Saturday, December 29, 2012

Christmas on the Coast


My last blog post of 2012 (weirdddd!)…and it happens to be my 12th blog (I think), love that J Well, tis the season to be jolly, fa la la J I am back in Sipili and wanted to tell you about my Christmas on the coast! I traveled 16 hours or so via matatu and bus to get to Kilifi where Deirdre, a deaf ed volunteer, lives now. A total of 6 of us, 5 deaf ed and one math/science volunteers met up for the holidays. On Christmas Eve we hung out at a friends house by the beach who Deirdre knows, some guy from England, and it was a lot of fun! Christmas Eve is also Mackenzie’s Birthday who lives in Malindi, a coastal town about 45 minutes away. We had great food, some drinks and just relaxed. I don’t think I could’ve done much more than that after the long day of traveling so it worked out well.
Christmas Day I had wanted to run but the coast is sooooo hot!! I have no idea what the temperature is but I’m sweating every day, all day if that helps a little. It’s just hot all the time-morning through the night and there is no air conditioner to retreat to haha.
We headed down to the beach early in the morning and met up with a Swedish family that comes to Kenya for a month every year. Their family started this tradition of swimming across a small segment of the Indian Ocean (they call it a creek but it is about 50 times larger than any creek I’ve encountered) and back about 7 years ago. The original swim was done to raise money for malaria and now they just do it every year because it wakes them up and feels great. I was not as amped to do this swim as I would’ve rather run to the other side but it was too hot and I didn’t know where to go haha. I am not a swimmer at all and although lots of my cousins and siblings are swimmers, I didn’t get that gene…however, I did the whole thing!! YOLO J (You Only Live Once!) I was swimming in total for about an hour and 15 minutes perhaps? The water was incredibly warm and I think that was probably at least 5 times the length of any distance I’ve ever swam consecutively and that was from way back when during elementary school swim lessons in the summer! I did do some aqua-jogging as well while reminiscing about our early JCXC morning swims but the water was def never that warm! 
After our swim we headed back, ate some spaghetti lunch (I think I’m going to hit a record of consecutive days eating spaghetti-I might be 7 for 8 days right now!), and then just relaxed for a bit. Around 4 we headed down to the dock where another one of Deirde’s new friends met us and he took us out on the water on his boat. It was so incredibly beautiful! We saw a lot of mangroves, awesome birds I don’t know the name of, tons and tons of white jellyfish and a sweet sunset over the water! It was pretty amazing!
My day ended on a great note because I got to skype with both my family and Nate! It was hard at some points during the day when we would be reminded that it was Christmas but when we were weren’t thinking about it, it wasn’t too bad because it didn’t feel anything like Christmas at all. I was sweating, getting tan, swimming, surrounded by lush greenery and I was thousands of miles from my family-the very opposite of every Christmas I’ve ever had. It was really good to chat with everyone and see faces though!! It made me really thankful to have the support I have been blessed with!!!! Thank you!!! J
The day after Christmas we decided to treat ourselves. We went to this resort place where you pay a flat rate to swim all day and eat a buffet lunch. It was sooooo surreal!! It didn’t feel like we were in Kenya…or in the Peace Corps! Haha it was a really nice getaway and time to hang out. We did the water aerobics class in the morning for half an hour and relaxed by the pool. We decided that going once or twice a year would be a wonderful way to indulge ourselves and have a break. I have only been to a few places like that before and it always feels a bit peculiar because it’s so unlike places I normally go to. It was a really nice way to relax and take a breather from the craziness of everything here and prepare ourselves to teach!
The whole break was a lot of fun and super good to talk and see the other volunteers!! I think that was the best part because we’d only been at our sites for one week but it felt like a long week. We’d gone from seeing each other for at least 9-10 hours every day and spending most of our waking moments surrounded by other volunteers and our host families to being totally on our own. It was great to talk with the 5 girls and know that we were all going through the same emotions. We talked about how it’s awesome to be on our own but there is so much we have to learn about our communities and since the students aren’t there for another week it can get kinda lonely at site now. We are trying to make friends but it is tough stuff. It’ll get easier though and once the students are back I’ll have my hands full.
I hope everyone had grrrreat holidays and continue to do so!!!
Merrrrry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone!!! J
Kisses from Kenya,
Lizbeth
p.s. I took lots of pictures but I wont be able to post any until I have my first break or go somewhere with my computer where I have faster internet, here in Sipili I can upload one or two but it takes a little bit. Hakuna Matata

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

From Machakos to Sipili...I'm an Official Volunteer!!!


Wow! So this time last week I was in Machakos sitting around with my host family pondering what site would be like and super excited for the new adventure. On Wednesday we left Machakos after a fun host family appreciation luncheon and headed for Nairobi. In Nairobi we were with the Math/Science group once again and had a fabulous time! We had sessions all day on Thursday going over stuff that our supervisors and stuff that we needed to know before we headed out into the real peace corps life. They also gave us a little bit of free time each evening to go to the mall area…mind blown. We visited the Westgate Mall, which has sooo many stores it was like America. It was packed with so many foreigners along with Kenyans and so many things that we hadn’t seen in 10 weeks! I ate a sub: amazing!, chocolate gelato: expensive but worth it if I only have it once/twice every year and then at the Nakumatt (basically their version of Walmart) I saw so much stuff I hadn’t seen in a long time! Nakumatt is part of the mall and packed with stuff. Now granted we are now living on Peace Corps stipend which means not very much at all and since most ‘Americanized’ items available are very expensive, you have to choose wisely when special trips to Nairobi or other large cities are made. I invested in some quality face wash, laughing cow cheese and the gelato. Wednesday when I went with some of the other Deaf Ed volunteers it was very funny thinking about our experience in retrospect because we walked around for one hour before we had to head back and the entire time our jaws were dropped and we were walking sooooooo slowly! We just hadn’t seen anything like it in 2 months and I at least didn’t think I would see something like that for the 27 months I was in Kenya. Eye opening for sure.
Friday was swearing in-such a fun day!!!  We drove to the USA Embassy with our supervisors and had a nice ceremony followed by a picnic sort of lunch-fantastic! They had arranged for a dance group of about 6 ladies and 2-3 drummers to come and play/dance for us and they were awesome and got everyone involved at some point. It just felt very surreal to actually be sworn in as an official Peace Corps Volunteer. I’m no longer a trainee! Say whatttt?! Post swearing-in we all headed back to AFRALTI, our hotel place and I got my head shaved as a buzz cut! I’d been thinking about it before leaving saying that I wanted dreadlocks for a year and then I’d shave them off so I could experience that and what a shaved head was like all while being away from America. Sadly there is a negative connotation associated with dreadlocks in my community so I just went for the shaved head look now. Another girl in the Math/Science group also wanted to do it and Jocelyn, Deaf Ed, later decided to that evening. I was kinda nervous beforehand but pretty ready for it and now I love it. It’s sooooo easy to wash/not mess with in the morning/run with and not have to worry if I don’t have a hair band! The only thing I’m worried about now is what it’ll look like when it grows out because I don’t have any sort of barber who has dealt with ‘mizungu’ hair before. Oh well, I’ll get to that when my hair is long enough. After my hair was shaved I headed out to the mall with Jocelyn and Mackenzie because they both wanted ear piercings and I was on the fence it but went along anyways. I soon found out it wouldn’t cost very much at all and I was feeling pretty bold at this point since I was a new volunteer with a newly shaved head, so why not make the trifecta? I now have an ear piercing at the top of my left ear! Friday was full of highs with the finale just being everyone hanging out and trying to soak in all the volunteer time they could before we’d all become separated from one another.
Saturday was a different story. I woke up after not much sleep pretty early to start saying good byes as everyone left at different times. My matatu left at about 8 stuffed to the brim with my stuff, Vince’s stuff, Vince, our 2 supervisors and me. His supervisor called ahead about a matatu to pick us up at the hotel but didn’t think about all of our stuff and so there wasn’t enough room for him to come in the same matatu as us. He caught the next one and met us in Nyahururu 45 minutes after we arrived. After my stuff was taken from the matatu and put onto a cart that some man pulled for us to the next matatu stage we boarded the 2nd matatu of the day to head to Sipili. Vince and his supervisor left us there as they boarded a different matatu to Marlal. It was during this ride that I started to fully realize that I was on my own now. I didn’t know of any volunteers sharing my banking town and I knew there wasn’t another volunteer in Sipili since the Math/Science volunteer didn’t get replaced. I started to get really nervous after we got to Sipili and allllll of my stuff was put on the back of a piki piki (motorcycle) to be driven while we walked to my school compound, my new home and I saw the tons and tons of people everywhere since it was market day! Eeeeek!!! Thankfully lunch calmed me down.
I am currently staying in a small house in the compound but across from the actual house I’ll be living in. It still needs to be painted and some other stuff is still being worked on as well. The hope is that I can move in once I get back from my small trip for Christmas. Fingers crossed!
Sunday was a dream come true/an odd day. All of the stores were closed and we’d gotten to Sipili around maybe 4:30 on Saturday, eaten lunch and then I just relaxed-didn’t buy anything. I got a nice 30 min run in and then with the exception of walking around/exploring the town to see if anything was open, I stayed in my house literally just watching movies on my laptop and eating the chocolate my parents had sent me that I’d wanted to save until I got to site. WIN!
These past few days have been good. I’ve gotten a lot of relaxing in, read a book, watched some movies and am trying to learn my way around town. I explored my banking town, Nyahururu, a 2 hour matatu ride away, for the first time today. I was pretty scared because it’s sooo much bigger than Sipili and I didn’t know if I was ready to go or not. I don’t go to cities in America very often and after being with 8 other Americans and told not to go anywhere by ourselves in Machakos I was a little nervous. Hakuna matata, I made it safely through my journey and got everything I wanted: food, money (the main reason I had to go since I have to pay for all of my furniture but I didn’t have any money to order/buy it), a sweeeet mask I’m excited about and paint so I can spruce up my house with a little color once I’m allowed to move in!!
Overall, things in Sipili are going well. This weekend I’m traveling with a fellow volunteer, Britni, down to the coast to stay with Deirdre and 2 other volunteers who live on the coast to celebrate Christmas! It is going to be a loooooong travel day since the average it takes me to get to Nairobi is 5-6 hours and then after I meet up with Britni and we take a bus together that they say averages at least 10 hours…yay? But its totally going to be worth the time and money because it means I wont be alone on Christmas. It’s going to be really strange I have a feeling but it’ll be nice to see familiar faces, watch Christmas movies with other Americans, eat delicious food and spend time together before the school year starts!
I’m sending all of you lots and lots of love and Merry Christmas’s!!!!!
Love and kisses,
Zabet
(not sure if I wrote about this in a blog yet but this is my new nickname here, pronounced ‘Zah-bet’) J

Saturday, December 8, 2012

One More Week of Training!


Week 9 of training is completed and I have one week to go! The big news from this past week was that we had our language final on Monday. I kind of nervous since our test was on KSL and they told us that if we used ASL it might take down our score a little bit. We had been taught KSL for the past 8 weeks but during model school we didn’t get much language practice and a lot of the students there use a big mixture of ASL with KSL. However, all worked out in the end and all nine of us passed with an Intermediate score or higher. Intermediate was what we needed to pass and that was what I got-I’m happy! If we didn’t pass then we wouldn’t be sent home but we would be put on probation I believe and would have to get tutoring hours while at site. Now I just gotta learn the village sign and the ASL that my students use J
My only other news is that I got my first dress made for me and now I have something a bit fancier to wear besides the 7 outfits I’ve been wearing for the past 9 weeks for our swearing in ceremony! It’s got a zebra print and it’s a pale yellow with black stripes/zebras….hard to explain but I’ll post pictures at some point of swearing in and then you’ll see it J
Other than that, most of our sessions this week were fine. Everyone is ready to be done with lectures and go to site. Next week we leave our host families on Tuesday, have our host family appreciation lunch with all the families in Machakos on Wednesday and then we head out for Nairobi on Wednesday afternoon. I’m sad to be leaving my family but glad to know that I can come visit them on my breaks. They said anyone that comes to visit me is more than welcome to visit Machakos so they can meet you! We will then meet up with our supervisors once in Nairobi and have some sessions on last minute details we might need to know for the next day and a half. The big day is Friday when we will be sworn in as volunteers!!!!!!! Can’t even believe it!! Then Saturday we all head out in the morning for our sites…on matatus…with alllllll of our stuff…just us and our supervisors-who we’ve just met…for potentially loooong trips…to our new homes for the next 2 years! WHOA!! Let the craziness ensue!
Also, this means I have a new address which I updated on the side if you want to send me mail J

Monday, December 3, 2012

Model School


Model school was last week! Whooop Whooop! Model School meaning that Peace Corps was trying to help stimulate a real-life school setting for us for one week. Peace Corps asked Machakos School for the Deaf if some of their students would be willing to stay at school for one additional week of school so we could practice teaching them and make it as real as possible. They just finished school but the headmaster picked 10 students from grades 4,5 & 6 along with 15 9th & 10th graders for the guys in our group who will be teaching at a secondary school. We had 2 volunteers who have completed one year of service and 2 who are about to finish their service who agreed to help out the whole week as well as 4 Kenyan teachers who normally teach the classes we were teaching.
Monday we observed the volunteers and Kenyan teachers and made our lesson plans. We then taught a total of 7 classes (35 min/class) over the next 3 days on various topics/subjects. We taught science, math, English or social studies. It went better than I thought it would since I still don’t feel like I have a wide range of KSL vocabulary and seeing as it was my first time ever teaching a class! The students at Machakos School are so incredibly smart and since we were doing lessons on topics they had just covered that year it also made it easier. I know I’m going to have my work cut out for me when I go to site to start teaching but this stimulation definitely helped. I’m going to have lessons go really well sometimes and also have lesson plans that I feel good about but then go horribly wrong. It’s a learning process and I’m getting more excited about teaching each day.

On a different note,, two weekends ago I went to my first Kenyan wedding…reception. It was about 10:30 am on a Saturday when I get a knock on my door from Whiney (Moosami’s mom, my Mamas one daughter who lives with us). She asked me what plans I had for the day and I didn’t have much except purifying my water and washing my clothes…I know, my weekends are craaaaaazy here! She invited me a wedding she was attending….in 1.5 hours. Haha no biggie. I tell her I don’t know what to wear and end up in jeans and blouse since she told me I could and I don’t have any real special occasion clothing, plus I figured I’m going to stand out either way. We left 2.5 hours later (Kenyan time as usual) and were driven about 15 minutes to a theological college where the wedding was being held. The wedding ceremony was supposed to start at 9 I think but she guessed that it started at least an hour later. Whiney had decided that we would miss the actual ceremony because they were usually pretty boring and since it was just the 2 of us plus her son who is 4 and Mumbi who is 11, it wasn’t worth it I guess.
We arrived about 10 minutes before the ceremony finished and got to see everyone taking pictures galore! There was a wide range of fancy dress and it was fun to see. After pictures everyone filed into 3 tents that were set up with chairs in maybe 4-5 rows-no tables except one for the bridal party. We started by eating a good meal of 1 chapatti, stew, one banana, pilau and a coleslaw type salad. We ate while the bride and groom took more pictures. When they came back everyone stood up and started dancing behind them and following them into the reception area. It was high energy and a lot of fun to watch. There was a little more dancing to follow while the bride and groom ate their lunch. A few speeches were given then it was time to cut the cake. This was crazy to me how many people got fed in this process…..ok so the bride fed the groom and vice versa. Then the bride fed the maid of honor and then the groom fed his best man. Next the bride & groom walked over to her parents and fed them and then they did the same for his parents. After that they walked back and cut more so that the groomsmen could walk around and give bite size (about quarter-size) pieces to every guest. The first 2 rows got a piece actually cut from the cakes on the table and then the 4 rows behind that got a piece that was in a little baggie with a ribbon tied around it. It looked like so much work! After all the guests were fed the bridesmaids and groomsmen each got a piece as well. The last thing was the presentation of gifts from the parents and maybe grandparents, I couldn’t quite tell. Everyone else put their gifts on a table but the parents each came forward with their wrapped gift and handed it to the bride and groom while a picture was taken with everyone’s hand on it. It was funny because after the first gift Whiney leaned over and said that back in the day it was crazy because some parents would buy mattresses and bed frames and have them carried in but they don’t do that any more….all of a sudden what’s brought in? A queen or king size mattress and all the pieces to make a bed frame…Hahaha we laughed and deiced maybe it does still happen.
The reception was pretty much over after that and people cleared out pretty fast. I found out that it was a smaller wedding than most though it looked like a medium/big wedding to me. Also, in towns crashing weddings, like I was doing, is pretty common but not that many people do it whereas in villages it is very common and they have to plan for tons of extra people who weren’t invited. The last interesting tidbit is who the bride and groom are…now I still don’t know their names, I tried to ask but got no answer, but I found out that they are both members of the Navigators Club…which I think is the same one my brother is in at Penn State!! The one director of the club was there and he said he had connections at Penn State and that there are a lot of Navigator groups based all throughout Kenya and Africa! I just thought that was pretty cool J

HIV/AIDS Week


(I wrote this blog last week but had no Internet access to post it until now but it is really about 18. Nov- 24. Nov)

The week’s theme: HIV/AIDS.
National World AIDS Day: 1st. December.

The Math/Science Trainees who we hadn’t seen since the first week of training when we spent 4 days with them came down to Machakos for all of last week so we could learn about HIV/AIDS together. We are all educators but we also are all ‘Behavior Change Communicators’. That basically means we are going to try and help our school communities and communities as a whole with some of their behaviors that could change for the better. We aren’t going to change any villages in big ways but we learned how we could help in little ways to educate others and do what we can. We learned a lot about HIV & AIDS and thought I’d share some of knowledge with you.


Fast Facts on the Global Overview of HIV/AIDS Pandemic from ’09:
- # of people living with HIV (not AIDS in ’09): 33.3 Million
- # of kids (age 15 and younger) living with HIV (not AIDS in ’09): 2.5 Million
- # of deaths due to AIDS (in ‘09): 1.8 Million
- # of orphans due to AIDS (in ’09): 16.6 Million
- #of new infections of HIV/day (in ’09): 7,000
- # of newly infected individuals in 2009: 2.6 Million

Fast Facts on HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Kenya (2009):
- # of people with HIV aged between 15 and 49: 1.5 Million
- 22% of Kenyans are aware of their partner’s HIV status
- ½ of those surveyed reported having unprotected sex with people whose status was unknown to them or with partners who were of a discordant status
- The prevalence rate for people between the ages of 15-49: 6.3%
- # of orphans due to AIDS (aged 0-17): 1.2 Million

The law: Section 24 of the HIV & AIDS Prevention and Control Act criminalizes the willful or reckless infection of others with HIV. People who know they have the virus are required to divulge that information to their sexual partners. Those found guilty of knowingly putting others at risk of infection are liable to a jail term of up to 7 years or a 500,000 shilling fine,

Kenya as a country is doing better than many other countries in Africa but there is still a lot of work to be done. The first reported case of HIV in Kenya was in ‘84/’85. Kenya is hoping that by 2015 they will prevent the majority of babies from becoming HIV+ from their mothers. They are trying to prevent mother to child transmission by promoting C-sections if the mother is positive. They are also trying to encourage people to get tested in the first place so they can accept their results and get the help they need.

We had a big session on stigmas associated with HIV/AIDS and became more informed on the topic so we could assist others. People stigmatize out of ignorance, fear, stereotypes and other reasons. Self-stigmatization is the worst kind and people have self-blame, avoid company, hide their illness, have a negative attitude and often avoid HIV services. As NEPHAK says, (an organization helping people living with HIV/AIDS in Kenya) “Let us replace shame with solidarity and fear with hope”!

The last big session of the week was about real people living in Kenya who are trying to help others with situations like their own. We watched a movie called ‘Courage and Hope: Teachers Living with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa’. It was initially a book and now they made it into a movie as well-its pretty good!! The book looks into 12 teachers live and the movie looks closely into a handful of the people mentioned in the book. It is about 40 min long and very encouraging! The best part of the session though was after watching the movie. We learned that two of the ladies in the movie had agreed to come in and talk to us some more. Jemimiah and Beldina are both teachers whose lives have been changed by HIV but have decided to advocate for people like them and go around talking at schools and in communities to educate others.
Jemimiah is a teacher by profession but now works in the Teacher Service Commission (TSC). She specifically works on the workplace policy for people living with HIV/AIDS. There are an estimated 18,000 teachers living with HIV in Kenya though only 3,500 teachers have been tested positive. The estimation was based off of the # of adults affected and the number of adults that are teachers so the estimation is rough but they know that either way, many teachers are affected but have not been tested. There are policies in place that help teachers but only if they have been tested and can prove that they are positive. The policies include: getting provisions to attend clinics for check ups/picking up refills; extra sick days if needed; fair labor practices ; if headmaster stigmatizes teacher then they get reprimanded and there are others but it comes down to the fact that these only help the teachers who have gotten tested. The biggest thing they say right now is promoting everyone to get tested! Also, Kenya as a whole does have an increased number of people on ARVs (Anti-retroviral medication) and more people have access to getting the drugs they need but there is still a lot of help needed in that situation.
Beldina says that we can fight stigma with following 4 steps:
  1. Know your HIV status
  2. Accept your results
  3. Disclosure (relieves you of the burden of secrecy)
  4. Have a NEW START in life! (NEW START being an acronym for: nutrition, exercise, water, sun light, temperament, acceptance, rest and treatment)
If you follow these steps than stigma won’t stand a chance! Kabam!

So besides learning all about HIV/AIDS we got to celebrate Thanksgiving together! My friend Jocelyn and I decided to start our mornings off by running a ‘Turkey Trot’ since it is tradition with our families. Not exactly the same but still solid. We then had regular sessions before our feast! Some members of our group talked to the hotel where we had sessions and came up with a plan. They very kindly agreed to cook us up a Kenyan Thanksgiving dinner with a list that we gave them, We had turkey-which I’m guessing was free range and local since we’re in Kenya-mashed potatoes, veggies and cranberry sauce which looked like gravy. It was better than I had imagined it! A solid transition from an American Thanksgiving into a Kenyan version….especially since I can’t see eating that good next year when I’m at my site. The food and company made it a little easier not having a Lindenhof turkey, pumpkin/apple pie and canned cranberry sauce. It was also great to be surrounded by American friends even though I missed the chaos of a beautiful Linde Thanksgiving full of ‘Merican football & soccer, lots of eating, talk of relationships and who will be the next to wed and tons and tons of laughter. It’ll make me that much more excited in 2 years when I can experience it again at home J
Also, lastly, I wanted to say CONGRATS CONGRATS to my sister Bek Bek on a wonderful performance at Miss Solanco which was the Saturday after Thanksgiving….You’re the best and I’m sad I missed it but I can’t wait to see pictures/videos!!!!!….she is the new Miss Solanco and I’m related to her! Way to represent! Win!! ;)

Monday, November 12, 2012

Lost in the Dust....an incredible experience.


Yesterday I accomplished something that I didn’t know was possible a month ago or at least I didn’t think I’d be able to do for quite some time here…I ran a race in Kenya and it was quite the experience J
I had seen the advertisements for the race just a few days after being in Machokos but I didn’t get my hopes up because I didn’t know if I’d have the time or be allowed to run here at all. A few weeks later I found out from my Mama that I could run in the mornings but I wasn’t allowed out of the house until 5:50 which meant my training consisted of maybe 3 miles 3-4 times/week with a 4 miler thrown in there on occasional Sundays for a total of 3 weeks prior to the race. I didn’t care though because at least I was running! The day after I started running I asked the people at the booth how much, where and when the race was. I like how race signing up works because they set up booths outside of the supermarket that was sponsoring the race and then from Friday-Monday each week they’d be ready to sign people up. They were there for multiple weeks leading up the race and then the entire week before the race. The cause was educating HIV/AIDS orphans and the cost was 850 shillings. Not too shabby.
Yesterday was race day and I left my house at 5:45 (since I have morning curfew as well as an evening one) and headed out. I had finally coaxed the answer out of the booth people as to when the race started (they kept telling me it was early in the morning. What does that mean? I didn’t want to miss the race and they told me I wouldn’t –I should just get there early). The final answer I got was 7am and that it was at the Golf Club (which also took some coaxing). I headed out with Jocelyn, one of my PC volunteer neighbors and we arrived there around 6:20. There was maybe 30 other people there and they all looked sooooo legit. Suffice to say, I thought I was not only going to come in last, but I was going to be last by maybe 10 minutes! Jocelyn and I were joking around and she was taking pictures of my competition when a man came up and started chatting with us. He was super nice and asked where we were from and he told us where he was from and then got a little into his training that he does. He’s from Turkana (wayyyy up north) but trains in Rift Valley. He is working on his half marathon right now but next year he plans on starting up with full marathons. He’s been running is whole life (he’s mid-late twenties I’d guess) but seriously began training in 2006. The place in Rift Valley where he trains he said is full of foreigners training and that it is the perfect place for it. They do tempo, fartleks, hills, long distance and it’s at elevation. I felt cool knowing the lingo haha. So we’re just chatting along and I know he must be decent because of what he’s said already when Joceyln asks him where he got his shoes. We were curious because we wanted to know where we would be able to get them. He looks down and says ‘Oh, these are my racing shoes, my friend won Boston and gave them to me”. Well dang. He then follows this up by asking my 10k time (he was running the 21k but had been running 10k’s before starting with 21ks). He says, ya know, a good time for a lady is 33, 34, 35ish…yeah my time isn’t quite there haha.  My best time-when I was highly in shape and training more than the 15 miles/week was 43 something! He was supportive and happy I was running and told me I should try and beat 50 minutes today. I found out his 10k PR is a solid 28:18, nothing big with a 1:04 half marathon time…find a super fast Kenyan runner: check!
He ran off then, never did catch his name though he told us it was on the internet seeing as he’e been in the top 10 in races in Tanzania, Mombasa, Nairobi.
So it’s nearing 7am by this point and I still don’t have a chest number because the officials aren’t anywhere to be seen. They pull in around 6:50 and have the table set up by 7. I make it to the line but forgot my registration receipt because in America, you don’t need it. Well I had a new destination for my warm up and I just crossed my fingers I’d get back in time. I ran 10-15 minutes to town, grabbed an autorickshaw (they only go on one road in Machakos so I couldn’t get one the whole way) and had my Mama meet me on the road by our house with my receipt where I got it and rode/ran back. 30 minutes later I was in the line and very thankful for Kenyan time! The race started around 7:50 and it was crazy!! I was doing the 10k which was the first race and there was maybe 35 women with maybe triple the men. They gave the directions all in Kiswahili and then the gun went off. They sprinted dead out. I was lost in the dust. Honestly, it was nuts. So there I am singing to myself and just amazed that I’m in Kenya running a race when I realized I wasn’t last and I was getting to see a lot of Machakos that I’d never seen before. It was almost an out and back course with a small loop near the end; one water stop and when we passed the mark to turn around you dipped your finger in paint so that you couldn’t cheat by turning around early. A nice course minus the fact that the was lots of pollution from the vehicles driving by.
Overall, I ended up finishing 22nd out of 35 women and beating a few men-some of them were even running-not just walking! Yahooo! Jocelyn, Carla and Jay came to watch and cheer me and it was great! I also got a lot of ‘Ayyy Mizungu’ (Mizungu being foreigner) while running since it was totally on the highway and plenty of people were out walking to church. I think that because I went in there knowing that I wasn’t going to PR or win, I could just take in the scenery and people; it was really neat! However, the competitor in me after running XC for 8 years can’t wait to actually train while I’m at site so I’m more prepared and confident.
Also, just throwing it out there but as more motivation for people to come visit me…if you do, then maybe we can run a race together! ;) Hahaha think about it! 

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Sipili Shadowing...I know my site!!


Hello friends! I have very exciting news!!!! We were recently told where our sites will be for the next 2 years AND I was lucky and got to see my site during our volunteer shadowing last week!! I will be at Sipili School for the Deaf J
Last Sunday to Thursday we all shadowed various volunteers who are currently doing Deaf Education or Secondary Math/Science depending on what we’re here to do. It was so educational, interesting and helpful!
Sunday I traveled and it was a long day-I left my house at 8 am and arrived at Jenny’s house at 7:30 pm! I started my journey by riding on my first Kenyan bus. The buses and matatus (14-16 passenger vans) are main sources of transportation here but can be tough sometimes because you have to wait for them to fill up before they’ll leave. Therefore, it can take you much longer to travel because you have an infinite amount of waiting time to add in wherever you want to go. My experience also included someone standing in the front of the bus preaching in Kiswahili the whole 30 minutes because they figure they have a whole group of people who can’t go anywhere and have to listen to you. That’s one to do it.
I also traveled on 2 matatus and while on the one going from Nairobi to Nyahururu I saw my first herd of zebras in the wild!!! It was soooo coool! Sadly, I didn’t get to snap any photos because I was in the middle of the back row and first off, I didn’t want to just whip my camera out but also, no one else was fazed by the sight of them. Oh well, it was exciting!!
So my town of Sipili is 56 km (2 hour matatu ride) from the city where I have to go for my banking (Nyahururu) with the last 8 km (from my post office in Kinamba to Sipili) being pretty much off the road. The trip to my post office can take anywhere from 35 min to an hour even though it is only 8km…looks like I might be running there occasionally since I’d probably get there faster J
Jenny, the volunteer who I will be replacing and shadowed all week, and Jessica, the Secondary Math/Science volunteer who is done in December as well, met us (myself, Vince and Madeline-2 math/science trainees) in Nyahururu and took us to Sipili. On Monday I got to go to the school where I will be teaching next year! It is a boarding school with 75 students enrolled currently and 7 teachers I believe. There are 2 teachers for the little ones (K-3rd grade) and then 5 teachers for the 4th-8th graders. They teach KSL, English, Math, Science, CRE (Christian Religious Ed.), P.E. and Social Studies, which they split among all the teachers. Each class is 40 minutes with a little more than an hour for lunch and a break in the morning.
The students are so funny, bright and happy! I know I still have a lot of KSL to learn but communicating with them just a little bit was great! Every time I didn’t know a word they would fingerspell, point to things, get a dictionary out, ask an older student or make wild gestures trying to get their point across while being extremely patient with me the whole time!
After classes were over I had one of the coolest experiences ever! Jenny had started a running club at their school and so now three times a week they all go out and run this loop. The loop is 3km long. Monday we ran it twice and Tuesday once. All the kids got changed and were laughing and loving my outfit. I wear these crazy striped capri pants underneath purple or green soccer shorts with a t-shirt on top and if it’s raining, my BRIGHT pink/yellow/blue rain jacket. Now, I have to wear the spandex because my shorts are too short (even though they basically go to my knee-don’t wanna be too risqué and the jacket (in case I get pneumonia or malaria or some other disease that is contagious? If caught running in the rain w/o it). The kids loved it. We did maybe 3 minutes of stretching and then probably 20-30 students with Jenny and me all took off together. It was FANTASTIC!!! The kids were just smiling and having a good time-I had runners high for sure-and not even just because we were at a higher elevation ;)
The other interesting part was that the Peace Corps had told us beforehand that we should cover any tattoo we had before the community got acclimated to us in case they didn’t like it. I asked Jenny if I should before school and she said the kids would enjoy it and the staff wouldn’t even notice it. She was absolutely right! The kids ate it up and I was glad because running + love are 2 signs I know well J They were so excited to run with me after seeing it! The best was on Wednesday though when we were about to leave and one of the Standard (grade) 6 boys, Patrick, came up to me and showed me his leg. He had drawn on a runner tattoo on his leg like mine!!! He had a huge smile and just stood there with his leg next to mine. I feel so lucky that I’m with these kids for the next 2 years and I plan on getting plenty of kilometers in with them before I leave.
Our last day of shadowing we celebrated Halloween by carving a pumpkin! We all drew one aspect of the face on it and then Madeline and I carved it with a leatherman; I only cut myself once! We also made guacamole (which with fresh-off-the-tree avocados is delicious!! And I’m pretty sure will become a staple food while I’m at site) with fried eggs & onions and then we put it all on a chapatti=yum! The cherry on top of our dinner was mac and cheese. Cheese is really only available if you buy it processed and even that can be really tricky to find apparently. We were able to have this rare and scrumptious delicacy because Jenny found it in one of the larger cities grocery stores and had saved it until now. Score!
My trip ended on a high note when I got to see more zebras and gazelles for the first time! Still no pictures were captured but I’m sure in the next 2 years I’ll be able to take some, no worries J It was a great experience overall and it has made me super excited to go and teach these kids! I’m still uber-nervous as well but after seeing the kids and my town, I’m more thrilled than scared, yay!
I hope everyone is having a great beginning of November-there was a meteor shower last night (Monday) so maybe you can catch the ending of it tonight. Also, don’t forget that Kenya doesn’t do daylight savings time so we are now at 8 hours difference. 
Love to all and don’t forget to send me updates of your lives since none of you have blog updates I can check out…
Lots of Kisses from Kenya,
Elizabeth

p.s. I’ll update my address next week and that’ll be the one to send things to from then on out! 

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Church, Milkshakes, Life Skills and Exercising :)


Well I don’t know where to start because I feel like I’ve seen and learned so much this week but I’ll try to hit the highlights.
Let’s see, sessions have been really good. This week we had a lot of KSL (Kenyan Sign Language) as well classes about lesson plans and schemes of work. There was also some on coping skills and learning about the Deaf culture. Interesting stuff!

And speaking of interesting, I went to church for the first time here with my Host Mama! It was pretty great-an experience for sure. Parts of it were longer than I was expecting but overall good. It was 2.5 hours but thankfully she took me to the English service. Most churches here have one service in English and then another in Kiswahili and sometimes one in Mother Tongue. It was a protestant church called African Inland Church and there was a full congregation! The singing was uplifting, loud and powerful! The preacher was similar with a real passion for the Lord and just a love of his church and everything around him!
The only weird part came at the end. The preacher kept talking about a visitor that was coming, this professor, who was running late (Kenyan time for sure) and showed up near the end of the service. So after the benediction the preacher introduced him, his wife and the 5-6 other people that came with them. I think his wife had gone to university in Machakos and they loved the place. They talked about how they weren’t asking for money but that they had come because they wanted to greet everyone and see how they worshipped. Well that was fine until he subtly put in there that he was a presidential candidate! Say whattttt?! I’m pretty sure everyone else in church already knew that he was but it took me by surprise. The kicker was when he asked if everyone believed in their prayers being answered by God, naturally everyone raised their hands with a yes. Then he said that they should ask God about whom to vote for and said that if they ask, he is sure that God will say him! Talk about culture shock for me. After church I asked my Mama about him coming and she said that politics aren’t allowed in the church but because that wasn’t his main reason (his main reason being that he loved God and wanted to experience the fellowship of the church) it was all ok! Oy, I have so much to learn.

On another note, I tried a milkshake here for the first time...but it was a bust-sadly but not surprisingly. They didn’t have chocolate and so I opted for the strawberry. I ended up getting cold strawberry milk….though I’m not positive it was all actually milk. No ice cream or even ice was involved in the making of the so-called-shake and it reminded me of those cheap wafer cookies haha oh well. Whoever finds a way to send milkshakes to Africa-hit me up, I’ll be a test rat for your invention ;)

This past weekend I learned & worked on some solid life skills, which I feel, is always a good thing…especially since we are working on being able to live alone in Kenya. So I hand washed my own clothes successfully; purified my own water; learned how to tie a tie and watched how to make: ugali, masala chai, sukuma (kale dish) and a chicken dish. The chicken was from our front yard and I saw everything except for when Kelly (the house help who lets me watch everything she does and then explains it to me) killed it. She called me outside and there is a chicken with no head in a bucket. For the first time, (which was odd since I come from a farm that sells poultry pre-plucked) I saw a chicken be plucked then broken up into pieces and then put in a stew. I don’t know at what point in my service here that I’ll be able to kill-pluck-eat a chicken for dinner but we shall see, maybe by the time I come back I’ll be so pro at it, I can set up a butcher shop at home and help out in a different way with the family business? ;)

Sunday was a great but full day! I was able to RUN for the first time IN KENYA!!! I got a solid 40 minutes in at 6 a.m. J I had been worried about if I’d be allowed/it would be safe and then this weekend I got the a-ok! I’m glad I waited for 2 weeks of being in Machakos, a total of 21 days since I’ve been with the Peace Corps before embarking on a run because I felt safer knowing my way around. My body felt out of shape and I was definitely dehydrated but it was just so good to be running…and doing it in Kenya!!

Lastly, on Sunday I went on a crazy hike to the top of this giant hill/almost mountain with Jocelyn and Carla. It started off with a bang when we saw a shiny green old VW bug (my 2nd since being here) and only got better! We weren’t really told which path to take but we knew we wanted to go up. So we started and going up we took a shorter path but it was steep. We met this guy who was walking up the path with a little girl on his back…the people who live up the mountain impress me so much with their strength! He told us that if we went over this little mound and took a short detour we could see some tribal dancing. The next part was surreal!!! I felt like I was in the National Geographic for Kenya. We were in this dome hut thing and they were having lessons for either drum or dance and gave us a show! Three elderly women, Joseph, a man in his 40s who was the teacher and a bunch of super cute kids got dressed in some of their garb, got their drums going and danced a traditional dance for us! Then when they were getting in the groove, they pulled me up to dance with them! Carla joined in the fun and Joselyn sadly didn’t get to because she was too busy videoing it all. It was crazy awesome and they got to see how much I can’t dance J We stayed there for maybe 20-30 minutes and then kept going on our way. From there we got a tour guide, a girl in 8th grade who offered to show us the way to the top! It was quite the hike, especially after my first run in 3 weeks, but so incredible. The view was fantastic and I felt like I could see forever at the top!! I could basically see all of you in the States ;) Incredible!!

Overall, this week has been really good and I’m excited for what’s next! Please keep me updated on what’s happening with you all from back home! I want to be in the know… even if I’m the last to know ;)

Many many kisses from Kenya,
Elizabeth

p.s. Here is some Kiswahili for you!!
Lala poa! [La-la poe-ah]
(sleep well!)

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Home Pictures :)

 Chickens in our backyard :)
 My brother, he's soo cute :)
My bedroom: always tuck in your mosquito net-not only to keep out mosquitos but ANY sort of creature! Once that was said...done. Nothing else needs to be said.
She's my sister! She lives with her Grandma (my mama) so she can go to a better school-she knows English and helped me with learn how to clean my room this past weekend

This is the avocado tree that my host family has in their backyard. So legit.
My home :)

Week One of Official Training: Check!


Habari ya asubuhi? (How is your (singular) morning? Ha-bar-ee/yah/ah-sue-boo-hi) I hope awesome! Things here are going well and the level of intensity is rising already. We found out last Friday when our language final is, our HIV/AIDS workshop, shadowing another volunteer and also when we have to do ‘model school’. That’s teaching at a deaf primary school for an entire week. After actually putting everything down on my calendar it became a bit overwhelming because there I just so much I have to learn and do in the next 9 weeks! This week we start extreme KSL language instruction-2-4 hours daily and then teaching instruction during our afternoons where we’ll learn how to make lesson plans and whatnot. The trainers here are all excellent and I know I’m in good hands…and they keep telling us not to worry; that they will prepare us the best that they can so we’re capable of teaching Deaf kids at the primary level (K-8) but worrying still most definitely happens!
Luckily, as overwhelming as it can be, emotions are a finicky thing and I soon find myself super excited to have this opportunity. I can’t wait to learn KSL and know more than a few words. I’m hoping my forgetful memory will kick in and start forgetting my limited ASL knowledge so I don’t mix the two languages up. I’m also excited/nervous to start learning how to actually teach. Ohhh my!
Ok, so, here’s an interesting tidbit I heard from my Host Mama:  She said that people from Tanzania are, (as a big generalization) seen as lazy by Kenyans and that Tanzanian people think that Kenyans rush around all the time and hurry everywhere!! Who knew that to some people, Kenyans ‘rush’! Hahaha Everything is relative J
Lastly, yesterday, we talked with the man in charge of placing us and we will officially know where we will be stationed by the end of next week! Whoa!! I have no idea where I will end up-it could be a town like Machakos or it could be as remote a town that they have to literally fly you there because the roads aren’t safe! I don’t have any big preferences on where I want to end up but I did try to mention that I’d love to be able to run if possible so we’ll see if that happens. I still need to figure out if I can run here/who will run with me…especially because there is a race in November I’d love to participate in if possible! Basically by the end of our chat, the verdict was that I’m pretty flexible and easy-going and I feel confident that he’ll place me in a place that he thinks is right for me.
Well, that’s my update as of now J And if there is something you’re curious about, just comment and I’ll try and answer in either another blog post or in the comment section but now I gotta roll because the kids want to plait my hair while they watch cartoons…works for me! J
p.s. Here are some pictures of my home for the next 9 weeks! I love it!

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Week One in Machakos


Sasa? Poa au fiti? I hope so J Sasa (saa-saa) is slang for how is it going, or “Wazzzup?” As Jos, our awesome Kiswahili trainer put it. Fiti (fee-tee) and poa (poe-ah) are the slang answers for good! Now you, like me, can be cool in Kenya ;)

Speaking of cool, I think it’s possible that my fashion is even looked at with suspicion across the globe. Hard to believe, I know. On Monday evening, after being with my host family for more than 24 hours, I had come home with them on Sunday afternoon and then saw them before I left for sessions on Monday morning as well as all Monday evening. Nothing said about my outfit. Then right before bed my Mama asked me if I knew that there was a mirror in my wardrobe J Hahahaha yep, always looking good. This morning in fact, she had to chase me down as I was leaving the gate because I had walked out in my shower slippers and had forgotten to change and ohhh, that would have been so so bad she said! (Slippers are plastic Old Navy-esque flip-flops that you wear whenever you are in your house-during your bath/shower and then the rest of the time too. I learned that the reason is so that you don’t track dust/mud (depending on the season) into the house after work or school and you wear them all morning because the floor is too cold otherwise.)

My host family, whom I will be with until I swear in come late December, is wonderful!! Edith is my Mama and she lives with her mom who is 80!! That alone is incredible considering they told us the average life expectancy is 45-55. She mostly just sits in the dining room watching everything happen and smiles basically the whole day. I have yet to see her not smiling. She has some sort of dementia and gets confused often but only speaks Kiswahili, which I have yet to master, and therefore I have only been able to greet her and smile back at her. Edith also lives with her middle daughter and her son who is only 4. He is soo cute but also only speaks Kiswahili so I’m hoping he’ll help me learn more. Her daughter is in Uganda now until Friday so I haven’t met her yet but I am excited to! She also has another grandchild who sometimes lives with her and she is only 11 but soo nice! She speaks excellent English and has helped correct all of my Kiswahili homework so far.

The food is great here because it reminds me of India and home J Ugali is Kenya’s staple food and is a thick, pretty tasteless porridge-y type of thing. I have only had it once so far so I can’t describe it very well but I know that I will probably eat a lot by the time I leave. So besides that, I have eaten a lot of rice, chapatti and potatoes as well as beef, chicken and cooked veggies. There are not any spices like India which is how it reminds me of home with our meat, potatoes and veggies but the chapatti, masala chai and fruit reminds me of India. I just found out Mango season is December/January! Yum!!
Classes are going well and we have them in this one hotel where we stayed our first night and so that means that I will be able to get Internet once a week when I venture out with my computer early before sessions start so I can write to you wonderful people J Score!

Sessions here are good and even though we have only had a few days thus far, they seem to be doing a good job: the security and medical people are so nice but are doing a terrific job at scaring all of us pretty well so that we take our malaria pills-stay alert-are cautious-and know that we all will probably get diarrhea-yayyy, how does that sound? ;) Our language facilitators are doing their best but we only get a crash course (one week) on Kiswahili and then next week we start learning KSL (Kenyan Sign Language). The rest of our trainers who are teaching us about teaching, development, volunteer roles and more are also doing a good job and the sessions are more interesting because you know that everything you learn is basically useful in some way. It’s great not having to take gen. ed’s here!

Time for Kiswahili class J Here is one last Kiswahili phrase to learn:
My Name is Elizabeth
“Jina langu ni Elizabeth”
Pronounced: “Gee-new laang-gu nee Elizabeth”

Lots of Kenyan Kisses,
Elizabeth

Thursday, October 4, 2012

I'm in KENYA!


WOOOHOOO!!! Guess who is officially in Kenya?! This girl!! J I met up with a group of 27 other PCVs (Peace Corps Volunteers) in Philly on Monday afternoon, woke up 2am to drive 2 hours to JFK, only to have to wait in the airport for a long time before our flight left at 11:15am. We arrived after who knows how long (if youre calculating with time differences and flight time its difficult to do) in Kenya on Wednesday afternoon. Some of the Peace Corps Staff met us there and brought us to Nairobi where we are staying until Sunday morning.

Our first day of training was today and we have already learned so much information! It’s crazyness!! We had introductions (sooo many Kenyan names to remember already), a lesson on safety and security, lots of paperwork (yayyy! After a year+ of application paperwork it would’ve been crazy if we didn’t have some), got our first little bit of walk-around money and learned a lot about medical policies here. We even got the beginning of our vaccinations!

The other volunteers are soo great and I think we have a really good group. We are mostly in our twenties although there are a few older people in the group as well and the ladies definitely outnumber the men. We are split into 2 groups with 11 of us doing Deaf Education (like me) and the rest teaching science/math in secondary schools. Starting on Sunday we will travel to our training cities and be split up for the rest of the 10 weeks. It kinds stinks because we are all becoming friends but soon we’ll be split up.

Tomorrow we are going on a small excursion through Nairobi to the Peace Corps Headquarters so that we can become acquainted with it. They are also taking us to a market I believe so we can buy a few items or at least see what the city is like. I’m excited to see what the city is like since all we’ve seen of it so far is driving in traffic from the airport to our hostel.

My first impression of it reminded me a little bit of India and that definitely made me smile sensing a little familiarity with the city even though I’ve never been in Africa at all before. I’m not sure how similar it’ll feel outside of here or even after I’ve been here longer than a day and a half but here and now it does. The buses are colorful and packed, the men are thin and wear business-type clothing, the smell is of dirt roads-flowers-BO-exhaust and food-similar things, and there is chai or coffee every 2ish hours J The British have definitely influenced their fair share of things and the chai is a delicious aspect of that. I also have taken advantage of the fact that here in the hostel they have hot chocolate you can mix in with the hot water they serve for the tea-yum!!

Things are good here though I did wake up this morning surprised at where I was. That never happens to me but today waking up at 7am to loud birds and animals and in KENYA-that was wild.
So I don’t know when I’ll write again but we are very lucky to have wifi here at the hostel in some areas so I thought I’d take advantage of that and tell you all that I made it and am alive and well.
Also, gooooood luck to my Solanco chums, Cooper and Dietrich running the Ragner Relay tomorrow and Saturday-I’m cheering for you all A LOT and hope to hear updates!!!!!! Race hard and be strong!!

Lots of Kenyan Kisses,
Elizabeth

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Timeline for Process

Jambo :) I have been accepted into the Peace Corps and am officially leaving on Monday! I will be travelling across the ocean to Kenya where I will train for 10 weeks to become a Deaf Educator/Behavioral Change Communicator. After training, if I pass all of the assessments and everything else, then I will be signed in as a Volunteer and will be put in a village somewhere to use the skills I have acquired. I am very excited yet nervous as well. I still have to figure out my students loan deferments, pack my bags, pack up my room and say more 'see ya laters'. It seems very strange that the time is almost here for me to go because the process for getting accepted is very long and at times very tedious. It involved, as Jack Johnson might say, a lot of sitting, waiting and wishing...which I feel is probably good since I've heard that there might be some more of that in Africa :)

Also, I'd like to say that I don't know what kind of internet access I'll have while over there and I don't know how much I'll be able to update this blog but I'm going to give it a shot even if it's only a once-twice/month update, enjoy!

So, when I was first looking into the Peace Corps I read a lot of blogs but could never really find a timeline, however rough, on how the process worked...and so I tried to keep tabs on when things occured so I could relay the message if I ended up making it this far.

Here is my attempt to say how things worked out for me:

August 1st 2011: Started my application

August 28th: Sent in application

September 9th: Fingerprints taken (do not fill out the forms on your own-go to the police station in your town and they know what to do)

September 25th: Fingerprint and other form they sent me sent in.

October 20th: Interview at Penn State University (2+ hours long where we talked about everything. Literally.)

Mid-November: Had to fill out 'Romantic Questionaire' and sent in

December 12th: Nominated for Sub-Saharan Africa with agriculture as my skill)

December 18th: Recieved Medical packet

Early January: Had to fill out another Romantic Questionaire because they had revised their old one and wanted the newer version submitted.

January 28th 2012: Sent in medical forms

February 6th: Got a note saying they had gotten everything but that I had to wait a while before they'd look at them.

May 12th: Got a note saying they wanted 2 more blood tests because mine weren't accurate enough

May 24th-ish: Sent in blood work again

June 22nd: Recieved another questionaire

July 3rd: Sent in Questionaire

July 11th: Phone conversation with Placement Officer (briefly discussed the fact that I took a year of ASL and might be eligible for Deaf Ed)

July 24th: GOT MY INVITATION FOR KENYA!!!!

July 30th: Sent in acceptance Email

August/September: Continuously sending in more forms like passport,visa, resume, aspirations, financial forms, ect.....but atleast I know I'm going to Kenya soon :)

So that was my best effort and I hoped that helps other aspiring volunteers a little bit.
The craziest part of me writing this blog is that the next time I blog I'll be in Kenya!! WHOA!