Monday, August 26, 2013

A Week Full of Bienvenidas and Motivation

My first week in site proved to be as awkward and overwhelming as so many promised it would be.  I will be perfectly content if I live the rest of my life without being ´presented´to another director, alcalde (mayor), school, or any other group of people.  However, even with the awkwardness and mass confusion, I am eternally grateful for the amazing welcome I have received.

I am a replacement volunteer, meaning I was sent to a site where another youth development volunteer recently left after her 2 years of service.  Being a replacement volunteer has its pros and cons - on the one hand, the majority of the community know what Cuerpo de Paz (the Peace Corps) is and I have lots of community members willing and excited to work with me.  On the other hand, I am constantly told what Amanda (the last volunteer) did and am expected to dive head first into work.  Thankfully, Amanda left me with a great set of potential socios and good relationships with the municipality and local schools.

So here is a glimpse of how my week went:

After convincng a collectivo to load up all my luggage and a mattress and drop me off directly at my host family´s house, I arrived in Ucupe just in time for lunch.  I found my room ready for me complete with balloons and signs of ¨Bienvenidas¨ from Valeria and Dayana - my two host sabrinas ages 8 and 5 respectively.

I spent the afternoon unpacking a little and beginning to settle in.  I intend to continue working on my room, which will aslo serve as an office of sorts, for the next several weeks - gradually getting things in the capital city and getting organized.  As for now, the floor suffices as a dresser and a desk.  My host mom had many members of the family - aunts and cousins who spend every night in our house - as well as 5 or so women who live on my street over for dinner to introduce me to everyone.  It is nice to already have familiar faces on the street and people looking out for me in the tranquilo pueblo of Ucupe.

Tuesday I ventured to the municipality to be presented by and to members of the muni.  After waiting an hour - a typical occurance in Peruvian culture, I was escorted to a room set-up with a table and ¨Bienvenida Caroly al Distrito Lagunas Mocupe¨ displayed on the wall.  I think they ran out of letters to actually write Carolina ;)  It was a nice reception led by a member of the municipality staff who recited a poem to me.  It also included ¨palabras¨ or speeches from directors of the local schools, a representative of the regional government of Lambayeque, my host mom, and the tenant alcalde and I had a song sung to me by another member of municipality staff.  It concluded with the tenant alcalde giving me a dozen roses, refreshments for everyone and each person introducing themselves.

Following the muni presentation, I walked with my host mom, muni representative, and director of the high school to the school.  In case everyone hasn´t already noticed the new gringa walking around, I was particularly conspicuous carrying a dozen glittery roses.

The school presentations continued for the next 2 days as representatives of the muni and my host mom took me around to 10 or so schools where I was once again ¨presented¨ to directors, professsors, and students with varying levels of interest and excitement.

My crew of municipality works and host mom also took me to the beach in Lagunas, only 30 minutes from my house so I am excited to visit the beach lots this coming summer!

Overall it has been quite a week that will continue into next week as I begin helping at 2 schools.  As many awkward moments I had being ¨presented¨ over and over again, this week gave me great motivation to fully get to know my community and truly dedicate 2 years of work and life here.  Visiting many small caserios, schools, and directors proved there is no shortage of work and energy here.  No, the tough part will not come in finding partners but in choosing where to focus energy and where I can have the best impact.

Thanks for the awesome welcome District of Lagunas!

*Also, I hope to share pictures of these adventures soon.  Unfortunately, my computer has broken so don´t have a way to get them from my camera now.  I will be working on this and hopefully sharing pictures before too long.

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Final Weeks of Training and Swearing In

For a year application process and 10 weeks of training in Lima, I have prepared for and dreamed of the community I will live in and work with as a Peace Corps volunteer - my site.  The first week of August, I traveled to Ucupe, Mocupe in the department of Lambayeque for the first of many times and the community immediately stole my heart.  

Over the next 2 years, I will share lots of information about my new Peruvian family and the community of Ucupe (and of Mocupe).  

***So to clarify - my new home is in the pueblo of Ucupe - a small caserio of Mocupe.  The main community is Mocupe and includes the caserios of Lagunas, Nuevo Mocupe and Ucupe.  This is all in the District of Lagunas.  To give an idea of the size: The entire district has around 10,000 people with under 4,000 residing in the main community of Mocupe and the remaining 6,000 split between the 3 caserios. So my home is in Ucupe and I will be working with schools and health posts in both Ucupe and Mocupe***

So, as I was saying, I will share lots of information about my family and site over the next 2 years but for now, after just a few days, I can already tell you I am thrilled to be a member of the rural coastal pueblo of Ucupe and think, or optimistically hope rather, that with current community leaders, patience, and hard work I can see some cool things happen in my community over the next 2 years and I'm looking forward to finishing training and returning not as a trainee but as a volunteer. 

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Following site visits, we returned to Chaclacayo as trainees and 7 days later we once again packed our bags and headed to the bus station as volunteers. 

The final week of training was a blur of finishing up trainings, language interviews, preparing to move, and soaking up the last days in Chaclacayo - including time with my host family, other trainees, and the hot water and wi-fi I was spoiled to have in Lima.  

It is hard to imagine I was telling my family, friends, and life stateside good-bye only 10 weeks ago. 
Within 10 weeks, I have gone from a bajo-bajo (low-low) Spanish level to intermedio-alto (intermediate-high) Spanish level.  
I have traveled to 3 different departments in Peru - including coastal areas to the north and the south.
I have become a member of a big Peruvian family to whom I was a stranger a few short months ago.  
And all of this I have done with friendship and support from amazing training staff and other trainees who are on this wild ride with me. 

Now it is equally as strange to say yet another goodbye to that new Peruvian family, those supportive staff members, and many of those fellow trainees and friends to venture to the real experience of Peace Corps - our sites.  The 10 weeks of training are an extreme learning curve and certainly an adventure in their own right, but they are but a blip of time and only the surface of the real task of serving as a Peace Corps volunteer in site.  I was sad to leave my first Peruvian home of Chaclacayo but overjoyed with anticipation, nerves, and excitement to take my first steps as a volunteer.  

Mil gracias to the host families, training team, Peace Corps staff, friends on the journey with me, and, as always, my family and friends supporting me from home for making training a great experience.  Now let's take some pasos adelante (steps forward) to the meat and potatoes of this adventure - my service in Ucupe Lambayeque Peru! 

Celebrating Swearing In as Peace Corps Volunteers with the close friends of my language group and one of our wonderful language facilitators Pablo 
*as usual, there are a few more pics posted on Facebook so enjoy :) 

Monday, August 5, 2013

Training Continues: Weeks 7 & 8

As training continues, it has become more and more of a time management experiment.  A great balance between spending time to learn and bond with my host family, studying and learning Spanish, spending time to relax with my fellow trainees, and taking time for myself to reconnect with friends and family back home, blogging/journaling or the rare but necessary alone time.  

This great balancing act seemed to intensify in the training weeks following FBT.  The highlights of my walking the tight rope of training in Weeks 7 & 8 follow. 

Site Assignments
The Thursday following Field Based Training was Site Assignment Day - the day we find out the departments and communities we will call home and work with for the next 2 years.  The training center staff like to get creative and have a game or activity to reveal sites.  For my training class of Peru 21, they hung balloons across a clothes line.  Each balloon had one of our pictures on it.  Two at a time (one business trainee and one youth trainee) would pop our balloons to find the names of our site.  

Following the reveal, we had meetings with our Regional Coordinators to learn more information about our departments and sites.  I am excited to say I will be living in the department of Lambayeque - a region on the northern coast of Peru and the department I visited for FBT - in a small site called Mocupe.  I will be a replacement volunteer for a youth development volunteer who recently finished her 2 years of service and returned home this summer.  While I was given information about the town of Mocupe, my new host family, and the past volunteer's projects, I feel the true identity of Mocupe and the nature of my work will remain a mystery until I not just visit but move in and begin my life and service there. 

Dinners with Host Families and Trainees in the Neighborhood 
A definite highlight and favorite moment from the past two weeks was cooking dinner with host families. The night of site visit, I went to the host house of 2 trainees to cook tacos for their families.  Getting to cook a tasty meal while spending time with friends and their families was a lot of fun. 

Apparently that family had a great time, too because they told my host family how great it was leading my host family to invite the other volunteers over to cook at our house.  At the request of my host sister, Sara, we prepared my mother's recipe (with a few Peruvian substitutions) of Lasagna.  It was not only a fun. Igbo but really special to share a favorite home cooked meal with my trainee friends and my training host family. 


Fiestas Patrias and Visit to Miraflores
On July 28, and the surrounding weekend, Peru celebrates it's independence or "Fiestas Patrias."  One of my most exciting moments of the celebration was that it meant a day of from training!  During the weekend, I traveled to visit Miraflores, a very nice area of Lima with two friends and my host family.  It was pretty and felt eerily American-like with a Starbucks on every corner.  

My host brother Samuel and my host sabrinas Ariana and Estephany in Miraflores

One of the coolest things on our Miraflores adventure was finding a Cuerpo de Paz connection in the artisan market.  During Fiestas Patrias, artisans from all over Peru come to Lima to showcase and sell their works.  This is what spurred my host family's trip because my host mom wanted to get a scarf from an artisan of her home town in the Sierra.  While walking through the market, a friend of mine who is a business volunteer trainee spotted embroidered goods he recognized from some of the volunteers' current projects.  Upon asking the ladies at the booth, we found out they were in fact artisans currently working with Peace Corps business volunteers and were artisans featured at the fashion show I attended during FBT.  It was a neat experience to connect with local artisans and Cuerpo de Paz partners.
 Artisans and partners of Cuerpo de Paz in Miraflores on Fiestas Patrias 

Looking Ahead
Next week I will travel to Lambayeque for orientation and site visit - which includes 3 days and nights in my new community of Mocupe.  Following the week of site visit, I have one final week of training in Chaclacayo that includes my final language interview, celebration for our host families, and the ceremony to be sworn-in as a volunteer.  Look in the next weeks for the final blogs about training and the beginning of my service as a Peace Corps Volunteer!