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February 28 Honduras, Feb. 28thHi Everyone!
Well I have been in Honduras now for almost two weeks. We got snowed in while at pre-staging training in DC and ended up there for a week instead of two days. It was actually really nice to be there for that long because we all got to know each other pretty well during that time and we had time to hangout in Georgetown and DC. There are 51 of us volunteers. I would say 95% are under 30…most being 22-26. We have one 40 year old volunteer and 4 married couples in their 20s. It’s about 60% girls-40% guys. Everyone is really nice and I already have some great friends in my group.
Well we flew into San Pedro Sula a week ago Sunday…that is the first and last time that we will be there since San Pedro Sula is a banned city in Honduras for Peace Corps volunteers (PCV) since it is as dangerous as Colombia. We took a four hour bus ride to a beautiful little town outside the capital, Tegucigalpa.
I am living with the best family! We live in a cute house, with rooms open to an outside patio. I have my own room. I am lucky because they have a washing machine, while the other volunteers have to hand wash their clothes using a “pila” and we have an Electroducha, which is a shower with hot water…which is REALLY nice because we are in the mountains so it gets really chilly here at night and in the mornings. Our town is basically a beautiful resort town outside of Teguc so it is probably nothing like where we will be placed after the first 3 months of training…but we are loving it here for now. I have gotten no mosquito bites yet and the weather is perfect. The locals are used to having Gringas here so it feels very safe. My family has three children…Marcio is 20, Iris is 17, and Jairo is 16....and a bird named Polly. The mom, Sandra is wonderful. She is so sweet and works so hard around the house...her job title is Ama de la Casa..which is like Heart of the House =) She cooks me all vegan food which is absolutely amazing!.......By the way Mom and Vida...she got eggplant in Tegus last weekend and made it for me today!!!!! I was so excited!
I get up at 5:00 in the mornings to go running with a few other volunteers. We have classes at our training center from 7:30-4:30 Monday-Friday. We have been placed in Spanish classes based on our language level. I am at Intermedio bajo so I need to go up one more level before I can be sworn in as a PCV in 2 months. I have forgotten pretty much all of my Spanish from my four years off so I am behind most of the volunteers (who studied or lived abroad)…but I’m hoping it will come back pretty quick. We are put in classes of 3-5 PCV per Spanish teacher so we have a lot of support. We have language classes all morning, then our “moms” walk our lunches to the center everyday….which is so nice. In the afternoons we have other classes about safey & security, honduran culture or specific to our projects. The 51 of us are in 3 different projects…business, water & sanitation, and health. There are 20 of us in the health project. Three of my closest friends are in the health project with me so that’s really nice. We are getting really great training on STIs, AIDS, etc. We had a doctor from USAID come talk to us last week which was really interesting.
After classes and during the weekend we have been exploring the town, hiking to see the sunrise, sunset, playing futbol (soccer), hiking, going out, studying, hanging out with our families…(Iris, Jairo and I watched the Notebook with Spanish subtitles on my laptop the other night so that was fun!) This weekend I am going with my good friends Kyle, Chris, Regina, and Leah to hike at a National Park. On Sunday my mom is taking Kyle and I to the market and mall in Tegucigalpa. We are all getting cell phones…and it is FREE (no minutes used) to receive calls so I can receive calls from the US easily! I will email my number when I get it!! Well that’s all for now…I could write all day but I don’t want to bore anyone too much.
Please keep in touch!
En Paz
Lauren
By the way my new name here is Lorena =) February 17 DCHey All,
Well we were suppose to be in Honduras last Wednesday...but when we got to the airport our flight was canceled because of the ice. Usually it takes 6 months for Peace Corps to get 51 people on one flight, so they thought the soonest they could get us all on a flight would be Tuesday. But they ended up getting half of us out today and the rest of us (including me) are leaving tomorrow, Sunday. I have really enjoyed my time here in DC. We have had alot of time to get to know each other. Our group is really great and I know I will end up good friends with alot of them. On Thursday, a group of us went to the National History Museum and the Holocaust Museum and spent time in Georgetown. Today, the 25 of us that are still here are going to lunch with some returned Peace Corps Volunteers who lived in Honduras..so that should be fun and informative. It sounds like it is going to be really busy our first 3 months so I'm not sure how often I'll be able to get to the internet, but I will try to update this blog as often as I can.
Hugs,
Lauren February 07 Positive Pelham Article 1For as long as I can remember I have longed to travel the world, help where I am needed, and experien ce other cultures. International volunteer work is my passion. I graduated from nursing school last May. I have been working on a pediatric floor at a hospital in Georgia since then. I went to Ghana, West Africa from September - November this past fall with Cross Cultural Solutions. There, I volunteered in a children’s ward and ran free blood pressure clinics in twelve villages.My experience there was very fulfilling because I was able to focus on my favorite aspect of medicine, public health. I believe everyone is capable of improving his or her own health when empowered through health education. For instance, most people I met in Ghana with extreme hypertension had no idea that diet and lifestyle play a major role in determining blood pressure. After learning to decrease their salt and palm oil intake, we saw improvements in there blood pressure, which really validated our clinics. In the U.S., we often take for granted internet access, books, and our many sour ces of education. We are lucky that we live in a country where this information is so readily available. Also, I believe that healthcare is a basic human right; sadly, I have seen how few people in developing countries actually have access to health care. In countries where there is insufficient money to fund basic healthcare, the next best thing is to provide them with education on basic health promotion and disease prevention. My trip to Ghana was life-changing in that it changed my perspective and showed me how loving and generous people can be, even when stripped of their health, security, and worldly possessions.In one week I will be embarking on a new journey. I will be serving in the Peace Corps in Honduras for 27 months. I am part of the Health Program and have been nominated for HIV/AIDS educatio n and child survival. I am hoping to pursue my passion for public health by educating Hondurans on how to improve their own health when access to healthcare is limited. I will be writing articles for Positive Pelham as often as I am able to get on the internet. I look forward to sharing about my life in Honduras, and I hope you enjoy experiencing Honduran culture along with me!In Peace, Lauren Positive PelhamI have been asked to write articles for an online news website while I am in Honduras. This website focuses only on the positive things that happen in the world. Considering all the negative, sad, hate-filled news stories we are constantly bombarded with each time we turn on the TV, I find this website to be very refreshing.
I am going to post my articles on this website, along with my journals, but I encourage you to visit Positive Pelham to read about some of the inspirational and uplifting things occuring throughout the world. There is also a free newsletter you can sign up for to be notified when the website is updated with new stories.
You can sign my guestbook and post comments through https://www2.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=7600742&postID=8036042794277898761
Thanks!
Lauren
Peace CorpsI leave February 12th for the Peace Corps in Honduras!!!!!! November 17 Photo ShowHey all.. my sweet Uncle and Aunt made a little slide show out of some of my pictures so I thought I would post them if anyone wanted to watch. http://www.photoshow.net/watch/cQ7hG2nS
I received the kindest email from a friend I made in Ghana and my grandma suggested I post it on here just so people can read how kind and loving Ghanians are, and how deeply spiritual most people are in the country, regardless of religion.
With much Love
My dear Lauren, u are rather the most sweetest person i have ever seen among your friends and i like that about u.Once again thank u very much of those lovely words and your human kindness as a very good friend will always be to a dear friend at heart. I hope things are moving on well as i expect them becouse in life everything that u do u will one day account for it, so please never stop been nice to people becouse God Almighty will richly bless u one day.By His Grace things are moving on well with us too and moreover we can't stop enjoying ourself as u are also doing over there.We missed u very much and we can not stop thinking about u bcos u are a real human being who deserve all the things that humans deserve in life, babygirl stay bless for me and all your love once.
IS SAID THAT, U WILL NOT KNOW THE VALUE OF A THING UNTILL IT IS NO MORE. SO GIRLFRIEND ONCE AGAIN STAY BLESS FOR UR FAMILY.
we love u very much and we will always wish u the best in life, take good care of yourself and tell Mr right to do that for me,
we missed u as u do too, c'yea is bye for now i love u my dear.
WE LOVE U WITH ALL OUR HEART AND WE REALLY MISSED U IN GHANA. November 10 PicturesHi everyone....well I am back in the States trying to readjust to life here. I really miss Ghana and the friends I made there. I am in Tennessee visiting my family now and have finally found time to upload all of my pictures. I have separated them into categories so that they are easier to look at.
Go to:
then under sign-in:
email address: lauren4714@aol.com
password: lauren4714
Hope you enjoy them! Thanks for all the kind emails when I was there and for all the people who emailed about wanting to send supplies and money. I really appreciate it.
In peace,
Lauren October 31 Hello All 2Today is my last day at the internet cafe... I am so sad to be leaving on Friday. I had such a good day yesterday. I went with a few other volunteers in the morning to paint a classroom at Tegbi school and then I had my clinic with Sam in Woe near our house. I had like 25 kids around me the whole time at my clinic and the sweetest two baby girls named Love and Rose who kept sitting on my lap the whole time. Sam was really sad that I am leaving..we have become really good friends. But I may return here one day...we'll see. Last night the African dancers came (for the new volunteers) and they are such amazing dancers...its unreal. The way they can move their bodies is just amazing. Anyway I need to head back for lunch and then another day of clinics. I love you much much. Me, Erin, Conner, and Mariah all leave on Friday so we are leaving for Accra at 1:00 on fri afternoon (our flights at 10 pm) and going to a sushi restaurant in Accra to all eat. Some of the other volunteers who are staying longer are coming in too to eat with us as a goodbye...Sam wants to come but I had to ask Ben (main guy) permission to let him off work so he can come into Accra with us..I don't know if they will let him but I hope so. Ok I love you guys....SEE YOU VERY SOON
LAuren
October 29 General Things About Ghanian Life & CultureHi everyone....well I promised I would send an email with just general things about Ghanian life and culture so here it is!
Everyone here has two names. One is a Ghanian named based on the day of the week that you were born and then an English name. Since I was born on a Sunday my Ghanian name is Esi. I made a list of some common great names of children I have met over here: Wonder, Believe, Constance, Comfort, Patience, Peace, Wisdom, Mercy, Fortune, Perfect, Precious, Rejoice, God's Way, Gifty, Clever, Brilliant, Bright, Bless, & Justice. Great huh?! Nothing better for a child's self esteem then being named Perfect.
I think I have told you this before but in Ghana the left hand is considered "dirty". You don't use your left hand to wave, shake hands, eat or anything because it is considered an insult. So children who are left-handed are pretty much forced to be right handed. They have a great handshake here. You shake hands and hold it...then as your pulling your hands away you both use your middle finger to snap. I love it. And sometimes they will snap 2 or 3 times. When you go into someone's house, they always offer you water and to be polite you should accept it. There is a common Ewe greeting always exchanged between the guest and family when you come into their house.
There culture is very modest so they keep their knees covered and only wear skirts below their knees. I think the Ghanians have gotten very used to the heat here because most of the men where long pants and even sometimes nice, long sleeved dress shirts in the 90 degree heat.
I learned that when a girl is interested in a boy to date she NEVER tells the boy that. Ever. Only after they are a couple does the girl tell him that she likes/loves him. It is always the guy who makes the first move. Guys often give their girlfriends promise rings if they want to marry them one day. When I asked Sam what the biggest problem among teenagers are here, he told me its marrying young. Alot of teens in the fishing and farming villages don't go to school, but just fish and farm and get married and have kids ages 15-18....I see some girls who look 14 with little babies all the time. Its interesting because the major problems among American girls is eating disorders but that is non-existant over here. Sam told me when girls are heavier here they believe it is their nature and they don't even know that diet and exercise can change their bodies so they just accept their bodies. Great for self-esteem but not so good for health in some ways I guess. Sam told me men here used to like women with curves (like alot of African Americans do in the US) but that women here would get fat inplanted in their butts so now men like slender women instead. But he said the most important thing here to be attractive is for a woman's front side and back side to be symmetical. So either small/small or big/big but not big boobs with a small butt. Interesting huh? Most girls begin having sex in junior secondary school (14-16). They often get pressured by the level 3 guys (16 yr olds). I was told 70% use condoms, 10% birth control, and 20% "know their cycle". Somehow luckily AIDS is not a big problem in this area. I was told maybe a 1/4 of teens wait to have sex until they get married. Its funny because alot of people here are strong Christians and will justify caning children and many other things because thats what it says in the bible...but when it comes to pre-marital sex they just kind of ignore that part of the bible. Christians here only have one wife but tradionalist (which is the tradional African religon) can have more than one wife. Interestingly, I found that most women who came to the well-child clinic had NO IDEA how old their husbands are. Like NO CLUE...its hard to understand how you could not know your husbands birthday, let alone whether he is 40 or 50 but I guess its just different here. Divorce is not common but it occurs here. The main reasons are if the woman cheats on her husband (nice double standard huh) or if the wife can't have children. I was told that literally EVERYONE wants to have children here.
Babies here get their ears pierced when they are a few days old. It is common for a baby to wear bracelets and the cutest little chain of beads around their bellies. Boys usually get circumsized on the eight day (because remember they follow the bible to the T here). Also, for some reason they believe that babies' wombs get traumatized during birth so they instill warm water into baby girls' vaginas and boys' penis for the first 1-2 months of life using a funnel. Strange huh?! Also, I love this one. If a child has stomach aches/problems they are told here to give the child alcohol. Isn't that so bizarre. Sam had stomach aches as a child so his parents had him "take" alcohol everyday from the age of 8 to his teenage years. Also, if a woman wants to abort a baby they don't go to the hospital but they take herbs instead. Like I said before people here really do not smoke. Most that do are men that learned it while "dating" white women who have come here. It is not important to men here whether you are pretty or not, they really are more interested in personalities. They are actually really respectful to women and never even tell a women she is pretty and NEVER make lude comments. People here are extremely private and never talk about their family or problems with friends. I asked a bunch of boys what is the most important quality for their wife to have and they said being "respectful"....not necessarily talking about just to men but to everyone, elders etc.
Everyone here calls everyone "Afo and Davi" which is brother and sister. I am called Davi Lauren by Believe. All the children here call me Lauren Nurse when they see me...and the volunteers call me Dr. Lauren. One thing I love about here is men are very affectionate towards each other. You will often see teenage guys walking down the street holding hands. At first everytime I saw it I did a double turn because in America that usually means you are gay. But here men are just very affectionate with their friends. Homosexuality is pretty much unheard of here. So sadly I guess they are forced to stay in the closet.
When you are walking down the street and someone wants you to come over they make almost a hissing sound as a means to call you over. Also, among friends each one will have a certain whistle so if one friend hears it they know who is calling them over. BUT they never do this whistle in the night because they believe that will invite evil forces over. Last thing I can think of is hugging does not happen here, and you do not call an elder by his name. Just Afo or Davi (Brother or Sister).
Oh yeah the main food they eat here are akplah and fufu. Akplah is ground up cassava mixed with corn flower. I don't like it..its taste very bland, but they usually mix it with something like ground nut soup or tilapia to give it flavor.
So there is just a few random tidbits about life in Ghana! Things are still going great here...we had 10 new voluteers come in last night. My friend Alli decided spur of the moment yesterday to put long braids in her hair so I spent 4 hours with her at the hair dresser yesterday...she looks very Rasta now. I traveled to Ho on Friday and delivered a laptop to the Ho Hospital, and a bunch of books to the Prince of Peace School for my friend Amy, who voluteered here with CCS last January. It was a lot of fun to deliver, the kids were SO excited...I got mobbed when I started pulling out the pictures and books sent over from a class in America. It is so strange to me that I do not have much more time in Ghana. I will really miss this culture and the people here. In a way it feels like I have been here for so long, and then it also feels like I just got here. I must admit the only thing in America that I do miss is washing machines....my least favorite time here is when I have to hand wash all my clothes. But its definitely part of the experience. Well thats all for now. My clinic continues on this coming week...
Peace and love,
Lauren
October 23 Journal 3 Hey all...sorry it has been so long since I have posted a new journal. Everytime I have tried to come to the internet cafe over the last week the phones have been down or the power has been out.....I was feeling sick last week but now I feel much better!
My clinic on Friday was great. We were down at the beach and finally it got properly announced so Sammy & I had a great turnout. There were a ton of people there and I am very happy to say that the blood pressures were really pretty good. I guess the hard work of dragging the nets and fishing has kept these people in great physical shape. I did have one man come up to me (probably in 20's) and proceed to tell me that (with a DEAD SERIOUS face) he sold cocaine to my president Bill Clinton and that I should get the money that Bill owes him and give it to him. And he thought that I was a queen (which I doubt any queen would be found sitting at the beach in sweaty clothes taking blood pressures) and then was told I look like Bill Clinton...lol. So I did everything I could not to start laughing during this conversation considering he was totally serious. It was quite entertaining though.
This weekend was really nice. I spent alot of time with Sammy, Richard, Comfort and a few of the other local Ghanians that live around our house. We are all about the same age. They are really fun to talk to and debate issues with.
Here is something very interesting. There was a lady at Keta hospital on Friday who supposedly was a bird and turned from a bird into a naked lady after she was caught trying to steal and kill two twin babies in the hospital. Ok now if this wasn't enough...people saw this happen AND everyone in Woe and Keta are convinced she is a witch. No joke. She is being held at the local police station. They believe in witches and wizards here. I had a long talk with Sammy who is one of the smartest, most rational people I know and he is completely sure of the existance of witches. He said that he saw a witch as a child in his village who caused the death of four men in his village. Then he has also seen a tree walk during the nighttime. I know...and here I am Mrs. Skeptical Westerner like "Are you CRAZY?!?!"...but then I had to take into account that our cultures are so different. I proceeded to tell them all about acupuncture, and auras, and therpeautic touch and they all looked at me like I was nuts. Its interesting though because even the Christians here belief in witches, wizards, sorcerers etc...they just believe that Jesus Christ can overcome these evil powers...hummmmmmm....
There are two little boys that live with Charles' family next door that are the saddest case of malnutrition I have ever seen. The one year old weighs 4.5 kg (like 9lbs) and the two year old weight 7 kg (15lbs) They both look like they are under 6 months old. Well the 2 year old has been coming to our house alot lately...he has a huge protruding belly and balding greyish hair (major signs of malnutrion) so Lindsey and I have been feeding him little spoons of peanut butter whenever he is at our house. He is so sweet and cute, just so sad to see that he is not being fed enough.
Sammy and I hiked out to a farming village today and got there to learn that the clinic was announced for tomorrow afternoon so we just left and are going back tomorrow. I had the cutest little girl and toddle boy escort me all the way back out to the road so I guess the trip was worth it =) That is all for now. In peace, Lauren
By the way my brother got engaged!!! CONGRATS MIKEY and KANI!!!!
October 17 journal 2The last few days have been a bit of recovery =)...nothing major, but I caught a bug from one of the other volunteers so I decided I needed to stay in Woe this weekend and rest. I also have had a problem with my eyes. It is really hard to wear contacts in third-world countries because of sanitation issues...when I was in Nicaragua last year my eyes got so irritated that I had to stay in a dark hotel room at the beach because of their sensitivity to light. Well this started happening on Friday and because I wasn't smart about taking out my contact and wearing my glasses (because I hate wearing my glasses-so uncomfortable) that my eyes really started bothering me Sunday night...so now I am forcing myself to wear my glasses for the next week. I really need to get laser surgery if I plan to spend my life in poor countries..but its too expensive for me!...$2000 an eye. So I guess that will have to wait.
This weekend at the house was very quiet. There were only 6 of us there and it was really nice. I read two books. Its fun because all the volunteers are avid readers so they have given me some GREAT books to read...right now I am reading the Red Tent. On Friday I layed my foot on my bed to go to sleep and I felt a pain like a blister...I looked at my ankle and saw that I had a MASSIVE egg sac from jiggers in my ankle/heel (which is a very rare place for them to go)...usually you can feel jiggers almost immediately after they burrow but for some reason I had not felt them until it had really gone to town on my foot! For some reason I was really excited about this...its kinda neat (and gross) to take them out. I ran to Alli's room (volunteer who LOVES and is really good at taking out jiggers) and we removed them. There were FIVE in there and massive egg sacs...but I put a blister pack on the wound and now its already mostly healed...so nothing to worry about. Imagine how many I would have if I didn't wear socks everyday =)
I took up a great hobby over the weekend. A lot of people ride bikes here (cheaper than taking tro tros) so I asked Samuel if I could borrow his bike. I rode past Keta out across a beautiful rode that separates the sea from the lagoon. I enjoyed myself so much I have done this each day. Yesterday I layed on the rocks and watched the fisherman..it was so great. I kept thinking about how my mom and cousin Saul would love cycling on these roads with the beautiful scenary. Constance (our cook) and Believe (our Mr. Do It guy) both went to visit their families this weekend and I missed them immensely. They have both become my very good friends, whom I love very much! I was so excited to see Believe back after my bike ride yesterday...I engulfed him in a huge hug! Can't wait for Constance to get back today. Sometimes it is hard to be around 20 American/Canadian girls (you know how girls can be) so I find myself spending most of my time with our Ghanian staff or locals.
Sadly my clinic again yesterday was a flop because the public announcement didn't inform the village I would be there. We even paid them this time...I guess thats the world of corruption. We were set up on the beach under palm trees next to the light house so it was a bit of heaven. Since we had no patients Samuel and me just laid in the sand under the trees and listened to Bob Marley on my ipod...which was great. Samuel wasn't feeling good so I guess it was a blessing that my clinic didn't get announced. We are back at the beach today so hopefully this time it will be announced!....Its so wierd to imagine its becoming winter in the States...I don't want to leave this tropical climate and go back to cold. Well thats all for now! October 13 journal 1Things here this week have been quiet. The 5 new volunteers who got here a week ago left for Cape Coast on Wednesday. It has been rainy this week so most of my clinics have been very slow. Also, they have not been making public announcements to the people about where I would be because the public announcement wanted bribery from CCS, which we wouldn't do. So sadly because of this corruption, not many people have known about my clinics this week. Earlier this week we even just decided to travel around to houses to see people. We ended up walking like 7 miles in the sand which left Sammy & I totally exhausted. But at least we saw some people.
As of a few days ago, all of the teachers in Ghana have gone on strike. ALL including all primary, junior & senior secondary, and the university level. So everyone is out of school. A group of teachers went on strike awhile back and the goverment promised them more money so they went back to work...but never got the increased salaries. So this time all of the teachers are forced on strike (and police have been ordered to ARREST any teachers they see teaching)...The government says that they will increase teachers salaries in 2007 so teachers say they won't go back to teach until 2007. This is REALLy bad for Ghanian education. One of our volunteers got kicked out of their school by the head master when she tried to teach on Monday. Some of the volunteers are having the students come to CCS to teach them there. A guy Richard who is training to work in construction said this is all really bad because when he gets back in April he will still be expected to take and pass his final exams even if he has not been taught in 6 months and if he fails he will be kicked out...how unfair is that!?
I also bought a lot of fabric at the market to be made into skirts and dresses, but so far have not had the time to go to the seamstress to have it made. But today after I leave here I am going to have skirts made! Also I found out today that a DSL broadband service is coming to this area of the Voltra Region and Mike (the owner of the internet cafe) is going to get it! It probably won't be for a few weeks...so I might have a few days of fast internet yay! You couldn't even imagine what it is like to wait 2 hours for the AOL website to pull up..I guess a great teacher of patience though. Ok thats all for now. I am going again this weekend back to Abor to the St. Teresa Center which I am excited about. I look forward to spending time with the kids again and hearing the music at mass. Lots of peace and love from Ghana. October 10 St. Teresa CenterSo I left at 9 on wednesday morning...and was just a tiny bit nervous about travelig through Ghana on my own. Thank goodness I had sweet Believe (our Do-Everything house guy) escort me to the road to catch my tro-tro. I had been telling everyone that I was going to Accra and was on the side of the street to catch my tro tro to Accra. I showed Believe the directions I was given and he laughed and said you are not going to Accra but 2 hours the other way towards Aflao...oops. So thankfully I had Believe to keep me from getting lost. I took a tro tro to Denu...got off and then took another to Abor junction...then got riped off by a taxi to take me to the St. Teresa center (a whole 1.50 when it should have been $0.50 lol). I got to the Center around lunchtime and immediately I met with Father Carlos who told me all about the Center. It is run by a Catholic Italian Father, brother, Spanish brother, and Nigerian Father, who are all part of Servants of Charity. The Nigerian Father spent the afternoon showing me around the Center. He was one of the nicest men I have EVER met. You know that feeling when you are looking into someone's eyes and you feel like you are looking into the eyes of God...thats how it felt to talk to Father Christopher. I loved his perspective on religion. I spent all afternoon talking to him. He wants me to come back to Africa in a few years (either to Nigeria, Ghana, or Congo) when I am done with Peace Corps and work with him traveling through villages helping the sick and poor. I might take him up on the offer...regardless of his religion he is the kindest person I have ever met. He knew I was Jewish...but he believes that everyone believes in the same God and is about accepting and loving everyone regardless of their religion. The purpose of the Center is not about what religion the children are but are about making them feel loved and to know that God loves them and made them perfect. See in Africa having a physical or mental disability is seen a curse or a punishment so most of the time they are discarded by their families and society and treated like animals. This Center is absolutely amazing. It is INCREDIBLY nice compared to everything else I have seen in Ghana. It is a senior secondary school (15-25 yr olds) who come and get training in either dress making, tailoring, computers, techonology repair, weaving, etc.) so that when they graduate they can get a job when before they were pretty much discarded. The kids I met here have BEAUTIFUL spirits. There are 80 with disabilities and 40 that are abled. It is great seeing the normal kids pushing around the disabled in wheel chairs. They sleep here during the week but can go home on the weekends. Polio has just recently been addressed in Ghana so there are tons of kids crippled here from polio. Alot in wheelchairs or with just one leg. They were so sweet to me and I made instantaneous friends. Saturday night there was dance party for their social. It was great. I am not kidding when I say the kids in the wheel chairs and two one legged-girls danced better than I could ever dream of dancing with both of my legs. It was amazing. I ate dinner with the fathers who spoke in Italian most of the time...which left me a little lost but they were very sweet to me. I had amazing Italian espresso (all we have in Woe is awful instant coffee) so that was a treat! The next day I went to mass with the children..and while Catholicism is not for me...the service was really great. The kids sung beautiful psalms while some of the boys played drums. And the sermon was about how God wanted men and women to be treated equally with the same amount of respect, abled or disabled...not that abled men should be respected first. So I enjoyed that. I had a sweet little girl (because some people from the surrounding village come to the school mass) who sat next to me who was shy for about 10 minutes but i kept smiling at her and then the next thing I knew she was sittting on my lap and holding my hand everytime we stood up! Such a sweet angel. After lunch Sunday a group of girls came to Father Carlo house to do a dance for me. It was great but while I was taking pictures my camera made the sound of a gunshot and I knew my camera was offically toast. =( But at least I got 200 pictures out of it before it died. Well I still have 2 disposable cameras so it will be fine. I went around to say bye to all the children...they asked me to stay...so I said I would come back next weekend. A volunteer from Italy drove me to Abor junction to catch a tro tro back to Keta. I made great friends on the ride home. A man offered me one of those fake soy meat on a skewer I talked about earlier so I tried it. It was good..then I offered him my water in exchange. His wife sitting next to me gave me a bag of ground nuts (their peanuts) so I gave her my bracelet =)...They gave me their phone number and wanted to stay friends. Another 60 yr old man asked me to marry him. Then a sweet girl in her 20s who was going to Keta adopted me and helped me catch a tro tro in Aflao back to Woe. So everyone was very kind and helpful. It was really a great weekend..I cant wait to go back!
October 06 hi everyone!Hello all,
Thought I would send out an update since it has been a few weeks since my last group email...
Well my blood pressure clinic this week has been much more uplifting! I was in one very large village for Mon-Wed. While there is still alot of hypertension in adults, most of the 15-25 had normal bp. Thank God! There is a huge football (soccer) field here that most of the kids and teens use. SO....this must be the reason why theirs are lower here....its the only thing I can come up with. People do not smoke here but alcohol is WIDELY used. When I teach some of the adults to only take one beer/drink a day alot of them start laughing at the idea of that. I went to a new village yesterday that is much poorer than the one from earlier this week. Again I saw 80 people yesterday and only 10 of them had normal blood pressures. I had to send about 40 of them to the hospital. In a way this clinic is very upsetting because I see how very uncontrolled blood pressure is over here. But I guess I need to look at it in a positive light and realize that even if just a few people know they have hypertension, start taking medicine, or adjust their diets, then thats better than if I wasn't here at all. The head public health nurse of this district wanted to meet with me today about the clinics. She asked me to tell her what all I was doing and teaching and she seemed very happy with my educational tools and my system for referral either back to me or to the hospital. She enlightened me with why so many people here are so uncontrolled....she said mostly from the lifestyle, the stress of daily living. Alot of people are fisherman here, and can you imagine not catching any fish during a day and having to worry about what your family will eat that night. Also, most people can only afford cassava (which is very starchy) and alcohol is consumed in large quantities here. But we both agreed that getting out into the communities and reaching out through education, awareness, and prevention are the best ways to reach the most people. When I left she said "we are so very greatful to you" about 45 times...so that was nice.
Anyways..... I also started morning placements. On Monday, Wed., Fri I am going to the children's ward to do crafts with the kids there. I only have one box of markers and one coloring book but an amazing class in Tenn. is sending more stuff so I can't wait to get more things so that I can do more activities with the kids. It is interesting here because kids do not really have any imagination or creativity whatsoever. One girl God's Will (great name, huh?!) that I was drawing with on Monday had to be told by her mother what colors to use for EVERYTHING. Its really interesting..I think because using creativity, crafts, art etc. is so rare here so they just never do abstract stuff like that to develop their ability. I don't know. But so far the kids have loved it and it has give them something to do besides stare at the white walls all day.
On Tuesday and Thursday mornings I have been going with the Keta District public nurses to their well-child clinics. WOW this is really a fascinating thing. It is great because it is free service and mothers are encouraged to bring their kids every month from birth to age 5. What we do is weigh the kids and keep track of what percentile they are in based on age and weight. Now the best part is the moms put them in these cloth diaper like slings and we literally have a scale that we hang from a limb on a tree and then we hook the babies/kids onto the hanging scale so that they are literally weighed hanging from a tree branch like we weigh bananas in the grocery store. Also if they are underweight we don't really do anything about it...just tell the mom about it. Formula here is around $20 a week, and moms can't afford that so if their breast milk is not adequate the babies end up being very underweight. Its interesting because in America, being over 100% is such a growing problem with childhood obesity but here its like SO not an issue considering almost everyone is underweight. At these clinics the nurse also sells a Tylenol like medication and she gives all the children their immunizations. She is going to let me start doing the immunizations. Anyways it is really interesting to be at these clinics and see all the moms with their children. My favorite part is how all the moms here tie their babies on their back using a cloth. I think this is a wonderful thing because instead of being in a stroller they are always close to their mothers, touching their skin. These babies seem very happy being so close to their moms all day. The kids are UNBELIEVABLY cute...I'm so tempted to put one in my suitcase when I leave =) It is part of their culture to put a little necklace of beads around the babies bellies. Also babies wear the cutest bracelets and girls have their ears pierced at only a few days old. This is actually a really good thing because it is custom for a girl who is in school to keep her hair short (shaved almost) until they graduate from senior secondary school so sometimes its hard to tell girls and boys apart without seeing their ear piercing. It is believed that long hair in school is too much of a distraction...interesting huh? Also, unfortunately teachers cane children here. At one of the other volunteer's school, a teacher asked a question and three children got it wrong, but when the fourth got it right she had that child cane the other three children. Isn't that awful? AND they have a "shame" song they encourage the kids to sing when a child gets an answer wrong. This is one aspect of Ghanian society that I REALLY don't like. But they believe caning is necessary to keep children disciplined.
Last thing...I am so so excited about....so anyone who knows me knows that Mother Theresa is like my biggest role model. I would give anything to even make a 1/1000 impact that she did on the world...anyways when we went to Cape Coast I saw Mother Theresa's Sisters of Charity in Accra and CCS helped me track down the number. I talked to someone who works there and I am going to spend this weekend at the Saint Theresa's Center for disabled and crippled children. They want me to come spend the weekend at the Center and then come back during the week for a few days because that is when most of the children will be there. I am so excited about this and cannot wait to go!
Well thats all for now..I go back to the same village today so hopefully we will get a few good pressures today. My translator Samuel has become one of my closest friends and when it is slow we spend hours talking about Ghana. So in my next group email I will talk more about Ghanian culture and common practices which he has helped me understand. I hope all is well in the States!
Big hugs,
Lauren October 02 Blood Pressure ClinicSorry it has taken so long for me to post a new journal. Ghana government turns off electricity for 12 hours every 3 days and it seems like every time I come to internet cafe there is no power or the internet is down. About my clinic that I started last week....wow so far I am blown away with the clinics I have done. My first clinic on Tuesday was national election day so we set up the clinic close to the voting tables under a tree. I had so many people lined up to have their blood pressure taken that the voting official got angry and made up move the table further away (5 feet) from the voting table because he said we were taking to much attention away from the voting. Which was really silly since everyone had already voted by that late in the afternoon. Anways I was going to stay from just 2-4 but there were so many people there and they begged me to do them all so I ended up staying an extra hour. I saw 63 people that first day. The second day we had some dilemmas...first we could not find a table to use, then my blood pressure cuff broke and we had to find tape to close the little hole, then after I had taken about 10 bp's...it started POURING..so we ended up leaving. Thur. and Friday I went to a different village and I saw 100 people from this village. Now let me tell you how disturbing the blood pressures situation is over here. So far in 4 days I have seen around 200 people and I would say MAYBE 20 of them had good or normal BP's...less than 130/90. Not only is that upsetting but the degree of hypertension I have seen so far is astounding. One woman I saw had a blood pressure 235/135...and another 220/125...I gave them both money to go immediately to the Keta hospital and medications because I was scared they were going to have a stroke at any moment. In Ghana, medication for people over 50 is suppose to be free...key word SUPPOSED to..but again corruption in the hospital is very common and most of the time they make everyone buy their medications. I saw probably 15 people on Friday who had blood pressure > 190/110 ...which is unbelievable. Then the majority of people had 140-180/90-100. In the US we would rush the first group of people to the ER and the second group either also to the ER or def. have them on medication, but here I have had to change the way I look at it. Typically if they are >150/90-100 I ask them to please go to the hospital today or tomorrow and get medication but if it is 130-150/80-90 I teach them about diet change and exercise and ask them to come to the Cross Cultural house in a month to see if it has come down. Here they drink a good amount of alcohol, and use alot of salt and palm oil so those are the major things that I focus on teaching. I ask the ones who are going to gets medications to come see me in 2 weeks so I can see if the medications are working because typically here they have no one to follow up with so they eventually just stop taking medication because noone is following them or encouraging them. When I get a bp of 136/82 here I'm like really happy....The other thing that is extremely upsetting to me here is that almost ALL of the 18-26 that I check have high blood pressue (140/170/80-100) which is really not good for people so young. For them since they are young and I know it is more realistic, I ask them to jog together for 30 minutes a day and then have me check it again in a month. I have no idea why they are all so high. It has really left me flabbergasted. Part of me so badly wishes that I could stay here and help manage these blood pressures. It is possible to get them under control if they were just consistently followed up with and encouraged. I think most people can find a way to afford medication if they were just encouraged to keep taking them and had their BP routinely checked to make sure the meds are working correctly. I was really happy when I left the clinic on Friday to see the 235/135 lady was back from the hospital and waving her bag of medications at me with a big smile on her face! So I guess thats one success story...one stroke avoided. Hopefully today I will get a few more decent blood pressures =). This weekend the director of Cross Cultural Solutions came to visit and it was great talking to him last night and hearing about how he started this NGO. I spent the weekend cooking with Constance and learning how to make her amazing dishes! She bought eggplant in Togo and olive oil in Angola and I made everyone eggplant last night which everyone loved! So that was fun! Just so everyone knows...I am keeping the mosquitos in Ghana well fed. I currently have over 50 mosquito bites on my legs...they really like me I guess =) And I was doing so good staying jigger free for the first 3 weeks and now I have gotten 5 or 6. Most of the time I see them before they've burrowed in and I scrap them out with my nail. But I had a really bad one this morning. My toe started hurting and a little blister was there, but I thought it was just from running. There was a little black spot but it didn't look like a jigger, more a faint freckle because it was burrowed so deep. I showed Allie...another volunteer who is great at getting them out and she was like yep thats one. She got cuticle cutters and started trying to cut it out and it was so deep...it hurt so bad I was screaming....and I still didn't believe it was a jigger but then she finally hit it and started pulling out the egg sac...and finally got the jigger out. LOL..I've been wearing socks but supposedly sometimes they can get through sock so what can you! Anyways...I am happy I've only had a few compared to everyone else. My roommated had 22 taken out at one time. Unbelievable huh?! Anyways you gotta take the good with the bad. Still a beautiful country! Well I better head out now! September 25 Trip to Ho and Cape CoastToday (Wed) was amazing. This morning Ally (another volunteer) ran with me to the internet cafe. My friend Frances was there so it was really nice to see him. We left for Ho at 1230 for our two hour tro tro drive. As anyone who knows me knows that I drink ALOT of water and have a very small bladder which = frequent bathroom visits =) So naturally after being on the road (especially on the tro tro where the ride is VERY bumpy over the very poor African roads) for about an hour I was dying. They stopped at a gas station for me..now I will NEVER look down on American gas station bathrooms ever again. So the guy pointed me to the bathroom at the gas station. It was a concrete ground surrounded by 3 concrete walls and there was literally a moat that goes around that you pee into. Quite the experience...what I learned on this trip was that this or a bucket is a luxurious bathroom. Another time on the road during this trip we stopped only to a concrete ground with walls and when you go to the bathroom it hits the concrete and spashes all over your shoes and legs..nice huh. =) Anyways enough about bathrooms...we got to Ho..which I was very unimpressed by. It is a "city" that is crowded and busy. I like small rural villages like Woe WAY more than a city. I am soo thankful that I got placed in Woe..which most of the other volunteers were to. This afternoon we went to this small village with 800 people that subsist completely on their own. It was fascinating. They had mud huts, their own fields of food, even made their own gin. The chief welcomed us and talked to us before we took a tour around. The children were amazing as soon as we got off the tro tro they jumped in our arms and held our hands the whole time during the tour. I had a little 3 year old named Georgiania attached to my hip. She was precious. I took some great pictures which I can't wait to upload onto my website. Everyone was so friendly! I am going to try and come back for a weekend and spend 2 days here with them. When we got back Yeo (the guy taking us on our trip) talked to us about herbal medicine. He is a natural medicine healer. It was quite fascinating. Then he showed us natural pills that he said if you take 90 seconds later no scorpion or snake in the world will bite you for 6-10 years. Of course I was the first to volunteer to take it. I took it and held his poisonous, deadly scorpion..even put it on my face..so it worked! It was a lot of fun..I figured why not..that way I can feel safe from snakes in the peace corps! Yeo had one volunteer in the past who did not believe the scorpion would bite him if he didn't take the pills...so he held the scorpion and got bitten immediatly and Yeo had to make an incision in the cut and put a herbal remedy on it to prevent the poison from reaching his heart! Today (Thur) we went to a monkey sanctuary where monkeys ate bananas out of our hands and then hiked around the woods. Later we drove to this amazingly beautiful waterfall (second highest in Africa) where we could go swimming. We spent this night in Ho and then left for Cape Coast at 10 on Friday morning. We stopped at a bead factory where we saw how they make beads (design, put in fire, clean etc) and then of course I bought a ton to bring home for gifts =) We spent 6 hours on the road in a tro tro and let me just tell you that with the African roads it was more exhausting then 24 hour international plane travel. By the time we got to our hotel on the Cape Coast we all passed out after dinner. On Saturday we went to a canopy walk at Kakum national park. We hiked up to the spot and then walked across 9 VERY loosely hung rope bridges suspended 40 feet over the jungle. I thought it was great but alot of the girls were super scared and close to panic attacks =) Unfortunately the humidity up there killed my camera again so I only got one picture. After this we visited a slave castle and then spent the afternoon on the beach. On Sunday we made a stop at the cultural market in Accra...and let me just tell you wow that was quite the experience. They come up to you and make you come into their stores and then when you tell them you don't want something they say "sister just tell me how much you want to pay" or "you promised sister you'd come into my store" you pretty much get harrassed the whole time and end up having to be very rude. I was happy to leave there! We ate lunch at this place called Frankies in Accra which is a Western restaurant. I got hummus and baklava..which I was super excited about. But its MUCH better in Israel! Then we went to a grocery store where everyone stocked up on food to bring back to Woe. We got back to Woe by dinner on Sunday and I was so happy to be home! I love Woe! Well today (Monday) I start my blood pressure clinic at 2 pm so I hope it goes well!!
September 19 Amazing People Amazing People
Sept. 18/19
Ghanian people are really the most wonderful group of people I have ever met. Yesterday when I was running, a guy named Gidon joined me for the whole 5 miles to the internet cafe. Then when I was running today an older woman joined me for 5 minutes, running in her skirt and flip flops! Towards the end of my run two 12 year old boys ran with me the last mile to the internet cafe. In Ghana this is a significant act because running is just not done here. It is so funny to see how different two societies are. How in America people have to exerise to stay healthy and not get fat because we eat too much and sit around all day at our jobs, while Ghanians work so hard and walk all day they struggle to eat enough to keep up with their energy expenditure. While I pass people on the street most of them do look at me like I'm crazy...kinda the way we would look at a purple dinosaur doing cart-wheels on 5th avenue =) I notice that their inital reaction is to stare at me with caution and distrust. But it's funny because as soon as I smile at them and say good morning, their faces beam with a smile and you can see the immense kindness in their eyes when they return the greeting. My friend Francis asked me Sunday, "Why are you so friendly?"...I said, "What do you mean?" and he replied, "Most yavus do not talk much to us when they come here, but you want to talk to everyone!" So I am finding it fun trying to show people here that yavus are kind and do want to be friends...which ends up in me saying "Good morning" about 600 times on my morning jogs =) I have found that smiling really is the universal language of kindness. Today we went to the market (which is in Angola every 4 days) and again I splurged on fabric. I just love the colors and the culture that it represents. One of the older volunteers who is here for his second time lent me his digital camera to use so I got some great pictures! He is going to make me a file on his computer and download all my pictures onto a disc before I leave! YAY! I have spent the last two days making posters and handouts for my blood pressure clinic and mother education class. I tried to make them very colorful and creative with pictures. I wrote them in Ewe in case people do not understand my English. I hope that the next volunteer will use my visual tools when she continues this project. Tomorrow we leave for 5 days to go Ho and the Cape Coast so I'm sure I will have interesting stories when I get back. I have gotten a few emails from people wanting to donate supplies here and I just wanted to say thank you so much for opening your hearts to Ghanians. Thats all for now. Take care and God bless! September 17 hiya! journal time =)Sept 16 & 17
Today all the volunteers from Woe, Akachi, and Ho came together to travel through Woe and Keta. Everyone is very nice. First we went to go see a "dam" they use to let sea water into the lagoon when the sea gets really violent to prevent flooding. Then we went to the Keta weaving school. It was fascinating to see them at work. It takes ALOT of creativity and 2-3 years to learn how to weave. It is a very difficult, intriguing process. The patterns they made were absolutely beautiful. Then we went to Fort Prizenstein. This is a place where slaves were held. To be at a place where slavery started, where people were torn from their homes, families, and countries was deeply saddening. The Danish built 14 forts throughout Ghana to collect slaves and hold them in deplorable conditions until they were to be shipped off to Europe or the Americas. Many died from insanity which I can understand after what I saw. The women were only allowed to bath during their menses, and in the same water that they had to drink out of. The colonel would watch the women and pick the ones he wanted as sex slaves. If they got pregnant they were moved to mulatto villages. Food was thrown through the windows of the cells and water poured under the cracks of the doors which they had to lick off the ground. They were weighed and if they lost weighed, weights were tied around their necks and they were thrown into the ocean. Men were kept in dungeons so small they had to stay bent over, and most went blind because there was only a crack for ventilation to let minimal sunshine in. The Danish only took 1 slave from each of the 14 forts at a time so that the slaves all spoke different languages so they could not rebel. I met the Royal family of Keta. One of the sons asked me for my email address so I might end up corresponding with Ghanian royalty =) Whenever I ask Ghanians if they are angry at white people over slavery they say no its in the past. What a beautiful answer. Today we picked up the chief of Keta and he took us to a big stone circe you go in that has a carved story of slavery on the walls. It was very fascinating. He explained it was not only the white people fault for buying slaves because many of the Africa chiefs sold their own people for alcohol and cigars. So it was just a mistake of humanity not a racial blaming. Very true. I love their perspectives here. Then we went to meet a herbal bone healer. That was truely fascinating. She was a merchant and had dreams from god telling her how to heal peoples bones with herbs. She was resistant at first but after 4 successful healing using the herbs and methods God told her to do, and with the insistence of her neighbors she opened a clinic. She pushes the bone in place, and can feel where it is broken and how only with her hands (no xrays) then she wraps it with gauze to immobilize and wraps her herbs around in. No pills, no surgeries, no casts....she has healed everyone that has ever come to her. Very fascinating. God can work wonders through people. Next we went to see where the lagoon meets the ocean. Later I decided to wash clothes which is quite a bit of work. You have to hand wash them and hang them to dry in the sun. But then you have to iron EVERYTHING, bras socks underwear...all...because bugs lay eggs in your clothes so you have to use the iron to kill them. yum yum huh? So i'll probably be rewearing alot of shirts before I decide to wash them =) mm..smelly Anyways I plan to go back to the house for dinner...I have been reading a lot. I have finished 3 books so far this week. It is a very calm relaxed environment at the house at night. I love it. Hey everyone!Well I figured out a way to post blogs on my website and since there is so much to say about Ghana, and I don't want to burden people with so many emails...I am going to start posting my daily journal on my website (laurengreenwald.spaces.live.com) and just sending out general updates via group email every few weeks. So if you want to hear about daily life..check out my website. =)
The other day I went to turn on my camera to take a picture and discovered my camera is broken. Other volunteers said sometimes the humidity brakes cameras here..so that stinks. I am frustrated about this because there is so much here that I want to capture by photograph. The CCS staff says I might be able to find a disposable camera when we travel to Ho (the nearest city) on Wednesday...so keep your fingers crossed for me =)
I spent this week on the pediatric ward and it was really an astounding experience. Here is how it works here: A child goes the outpatient center (like ER) and waits many hours to be seen by someone (NO triage system here), then they have to pay 5000 cedis to even be seen ($0.50) which most people don't have so they just have to go home sick. If they get admitted the on doctor for the hospital will see them and write orders. The nurse gives this to the parent and they have to go to the dispensary (pharmacy) and pay for the medicine and supplies (IV fluid, tubing, gauze, EVERYTHING). If they can not afford it they have two choices: go home without treatment or maybe only buy 1 out of the 4 medicines prescribed, or get them all and have to stay at the hospital until the bill is paid. We have one little girl who was treated for malaria TWO months ago but her parents cannot afford the bill (750,000 cedis=$75) so she can't go home. Keep in mind a professional nurse in Ghana only make $65 a month, and most only $1/day so $75 is ALOT of money here. The ward is very depressing with nothing for the children to do but lay there all day. If they want food the parents have to bring them food. The equipment on the floor is pathetic. No blood pressure cuffs, no stethoscopes, one mercury thermometer (remember the 80's), no alcohol, no gauze, no towels to dry hands after washing them. Unbelievable. In between taking axillary temperatures they clean the thermometers off with DRY gauze...sounds effective huh!? I sat in on a unit meeting though and it was really interesting how they are trying to implement the same nursing standards as in the west (infection control, patient rights etc.) unfortunately they do not have the means to carry out much of anything here.
I gave them my supplies that were donated to me from Athens Regional, Athens Nurses Clinic, and other volunteers, which felt great. The nurses kept saying akba ka ka ka (thank you very much). I gave them gloves, masks, a ton of syringes, gauze, IV start kits, antibacterial sanitizer, and their favorite..a digital thermometer! I am going to give my stethoscope away before I leave. It felt great giving the stuff not necessarily to the hospital, but more for knowing that by donating gauze I was saving several patients from choosing between gauze and food. Other than giving supplies though I feel pretty helpless here. The nurses do not really need my help, they need supplies and money. And there is an abundance of nurses and no doctors. What I find myself thinking is whether I should be a nurse practioner. While I love patient care and really don't want to take on the "only prescribing" role of a doctor, I see how much of an incredibly big help I could be here if I could diagnose and prescribe (and even give free medicine donated from pharmaceutical companies)...so I have alot to think about when I get home from the Peace Corps.
Because my ability to help at the hospital is so very limited, I have decided to change my placement. A volunteer nurse last March ran a blood pressure clinic that hundreds of Ghanians came to, and asked them to follow up hoping another volunteer would continue it. But noone ever did and villagers have been coming to the CCS house wanting their blood pressure clinic and haven't been able to have it taken. So I am unbelievably excited about what I plan to do. There are 12 villages in Woe. I am going to spend Mon. and Tues. researching, making handouts, posters etc. Then we go to Cape Coast Wed-Sun. so I will start this clinic the week after next..so that leave me 12 villages to cover in 6 weeks. They are going to broadcast my clinics by public announcements at night so people know when I am coming to their village. I am going to spend 2-3 days in each village doing a clinic in the afternoons. If their bp is moderately high I am going to educated about ways to modify diet and lifestyle and if it is really high I am going to refer them to Keta hospital. I am also going to teach a "Childhood Disease Prevention" class in each village to moms about how to prevent malaria, anemia, jiggers and other common problems in children. I am hoping to train one of the new voluteers coming before I leave so they can carry out the follow-up clinics. I can't describe how excited I am about getting out into the community and really making a differnce through education. This feels like a dream come true. In the mornings on M, W, F I would like to bring coloring books to the children's ward and play with the kids there and hopefully Tue. and Thur. helping the Tegbi clinic do their well-children clinics...but I don't know for sure what all I will have time for on top of my clinics...
Many people have asked about the food here. It is very good, but very spicy. The vegetable are amazing. I have never tasted better spinach, okra, cabbages dishes in my life. Here are the typical things we have served to us: breakfast: eggs, coffee, bread, marmalade, chocolate spread lunch: potatoes (Sweet and reg), chicken, cassava, salad dinner: fish soup, peanut butter soup, rice, pineapple. Our cook does not cook many traditional Ghanian dishes because I guess past volunteers have not liked them. I have had no stomach problems so far =)
People here are unbelievable friendly. While at the internet cafe I always have a group of teens sitting around me reading my email with me and wanting to be my friend =) I had one girl name Rejoice ask me to her house...which I went to today. I met her mom and brother...who were both very sweet. Her mom gave me two necklaces and her brother (24) asked me to marry him =) The owner the internet cafe, mike, who has become a good friend asked me to his uncles funeral this weekend (which is like a celebration here) but we are traveling this weekend so I couldn't. I go running down the one street in Woe during the day and although some people look at me funny because people don't run here (they sometimes say who are u running from or why are you running) or some of the children have never seen a white person before, but they ALL always smile and say good morning! Such wonderful people. Or I'll be walking home and a group of children will run up to me and hug me and walk with me holding my hand. By the way...after we started Charles on his antibiotic his Toe looks 100% better...YAY,..now we just need to figure out how to keep shoes on him.
Many of you have asked if you can send money or supplies. I appreciate the though and it very kind of you, but not necessary. Although if you still feel the need to help I have a list of things that are really needed. I would like to have a "craft cart" at the hospital with coloring books, markers, beads, toy cars etc. for the kids to have something to do when at the hospital. Also these are the supplies that are needed at the hospital and Tegbi clinic:
-2 adult blood pressure cuffs and 1 pediatric blood pressure cuff
-2 stethoscopes (can be cheap kind..just as long as it works)
-Gauze (2x2 and 4x4)
-Alcohol wipes and cavi-wipes
Don't feel obligated to send anything but if you really want to give one of these things let me know. Since packages are taxed so high here it would be best if all this stuff were sent together in one or two packages. Anyways thats all for now. I will post my journals about my travels this week on my website today. Again sorry for the big email.
Lots of love and hugs from Ghana,
Lauren September 14 Hello from Ghana!Hey everyone!!! Wow well I have now been in the internet cafe here for TWO hours trying to send an email and pull up my website to post my journal entries as blogs. The internet connection here is unbelievably slow so I don't know if I will ever be able to post blogs...let alone pictures...but if I am ever able to I will send an email letting everyone know. I do have pictures up from Israel so if you want to look at those feel free...
laurengreenwald.spaces.live.com
I am going to keep trying to get my website to work though.
Well I am here!! Africa is amazing, truely everything about this country is beautiful. Even though I am constantly seeing absolute poverty and disease here, the smiles and joy in the eyes of some of the children I have met is showing me how even the simple things in life can bring happiness, and how people with so little can have so much love to give. The culture and lifestyle here is so different its imporssible to put in it into only a few words. I am going to spend the next month working in the pediatric ward of the Keta Hospital, 10 minutes drive from the CCS (cross cultural solutions) home base in Woe, and then the next month traveling with nurses from village to village running well-children clinics, immunizations, women's health, hypertension management etc. so that should be amazing. We have children from our village constantly over at our home-base so I have really started to bond with a few of them. I have been given the job of taking care of a little boy who's toes are so infected they are going to fall off if I do not find a way to heal his sores...so that should be quite the challenge. Most people here speak some English, but the majority, especially children, speak Ewe. It is a fascinating but VERY difficult language with consonant and sounds I've never heard. I look forward to helping out in the hospital and village, but most of all being fully integrated into this amazing culture. The group I am with are big journalers so I have been keeping an extensive journal...I was going to post my journal on my website but since it looks like that is not going to work..I will include some interesting stories, facts about this culture, and things we have done in this email..I know it is going to be really long, and I apologize, but I want to include my journals from the last few days for anyone who want to hear more about the situation, living conditions, and culture in Ghana. I have taken great pictures but those will probably have to be uploaded when I get back to the states...
Sat. Sept 10th,
Wow well I am here. After a really long flight we arrived in Accra. The airport, if you can really call it that, was the beginning of a new world. We descended the stairs and entered the airport, which was basically a large room. I had $400 exchanged for Cedis..their money is so devalued...10000 cedis = $1 so I was handed a large plastic bag full of bills...I felt like a drug dealer. We drove 3 hours from Accra to our home base in Woe, a fishermans village in the Volta Region. We took a Tro-Tro which are the names for Taxi-vans in Ghana. It's pretty much the only means of transportation because almost noone has cars. I was absolutely blown away by the poverty I saw on that drive. The "houses" we passed most Americans wouldn't even use to put their lawn mowers, let alone live in. The temperature here is great. It is in 60s during morning and nights and only gets REALLY hot around noon. Another interesting thing I saw was as we passed through "towns" people were sitting on the side of the highway with stands lit up by fire or candles. We constantly had to stop to get permission to pass by police and one time a lady came up and begged us to by a loaf of bread for 10000 cedis (less than $1) Can you imagine sitting on the side of the highway at 11 pm on a Saturday night with your little boy hoping to make a dollar?! We got to Woe and were immediately greated by some teens who were very nice. CCS compound is a series of building, 7 rooms with 4 beds (bunkbeds) and dining area and kitchen. We sleep under mosquito nets, and while there is electricity (on and off) we obviously have no air conditioning, just a fan. But it is very nice at night. I am living with a 20year old from Vermont, and 19 from Canada, both here to teach English.
Sunday Sept. 11th
It was nice to wake up at 8 today to the sound of children laughing. The children in our village know that they are always welcome here so they are constantly coming in and out to play or talk to us. Some speak English, while most only speak Ewe, the local language. Most adults can speak at least a little English, but the language barriers is more difficult that I imagined. We have two bathrooms and two showers. You can not throw toilet paper in the toilet, which is the same in Central America. and we have no hot water. But I jump rope before I shower to make it a pleasant experience =) There are 15 of us volunteers in Woe. 13 girl and 2 guys (age 18 and 60) There are two older ladies and the rest are ages 18-25. I learned good morning in Ewe and after breakfast a few of us went walking around the village where all the beautiful children came out to talk to us...and once you say anything in Ewe they think you know everything and start talking really fast...then you are left puzzled and laughing. All the kids are absolutely fascinated by my pink Nike watch and keep trying it on and asking for it. CCS recommends not giving things or money to the villagers, because then they come to expect it. It is better to play games with them and focus on forming relationships. There is a little boy here named Charles, who is ten and has seizures...he's had so many he has had brain damage. The last pre-med volunteer here talked to a dr. at the hospital and got him on seizure medication so i will be in charge of giving that to him. His father is not interested in him and abuses him so we can not count on him. He also has very bad sores on his feet caused by "jiggers". Jiggers are one of the 3 mains problems here is Woe...Malaria, intestinal diseases and jiggers. Woe is all sand. And jiggers are "bugs" that live in the sand and they burrow into the skin of your feet and lay eggs. Everyone gets them, almost all the volunteers have, not me yet. They look like blisters with a black dot it the middle. You have to cut them out and then pulll out the eggs...sounds yummy huh. So that is my job now. Well Charles had so many jigger bites and they have gotten so infected because he wasn't wearing shoes that if they don't heal he is going to lose his toes. So I have to come up with a plan to try and heal these sores. When I go to the hospital for my placement I will try and find his doctor. I have absolutely fallen in love with this country. I already feel very at home. It is beautiful, the people are so loving...I feel very on purpose here.I met a boy named Moses who has become very attached to me. He loved my hair tie and when I gave it to him you would have thought I gave him a diamond bracelet. How the simple things in life have so much importance to people here. Being here has really helped me put a perspective on things. We went to the beach, a ten minute walk, which was beautiful to see the Bay of Guinea with children running and playing in the water. I was amazed seeing the people smiling and laughing, who had so little money and health, but still so eager to smile. I guess thats the beauty of life, the constant striving for joy. I have enjoyed the other people on the trip, who have very similar dreams and desires as me. I think I will stay friends with a few of them for many years. After dinner we had African band come over and we all danced with the people of the village. There dancing is soo unique but very cool. I danced with the kids and I'm sure I looked ridiculous. I met Charles today (with the wounds) his feet are so bad. There are basically holes on his toes. In the US he would be on IV antibiotics with a wound care RN seeing him. Here we just wash his feet and spray antibacterial spray...which then get covered in sand. I have to figure out something effective to do for him.
Monday Sept. 11th
Today was another great day adjusting to life as a "yavu", white person. We spent the morning in orientation findind out about our placements, which start tomorrow. The head nurse of the public health district of volta region came to talk to us. I showed her all my supplies which she was very excited and greatful for. I am in the hospital for the first 4 weeks then a traveling clinic the last 4. I am very excited about this. I love home visits. It is the best way to get to know and understand about your patients. Marie, a premed from Norway, is rotating with me so we will ride the tro-tro together to the hospital each day. I got a Ewe lesson from some kids after lunch who go to the school we have at our home base. Listen how great the names are here in Ghana: Isaac Newtwon, Peace, Freedom, Patience, Comfort, Constance, Enoch, Moses and my favorite Gods Way. Great huh!? Then we went to the market which is every 4 days. They sell everything imaginable here. I bought $40 worth of fabric and a seamstress fitted me for skirts so I can't wait for that. The clothes are so colorful and beautiful. It gets dark here very early because they do not have day light savings so by 7 pm it feels like midnight. We got to placements tomorrow yay!
Tuesday Sept 12th
Today was my 1st day at the hospital. It was just a day to meet the other nurses but I can already tell it is going to be VERY different from Athens Regional =) The hospital has no air conditioning and is one story...spread out over several buildings like a school. The pediatric ward has 2 rooms, one with 7 beds, one with 7 cribs. There is only 1 doctor in the whole hosital!!! (100 beds) Right now there is a pediatrician volunteering from Cuba but she leaves next week. Most of the kids come here with Malaria and have blood transfusions, some with gastro (HAHA i sure know about that ARMC), asthma, anemia, and typhoid fever. There were 11 patients but only 4 were being actively treated. The other 7 had been discharged but they aren't allowed to leave the hospital until they pay their bill. (which is only usually $1-2, but most people can't afford this). The nurses do not wear gloves, and are very excited about me bringing my supplies tomorrow. There are only 2 nurses and one student...all VERY nice. Next I went and found Dr. Charles, who is the doctor for the little boy charles from my village. Interesting...he ended up being the psych nurse. who has been prescribing phenbarbital and tegretol to this little boy who he has never even seen. I now how a very interesting plan to heal his wounds. This RN wrote a presription for 2 antibiotics which I bought for him. Then I bought gauze. They do not have sterile saline so I have to boil water and add salt to make "sterile salt water" to soak the gauze in. Then I add vasoline to the gauze and (get this RN's) crush up Phentoin (antiseizure med) and put on vasoline then wrap his foot. Quite different then done in US but hopefully this will work. Well I am missing my Ewe language lesson right now because I wanted to get this email out... I am really sorry this is so long. I hope you will just delete or not read the journal part of my emails if you don't want to read them, but for others who want to hear about the experience I hope you've enjoyed reading! Hopefully I can start getting this stuff posted on my website and I will try and condense my journals.
I love you all!
Lauren
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