Cant say I was disappointed we didn’t watch it.

Suday June 19, 2011--drive back from Semuc

We left at 7 and stopped at McDonalds in Coban at 9:30. I finally gave in and bought peanut butter to go with my banana at a grocery store in the mall. This store was at least 10% cheaper than in Antigua. Granola bars there were 23 and at Antigua they were 28. I also got a blizzard because I have a weakness for icecream.

We stopped at the same place we got our snack at for lunch around 12:30. I got a pineapple smoothie made with milk and a half of a banana break and a pack of jelly beans. All was good except for the smoothie. Tasted like guatemalan milk and nothing else.

Got home at 4:20 and chilled until 7 when we met back up at Café Sky for dinner. There was new girl in our house from Germany so I invited her to come. I asked her what she prefers and she told me it didn’t matter Spanish or English. I forget her response but I think Ingrid told me Spanish so I went with that. But she speaks English to Chi-Chan so I am at a loss of what to use. At Café Sky I didn’t want to spend that much money so I split the nachos AGAIN but this time we through in a Quesadilla. It was the first time I have had a flour tortilla and cheddar cheese in at least 5 weeks. It was the most phenomenal thing I have ever had.

I met an alumn from U of M. Orginally from SD and did her undergrad and graduate at U of M. She taught in English in Costa Rica for the past 2 years and was swinging by Guatemala before she starts working at a Spanish Emersion school in SLP.

Saturday June 18, 2011--Trip in Semuc Chamepy--Swimming in Natural Springs, Swimming in Caves, tubing down a river,

The van picked us up and then we had to go pick up the guys for breakfast. They didn’t have electricity or water for the night. They also had to ride on top of the van to the restaurant. I don’t see why they couldn’t have just shared a seat or sat on the floor but they had fun. We ate breakfast at a restaurant. The food was ready within 10 minutes of ordering, but it all didn’t come out at once. I just had a strawberry smoothie with my granola bar. The smothie cost Q12. To get from Lanqin to Semuc Champey it was 20 km. We rode in the back of a truck to get there. It was funny to hear the driver offer the ride for Q5 when we paid $60 for the entire trip. But I was happy to have it all planned out.

First we climbed the mountain to the top to look out. The walk was a combination on rocks as steps, wooden steps (which were slippery and wet), ground/roots. It was all uphill and we all sweat profusely because it was so humid out. But the view was worth it. We could distincly see where the natural springs were and where they joined with the river which popped up randomly. The springs were clear and blue and the river was muddy.

Next we decended the mountain and got a view of the 20 foot waterfall. The water was crazy strong and there was a man that was patroling the area to make sure we didn’t get too close to the edge. We then swam in the springs in the 6 different pools. It was hilarious how slippery the rocks were. It was so hard to walk sometimes. Unfortunately some people fell and cut themselves up. To get to the different pools, we slid down some of the rocks like slides. But some were bumpier than others and hurt more. We also jumped from one pool to the other. It was only a 12 foot jump but it was slippery so it was a little worrisome. The other tour guides were running and doing punch fronts (front flips). I am very surprised they always found a grip and that they never slipped.

We then walked where there was a 35 foot waterfall. Some people were jumping off of this cliff but our guide said it was prohibited because someone got hurt a week ago and had to go to the hospital. In fact there were 3 injuries in the past week. One from the waterfall, one from jumping off the bridge, and another from jumping off the swing into the river. So our guide wouldn’t let us do the waterfall and bridge jumping which made me glad.

Next we got to go in the swing from land to the river. It launched us at least 20 feet high. But as soon as you hit the water you had to start swimming cause the current was strong. I did it 4 times and the guy never got a good picture of me. It was way to funny how bad he was at taking pictures. I could have done that for days but we had to go on our cave tour.

Our cave tour consisted of a water filled cave that was lit only by our little candles. There were also bats in this cave. We also had to swim with them at times. There was also a 10 foot waterfall in the cave that had super strong current. We had to climb ladders that were made out of small metal pipes that were wrapped in tape. If you had a misshap you could end up falling 15 feet with rocks on everyside of you.  Lets just say that it would not have been legal in the US. At the end of our tour we were able to climb a rock and jump 10 feet into the water. We only had about a 4x4 spot that was garaunteed a good spot to jump. Once again the rocks were wet. I just jumped and my feet touched the bottom which was a soft sand. This dumb Argentinian decided last second to dive and he was super close to the wall and we didn’t know if there were rocks under the surface. He even terrified the guide. We all were surprised that he came up unharmed. I accidently kicked way to many rocks because they would randomly pop up as I was swimming, but it was one of the funnest experiences of my life. Chi-Chan struggled a little bit. His candle was always out and he was always wandering by himself. He came out of the trip with a rip in his little speedo short things. Way to funny.

Final activity was a nice float down the river in intertubes for 3 km. I almost made it back with out a scratch until the last 50 feet I hit a rock with my butt. By this time it was 5:20 so we headed back to Lanqin. We all met up for dinner at 7 at the same place. We were going to try to find something new but there were no lights around the bend where we were supposed to go. The soccer game was on. It was Guatemala vs Mexico. They ended up losing which would have been their ticket into the finals of the Gold Cup. It was funny because one kid asked if there was a place to go dancing, which I have no clue why he’d ask that. They said no but they could turn on music after the game. The music they chose was clearly geared toward us and was Black Eyed Peas. We politley asked them to change it and to turn down the music. We just wanted to chill. I had nachos and pina coladas.

Our walk back was the SCARIEST thing of my life it was pitch black and I couldn’t see the road in front of my over half of the time. We just kept trying to follow the road until we saw the light of our hostel. For someone who HATES the dark and is paranoid, that 6 minute walk seemed like an eternity. Luckily there was another bug in our room I found as the other girls were brushing their teeth. It was hidden behind a shelf so I gave them warning and asked for their help. One used a paper to scare the bug out of its spot as I used their shoe to smash it. I wasn’t about to be sleeping with a 2 inch beatle in my room.

Thursday June 17, 2011--went to the Mayan school with my Grandma--field trip.

NO VOLUNTEERNG. WENT TO SCHOOL WITH MARINA INSTEAD.
I didn’t have volunteering today because the teachers at La Casa de Esperanza had an employee meeting. So I asked Marina if I could join her at work and she said yes. We left at 6:50 am to be there in time for when school starts at 7:30. We took a bus that utimately goes to Guatemala City but we only took it for 20 minutes for Q3.50. I was surprised to see a TV in the bus. We watched Fat Mama on the bus. I guess its not unusual to have TVs on the busses that have longer roots. We got dropped off at the town’s square. In the town square was the typical Church, municipal building, basketball/soccer court, fountain, and school. The school was two levels. 4 classrooms on the bottom and I am not sure how many on the top level. In the hall there were signs that the kids made in honor of those kids who don’t have the priveledge to study and who are rather working. There were signs that said the kids have a right to study and they shouldn’t be working. It was really sad because it’s the truth that kids are put to work at a young age, especilaly to target the tourist population.

She teaches 4th grade at a public school in Santa Catarina that has kids from that town and the next town over, San Antonio. These two villages are Mayan villages. There is no uniform here. Over half of the girls have traditional Mayan clothing. Each village has its own distinct pattern. All of the boys dress in Western styled clothing. There is a mixture of the Mayan language and Spanish in the classroom. For example the calander has the days and months in both languages and also a paragraph in Mayan with a different figure next to each month.  She has __ kids in her class. It was her first day back after her surgery and as soon as she got off the bus she had kids running up to her giving her hugs and kisses. It was nice to see how much the kids missed her the past two weeks.

At the beginning of each class there are 4 kids that are assigned to sweep and mop the classroom. Anything left over from the day before is left and cleaned the next day. As soon as they entered the classroom, the four kids got right to work. They didn’t even have to be asked.  

Today was a little different and they didn’t follow the normal daily schedule. First off Today was El Dia Del Padre in Guatemala so Marina had a project set up for the kids. They were to make a pop up card using 3 sheets of paper. However the kids had to provide their own paper. So during class they all left on their own time to go buy sheets of paper from a near by store. A couple kids either didn’t have money with them or couldn’t afford it so they didn’t make the card. It was really fun because I thought I would just observe but Marina asked for me to go around and help the kids out if they had questions.

They were surprised I spoke some Spanish. When they first came in the room they thought I could only speak English. It was really sweet when Marina introduced me to a few of her students at the beginning she said, Ella es mi amiga Lorena. So they didn’t know that I was living with her. One girl asked me if I was her daughter.

It was also an unsual day because they had an imprompt to field trip to ___. It is where the water source begins. There is lots of water in this village and the village relies heavily on it to make their living. This trip would never have happened in the US. There was no permission slips and no secure way to make sure all of the kids were accounted for. The kids in Marina’s class weren’t going to go because she couldn’t make the trip because her side was still delicate from surgery. They really wanted her to go and asked if she could take a tuk tuk. She said that the ride would still be too rough, plus the tuk tuk would not have gone to the beginning. So she asked me if I would go and watch out after the kids. I said for sure. I thought that it was just going to be a 5 minute walk and just our class. But the rest of the grades came too and she told me it was about a 2 kilometer walk.

To get there we walked through the cobble stone streets at first. But being that most villages are ON mountains, the walks are usually uphill. People in Guatemala that live in the mountains are very strong and tough people. Then the road turned into dirt. And along this dirt road were houses/little farms inside the house property that relied on the river for irrigation. Towards the top, the road narrowed and there was just a path wide enough for one person to walk on, which was interesting since for over 200 kids went on this field trip. On the way kids would stop at little stores/houses to buy food/drink for their snack. On the journey there, I had two girls helping me cross the more difficult parts because there were some rocks to climb. They were so happy to help me and always made sure to stay by my side. They were really sweet. Also since the beginning of the field trip I had two little boys grab onto my arms and hold on to me for the whole trip until we had to be in a single file line.

The place were we stopped that was the where water [began] was quite weird. There were all sorts of PCV pipes. Some led to where the water flowed down the mountain and others I am not sure at all. I am very confused as to their purpose.

Once we reached the top, the kids all sat down and ate their snack. Some girls asked me where my snack was. When I said I didn’t have one they immediately asked if I wanted some of theirs. I said no thanks because I wasn’t hungry because I was not used to having a snack between breakfast and lunch. When I said that in the US we only eat 3 times a day they were shocked. It was kind of funny. They just sat there and contemplated it.

When I was taking pictures, the little boy that held my arm the entire way up asked if he could take pictures. Of course I said yes and he went to town. He was loving the camera and took so many great pictures of the students and teachers for me. I really like giving the camera to children and seeing what pictures can come out of it. We stayed at the top for 20 minutes to eat. The teachers all brought bags to collect trash and emphasized that the students should through away their trash and any other trash they found on the ground. Even on the walk back they were going off the path to pick up trash. On the way down, we stopped at a part where the kids could get their feet wet and stand in the stream. Instead lots sat down and drenched themselves. Of course the water was cold so I’m surprised so many of them got in. It was cute they had a splashing fight and it was typical in the fact that there were some girls that didn’t want to get wet that became the target for splashing.

We walked back and the teachers took us on a detour that we had to climb another steep hill. It turned out to be a pretty cool view of the town and valley. We were gone for a total of 2.5 hours I think. I helped the kids finish up their cards. We went past 12:30 when class ended. Marina stayed with a few kids until we left at 12:55. The teachers themselves have to lock up the gate and ALL of the kids have to clear out of the school right away otherwise they’d get locked in. We missed the normal bus that stops at the school so we had to walk to ___ to catch the bus. This one didn’t have a TV.

I got off the bus at 1:34 and I still had to go home, eat, pack, walk to the grocery store for a gallon of water and granola bars, and be at the travel place at 2. I asked the Tawaniese kid if he could go for me to the grocery store because I was running late. Instead he sat their as I ate and didn’t move. He didn’t want to go there alone so I was trying to have him save us time and go there. Something was lost in translation because he said he’d go for me and then just sat there. I told him I was gonna run and to just meet me there. He insisted to come with me. Once we reached the intersection of the grocery store I told him one last time that Id meet him there because the travel agency was 3 blocks away. Finally he agreed to go on his own. I managed to get my gallon of water, granola bars, pineapple off a street vendor and get there all before 2.

TRAVELING TO SEMUC CHAMPEY
There were all kids there I didn’t know ,but all from La Union. It was funny because I was the one that organized the trip and just asked some randoms to come and they all brought their friends so it ended up being a group of 11 on the trip. There were two 18 year old girls from Quebec; 3 college students from Michgan who were Free Baptists; 1 guy from California who was 25 and going to medical school in the fall--He was a jewish persian that was born in Iran; a 20 year old and 17 year old brother and sister from North Carolina; 19 year old who graduated high school in 2009 who did a 5th year of high school in Chile and now goes to Brown; and 33 year old Chi-Chan from Tawain. Quite the crowd.

We left Antigua at 2:20 and arrived in Lanqin at 11:20 with a little over an hour of stops. We stopped at a gas station where I bought an icecream bar and jelly beans. We also stopped in Coban at a mall. We all ate at Pollo Campero. I had lasagna because Paty always has it when she goes there and I split Tangas with Candice.  Tangas are basically little calzones without sauce in them that you dip in sauce. It was a little bit of a disaster because we were supposed to be in and out in 30 minutes but I didn’t get my food until 5 mintues before we were supposed to be in the car, which was a 5 minute walk. So I ate my tangas and took the lasagna to go. It wasn’t bad, but there was nothing great about it. It was the first time in a long time I had stringy melted cheese. Usually its dry and not normal. The drive was a little bit on the painful side because the seats weren’t comfortable and the last 45 minutes we probably were going 20 mph because the road was SO bumpy. It also was really hard to sleep because the roads were so windy.

We got to our place in the middle of the woods. As soon as the guy opens our door there is a 4 inch spider on my bed and the girls I am rooming with are screaming. They were so paranoid about bugs that one slept with her hood over her head. The guys stayed in a different hotel. The other bed we had to sleep in was in a room with a random french guy so two of the girls were nice enough to share a twin bed so I could sleep in their room rather than with a random. It was an interesting set up because the wall didn’t meet the roof so bugs could crawl in if they wanted and also there were no sound and light barriers between the 4 rooms. We had a little wash station with good toilets and shower, however we lacked SOAP. Of course that wasn’t great for me being a germaphobe. The other girls in my room didn’t sleep well because they thought it was too hot and they told me I passed out w

Thursday June 16, 2011

VOLUNTEERING:
Today the kids decorated a tie with finger paint as the second part of the father’s day gift. Since I couldn’t find varnish for the key chain, they just made their finger print in blue paint on the block of wood and on the othe side it said Te Amo (I love you). I thought it was really cute. The teachers made most of it. Only kid involvement was saying their fathers name and using their finger as the decoration.

NEED TO WRITE ABOUT THE GOOD VOLUNTEERS
NAME TAG
Frame
Story moi scared
Fake snow


SPANISH CLASS:
We went to the market because I had a few errands to do and I didn’t want to do them by myself because I get lost way to easily. I needed a Universal Charger, blank CDs, Spanish music, and coconut candy. I got a charger for Q35 instead of Q295 or Q370 that the other stores were charging. I bought so many coconut treats: coconut and sweetened condensed milk, toasted coconut balls, coconut and pineapple balls, and another kind I can’t remember. I bought two CDs for Q15, I think was overpriced a wee bit but I didn’t want to try another place. Finally I got my 2 blank CDs for Q4 each. We also walked through the artisan’s market for the first time. I bought some postcards for friends. It was raining so as an excuse to try Pollo Campero and not to walk home in the rain, I asked if we could stop in since it was super close to the market. It was strange because if you wanted to eat in, you had to sit down and order your food as if it was an actual restaurant and pay at the table. I got a crispy chicken sandwhich and fries. The sandwhich was quality but would’ve tasted better had it been a wee bit hotter. We also went to the bank to exchange some money. However Paty forgot she had to deposit her money too so we took a trip back while it was raining.

HOME
Nothing special that I can remember. I forgot to Journal for a while. I know that I was lame and called it quits early and went to sleep. I had the opportunity to go out with Kristen but I didn’t know when and where and I didn’t think the texting was reliable with the time I received the text at between the time she sent it at. Les wanted to go out and asked me but I decided know.