Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Beth in Bolivia Update 3

hola everyone!i hope that all of you are doing well and that you had a good weekend. ithought i´d take the opportunity to let you all know what i´ve been up to.things have been pretty good here, although the cold weather and lack offruits and veggies is sort of getting to me.

this past weekend i pretty much stayed at my host family´s place and helpedtake care of the baby and joel, who is still kind of sick. he has a prettybad cough and an ear infection. fortunately i convinced my host mom to takehim to the doctor´s last night. now he is on amoxicillin (however you spellit lol) which is an antibiotic, so he should start to get better. nothingreally exciting happened, i did a lot of homework and i hung out with myfriends on saturday for a little while. sunday i stayed home all day,because i was feeling sort of sick. i thought i was coming down with theamoebas, but it was a false alarm. on sunday i also learned which bananasare used for what purposes, honestly they all look the same to me but iguess there is a difference between the ones that are good fried and theones that are not. i guess there is a slight size and shape difference, butat a glance you would never know. as a result of my banana studies... i´maddicted to fried bananas.

on monday i went into quilacollo to use the internet and printed out someinterview questions in order to interview a local dentist for my project. inquillacollo i also bought some listerine, which makes me feel ten timesbetter about my dental health. the peace corps only allows you to see adentist 1 time per year on their insurance, and i thought that governmentinsurance was supposed to be awesome...it is not.

while i was in quillacollo i saw a few interesting things. first a herd ofburros crossed the street in front of a bus with a little old lady. i wish iwould have had my camara. it was such a contrast between the modern andtraditional ways of life here that continue to coexist. then i saw a manwith a monkey on his shoulder. the monkey was sort of dancing and he wantedpeople to pay in order take a picture with it. i felt bad for the littlemonkey, because i´m sure he is over worked and poorly fed as are all thepets here in bolivia. most people just give their cats and dogs tablescraps, like rice and tomatoes. and then they complain that the cats anddogs aren´t eating their food. people also are very violent with their dogs.people are constantly throwing rocks at dogs or kicking them. i have no ideawhy some of the dogs stay with their owners at all. this violence makes thedogs pretty mean and you have to be careful when you walk down the road.some dogs will ignore you but others will bark and start to follow you.unfortunately the only way to make them stop is to pretend to pick up rocksand throw them. what i really don´t understand is how they can have solittle information about animals when the bolivian vet and livestock schoolis located about 5 mintues from where i live.

anyways, on to my adventures today. today i went to the big expensivesupermarket in cochabamba. i left my house at 8 am and arrived about 9 am.the supermarket is called ic norte. the first step at all larger stores hereis locking up your bag. you have to turn in your bag to a guard who watchesthe lockers while you shop. he puts the bag in a locker and gives you thekay on a long wooden stick you have to carry around with you. i was soexcited when i got in there...because i found peanut butter! they had igabrand peanut butter and all sorts of american brands. i found kit kats,milkway, oreos, smuckers jam, coca cola zero, quaker oatmeal and many otherthings. so of course i racked up a big bill buying peanut butter, somecandy, crackers, soy nuts and a few other things. the peanut butter alonecost 22 bolivianos for a pretty small jar. to me it is worth it. being avegetarian...or trying to be a vegetarian...is extremely hard here inbolivia. to them eating well means eating a lot of meat and potatoes andusing a lot of oil. in fact, i found out last night that my host mom hasbeen putting extra spoonfuls of oil in my rice because she thinks i´m tooskinny. now that i have my peanut butter i´ll have to let her know that i´mgetting plenty of fats in my diet lol.

today i have a culture class at 2pm. we are going to talk about traditionalbolivian customs and have an overview on the politics. i´m not really intopolitics, but it is important to know what is going on here. in the largecities there is some anti-american sentiment. the current president, evomorales, is a coca leaf farmer. coca leaves are used to make cocaine, butare also used in many teas and native dishes. people in the andes have beenchewing the coca leaf and drinking tea made with it since the time of theinca empire. chewing the leaf or drinking the tea supresses hunger and givesenergy. it is also an altitude sickness treatment. you can buy coca leaf teaat any supermarket all packaged up like you would find any other type oftea. the peace corps however prohibits the use of coca leaves in any form.apparently a former peace corps worker applied for a CIA job and put on herapplication that she had used coca leaves in peace corps bolivia. she didntget the job and blames it on the fact that she had used coca leaves. shecaused a huge mess and the peace corps has recently had to ban the use ofcoca leaves by peace corps workers. coca leaves are by no means cocaine andare a huge part of the culture here. not using coca leaves or drinking thetea offends most bolivians and is making it hard for peace corps workers tointegrate into their sites. i am however glad it has been banned, so now ihave an official excuse not to use it. i heard it tastes bad anyways lol.anyways, back to the anti-american sentiment....i got off track there a bit.ok so the president of bolivia claims that in his youth an american militaryhelicopter came down on his village of coca leaf growers and killed somepeople and caused damage. there are many different versions of the story,but most of them go something like that. so now people here think americansare here as government spies to bring down the coca leaf growing industry.

training is going well and all this week we are preparing to go on our techweekend trip. we are going to visit a boarding school and do a workshop andpresentation on self esteem, leadership and computers. i´m in charge of theice breaker and review games. i´m also in a group that is supposed to teacha group of kids how to create and save a document on microsoft word. itshould be fun. we are going up into the mountains and it is going to bepretty cold at night and in the mornings. i didnt bring a hat and gloves,but i think i´m going to have to buy some.

well that is about it for now. check for another update later this week,i´ll try to write one if i get a chance. i hope you all are doing well andhaving a good summer. dont worry about me, some of the things i writeprobably sound a lot more scary than they really are. i´ve been treated wellby all the bolivians i have met, they are a friendly and helpful people.and i have not come down with any weird disease. i´m taking really good careof myself and plan to come home healthier than when i left.

ok well take care and write when you can!

paz y amor, beth in bolivia

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Beth is Alive!

hello everyone, hola todos!
beth is alive! beth esta viva!
sorry that it has taken me so long to write a group email. i have been crazybusy. this training program is insane, they keep us busy every day from 8-6and then expect us to help our families cook dinner and do our homework. sowhere to begin...

right now i´m living in a community called florida, which is outside of abigger town called quillacollo, which is a suburb of cochabamba. i´m in amountain valley at a pretty high altitude. it is very chilly in the morningand after the sun goes down, but during the day it hits the low 80´s. i liveon a cobblestone-dirt road in a tiny cement-concrete-plaster house with ayoung family. the parents are in their early 30´s. their names are don noeland doña willma. they have two precious childre, joel who is 4 and lesliewho is 7 months old. joel is full of energy and always wants to play andtalk with me even if we don´t understand eachother. the spanish here is hardfor me to understand, they speak with a different accent and use a lot ofslang from the indigenous language (quechua). the baby is so chubby andcute. she doesn´t cry much and just loves to be in her stroller. i´ve beenhelping care for her a lot. i get to feed her, which is funny to do becauseshe won´t take a bottle. you have to feed her with a spoon. don noel anddoña willma are really nice, and they talk to me all the time. doña willmais trying to teach me all sorts of things. i´m learning how to peel tomatoesand potatoes with a really sharp knife. she does it so amazingly fast and ittakes me a very long time. hopefully i come home with all of my fingersleft. i´m learning how to cook a lot of native dishes too. which means i´mlearning 1001 ways to cook potatoes and rice, because that is all they eathere. every dish includes rice and potatoes, and sometimes noodles as well.they eat a lot of carbohydrates. they cook the rice here with a lot of oil.first they fry the dry rice in oil. then they boil it in water with oil andthen they drain it and put some more oil on it. it tastes ok, but i know itmust be pretty bad for you. i really wish they would cook more veggies,because they have them around. they mostly just sell all of the fruit andveggies they grow at the market instead of eating them at home.

as for the peace corps training, it involves a lot of sitting and listening.we get lectures on safety, security, diseases, and cultural issues. thereare a lot of scary diseases here that i won´t mention, i don´t want to scareyou all. don´t worry though, i´ve been vaccinated for a lot of thingsalready. every wednesday we go to the training center and get shots. lastweek i got 3 shots, and the flu shot hurt really bad. everyone has bruisesand sore arms from that one. every morning we have language classes in thecommunity where we live. the professors come from the city and we meet ingroups by level of spanish at someone´s house. i´m in the advanced groupwhich is both good and bad. it is good in that i can communicate prettywell, but on the other hand the advanced group has to do individual thesistype project-reports. i´m kind of nervous because it involves doinginterviews and that sort of thing. it should be ok though, i have to go getmy proposal signed on monday morning, i´m hoping to do a project on boliviandental care and the role of the school system. the people here have prettybad teeth. my little host brother has all of his front teeth half rottedout. most adults have a few fake teeth or have tons of gold fillings acrosstheir front teeth. the living conditions in my community are not so good.most people have running water at least a few days a week and electricitymost of the day. my family has electricity and running water most of thetime. we also have a latrine, which is basically a cement toilet that youhave to poor water down after using. it smells horrible. the first time iwent in there i threw up because it smells so bad, but now i´m getting usedto it.

let´s see...what else. hmm, today i´m in the city with my friend laura wholives with the family next door to mine. we went to the supermarket to lookfor some food, because we are already sick of eating potatoes and rice. ibought some powdered milk because we can´t drink milk from the local cows,it is too full of bacteria. i also bought some tomato paste, so i can teachmy host mom to make some sauce for pasta tonight. oh yes, i forgot tomention my host parents are both teachers. my host mom teaches weaving andcrafty type stuff. i have no idea what my host dad teaches, but on theweekend he is the community water and electricity bill collector.

well, for now i guess that is all. i´m having a good time and the people inmy training class are awesome. everyone seems to get along well and we´rehaving a good time. hopefully i´ll have some funny stories next time for youall. i love and miss you all. take care and write back when you can. if younotice someone is missing from my mailing list, please let me know. i don´twant to leave anyone out. thanks!

hugs, beth in bolivia