Monday, November 24, 2008

It's been awhile.

A few updates on life:

The volunteer work here is interesting. This country is so flipping disorganized that the volunteer work is hit or miss. Which is asinine considering the need here.
For the past month Shawna and I have been working at a day care run by nuns, doing nothing more than playing with kids for two hours a day. Not to say that our presence wasn't a help to the three employees who take care of over 60 children everyday, but when you look at all of the problems going on around here, you can't help but think there is a better use of your time.
The work at the day care is now over, because all of the schools are going on their summer break. Tomorrow, Shawna and I start work at a different organization that seems a bit better run. I'll be teaching English from 1-4 in the afternoons. God help me if I am stuck with my own class without a helper, as I suspect is the case. It's one thing to teach one on one with carlos, and another to have a class full of preteens all to myself. lol. God help me.

Shawna and I have also been teaching English on the weekends at a school run by a lady who does online Spanish tutoring at our school. We've both been really enjoying that, and last Sunday, four of the guys we teach asked to take us to their town and show us around next weekend. It should be a random and hysterical event, considering Shawna and I got a joint love letter from two of them ysterday. (we suspect they went behind the backs of the other two to try and secure a place our hearts. haha.)

We are staying at the school one week longer than originally planned... and for that week we will be living at the school, which I'm pretty excited about. Our family has been great, but I'm about done living in someone else's house... and it will be nice to be at the school for a week. We really love the people there, and the lady that lives at the school is one of our fav's, so we're pretty glad to spend our last week in Granada with them there.

It's been interesting here since the elections. A week after we had our presidential elections, Nicaragua held all of their municipal elections. Practically the entire nation was closed for the four days surrounding the election in an attempt to keep things a little safer. Even with that, there has been plenty of fighting after the fact in all of the cities where the elections were a bit dirty. ( I'm pretty sure Granada is the only place that didn't see any riots...) It's calmed down some, but the papers are still full of election news and riot photos. Not gonna lie, I've enjoyed it. (Obviously, I wish it weren't this way...) but it's been interesting to see how things work here, and understand just a little bit more why this country can't make any progress. They fight each other too much to get anything done. (that's not the only problem... clearly... but it plays a huge part...)

We've had a Christmas tree up in the house for the past three weeks which is just weird... it's ingrained in my mind that first you hav thanksgiving and fall scenario's, and THEN you can have Christmas. But then again, it doesn't even feel like Christmas when it's 100 degrees out. lol.
For this reason, I loaded a bunch of Christmas music on my ipod before I left for when December hit... but, unfortunately , my ipod has been stolen. I'm sure whoever took it couldn't possibly buy one themselves, so hopefully it blesses them.
And they better freaking enjoy my Christmas music.

Anyways... that's the short update for now.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Prayer Please

So, a quick update on my linguistic skills here...

I can't believe how much I've learned in just 2 short months... it's pretty amazing. I comprehend tons, and can pretty much communicate whatever... slowly.

But my goal was fluency. Maybe that was an unrealistic goal for just three months, I don't know, but I'm concerned about the level I'm at and returning home. I know I'll lose it.

We found out that we actually paid the school for an extra week of classes, so we are going to take that 11th week, and I would really appreciate prayer that in these last three or four weeks my spanish would really start improving. I'm not to a point where I could get a job translating at all right now, and I need these next weeks to really count. I would appreciate prayer! (if you have the time, you could pray that I never get served the tongue again as well... lol...)

With taking that extra week of class, we lose a week of travel, which is a bummer, but my main purpose for coming here was to learn spainsh, not travel.
So we will only have one week, and we've pretty much decided to head over to the corn islands for that week and relax on the caribbean, which I'm pretty excited about. :)

anyways, yeah... prayer please!

Monday, November 10, 2008

"Shawna, what does this meat look like to you?"

Yesterday Shawna and I sit down to lunch, and start to eat.
The meal looks like a typical stewed meat of some kind with a side of beans and rice. Just a normal lunch.
I go to slice off a piece of the "meat" and to my surprise, the side of my fork slides right through like butter... I didn't think much of this other than they must have been stewing this beef since last night. I put it in my mouth... it tastes good, and I think, wow... they really know how to stew meat here so that when it's done it has a totally different texture!
I keep eating, and the further in I get, the softer it is. Still, I am blissfully not thinking about what I'm consuming. I encountered a chunk of "fat" which I just ate, because to be honest, I'm dropping weight like nobody's business here, and I thought the fat might be good for me.

Finally, I get down to my last three or so bites of "meat", and I really give the thing a good look. And that's when I saw them, the taste-buds. And suddenly everything that was weird about the meat now made sense, IT WAS COW TONGUE!
That one random piece of "fat" was the what connected the tongue to the mouth! I had consumed the taste-bud lined skin of the tongue! That's why the middle was so soft... that's why there were no straiations! It wasn't just stewed for a long time...

After all of those realizations crashed down on me in the spanse of 30 seconds... I still tried to finish my food. After all, I had eaten in up till then with no problem... it actually tasted really good, and I had been fine before I spotted the taste-buds. I put the fork up to my mouth and my body pulled an access denied scenario. There was no way that bite was going down. I could feel my gag reflex going.

And I have learned my lesson... when I'm eating something new that tastes good... don't look at it closely.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Una mezcla de pensamientos.

Today was election day... it cost me $10 to mail my ballot (bah!) but it was awesome to be able to vote. Nicaraguans are pretty into politics, it's always one of the first topics brought up when you first meet someone (a polar opposite aspect of the culture from the u.s.), so we've actually talked about the election way more than i thought we would in Nicaragua. (next weekend are the the muicipal elections for the whole country. I'm really excited to be here for them. Apparently everything closes on Friday and Saturday so that the people are rested to vote on Sunday, and on Monday everything is closed in an attempt to stop some of the violence that almost always results from an election. Nicaraguans are pretty quick to lose temper... especially about politics. And that's not just my observation... I've been told that by MANY Nicaraguans. haha. Carlos tells me that he thinks that's the reason that Costa Rica is so much more wealthy, because every time there's an election, the parties that lost don't pick fights and try and overthrow the government. It's interesting to think that an aspect of their culture is helping to keep them so impoverished. Anyways, mom and dad, if you're reading this... don't worry, there's not much fighting in Granada so I'll be safe.)

I got my first compliment on my Spanish from a local today. Not gonna lie, when she told me I had good spanish I looked behind me to see who she was talking to. haha. To my surprise it was actually me! We had a nice chat after that about the election (what else? lol) and I left the cafe feeling pretty good. Then I started thinking about how second nature spanish is actually becoming to me. I don't have to think as hard anymore. I find myself sating things without even thinking about, and then afterwards I'm like WHOA! I just said that? haha. It's a good feeling.

Shawna and I went to Ometepe this weekend with a couple of classmates which was AMAZING! Ometepe is an Island in lake cocibolca made up of two volcanoes, with a couple little towns and about a dozen villages. It was dirt cheap and one of the most beautiful places I'll ever go, I'm sure. (It's the 8th wonder of the world.)

Highlights:
-climbing volcan concepcion. (also a WAY harder hike than i expected... though I'm not sure why I thought climbing a volcano would be easy... we went up to the cloudline and then back.)
- Ridig back to town from the hike in a Political parade for the Sandinista's, and getting the nickname 'gringa sandinista.'
-Biking around the island and stopping in the little villages along the way. (want to know a really bad idea? Bike in full Nicaraguan sun for 7 hours without sunscreen. I have a killer burn on the tops of my hands but not on my fingers from gripping the handle bars. lol. it's pretty hott.)

Overall, a great weekend... and I feel really good about that Spanish compliment. :)