Thursday, 31 March 2016

bolivian quirks and tips

Internet says no photos! Sorry.
Standard Bolivian greeting: (and believe me, greetings are VERY important, to the taxi driver, the neighbour, the shop owner in the market, you MUST say good morning/afternoon) If this is a person you are officially meeting (so, not the waiter, or taxi driver, but someone you will talk to), you must shake hands and give them a pretend kiss, your right cheeks touching. You don’t actually contact their ear/cheek with your lips at all. Make a slight kissy sound, and voila, you are not a rude person. This is only for females greeting females, or males and females, not JUST males. Overall, be more friendly than less friendly! Unless you’re a female alone somewhere, then maybe not as good an idea.
Approaching someone’s house: yards/compounds have fences/brick walls around them, so either right before you enter their compound, or right after, you clap loudly a couple times. This is the doorbell. Give them time to come outside, don’t approach the house right away.
Restaurants: don’t bother asking for a menu, they do not have any. Or if they do, they won’t have what’s on there anyways. There are usually 2 or 3 options, chicken, beef, maybe pork, with rice/potatoes/fries and some veggies, plantain, etc. You pick the meat, and you get what comes with it. Chicken is very very cheap here, fyi, and pork is the most expensive. Also, some restaurants carry only 2 or 3 L drinks, so don’t EACH order a drink, or that’s a lot of pop!!
Pepper is not a normal thing here. You can buy it, in a few places, but most don’t use it. This is so sad to me, I like to pour the pepper on. Also, MUSTARD. It exists, but again most don’t use it. Heartbreaking! I love mustard. Fruit and vegetables are very cheap, perfect for my ideal sustenance:) I am particularly loving the papaya, green grapes, watermelon, lemons and string beans. I go fruit shopping a couple times a week, sometimes a fruit truck comes down my road and I buy it right there on the street.
Umm… I’m forgetting lots. I will experience more of these I’m sure!
Ciao

Monday, 14 March 2016

community

Buenas noches, como estas?
Bit by bit, I’m learning Spanish. Poquito.
God is good. So many things, big little, have happened this week that just prove that over and over again. School stuff just coming together in miraculous ways, hearing the stories of changed lives at a wedding yesterday afternoon, a funeral today where someone came to the front and asked for forgiveness for his past sins, and wanting to accept Jesus in his life! Things are hard yes, why did a young man have to die?? Nonetheless, we are NOT God and we don’t know the answers, we just trust that he is GOOD. It was a beautiful funeral service, ending with long hugs and hope.
As I see the community gather around families here in both celebration and grieving, I am so thankful for the community that I have. I have family and so many friends, a ‘clan,’ a church family, all who are so amazing. This sounds incredibly trite/cliche as I’m writing, but I do want to recognize and be intentionally grateful for what I have, and I have a LOT. My new community here is something I’m grateful for as well:) Thank you ALL for whatever role you have in my life!

After the wedding photo! Nancy, my new roommate and an English teacher at the Villa Nueva school, is on the left. Ella, a linguist working on a Plaut Deutsch curriculum in the Santa Cruz province in the middle. Both good friends of mine here:)

Friday, 4 March 2016

Not tiptoeing


“All around you, people will be tiptoeing through life, just to arrive at death safely. But dear children, do not tiptoe.
Run, hop, skip, or dance…
just don’t tiptoe.”
I’ve read many, many books since arriving, as there’s not much to do in my free time! Currently I’m reading Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne. It’s amazing, and disturbing. It hits home, but then I have to do something about it. This quote is from this book, I think it was from his college professor? About living LIFE.
photos in no particular order:

This is a traditional food here, from the Mennonites I’m guessing. My hosts for the last month had this for Sunday lunch a couple weeks ago and invited me to join them. It’s called geesu (that’s how it’s pronounced, not spelled!) and is prepared in caste iron pots over the fire. Delicious.

Tuesdays and Thursdays are ‘long’ days at school, 730 to 230, so lunch can be purchased at the school on those days for 10 bs. This particular lunch was very good, the deepfried bread looking thing there is jietzkuaken. Amazing!
People drink a lot of pop/sugary drinks here, partially because the heat drains your energy and partially because they just like to drink them. I do as well, when I need a quick energy pickup. This particular pop was pineapple. Not bad. And on the right in an imported item, dark chocolate covered raisins – pomegranate flavoured. Love this in Canada, so when I saw it in one of the big grocery stores here I scooped it up! However it didn’t have a price on it, so when I paid for it I was in for a bit of a shock! 168 bs for a bag. PRICEY. It’s a good thing that store is far away and not readily accessible.

This it the money here. Bolivianos. Everyone calls them ‘bs’ (pronounced bees). 5 bs equals about 1 Canadian dollar, 7 bs is one American dollar. I’m getting better at doing the exchange in my head on the fly!

I purchased a phone a couple of weeks ago, which is quite an experience. It took 4 different people to get it registered, 2 days, and 3 shops. What you see in this picture are the phone repair shops/tech shops. They just set up a little booth covered in tools and parts and they’re ready for business.
Life has picked up in speed here! In addition to school, I’ve joined a worship team at the church here in Villa Nueva. We played for the first time last Sunday. There was a funeral in the community, I played for that as well. Spanish classes will be starting this next week on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, so I am VERY excited to learn EVERYTHING. Ha, we’ll see! If people come to register, I will also be teaching English on Wednesday evenings after Spanish. I’ve taken on piano students as well, I think about 8 so far. AND track and futball/futsal teams are starting up and need to be ready to compete at the Games in one month! It looks like I’ll be coaching the elementary teams. It is a bit crazy, but doable, hopefully.
One thing that is very exciting is that TOMORROW I will move into a house, where I will stay for the rest of this year! I’m extremely grateful to all the people that have hosted me in the last 6 or so weeks, they’ve been wonderful. It will be nice to have a place to call my own, and have a kitchen and all that!
Prayer:
- There’s still a few things to iron out with lesson planning (although it’s getting much easier to plan!) particularly with the grade one class and also with curriculums
- That I would be organized and disciplined to accomplish everything I need to in the next month!
- Sleep has been difficult for me, mostly because of my wisdom teeth. I was looking into getting them pulled before I came but didn’t have the time or finances. Here it is MUCH cheaper, but still costs money! So that I would be able to get them pulled, and also that I could find ways to rest in the meantime!
Thankfulness:
- a house!
- more and more independence in grocery shopping and doing business
- visa paperwork is in the very last stage (currently being processed in La Paz). Interpol okayed me!
- opportunities to mingle with people in the community
- building relationships with students