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Monday, May 27, 2013

PST this is Madness


Pre-Service training has been going on for about a month and a half now and it will soon be ending, on June 10th to be exact!  It has been an adventure!!! During PST we have an incredibly structured schedule, barely any free time, a curfew of 9 pm, and only have 1 day where we are semi-free.  Along with that we learn A LOT!, along with practicums, and other cultural events.  This part of PST I am more than ready to end.  I’m stoked to feel like a free person again!!!  At the same time I’m going to miss my village (Studenchaskaya) a lot, my current host family, and the trainees that are in my village.  We have grown incredibly close in a short amount of time and when we leave for our permanent site’s chances are we will not be in the same place.  One thing I’ve already learned about Peace Corps is they are really good about forcing you to build very close relationships then breaking them down, over and over again.  It’s tough!  I know I haven’t updated my blog in a while and that’s because I’ve been too busy riding the roller coaster of life and loving every high and low of it. 

A lot has gone on so I don’t even know where to try and start.  Within our village we have bonded with a lot of the kids and other host family siblings.  We’ve attended birthday parties, gone to talent show (kinda) graduation celebrations, a school disco, and the last bell ceremony (high school graduation).  These relationships are amazing and while I know new one’s will be made with my future community it will make leaving my current village difficult.  I’ve also gone on runs with the kids, played lots of volleyball, and just had a blast attempting to talk to them in my very broken Kyrgyz.  Language learning is a continuing struggle that will not be going away any time soon.  The Peace Corps training’s that we are required to do are a mix of important, repetitive, and a really big waste of time but because we technically work for the Gov. we’ve got to do it!  Yay bureaucracy.  I’m excited to learn more job specific and health related topics.  A few weeks ago we all did practice lessons first for our fellow health trainees then at are local school.  My friend Fornia and I worked together and put together a lesson on the differences between exercise and physical fitness.  The idea of exercise is practically non-existent in Kyrgyzstan!  It was a lot of work translating posters into Russian, trying to speak a little bit in Kyrgyz and preparing a lesson for approximately 15 students and then having about 30 show up!  It was a lot of fun and I really enjoyed it, but I realized how difficult lesson planning, and execution is, especially in a foreign language with very different cultural attitudes towards everything!!!

I plan on uploading all of my photos from PST as soon as I have enough internets to do so.  This will probably be mid June.  Here are some random photos from the past few weeks! 

I’m ready for PST to be over, but NOT ready to leave the village and the people I’ve grown so close to over the past month and a half.  I miss everyone back at home but am beyond ecstatic with my life here, the new adventures that happen everyday and all of the opportunities that await me.  For now I’m just going to hold on tight and enjoy this amazing ride! 


Hiking in a nearby village 

A normal lunch

Tori ballin' it up at kids day

Out for a run!

A picnic in the woods, yummm Plov!

Duck head any one?

Dinner with the family

Mine and Fornia's first lesson! 

School Graduation

The LCFs in our village

We've resorted to watching really dumb shows... already

My two youngest siblings

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Ever Wanted to see Sheep Intestines Shaped like a Snake?!

Things are continuing to go great!!!  No sickness, I’m in high spirits, I’m even running every now and then.  Language is continuing on, struggles are amassing, but I feel like I’m starting to grasp some of the grammar and conjugating a little better.  This will be a continuing struggle, probably all throughout my two years.  In addition to that everything in my village is wonderful.  We have kids running amok everywhere, and we have 11 trainees in our village, so an American friend is never far away when I need a break.  Everyday we have language training in our village we will go guesting to another host family’s house.  My family had our group on the first day, and every time presents a new food, etiquette, and amount of Kyrgyz-iness.  My family seems to be a great mix of modern and traditional Kyrgyz life.  We do have a large family, we milk the cows twice a day, I’ve gotten to do it once now and it takes some skill, we follow many other traditional Kyrgyz values, but our food is pretty safe, they don’t force vodka down my throat, I don’t get shamed if I make a cultural faux pas, so overall my family rocks.  Another trainee in my village Fornia has a rocking host family.  They are very Kyrgyz!  By this I mean they eat all kinds of fun things, drink fun things, and you get shamed for fun things.  The other day I went over to her house expecting to help make some bread.  Instead we ate some sheep intestines, which were so aesthetically shaped like a snake!  Along with this I had the unpleasant pleasure of trying Kumez (Sp?), which is fermented Mares milk, it tastes worse than it, sounds and it made the intestines look and taste appealing.  Fornia’s stories from day to day are never dull.  She’s also eaten liver pretty regularly, taken part in a rare cultural phenomenon known as geopahgy (the ingestion of chalk, soil, mud and clay), the purpose of this is to get minerals that may not be present in their everyday foods, and today she had the honor of being given the sheep head at dinner.  It is an honor and I’m Jealous!  I feel so lucky with my new trainee friends, my family, all of the children and other families in Studenchaskaya (My village spelled roughly in English).





Our leash is slowly being extended everyday as training goes on.  Pretty soon we will even be able to go places on our own!!!  This past Monday we went on an adventure to Bishkek (the capital) with our language instructors.  While this day was meant to be instructional so we can find our way around in the future, all it really did was give us a work out with chasing our instructors around the bustling city.  The two useful things I learned were 1) where my bus stop is to go back to my village and 2) working for the Peace Corps in another country has its perks.  The Peace Corps office in Bishkek is the nicest and most secure building I’ve seen in country.  The doors to the guard area feel like they way a ton, we have 2 Russian security guards (one of which used to be a ranked boxer), a beautiful garden, and every modern amenity you could ever want.  If I’m ever in Bishkek I may swing by just to use their bathroom!
  


While all the culture and surroundings are great, I am here to do a job.  I’ll be doing health education in a country very set in its ways.  Traditional Kyrgyz culture has a lot of health myths, folklores, and an age hierarchy that determines a lot!  To mention a few of the myths or cultural beliefs some Kyrgyz have are: sitting on concrete will make a female sterile, drinking cold water will make you sick, open windows let “bad” wind in that will make you ill, Vodka fixes everything, and eating lots of fat makes you strong.  These are just a few and there is a lot more things that are considered Ooyat (shameful) especially surrounding naan (bread).  Bread is seen as very holy here, and therefore must be treated very well.  You may not set your bread upside down on the table, feed bread to dogs, brush crumbs on the floor, step over bread, or throw bread away.  The intricacies of Kyrgyz culture and abiding by them are a challenging learning experience.  Especially coming from America where we are about as insensitive as it comes to respecting things that may be strange, illogical, and abnormal to us.  We are quick to categorize and ostracize such beliefs and behaviors at home, so it’s very unique to be in a place where such behavior is not only acceptable but also supported strongly.  Everyday is a new adventure here, and they range from taking my first bite of innards, to accepting the culture of the Kyrgyz people that will be natural to working within the health education field.