Friday, November 28, 2008
More pictures from 11.29.08
11.29.08 Pictures
Sunday, November 23, 2008
More pictures!
Saturday, November 15, 2008
11.11.2008 (Tuesday): The last day of my visit with my permanent host family
Today is my last day at my permanent working site and family, and I will leave tomorrow. I will return in the beginning of December and move in permanently with my host family and start two years of work at my House of Health. This brief five-day visit to our permanent sites was to make sure everything was compatible and ready to go. My site is pretty neat. At this point, I am actually reluctant to leave, since I have built good relations with both my family and my hospital staff. Saying my goodbyes, I feel in limbo. Five days were really short, but I tried really hard to be as courteous as possible, since the next two years are what I make of it, and first impressions last a long time.
At this point, I am really happy with my permanent family. My sister studies in Ashgabat and only comes home on the weekends, but today she called me to say goodbye, and it was very sweet. She had an exam today, and she said it didn’t go so well. I wished her good luck on the next exam. Then she asked me if I was really going to come in December, and I reassured her that I would be here to spend the New Year’s holiday with her. “I will be at the house when you move in,” she promised. My family meanwhile was following along with the conversation and was suitably impressed that I could carry on a coherent conversation. So impressed that they proceeded to call all the neighbors that they could think of and have me relay certain messages to the neighbors. I played the part of the bumbling American pretty well, although I had fun adding my own touches of ingenuity.
The culture here continues to amaze me, and the hospitality of these Turkmen people is so far-reaching. At every meal, every single dish was pushed as close to me as possible, while the rest of the family reached across the eating mat to serve themselves. Also, since meat is relatively very expensive in this country, my family would save the meat for me and not eat any themselves, saying that they didn’t like to eat meat. I don’t really believe that, since I have heard some people say that only in America people can choose to become vegetarians. In Turkmenistan, the people who didn’t eat meat are the ones who couldn’t afford it.
In addition, my family always says that I am too skinny and that I need to eat more, much more. I in turn pointed out that they are themselves very skinny, and they argued that they eat a lot and just can’t gain weight. Once all my protestations and arguments are rebuffed and overturned, I am forced to intake more food. My mom and my sister would coax me, “Just one more spoonful. Just one more.” Almost at every meal, I have to say that my stomach hurts to stop their coercion and convince them that their guest is indeed well-fed. I do understand that my family is trying to be the most hospitable hosts they could be, and I gratefully appreciate their efforts. They try so hard, and it touches me so much. And they are so protective. Every time I step outside the door to wash my hands, brush my teeth, or wash my face, they have ready a pitcher of warm water to hand to me. They tell me that it’s really cold outside, and they are afraid I am going to catch a cold, which I did. And after each shower, they would insist that I stand next to the gas heater for a while to warm up, and although they don’t use it themselves, they brought out an old-fashioned hair dryer for me. I wasn’t allowed to leave the room without using it; they didn’t believe that I go around all the time with wet hair in America, even in the winter. I think I will save the story of the many times my wet hair had frozen in the winter air for later, when they are more convinced that I am capable of taking care of myself.
My mother is the sweetest person ever. She has pretty bad teeth, with a lot of them missing, and when I first met her, she kept covering her mouth with her hand when she talked, and she kept apologizing to me, saying that she will get a fake set of teeth put in soon. That touched me and also confused me, almost appalled me – the fact that she thinks that I would view her differently based on how she looked. I strongly stated that I didn’t care about that, but she nonetheless went into the city twice to get a set of fake teeth put in, even though she had to take time off work, neglect the family, and have her gums hurt so she couldn’t eat. Every time I see her painstakingly swallow without chewing, my heart breaks a bit more.
In addition, my family tries to anticipate my next move and do for me something before I even ask. For example, the outhouse doesn’t have a light, so I take my flashlight with me when I have to go to the bathroom at night. First, there’s the man-sized Alabay dog that I have to watch out for. Second, the path to the toilet is pretty treacherous: it’s a narrow and uneven path between two garden patches, and sometimes I have to step off the dirt path to avoid hitting tree branches. Third, the nightlife is quite lively. I have stepped on two frogs on my way to the toilet, and I am terrified of snakes, which I suspect the tall grasses sometimes hide. Although it’s winter, I think I have heard some slithering and hushed sounds of movement, especially since the cold-blooded snakes would want to be near the warm bathroom. Anyways, my flashlight comes in very handy: I could see the frogs that I have accidentally bruised limping around. My father on the third day of my visit installed a light bulb inside the outhouse. I hadn’t expected it since I hadn’t said anything, but they had glimpsed the flashlight, and wordlessly, they had installed a light, although they hadn’t needed a light themselves. These accommodations reminded me of a story that a veteran Peace Corps volunteer told me. When he was a volunteer, his family always had toilet paper in the outhouse, but when he went back to visit, there wasn’t any. They had only bought the toilet paper for him.
My family also told me that they would install a patio light for me, to make it easy for me. In addition, when they let the dog run free at night, my younger brother goes with me when I need to use the toilet. He would on the one hand catch the lunging dog while I escape to the toilet. I distinctly remember the time when I was sick and spent quite a while in the outhouse. All the while, he was standing out there, shivering in his T-shirt, holding onto the dog. My family tries so hard that there isn’t anything that I could ask for. Every one of my actions is anticipated, to the extent that I sometimes feel comfortable, wondering how I could repay this kindness. Most of the time, however, I am so deeply touched by their gestures of kindness. Living in a strange country and initially with strange people, I greatly appreciate the feeling of being looked after. It goes a long way to make my cultural integration that much easier.
Maral. I have to tell you about her. She’s ten years old, and she’s one of my many host cousins. She has really beautiful curly black locks cut short, and her light brown eyes are super accentuated by super long and sooty lashes. She has a really boyish air, and she’s easily becoming one of my most favorite people in my new village. I went to guest at her house, and that day, her parents and brother had gone to visit her mother’s parents, so she was alone in the house with her elderly grandfather. It’s the Turkmen culture to show the guest photos of the family, and Maral brought out every single picture that was in the house, including a stack of black and whites that told of a different generation. As I worked my way through the mountain of photos, she brought out everything she deemed interesting and worthy enough for my eyes: a Russian vodka bottle that was given to her father for his birthday, an anti-aging cream that belonged to her mother, a broken cell phone, some pictures that her father had drawn of her, and an address book full of her cousin’s drawings. The vodka bottle had looked too heavy for her skinny arms, yet she managed. Looking at the eager and earnest look in her eyes and observing the careful way she takes her of her grandfather bring happy tears to my eyes. (The girls in this culture are so hard-working and good children.) And when she came guesting at my house, she handed me two small packaged marshmallow cookies, and I felt that I couldn’t accept them. I didn’t have anything to give her, but she was thoughtful enough to bring me something from a store. She was ten years old! When I finally said goodbye to Maral, I did cry. I gave her a long hug, although shaking hands is more appropriate here, and at the last moment, she turned around and blew me a kiss.
In addition, I have formed good relations with my all-female clinic staff, and I managed to talk to everyone and ask their age, their name, the number of children they have, and essentially their life story. On my last day of work, I brought in a box of chocolate truffles to share for the staff to share. Although they thought I’d overpaid, they enjoyed and savored the chocolates. For my family doctor counterpart, I gave her five packs of Orbit gum. I didn’t really know what she liked or what I could afford with my volunteer salary, but I had seen her buy a stick of this gum before, so I bought her some more. Although she probably didn’t know what to do with all the gum, she was very touched and was embarrassed that she had nothing to give me. Then she proceeded to tell everyone about what I did, and now they are all planning to give me a present that would be from all of them. Hopefully, I had objected strongly enough; I already feel indebted enough to their taking me under their wing.
The goodbye with the staff was very awkward, yet touching. They kept asking me who was helping me travel back into the capital and made sure that I understood that I could always ask them for help. Then they held out their hand, and I went in to shake it goodbye, but they kept tugging me towards them. Oh, a hug, I thought. But it turned out to be a huge noisy kiss on my cheek or near my ear. Ok, I have seen many a Turkmen kiss people hello or goodbye, and they would kiss on both cheeks. Naturally, I presented my other cheek for the kiss. No such luck. I was pushed back. This proceeded with all of my staff, as I tried to shake their hand and as they tried to kiss me. Then we all awkwardly laughed. It was great, and I was reluctant to leave their circle of camaraderie.
11.9.2008 (Sunday): My new host family
My new host sister is not just awesome in washing clothes. She’s one of the most gentle, kind people I have ever met, in contrast to my current host sister who likes to sassily call me black or African just because I have tanned a bit. My new host sister, Annagozel, is 17 years old, and I like to tell her how my younger sister in the US is named Anna and is also 17 years old. Annagozel is a bit taller than me, I think, although I would like to believe that we are the same height, and she is also very skinny. (Actually the whole family is super skinny, although the dad is putting on some poundage around the waist: they call it the age belly.) She does a lot of the chores around the house, including washing and sweeping the floors, washing everyone’s clothes, and cooking. On top of that, Monday through Friday, she goes to a Turkish school for the best students and stays with her relative in the capital during the weekdays. She comes home for the weekend and doesn’t stop doing chores. I hope to relieve her of some of her duties when I move in permanently. In addition, her English is pretty amazing, and she wants to teach me Russian, Turkish, and Turkmen. In return, I will teach her English to help her get into a university. Overall, she is awesome.
My mother is also very kind and soft-spoken. She is a great cook (I am currently salivating to the smell of her cooking. When is dinner already?) and does many of the daily chores around the house, including milking the cow, which I saw today. I am actually very excited to try my hand at that, although I am scared of doing something wrong and startling the cow. Yes, the mother doesn’t ever stop working, and I hope to share some of her responsibilities in the near future. On top of that, she turned out to be this amazing teacher and youth motivator. First of all, she teaches health, biology, and chemistry at the school; I got very excited when I learned that since I like all those topics, and I am also a health teacher. When I learn more language, I want to talk to her about what she teaches the students and how I can supplement some of her teachings. Secondly, she is applying for a program that would allow her to study for a month in the US and give her some funding for certain projects in this community. I read about some of her past projects, and I was literally floored. She is considered to be a great teacher who works well with her students (her students give her lots of presents to show their respect and gratitude); she has given chickens to students to teach them how to maintain sustainable businesses; and she has applied for certain grants and worked with the community to supply the people with running water. I couldn’t believe how much she has done for her community, and it really inspired me to make her proud through my own projects.
In addition, I think my host mother is very “progressive” in a sense. (My fingers are finally thawing.) She got married when she was thirty (some people think that at 30, a woman is a spinster), and she didn’t want a big family. In addition, she pursued education extensively, and while others are watching TV, she would take out her books to prepare for her lessons and to read. And she told me that she didn’t prefer boys over girls (which is very prevalent in this patriarchal culture), and she named her last child “freedom,” and although my Turkmen language is limited, I think she said that the third child served as her freedom from having more kids. I thought it was hilarious at the time.
My father is a driver, I think, although I think they dumb down concepts so that I could understand. So maybe he’s not just a taxi driver. Nonetheless, he is very nice, and I think he has a jolly sense of humor. He jokes around with his kids and plays competitive games of checker with his sons. He looks Russian to me, although I don’t know why I say that, since I have seen more Turkmen people than Russians. Are all Russians blonde-ish?
I have two younger brothers. One is 13 years old, and the other is 15 years old. In this culture, I have been conditioned to not talk to the men or even look at them, out of propriety. However, the 13-year-old is so rambunctious, with such a contagious smile, and I can’t resist smiling back and agreeing to many consecutive games of checkers in which I never win. And they both try so hard to serve me so I don’t have to lift a finger. It’s kind of funny, to see them scrambling over themselves to pour me tea. Today, it was especially sweet. My mother came into my room and quietly let me know that my younger brother, the 13-year-old, was counting on his fingers the number of days before I move in permanently. He usually acts so macho and wears the could-care-less attitude typical of teens, but inside, he’s such a sweetheart. That really touched me. And he said that he would try to learn one English word per day. So far, he has “hello, good bye, I love you, thanks a lot” down pat, showing the influence of American television.
The family has already earned my respect and admiration. They are especially hard-working. Every morning at 5:30 AM, they wake up as a family to go to the warehouse where they keep their cows and herd them back. I think that’s it, although I don’t completely understand this. So while I sleep, they, including both of the boys, quietly leave the house and complete the morning house chores. I find it so strikingly different from the culture in the US. In the states, my family sleeps so much more, hitting the snooze button over and over again, and usually running late. Here in Turkmenistan, the work sounds louder than any alarm clock. And yesterday, I saw the younger brother untying our giant puppy (2-year-old) and taking it for a run, but not before he forced me to pet it. The dog probably weighs more than me and almost came up to my waist.
I had a long and pretty deep conversation with my sister last night (which I happily chalked up as a language milestone). We talked about her aspirations, what she does in school, and her chores around the house. Although she does practically everything in the house, she said that she doesn’t like milking the cow. She only does it when her mother is too busy, and then she needs her younger brother to grab onto the tail. She is a really petite girl, and it cracked me up, picturing her trying to milk the cow and her brother hanging onto the tail. “Otherwise, it would whack me across the face,” she laughingly explained and demonstrated, “And when I do it, the milk doesn’t come. I am not very good at that.” She’s so brave and sweet.
11.7.2008 (Friday): My first day with my permanent host family
I think there’s a water supply, though not very readily accessible, and the hose squirts everywhere when I ask my brother how to get cold water. Hopefully, I will be able to explore this place more during these five days. And my 16-year-old sister kind of speaks English! That’s both good and bad. It’s good because I feel more comfortable if she can translate for me, but it’s equally bad because I would love to rely solely on my Turkmen. Hopefully, I won’t fall back on English at all. My sister is more educated than most of the women that I have met. Usually girls finish high school when they are 15 years old and then just work at home, but my future host sister studies in the capital every day. I am not sure what she studies, but her English is very impressive. And to commute every day to the main city – a 45-minute endeavor at least – is very commendable, and at first glance, she looks very modern to me.
I also have a 15-year-old brother and the aforementioned younger brother. The 15-year-old has to be at least 6 feet 4 inches tall. He can almost reach the ceiling, and he has to stoop every time he comes through the door. However, the sister is shorter, around my height. As for the younger brother, he’s very lanky, and I can tell that he’s going to be tall as well.
So this is my second family to integrate into, and I am feeling a bit weird. They are all outside, and I am inside, cranking out these words. I don’t know how to do the first introductions, since there are mostly men out there, whereas with my current training family, it’s an all-female household. I feel like I am not making the best effort here and that the opportunity to make a favorable first impression is already ruined. Not to mention how the young 13-year-old beat me three times in checkers. I couldn’t efficiently communicate with him in Turkmen, but the universal language of checkers overcame all language barriers, and it was such a relief to think of what the next move would be, rather than wrack my brain for an elusive word. It’s amazing how the people in this country make do. I thought we were playing chess, and but it was a checkers board, and we were just using random pieces of chess pieces as checkers pieces. I hadn’t played in a long time, and I really think that the rules here are very different. Either that or my host brother totally took advantage of ineptness. It was very entertaining, actually. This 13-year-old was alone with an American stranger (me), and he was trying his best to be a hospitable host. He poured me some tea, flipped to a channel with American music videos (I saw Rihanna performing “S.O.S.”), and then came up with checkers. He was very generous and allowed me unlimited take-backs. I am now really motivated to practice and improve and then beat him.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
11.07.2008 (Today!)
In these wee hours of the morning, I have written a list of things to do with my new family, which includes making a community map. I want to take a tour of my village and see what’s available. I want to know where all the dukans (little stores on the side of streets) are, where I could find some seamstresses (I am quite obsessed with the dresses here), what places to go and avoid, who the neighbors are, and essentially learn everything I can to flourish there in 4 weeks. I have also listed some things to be aware of. I have made some mistakes with my first family, and I want to correct them once I get to my permanent site. For one, my current family doesn’t allow me to do any chores, and I want to tell my new family right off the bat that I want to be an equal part of the family. Along the same lines, I want to learn how to heat the water and get the water for showers and how to do basic cooking. In my current family, I still don’t really know how to do these things: I usually hope for heated water in the bathroom and when there isn’t, I just take a pretty cold shower. I am starting to despise this passive approach, although I have managed to heat some water, learning by trial and error.
The minibus will drop me off at the hospital, my workplace. I will hang out with my counterpart and hopefully, she will introduce me to some people and give me a tour. She is a family doctor, and I met her yesterday. She is very personable. I have thought about some questions to ask her, to start assessing what the community needs, in terms of health education. However, veteran volunteers keep telling us to slow down and drink tea with them, and I am fully prepared to do that, but it wouldn’t hurt to start a dialogue today.
So I have to go to the bank today to start an account and also go to the post office to find out the mailing address. I also have to call Peace Corps to let them know that I have arrived safely, although I am pretty close to the PC headquarters. That’s disappointing and also neat. On the one hand, I had wanted to travel and see other parts of the country, since I have trained in this province and especially my training site is twenty minutes from my permanent site. I feel like I would be exposed to the same challenges and atmosphere. My comfort zone. However, I am an hour from the capital of Turkmenistan, and I would get to see volunteers whenever they come to the capital. During my site placement interview, I didn’t say where I wanted to go, although I had secreted coveted a certain province, because coming into Peace Corps, I was ready to be flexible, and I was prepared to go wherever PC needs volunteers.
I am staying for 5 days with my new host family, and I am trying to pack very lightly. I am not that worried about the packing, because I can just come back here to pick up anything that I have forgotten. It’s pretty cool that I don’t have to travel for that long. Other volunteers have 14-24 hour train rides, and since I get motion sickness, I don’t envy them. Ok. I don't have time to finish this post, but I will continue this later. I am leaving now for my new site. Bye! Love, Amy.
10.23.2008
Today, we had a 4-hour day camp for 60 5th and 6th graders (10-12 year-olds), and tomorrow we are doing the same, probably with the same kids. So this morning, I reluctantly woke up at 7 AM, hurriedly got ready and for the first time that I am in Turkmenistan, put in my contacts, since I would be playing sports with the kids. When we volunteers congregated at 8:15 AM, the air was filled with nervous and anticipatory tension. We had no concrete idea of how many kids would show up and whether they would be receptive to our activities. Also, we were putting final touches on our visual aids and translating some more directions for certain games into Turkmen (okay, it’s been barely a month, and already I am forgetting some English words, or it’s harder to recall them. And I am forgetting some of features of my college life, such as the names of the school newspapers). Outside the window, we could see more and more kids milling around. And some of the kids would poke their heads in our room and dash outside again, giggling wildly. Especially the boys. The girls are very well-behaved and waited patiently outside in the school courtyard.
Gathering all our bravado, we stepped outside and tentatively greeted the kids, talking in English, since the point of the camp was to teach them English and also about healthy habits and practices. We introduced ourselves and got the kids to do the same. They were so eager and happy that they touched me, and I felt that feeling that I dubbed “Peace Corps feeling” – the feeling that I am right where I am supposed to be, doing exactly this. They were excited that we were there, and I was definitely happy to be there. We proceeded to divide the kids – boys and girls – into 4 teams: the red, yellow, green, and orange teams. A male volunteer and I got the green and orange teams for the first hour. The girls walked with me and the boys with the male volunteer over to the dirt soccer field. The girls jostled each other to walk next to me and grab my arms. Absolutely adorable. This age group is fantastic, I thought.
We first started with some simple stretches and counting in English; then we ran a lap around the large soccer field (I always want to say ‘football’ now; honestly, no one says soccer outside the states, and while I am on this topic, it’s not fun converting everything into the metric system; why’s America so weird in this aspect?). The lap really showed me how out of shape I was. I haven’t exercised since I left the states, since it’s so conservative in this village that running is considered strange, especially running in pants. I have considered running in the culturally appropriate floor-length skirts. Anyways, some of the girls kept pace with the huffing and puffing me. I was grateful.
Afterwards, we introduced ourselves with Frisbee throws to each other. The girls and boys are 100% segregated here, in that the girls don’t hang out with the boys, so we made an effort to make even teams with both genders. With these teams, we tried to throw and catch the Frisbee, while counting in English. The kids already knew the numbers very well, although it was harder to catch the Frisbee five times without dropping it. Then, after getting to five, we played sharks and minnows. This time, we sharks called out different colors in English, and those wearing that color have to run to the other side of the safety line, while we tried to tag them. And when they got tagged, they became sharks with us. We did this until there was only one “minnow” left – the winner. Some of the kids didn’t know the colors, so I played the referee and also the motivating voice, egging the kids to be excited and have fun and run across the swarming sea of sharks. Overall, we had the kids under control, and they had fun. They kept saying “very good!” from my limited understanding.
Supposedly, we were supposed to play “Capture the Melon,” which is essentially Capture the Flag with watermelons. We thought that was super appropriate since this country has amazing watermelons, and it has dedicated a whole day to melons – Melon Day. Anyways, the other groups and volunteers wanted to do this at the end of the day with all 60 kids, so we played soccer instead. The boys were super into it, and we liked it because we didn’t need to explain anything – the kids knew the rules better than us. The girls were initially into it, but eventually after the boys dominated the game for 15 minutes, the girls fell back. So I did too, although I loved that I could run again – the adrenaline and energy rush felt amazing. I kept the girls company and encouraged to kick the ball. The boys were simply an amazing sight to watch; they were so good and agile. I was in awe. Soccer was huge in this culture, and they knew about Brazil and certain soccer players, and they wanted to show us their stuff and impress us, so they threw themselves into the game, so I used all the Turkmen I know to encourage them. In the course of the 30-minute game, I had to break up a fight between a boy and girl and also make sure that a kid who fell was alright. The latter boy was already so macho that he got more upset after I tried to console him.
Anyways, my team won. 3-2.
Then, we took a 10-minute break. The girls swarmed me, and I could barely go inside to drink some water. They constantly pat my clothing to make sure that I was clean of dirt, brush back my hair, and grab my hand. I enjoyed it. The boys were more subtle, but they followed the male volunteer wherever he went. They all looked up to us, the American foreigners, and it really frustrated me that I couldn’t express my gratitude for their participation in any sensible sentences. During the break, I hung out with the girls, took their pictures, and then asked them to tell me a little bit about themselves.
After break, we took the blue and yellow teams, and we did the same activities with them for an hour. I didn’t know what it was, but this group was so hard to control. I shouted until I was hoarse, and still the kids were running wild. We briefly did Frisbee and Sharks and Minnows, but we ran out of ideas and just started the soccer game as soon as we could. The girls in this game were even more disinterested in running after the ball, and I don’t blame them. They are all in long skirts, and some had heels on. Some even had their best dresses on, and the dusty dirt field was not too kind on clothes and skin. I was literally inhaling dust through my nose and mouth, and my white shirt would be hell to hand wash out this coming Sunday.
Finally, we breathed a sigh of relief when break came. The next activity was the kids documenting what they got out of this day on a mural with markers. Half of the group drew on the mural, and the other half played Capture the Melon. The latter activity was every definition of disaster. Our 2-year-old Turkmen was hardly sufficient to explain this, on hindsight, extremely complicated game. We tried our best with words and demonstrations (me running back and forth), and when we said “Go, start!” the kids went crazy (I blame it on the watermelons) and swarmed the two watermelons at the two ends of the field. There were two kids who held onto the melons for dear life, while other kids sat on them and tried to wrench the melon away. And we have this photograph shot of this kid with his teeth bared as he shouldered his way through a 20-person wall. We tried to pull the kids apart, terrified of possible injuries, and hardly succeeding. My goal was on one of the melons, and I pushed my way to the center of the ferocious group. I saved one of the melons. The other melon fantastically split open, seeds and juice spewing out, all over the dirt field. All this mass chaos took place before the country director of the Peace Corps. Of course.
Yes, after that disaster, we gave up on that activity and just called it a day. We told them tomorrow we would have more activities and that they should come back. For the kids, mostly boys, who wanted to hang around, we played another game of soccer. However, I first told them to drink some water and wash their hands, since they told me that there was a water source at the school. Then soccer again resumed, and it was fun to just play with the boys, without worrying that the girls would be bored. I gave one of the boys a high-five and said that he was really good at soccer, and from that little exchange, all the kids gave it 110%, just in hopes for another high-five from me. My heart literally melted. Therefore, I congratulated each person individually, beamed at them, and encouraged them to come back. This age group is amazing, so full of energy and potential. I felt humbled in their presence, and so I gave it my all, running back and forth, shouting out encouragements. Another volunteer said that it was a classic Peace Corps shot: me out on a dirt field with a bunch of smiling kids and a ball.
At around 1:30 PM, we headed for lunch, and I was hungry, tired, and dusty, nevertheless happy. I felt that it was my first day of doing something useful. So far, I have been just observing nurses and doctors and learning the language, but today, I got to provide activities, a service for the students.
After lunch, we had site placement interviews with a Peace Corps staff, which would decide where we end up for the next two years. I felt uneasy about this interview, since I didn’t know this country to really know what I want, and also I don’t feel comfortable expressing what I want, since this experience is supposed to be of service, wherever they want me or need me. Anyways, I tried my best to express what I felt. I said that I loved languages, and besides Turkmen, I would love to learn Russian. Apparently, there are certain regions in the country that use Russian in addition to Turkmen. I also said that I am comfortable teaching any of the health topics, which include anemia, hypertension, mother/child health, etc. Finally, I said that I was scared of dogs. (Dogs are everywhere here, and I was hoping that my next host family wouldn’t own too many dogs. They grow the dogs huge here, and to me, they appear ferocious. Well, there’s this scrawny dog that chases me to the toilet every night. He’s very intelligent – he waits outside the door for me. And every day at 4 AM, he barks at my window. Smart, huh?)
After the interview, I still felt uneasy: did I say the right things? And what if the things that I said backfire on me later? Anyhow, we did some more language and prepared for next day’s day camp. We also got mail! Letters and packages from our family and friends are simply the most welcomed sight in the world here in Turkmenistan. I can’t express that with the all the sincerity that I feel about that. Mail informed us that we are loved and missed by others, and that we still remained in contact with our loved ones. And they make the outhouse smell better, the bucket showers more exciting, the language learning easier, and the loneliness easier to bear, from day to day. Home. Mail is home. Mail validates our existence, that we matter. Are you convinced yet?
I got two letters, one from a friend in the states and another from a T-16, fellow volunteer who had gone to the same college as I did. I was very happy, although the others had gotten huge packages and made sure that I knew about what they got and how happy and excited that they were. Hmph. Anyways, I read the letters over and over again, and they are wonderful. Someone’s thinking of me. I am excited to write them back and update them of my life.
Afterwards, we walked home, and I was eager to come home and rest. I had exerted a lot of physical energy today, though conversely my mental and emotional energies were replenished and strengthened. Here’s to another day.
10.19.2008 (Sunday)
(Note about these blogs: I don't have much time to use the Internet, so I am just copying and pasting from my pen drive. Some of the formatting might be off, and when I have some more time later, I will edit these posts and correct some things. And also these are not daily posts. I am trying my best to update whenever I have some time. Thanks for reading and please let me know what you would like to hear about. Comments and suggestions are much appreciated. I miss you guys.)
This morning, I was woken up with an amazing surprise. I groggily heard my name being called and a light knock on the door. It was Sunday, and I looked at my watch. Barely 9 AM. I had hoped to sleep in for longer. I sat up and hoped that my host sister or mom would go ahead and eat breakfast without me. However, I heard my name again, so I scrambled to put on a long skirt and opened the door. It seemed that my host mom was rudely woken up too – by a phone call…I dashed to the phone placed on the floor and hoped. And it was. I heard my mom’s voice on the phone, and my voice hitched when I said tentatively, “Mom?”
It was the most amazing moment; my mother had called from America to check in on me. I still exist in the minds of my family and friends. Once I had my existence validated, I eagerly launched into pouring out everything as fast as I could. It costs $10 for 25 minutes of talking or $0.40/minute. My mom said that for this same calling card, she can call to China for 600 minutes. Wow.
I described everything that came to mind. The diarrhea, my host family, briefly the culture that I have encountered, my adjustment from living in California to living in Turkmenistan – both the easy and hard parts. But mostly the diarrhea. Now on hindsight, I should’ve asked about my mom and my family back in California. Like how she’s doing and also how my sister did on the SATs that she took on Oct. 4, 2008. But I did manage to express all my worries and thoughts during that phone call.
When I did put down the phone after the 25 minutes, the homesickness hit me like a Mack truck, and tears instantly sprung to the fore. All the while, my host mom and sister were eating breakfast and looking at me expectantly. They didn’t know who had called me so early in the morning. I quickly told them that my mom had call and escaped into my room to collect myself. This moment once again reminded that I was in Turkmenistan and not back in my comfort zone. All the differences, adjustments, and sickness surfaced, and they made it hard to go about starting my day once again. Nevertheless, as I was washing my face and brushing my teeth, I was still glad that my mom had made contact, after so long – 3 weeks. The phone call again reminded me of how important family was to me, and how much I appreciate my family, especially my mom, for how hard she works. It felt so good to know that someone across the ocean is thinking of me.
After, I ate breakfast with my family, and then I waited for the rest of my group to come to my house at 11 AM. We had planned to get together today to make some American food – specifically eggplant parmesan. The day before, we had gone to a small bazaar to buy lots of vegetables. We have lots of meat in our daily diet, and we wanted vegetables for a change. So I spent an hour just organizing my room before our cooking adventure. I hardly cook in the states, but I am definitely trying to learn, and I have never made eggplant parm before, so I am excited about that. Actually, I am excited about the prospect of anything that deviates from the routine of just bumming around the house on Sundays.
When everyone got here, we started to chop the vegetables and prepare the ingredients. It was strange at first, since none of us had cooked by ourselves in this country yet. We didn’t really know where the cooking ingredients are, and the gas stove kept going out, and we had to repeatedly light matches. Although the kitchen didn’t have the technological appliances as the ones in the states, we made do, and it turned out great. I went with another volunteer, a male volunteer, to buy Coca-Cola, Fanta, and desert to complete the meal. We went to a couple of little street-side stores, and I eventually realized that people are giggling at us. In this culture, when a girl and boy walk together, they are on a date. Whoops. We bought the drinks and ice cream despite the cultural faux pas, and they were delicious treats. The final production presented on the Turkmen serving cloth looked delicious and as American as we could make it, and we took pictures before we dug in. I urged my host mom and sister to eat, but they took the obligatory bite and said that they were full, although I knew that they hadn’t eaten yet. It was an odd situation. Usually, I feel like the outsider of most cultural exchanges between me and my host family, but at the lunch, they probably felt awkward, since we were six American volunteers, and they didn’t understand our manner of eating and the huge dish of eggplant we were consuming. Maybe they also felt the hesitation (thinking what should I do and how I should comport myself) that I often feel.
Anyways, after the meal, we ate ice cream, and the creamy vanilla ice cream was much welcomed. It was definitely a rare treat, especially that deserts in this culture usually mean tea. I consider it pretty American to top off our vegetable meal with ice cream. We discussed the possibility of having such a get-together each Sunday and to rotate the houses in which we cook in. I think it’s a great idea, and hopefully it works out. We had picked my family since our family was smaller, and hopefully we hadn’t inconvenienced anyone too much, although I felt bad that later the family was eating their own meal. We had pushed their lunch time back by 2 hours. I seek to be culturally sensitive, and on hindsight, we might have seemed like a raucous group of insensitive Americans who just wanted to please ourselves. Hopefully, it wasn’t like that.
10.11.2008
Today was a good day. I woke up at 7:30AM and lounged around in bed for a while. Last night, I had requested an extra duşek (a thin mattress), saying that my back is in pain, which I had learned to say yesterday. That was kind of true, but I actually just wanted to be more comfortable. I didn’t even know that I could ask, since all the family members just use one. However, a Peace Corps staff said that it was OK, since families usually store a bunch in the house. I did feel spoiled and inept when I asked for one and my host sister did give me a strange look, but this morning…ahh…it was worth all the prior awkwardness. The first night sleeping on one thin duşek on the floor – I couldn’t really sleep. At home in the states, my bed is so comfy and soft in comparison, but after a couple of days, it was easy to get used to, but the extra padding is luxury. So the sleeping situation here is just that: you sleep on the duşek, and you have one pillow and one blanket which is just a carpet. And I think there’s a correct direction to place the pillow because the first night, my host sister corrected me, but since then I have switched sleeping positions, so I don’t really know. Also, every morning you have to make your bed, which means that you have to fold everything up and put it in a neat corner. Sometimes when I am in a hurry in the morning, I quickly shut my door and leave my bedding there, which looks ever so inviting when I come home in the afternoon, begging me to take a nap.
My room is actually huge; it takes up 1/3 of the house. There are two bedrooms in the house and a living room. I feel bad because since I take up one of the rooms, my host mom sleeps in the living room, which means that every time I make a run for the outhouse in the middle of the night, she knows. And most of the time, she stands in the doorway and waits for me, and when I walk back, sheepish and red-faced, she smiles a knowing smile. Drat.
The first time I saw my room, I was amazed at the size and neatness of the room. It was also beautiful, covered in luxurious and bright carpets. However, as I walk across the room, I nearly twisted my ankle. When I lifted up the carpets, I realized that there are holes spaced every other foot apart in the floor, so in the past few days, I have charted out how to skip across the room. Regardless, I am very satisfied with my living situation. I have a closet, which most of the other volunteers in this town don’t have. I also have running water, which, I found out today, is not the norm! I have two tap water sources, which I totally took for granted. I use them to wash my hands, fill my water filter, and also to fill my shower buckets. Ok. The outhouse toilet. The first time I went in there, it was so pungent the smell shot straight up to my brain, and I kid you not—I lost consciousness for a moment then. I was momentarily paralyzed, which sounds silly and just indicates how spoiled and inexperienced I am, on hindsight. However, I hadn’t prepared myself and had just walked in there. After that episode, I dreaded going to the bathroom, but then I had diarrhea. That meant I had a five-second time span to sprint to the tualet. In the hurry I forgot about the smell and forgot that I was in an outhouse. My bodily functions were more urgent then. I think the smell eventually grew on me, since I spent so much time in that outhouse that night. My host mom had to wait a long time at the doorway.
Regarding the shower situation, I don’t mind the change that much. I consider myself very fortunate and blessed. There are big buckets there all the time, filled to the brim with clean water from the tap sources. And on the gas heater/stove, there is always a metal bucket filled with hot water. So for my bucket showers, I fill my bucket with an appropriately warm mixture of both cold and hot water. It just takes a bit of getting used to. Actually, I had spent the first ten years of my life living in China, and I had used bucket showers then too. The absence of showers definitely brings back many childhood memories. I was surprised at how natural using the buckets had come to me, although I didn’t remember how to watch my hair. I guess the only thing about the shower room is that it’s so hot and stifling that sometimes I can’t breathe in there. I sweat while taking a shower.
I also use the buckets to wash my clothes. Oh how I long for a washing machine. On the second day there, my host sister taught me how to hand wash. When I was living in China, my relatives had also hand washed my clothes, but at least I wasn’t involved then! Now, I gotta scrub every inch of my clothes. Sigh. I think I will wear clothes over and over again just to not wash them, although the underwear situation is a bit more complicated. That day I hand washed my clothes, it took me forever, since I wanted the clothes to be clean, but the stains still weren’t coming out, and I could understand now when veteran volunteers say that their knuckles bled in the winter from hand washing. Why can’t we just ship some washing machines to this part of the world?! After I finally finished washing, I didn’t know where to hang my underwear. My host sister just hung them out in the open. I was too tired to protest and just escaped into the house. Here is another chance for me to comment on how amazed I am at the young girls here. They are all trained in the domestic arts and could feed and take care of themselves. It’s so easy to compare just how much I depend on my mom to cook for me and wash my clothes in the states. I had gone to college with no knowledge of even how to operate the washing machines and how much detergent to put into my clothes. And the first time I washed my clothes, it wasn’t a pretty experience: most of my clothes came out pink. Now, I feel like a young child again, being taken care of by a 14-year-old. Even worse, when my host sister has to go to school in the morning, she calls over a 10-year-old to watch over me and serve me breakfast. It is humbling, to say the least.
However, I and the rest of my group have learned to laugh at the cultural differences and the faux pas that we make. For example, another volunteer shared a recent experience today. He was in the outhouse, and he had thought that he had bolted shut the door. Apparently, it wasn’t, and his 10-year-old host brother opened the door. And in that frantic moment, the first Turkmen words that came to his mind were “Hawa! Hawa!” Unfortunately, that meant “Yes! Yes!”
As for my own faux pas…today, I was spending some time with my medical counterpart, who I am supposed to learn the Turkmen healthcare system from. However, there was going to be a huge wedding tonight, so no one was really thinking about work, and everyone was just chatting and socializing. I was just using my limited language capabilities to ask her what her husband did for work, but I didn’t know the word for “husband,” and I ended up acting out a marriage in her office. She still didn’t understand. Anyways, a male doctor walked in, and he caught sight of me in an awkward charade pose. I immediately looked down, having been taught that this is how Turkmen women are supposed to behave in the company of strange men. Anyways, he started to ask me a series of questions, and I demurred. I told him that I was 22 years old, and then he started to say a bunch of things that I didn’t understand. However, he kept smiling, so naturally I nodded and smiled back. He exited the office in high spirits. I looked to my counterpart with a questioning look. I had agreed to wed his 20-year-old son. Apparently. “Don’t worry. He said that a dowry wasn’t necessary,” she assured me.
It’s actually very eye-opening to come to this country and be Chinese at that. Many people have pointed to my face and said “Turkmen.” I will take their word for it. Turkmenistan is very interesting in this aspect. I have found many of the people here looking Asian, which presumably is due to the proximity of this country to China, India, and other Asian countries. A Peace Corps staff also told me that you could find people here looking like every other culture, and she said that she has found Turkmen who have Negro features. My nurse counterpart, for example, looks Vietnamese, and when I commented on it, I think she was a bit offended, as she put her hand on her chest and said “Turkmen” indignantly. I have also found one of the language teachers to look exactly like one of my Korean friends and the safety and security coordinator here to look a bit like my dad. That was fascinating for me, and it actually made me feel a bit less strange in this new land. Like one of them.
Also, I have fallen head over heels in love with one of the girls here. She’s 7 years old, and she’s absolutely delightful. I love kids, and every day she gives me a huge hug, and that is sure to brighten my day. She’s a neighbor’s child, and one of the volunteers actually lives with that family. She has the most beautiful brown eyes, and her smile is wide and beautiful and shows some missing baby teeth. Anyhow, I was thinking what I would think her nationality is if I were living in the states. At first glance, she looks Latina and Asian to me. I have realized that there are certain people here that look distinctly Central Asian, with dark skin, big eyes, and certain features. However others, like this little girl, looks like a blend of different ethnicities. This fascinates me. This eclectic-looking group of people who shares the same language and culture.
At first, when I learned that I was coming here, I was like, “Where is Turkmenistan? And what is it?” I vaguely remembered reading the name when I took a class on the Middle East. But now, I increasingly find it amazing and full of so much history and distinctive culture. For example, most of the people in this country are bilingual, speaking both Turkmen, the national language, and Russian (a residue of being part of the Soviet Union). Also, it’s now mandated that English to be taught at every level in all the schools. Furthermore, due to prior Soviet laws and influences, there are little pockets of Uzbeks, Russians, and Koreans sprinkled throughout the land of Turkmenistan. It’s said that where the Uzbeks and Russians live, the people there are more liberal (i.e. the women don’t have to wear long dresses that cover them from head to toe). It completely boggles my mind that there are Koreans here, and for some weird psychological reason, it makes me feel more accepted here. It’s even stranger to me that the Koreans here mainly speak Russian with each other. Back in the states, I have many Korean friends (who speak their native Korean language), and this concept of Russian-speaking Koreans is absolutely astonishing. There are just so many layers and depths to this country. In addition, I learned that there are Chinese people here too. They are building oil pipelines to China, so for many Turkmen, the sight of a Chinese person is not so strange, and there are actually many people, either on busses or on the streets, that tell me that I am Chinese. And it takes them a while to understand that I am also American and that I live in California. Nonetheless, in such a strange and foreign land, there is yet something so familiar and close to home as such.
I have found that I draw on much of my Chinese culture and background to adapt to living here. When I moved to the US from China, I had to adapt and change my behavior to adapt (i.e. be more outspoken and opinionated). In Turkmenistan, I once again find myself searching within myself to adapt. I become more quiet and demure, and I always cast my eyes down when I am walking and especially when I am approaching a man. I speak only when spoken to, and I once again become a child, seeking approval from the adults. It is so very interesting (I know that’s getting repetitive) to see the overlap between this culture and the Chinese culture and what I know. I had joined Peace Corps in hopes of a cross-cultural experience, and cultural exchange is definitely taking place. I am very glad to be in Turkmenistan at this time. Many people speak of how in 5 years, the country would be very different, as it contained much untapped oil and gas. Besides that, to come here and immerse myself into such a historic place (Turkmenistan has some of the oldest structures in the world, as it used to be a stop on the Silk Road) is an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Sorry. I was supposed to be talking about today, but I find myself once and again analyzing everything. Don’t even get me started on the beauty of the nearby, looming, absolutely stunning mountains of which lies Iran on the other side. Every morning when I walk to school, they just take my breath away. Not to mention the clean, fresh air that I breathe every morning.
I had known that joining the Peace Corps would provide a different environment and culture. I had anticipated the differences, but the similarities are equally immense. Just the other night, I was hanging out with a bunch of 16-20 year olds. And certainly, they were interesting in chatting about boys, just like my friends back home would be. My language skills are limited, but I contributed my share of the giggling and pillow throwing. And the speaking intonations are the same. For example, I take it as my cue to nod or shake my head when the pitch of their voices lowers or rises. That’s my main way of communication. In such drastically different places, so much is the same. This reminds me of one certain psychology study that was done. The researchers had sought out a tribe that was untouched by what we consider “civilized societies.” The scientists were interested in the similarities between the rest of the world and this group of people and found that most of the emotions are universal (i.e. anger, happiness, sadness, surprise). This cultural part just blows me away: there is so much inherent already in our human make-up.
Ok. So what did I do today? I woke up, got ready, and got served breakfast by my 19-year-old neighbor. My host sister had already left for school, and I had a new, albeit older, babysitter today. My host mother wasn’t here last night, and I didn’t understand where she went for the night. Then at 8:30 AM, I picked up another volunteer on the way to school. We live very close together, and it’s a comfort to me that I could run to her house if an emergency arises. Also, my favorite person in Turkmenistan aka the 7-year-old lives there.
(Ok. This strange man just came in and sat down and started talking to me. And my host sister is not helping and is off giggling. He had called before, and it was weird. He’s not married, and it’s not appropriate in this culture for unmarried men and women to associate. I hope I am not encouraging any kind of inappropriate behavior through my limited language capabilities. I only said hi to him when he waited outside the door the other morning when I was walking to school. Dang it! I should’ve retreated to my room when I had the chance after dinner. Now I am trapped, typing in the hopes that he will leave.)
So it took 20 minutes to walk to school, and we had language lessons for an hour. Then we actually went to one of the host families and learned how to cook palow! That was the most amazing part of the day. Palow is a stir-fried dish of meat (usually chicken), carrots, rice, salt, and water. It’s mouth-watering every time I eat it. Thankfully, it’s a very popular dish here. Today, we had a cooking lesson, hopefully to help us better adjust to this society and be better able to take care of ourselves, should we live by ourselves later on. The host mother cooks for us every single lunch, and it’s usually the best part of the day. She’s absolutely wonderful, especially at cooking. However, during this cooking lesson, I only chopped one onion and botched the job of chopping one carrot. It was basically the mother cooking and adding various proportions of the ingredients and us talking in English amongst ourselves. However, it was still nice, and I did learn how to chop vegetables, although I smelled like onions the whole day.
After that lesson, we went back to the hospital room where we have our daily language lessons and worked on the booklet that helps us integrate into the Turkmen society. It asks us different cultural questions, and we try to answer them based on our interactions with the host country nationals (which sounds weird and too official sounding). Then, we left to spend some time with our medical counterparts or English-teacher counterparts (for the volunteers who are English teachers in Turkmenistan). That was really fun, but not really educational. I really like my nurse counterpart: she’s young and fun to talk to. My family doctor counterpart had already left for the wedding.
Ok weird guy just asked me if I had a boyfriend. WEIRD. When will he leave? He’s also 30 years old! He also asked when I was going to marry. This is becoming weirder and weirder, and gauging from the shriller volume of my host sister’s laughing and her friend’s laughing, I don’t think this situation is improving. He’s also coming closer and closer to the computer…and reading over my shoulder. Thank goodness he doesn’t know I am writing about him.
Anyways, after the practicum with the counterpart, we went home to spend the rest of the Saturday evening with our host families. I really like my family. They are very kind, although they think I am a man carrot aka someone who’s not domestic at all aka someone who cuts carrots like a man. Since no one was in the house, I stayed in my room and typed and here I am now, after dinner and chilling out with my host sister, and being rudely interrupted by the weird man. My host mother had left for the huge wedding that the whole community is participating in…well except me. I had really wanted to go, but it turns out that my sister doesn’t want to go, which means that I don’t get to go. I could hear the music and festivities, but I can’t go off by myself. I think I will retire soon and finish some letters to my friends and family. I would also like to finish the first complete entry and detail what has happened thus far, to do the hard task of conveying all that I feel and see into words that don’t do complete justice.
Thank goodness, one of the respectable neighbor moms dropped by. I am saved.
10.10.2008
After 15 minutes, she came back with another adaptor to which I fit my set of adaptor, surge protector, battery charger, and finally computer. It was a neighbor’s adaptor, and it obviously adapts big prongs to smaller ones that fit into the outlets in this house. When she plugged it in, it made a large popping sound, and I thought my computer was fried. But thankfully, it worked. I was very thankful for her help. I kept saying “Sag bol” (thank you) over and over again, but she didn’t seem to acknowledge my gratefulness. And I felt really bad. She was only 14 years old, and she has to wait on me hand and foot. She waits for me to come out of my room in the morning to serve me breakfast, and she makes dinner for me, and overall she looks out for my well-being. When I want to help clean the dishes or help prepare food, she waves me away. She serves every meal and cleans up after every meal. I am 22 years old! But she seems to accept that she has to take care of me, and because I am so inept in this country, I do depend on her directions a lot. But I don’t know how to convey that I want to help out too. I don’t want to be a burden, but a friend, an older sister. However, her mother makes it seem that she has to do all the chores in the house, and I have become yet another cumbersome chore. I think I am catching on to her annoyance with my demands and questions. I mean, she is an exemplary 14-year-old, but nonetheless, she’s a 14-year-old. In comparison, I was a monstrously spoiled 14-year-old who could barely take care of herself. I really respect my host sister for her domestic capabilities.
[I think there’s a party/wedding outside of the house. There has been booming music for a while now. I wish I was invited.] Ok. So I now have a working computer, and I will chronicle my first two weeks as a Peace Corps trainee (yes, they want to make sure that I understand that I am not yet a volunteer).
I left my house in California at 7AM Friday, 9/26/08 (exactly two weeks ago today). The plane to Philadelphia was at 9AM. We were running late, and my dad was cursing the traffic on the road. I, on the other hand, was mentally checking that I have packed everything, suddenly realizing that I should’ve packed more cute blouses. I am a health volunteer, so most of the clothes that I packed were professional clothing and long skirts, complying with the dress codes in Turkmenistan…aka clothes that I would never wear in the states. However, I did manage to sneak in some cute jeans and shirts, and volunteers now tell me that I should’ve packed more of the things that I would wear in the states since I could get Turkmen clothing in Turkmenistan. I do love my comfort clothing, and as I am typing this, I am wearing comfy sweats and a T-shirt. Ahhh…it feels so good to not be dragging around and tripping over a floor-length skirt. However, I have to change when I go out to eat dinner. I wonder if I can ask my host mom if she will accept me in this as long as I promise not to leave the house. Haha.
Anyways, I was on time for the plane ride to Philly, but it wasn’t ready for me. Due to horrible weather in the east coast, the plane was delayed for four hours. I didn’t mind. There was much on my mind. It suddenly sank in that I was leaving for good for two years. I sat on the hard airport seat, my arms wrapped around my knees, slowly taking in the realization. I cried. Before there was excitement, but finally, when I had a moment, I realized the weight of my decision. I had already started to miss my family and my friends, especially my family. Sure, they can get on my nerve, and I have had more than my share of fights with them—sometimes love and hate walk on the same line. But in that airport, I knew that they would always be my anchor. Sure, they all have their idiosyncrasies, but at the end of the day, they will still love me, and I them.
Anyways, all that sappy talk aside, I was in for 12 hours of travel time to get to Philly. I was crossing my fingers, hoping that this delay and horrible traveling experience weren’t an omen for my upcoming Peace Corps experience. It was a pretty grueling experience. I was dragging around 2 huge bags, 1 carry-on, and a backpack. When I got to Philly, I was exhausted, but I managed to find ground transportation to take me to the hotel in the historic district. Then I checked in at the hotel, dragged my baggage to the third floor, stood in front of my room and breathed a sigh of relief. I was there. For better or worse. The experience had started.
On the other side of the door, I met my roommate, a fellow Turkmenistan volunteer. She was a welcomed sight. I was super excited to meet another person who was also about to embark on this experience. Also past volunteers have said repeatedly that your training class of volunteers would become your new family, since they will be the only fellow American faces that you will most likely see for the next two years. You will be at their weddings, and you will hold their babies. That’s what they tell me. So I was prepared to make my roommate my new best friend. It was easy. Her name was Megan, and she was from Montana. She was really friendly, and we hit it off. We were both from the west coast, so we had come a half day early, so the next day we went and explored the magnificent history contained within this city. I saw the Liberty Bell and was sorely disappointed. From pictures, I had thought it was huge, but it was small! The cobblestone streets were more interesting by comparison.
At 1 PM, we were ready for the official check-in of Turkmenistan volunteers to begin our staging process. Actually, the Macedonia group had already been there a day earlier, but they don’t talk to us. And a couple of them later even threw firecrackers at some of the guys from our group, so a joking ill-feeling had been bred between our two groups (on our part at least), so we now blamed all our misfortunes on “those Macedonians.” They were personally responsible for all our diarrhea, for example.
Anyways, I was very excited to meet the rest of our group, our family of volunteers. Everyone seemed a bit nervous but friendly. I had thought Peace Corps volunteers would be very hippie-ish, but my nervousness of not fitting in faded as I realized that most of them were walking in my shoes: recent college graduates. They were just like me. In our group of 44 volunteers, 2/3 were girls, and 2/3 were English teachers, whereas 1/3 were health volunteers. And as I watched our group file into the meeting room, I realized that I was the only Asian girl in the group, although there are two other Asian guys. (Now I realized that being Asian or non-blonde-hair-blue-eyes has both advantages and disadvantages. Some people think that I am Turkmen, and I feel that I am more easily accepted. On the other hand, my neighbors sometimes asked if I speak English. For those that don’t really want to believe that I am American, I respond, “A little.”) There are also two black people in our group. There you go – American diversity.
Our first activity was to get to know each other, and all of us were at first a bit shy. We held back and tentatively shook hands, but over the course of the next hour, the din of the room and the laughter rose exponentially. We were going to be together for the next two and a half years. Let’s be friends! Of course there were those individuals that I clicked with immediately, and we stuck together for the rest of the Philadelphia staging, and even as I write this, we are still together now. That always reminds me of the book Blink and how in a very short amount of time, you can gauge the personality of a person.
The next activity and the rest of the day were lectures, about Peace Corps policies and basic orientation stuff. Not especially exciting, but necessary. It was interesting and perhaps a bit distressing to see how easily I fell back into college mode. I took notes on practically everything. I wonder where those notes are now. However, we also wrote down our fears and aspirations. Many common fears and aspirations emerged. Among the fears were the weather, the lack of modern toilets, squatting (ok, there was much talk of that, and writing this now, I have to say I have never talked so much about toilets and stool in my entire life. We analyze each of our bathroom experiences), water, food, health, camel spit, homesickness, and the fear of not being able to do a good job. In that list, most of it comprised of our basic needs: food, water, and shelter. And among the aspirations were to leave a positive impact on our community and integrate into our community. (I might expand on this part later.)
And that first night in Philly, I was eager to try the famous Philly cheese steaks. I went with a bunch of girls to a local restaurant, and while I chatted with the girls about their fears and aspirations about the upcoming years, it again struck me that I was finally there. I was leaving American in two days. The application process had taken almost a year, but finally I was starting this chapter of my life. And the famous Philly steaks were not that special. I have had better in my college cafeteria. After dinner, my roommate and I watched Sweet Home Alabama, one of my favorite movies, on the hotel TV. I savored the experience, since American TV with all its faults would soon become a rare commodity.
The next day started bright and early, and after putting on our professional clothing, we headed downstairs with our cool Peace Corps folders. (I am sorry that I didn't finish this post, but I will continue it later and tell you all about my time pre-Turkmenistan.)
HOWEVER, you can write me!! Please do. The address and some directions are below.
US Peace Corps/Turkmenistan
P.O. Box 258, Krugozor
Central Post Office
Ashgabat, 744000
Amy Q. Quan
TURKMENISTAN
Türkmenistan Aşgabat, 744000
Merkezi poçta
abonent 258, Krugozor
Parahatçylyk Korpusy, Türkmenistan
Amy Q. Quan
TÜRKMENISTAN
1. It costs less than $1 to send a letter, but it would mean so much to me. (See plea below)
2. put “Airmail” and “Par Avion” on the letter and perhaps also “Via Istanbul” to ensure its arrival, and usually it takes 2 weeks to 1 month for letters to arrive.
3. And I promise to write back to every one, since without Internet, I have picked up writing again, and I am writing tons of letters each day.
4. And tape your letter to discourage tampering with the mail
5. Number your letter in case some letters don’t make it
6. And please keep track of the letters you send and send me an email (amyquan@gmail.com) when you do send one. I usually get to check email once a month, so I will look out for possible mail and keep track of the letters on my end.
7. And if you want me to start writing first, please send me your mailing address via email. I would love to write you! Please keep in touch.
Excerpt from one of my diary entries:
"Letters and packages from our family and friends are simply the most welcomed sight in the world here in Turkmenistan. I can’t express that with the all the sincerity that I feel about that. Mail informed us that we are loved and missed by others, and that we still remained in contact with our loved ones. And they make the outhouse smell better, the bucket showers more exciting, the language learning easier, and the loneliness easier to bear, from day to day. Home. Mail is home. Mail validates our existence, that we matter. Are you convinced yet?"