Ghana

Ghana: a country on the coast of West Africa, where i will be living for the next 27 months or so....

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Getting to the finish line of Peace Corps...

The reason I have not been able to post anything for a long while is because life been crazy, unpredictable, and exhausting. I knew that April was going to be a LONG month, but no one expected just how long it was going to be. As Food Security president, I and other members of the task force were in charge of planning this years All volunteer conference; a 3 day conference for all volunteers in country to come together and learn about what we have been doing at site and gain new project ideas…..also just to get together and have fun.  The conference went well, and I had three days to make sure my next programs were ready to go. Because of scheduling issues, I had two programs running at the same, in the same place. The first was our regions GLOW-Girls Leading Our World- camp, where girls from all over the Eastern region came and learned about AIDS, Malaria, Food Security, confidence, and leadership, while having a blast playing games, tie dying t-shirts, and running around. On the second day of the camp, my other program started, my Cross Sector Boot Camp, where the newly sworn in PCV’s come to learn about the other two sectors and how they can apply them at their sites.  This is one of my proudest accomplishments in Peace Corps; the fact that this is now a permanent part of the training program makes me swell with pride.  So for the next three days, I ran back and forth between the camps, making sure both were going well. I Loved it, staying busy, doing things, it was a great week.
 After finishing these two programs, I headed back to site to work on my project there, training community members on different food security topics. I was at site for about a week, when I received a call that would change everything. I was on my porch at around 8am, making calls about my next big program I was planning in May, when I get a call telling me that Danni Dunlap had died. At first I think it’s a late April fool’s joke, but after hanging up with her, still in denial, I get another call, it’s an official Peace Corps call telling me that she has passed away. I didn't know what to do….where to go or how to handle something this unexpected.  There was only one young girl in my compound when this happened, I am sorry to say I think I might have scared her.  Within 15 mins of the call, I was headed out of my village on my way down to Accra where I could be with other people and know what steps to take next. Over the next 5 days, the whole of Peace Corps Ghana came together and planned an Amazing memorial for her; never have I been touched like I was during the service. Danni was truly the best of us, there is not one person who met who she did not touch, that was just who she was. I know that none of us will ever forget her, and will live better lives because she was in it even for the short time she was here.  I think of her every day and know that I will try harder to be a better person because of her.
Right after the memorial, the 50th group, that’s my group, headed to our COS-Close of Service- conference in the Volta region.  Danni was also in our group, so it was nice that we got to spend more time together after something this unexpected happened.  I learned that I will be heading back to America on July 31st and will arrive in Indianapolis on August 1st. After this conference, I went back to site for a few days, and then had to go to another and my last conference called STARS-Students Taking Action Reaching for Success. This is a weeklong conference for 60   form 2 students or juniors in high school,   to come together from all regions in Ghana to learn about what it takes to be a good leader. It was fantastic….totally exhausting and tiring, but went very well.
So this has been my past two months and why I have not written till now.  It has been two years since I stepped foot in America…..and I have no idea how time has flown by so fast. One minute I’m waiting desperately to hear back from the Peace Corps to see where I might be placed, and the next, I’m packing up and closing my life up here In Ghana.  My close friend and I are sitting on her bed, listening to music and writing  her friend a letter since he  just sent in his Peace Corps application and wanted to know what he is getting himself into, what the “real Peace Corps” is like.  The past two months have such a roller coaster of emotions, events, and gatherings that it was a perfect time to think back on what my life has been like, and damn, I do not regret a single thing I have done. I love where I am in life, I love where life has taken me, and I can’t wait to see where and who I will be in the few years.  Peace Corps was the best thing I did in my life, no matter what my expectations were,   they were wrong and thankfully so because there is nothing more boring than a predictable life.  Thank you to my Peace Corps Family, Thank you to my true family, and Thank you to all my friends, I would not be who I am today with you…

Saturday, March 16, 2013

The Battle I Won....


For the past 21 months I have been in battle, in the country of Ghana, in the small village of Mem Chemfre …..a fight that for the most part I was losing, but on Tuesday the thirteenth, I defeated and I won the war. At first I did not realize I was even in a fight, but after my first roll of duct tape disappeared and the amount of things falling increased, I knew that things would never be same. I tried to ignore the problem, look the other way, pretend that it will stop on its own….I was wrong.
I didn't know what to do, where to go, who could help me. I enlisted the help of my second and last roll of duct tape to finish what they started. But it failed, and I lost all hope for a normal and comfortable life. In a moment of despair, I started to talk to myself about my problems and was overheard by a neighbor. He had the answer, he was my new life line, my rope to climb out of the hole; Putty.  That one word gave me hope and motivation to change my situation in the war.
I attacked in full force: ripping, tearing, and destroying my past work. And all the while, it kept coming and coming….large and small fell all over me and my room.  But I knew that this was my last stand, I was Custard and they were going to lose. One finger full at a time, one smooth motion with my hands and I was winning. At the end of the battle, I was sweating from every pore on my body, covered in god knows what, and smelling to high heaven, but as I stood back and admired my work I knew…this was it…It was done and I had won.
As you can imagine, clean up after a war like this took almost as long as the battle itself.  With only a small homemade broom, I cleaned it all up and can now walk in my room without turning the bottoms of my feet black. I took a long, cold bucket bath and now lay in my two yard on my bed, feeling good. I can still hear them, and know they will continue to try, but for the time and I do hope some time in the future, I can rest at ease knowing that I stopped them…..for now.    
Based on a true story of my life in Ghana….Can you guess what I was fighting against??? 

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

A day in the life of a Peace Corps Volunteer in village


I wake up around 7 to either the noise of a rooster, guinea fowl and or one of the nine people that I live with.  I get up, grab the key to my latrine, wrap a two yard around me, and walk the thirty feet to my latrine. Once finished, I greet my bathroom lady, -a women that lives at my toilet- because it is rude to greet going to the bathroom, and walk back to my room. I then dress, make my bed-shocker I know, it took moving to Africa to make me do that- fill up my electric tea kettle- the most amazing thing ever, America you got to get into this fad- prepare my oatmeal and coffee, pour hot water and enjoy. While eating, I am usually outside on my porch reading a book; listening to music and watching my village pass by. I am going to say that this is a Sunday, since they are the best days around here. The people passing by are wearing their best outfits and going to church which lasts anywhere from one to three hours, depending on which church you attend. I will be doing this for around three hours or so, then I will come inside to my room and do some small chores; dusting, cleaning, washing, etc. Washing clothes takes a whole day, let me tell you. By this time, I start to prepare for lunch which is usually rice, stew, soup or fried yams. While eating, I am watching shows or a movie on my laptop.  Once my compound mates return from church, we talk and hang out for some time. Sunday is also the day that my farmers group meets as well as my women’s group. So I will go to those meetings if they are having them, and then return back to my place.  This is now around four pm, the sun is starting to go down and the weather is finally getting cooler (AKA under 90 degree’s). What I would do without my fan, I don’t know. The power has been going off most days now, so I try to spend most of my time outside where I might catch a breeze and stop sweating from every pore on my body.
The power being off at night is just about the worst thing I can imagine.  Waking up sweating everywhere and there is nothing you can do…Oye those are some long nights. I do not have a light in my room, so I do everything by candle light. The reason I don’t have light, yet have power, is because the bats/rats in my ceiling keep biting and destroying the cords that attach the power, so I gave up and live by candle light, which I enjoy now.  After I have prepared diner, which is mostly noodles, eggs and veggies or leftovers from lunch, I take my bucket bath and prepare for bed. Here I will watch one movie and by 8pm am so tired that I fall asleep….like an old lady.  This is a typical day for me in Mem Chemfre, my village. Peace Corps is a lot of reading, watching and learning, with a little bit of action and excitement. Each PCV of course has a different routine, but I know most will follow something like this on a daily basis.  It may seem boring to what you thought my life might be like, but it is these times where people are not staring at me or calling me white lady that are so nice and comforting.