Thursday, February 26, 2009

So I'm getting comfortable in my apartment now. Decorations-wise, it's still a work in progress (Martha stole the only hammer we own, so I'm at a standstill now), but here are preliminary pictures, to give you a little idea how I'm living now.



so, again, I have a lot of free time. Here's the layout of my apartment



























The stairway leading to my apartment. Kind of scary and dark at night. Thanks for the flashlight keychain, Mom. You've saved my ankles.


















The view from the front door, into the bedroom
















The living room (I have big plans for this room's decor)















Books and stuff
















So, in moving my couch, other volunteers found that it could be split into two parts. So now the couch top sits on the floor, and the legs are propped up on their side, covered in fabric, and splitting the otherwise oppressively large room into two. This section is the "Turkish lounge".









These are the couch legs. Lovely, right?















Ugly, uncomfortable chairs and two greats of Russian literature. This is the unused half of the living room.











The "sun porch". I'm very excited for spring out here.




















Lots of windows














The view from the sun porch















My dumpster is over there, and more apartments

























The kitchen



















































View into the kitchen from the hall.


























Pots, pans, dishes...



















The stove (it works surprisingly well)























My bedroom. You can't see it,but when my sleeping bag (thanks Mom!) is spread out, I think it looks like a flying squirrel













My bedroom wall


















My closet/dresser. Plus, my bedroom doubles as the Jalalabad library.
















Books. Lots of them.




















THe view from my bedroom balcony.

















My window box. I may try to actually do something with this.


















The view

















The toilet room. Admittingly, not the loveliest part. Don't mind the things growing around the pipes.



















The shower. It's been over a week since I last had poop coming out of the drain, so that's a big improvement. It also explains the bucket in the tub.

























The shower room














Also, I got the fence project from my old village finalized.






















The much-hated fence












Oh, and I went to Osh last weekend. We climbed Sulayman mountain again.


















Prayer flags tied to the trees












Sunday, February 15, 2009

Here are the promised camp pictures!






Ready to go on the first day! No giant footlockers full of stuff for Kyrgyz children. Five days (including sheets and slippers) in one plastic bag. Americans can learn a little something about packing lightly from them.













The whole camp, with volunteers and helpers!














The awesome ladies who ran the sanatorium where camp was.











If Peace Corps has taught us nothing, it's innovation. An empty pool became a volleyball court and a broken chair, sticks, and packing tape became a basketball hoop...











Team-building and problem solving were fun sessions...













Me, Martha, and a curious kid coloring in certificates.















Dance class was a hit!









More dancing










The boys loved watching Step Up 2: The Streets.








Girls working on a poster











Boys working on a poster













More team building













Me and a helper (Begimai) teaching a self-esteem lesson















Cross dressing and dancing were popular at the talent show



"girls" performing at the talent show








Just being girls... Cross dressing is a popular joke here in Kyrgyzstan.




Thursday, February 12, 2009

A lot has happened in the past few weeks!
First, last week was the Bazarkorgon winter camp. Than meant five days of overnight camp with 38 7th and 8th form (12-14 year-old) kids. We had so much fun and everything went amazingly well the whole time. The kids were adorble and relatively well-behaved. The worst incident (and this goes to show just how good they were) showed just how much American movies are corrpting the world. By that, I probably mean the Lindsay Lohan "Parent Trap". On the first day, some boys asked us if they could put toothpaste on the girls' faces while they were sleeping. We obviously said no. Two days later, we were woken up at 4 AM to the sould of running and laughing (boys) and screaming and crying (girls). It seems the boys had ignored our rule and snuck into the girls' room, toothpaste in hand, ready to wage war. We were not pleased, mostly because it was 4 AM and our rooms had only three walls and a curtain, so the children were unavoidable. When we threatened to take away their talent show, tey all straightened up and behaved for the rest of the week. The camp iself was a "Life Skills" camp (that's how we got the funding -- obviously the most important part). All day, we had three hour-long sessions. I taught one on self-esteem and one on community service/volunteerism. One of the best things about our camp was the group of nine 11th form and university students who were our "helpers". They all had good English, so they served as our translators, counsillers, and friends throughout. Because of their help, we were able to talk about much more complicated topics than our Kyrgyz would otherwise allow. After the sessions, we had activity time for two hours. The activities included English club, sports, movie, arts and crafts, and (most importantly!) dance. I had choreographed a simple dance to NSYNC's "Here We Go" thinking that teaching it would last me the three days of activities. In the first hour-long class, the girls had learned the whole thing! I also had a really sweet helper ith me the whole time (who is an awesome belly dancer -- really popular here) and other visitors because dance is obviously the most fun... My helper, Ika, taught a swing dance and I choreographed another dance on the spot to fill up the rest of the time. The girls (and even a few boys, after Joni's session on gender stereotypes) were so cute and excited to dance with me. They performed all three dances at the talent show, and looked fantastic. It made me realize how much I missed dancing. I've already arranged a dance club at my school to start next week!
Overall, camp was a huge success. The kids had a great time. On the last day, we got trapped by all 38 of them crowding around us volunteers and begging for "autographs" in their notebooks. My hand was cramping by the end. We're already gearing up for summer camp in July in Arslenbob (only the world's largest walnut forest...)
While we were at camp, other news was breaking. Frst, we heard that the US Airbase (Manas) in Bishkek was probably closing. While this doesn't directly affect us, it's putting us on our toes a little. None of us really want to be kicked out of the country quite yet...
Also while we were at camp, there was intra-peace corps drama. Because of it, an apartment in Jalalabad opened up, so I now have my very own apartment! I got it approved on Tuesday morning and moved in on Tuesday afternoon. Now I'm working on unpacking, getting settled in, and decorating. It's really great to have my own place finally and to be able to settle down for a whild. My last year has involved moving in May, July, Septemer, December, and now February. It is fitting that I would become a nomad in Kyrgyzstan, but that doesn't mean that I like it. I feel like much more of a grown-up now waking up in my own apartment, commuting to work, coming home, making dinner, amusing myself.. All this time with host families has made me realize just how much I value my independence, control over my own life, and time to myself. I feel like I'm finally settling into what I'm supposed to be doing here (right after the 7 month in country mark...) between my apartment and being at school full-time. Now I see what the next year and a half (almost exactly) should look like.
I'm in the middle of my first real week of school now. It's been going really well -- my conterpart is amazing and my students are great. As I write this, I'm sitting on a bench outside (it's still a bit cold, but pleasant with a coat on) between classes. A policeman who guards the school (?) is pacing in front of me asking various questions and commenting on how much I am writing (so much! bad for my eyes...) while adorable little children run by. It's nice having breaks between classes every day, even though I was told no one can go down the hall where the teachers' room is. I have no idea why, but that explains my presense on the bench.
Otherwise, most of the volunteers who went home or to other places for vacations this winter have returned, though Sarah just left for Gong Kong (Kyrgyz people replace "H" with "G"-- Garry Potter, Gamburgers, Gitler, Holly -- you may be "Golly" here.), so it's nice to have most of the family back together again. We're headed to Bishkek again in less than month for PDM (Project Design and Managment) training -- the last group get-together until COS conference next summer! Straight after that,my friend Nick (who lives in Karakol -- the complete other side of the country) is coming to visit. I'm very excited, because I love sharing my homes with people I'm close to and this city is so hard to understand if you haven't seen it. (The cop just asked if I'm sad -- I guess that's the only way to justify writing this much. I showed him a picture of my family I had in my notebook and he pointed at me,gave a thumbs up, and said (in English) 'I love you'. Now he's intently watching me write. Good thing he has no idea what I"m writing...)
And to close this with a story: On Tuesday, to move all of my stuff from my house to my apartment, I flagged down a car (a Tico -- a tiny Uzbek car that's all over the South-- kind of the Kyrgyz equivalent of a rickshaw) and explained in Kyrgyz what I needed. The driver said ok and drove me to my house. We started to load everything in the car, but he insisted on doing it in two trips. I didn't feel like fighting much, so I got in the car and we started driving all the way across town. About half-way through the first trip, I finall convinced him that I'm American (as opposed to Uzbek or Turkish -- his first guesses. I take that as a compliment on my Kyrgyz) and continued to beg me to go to a restaurant with him. I spent the ride telling him I wasn't hungry, I have a boyfriend (big, scary, and protective, of course), and that I don't want any friends. I even gave him a fake number to get him to stop begging for it. We got to the apartment, unloaded everything, and started back to my house. This trip was an English lesson. He pulled out a notebook and made me write various English words (spelled out in the cyrillic alphabet). He asked me if I knew how to drive. When I said yes, he stopped the car in the middle of the street and told me to drive. I refused, for obvious reasons, but he kept insisting. He finally took off again, but kept asking me to shift for him. I did no. Once we had unloaded everything from the car, I handed him the money we had agreed on in the beginning. He refused to take it, shook my hand, and walked away. I guess that was payment for my excellent English lesson...
I will probably post some pictures from camp in the next few days, so stay tuned!