Sunday, November 7, 2010

Kitchen party

Quick CHRISTMAS POSTAGE ANNOUNCEMENT: if anyone is planning on sending anything to Zambia for Christmas, you should mail it by Nov 20th if you want me to get it before Christmas. This includes letters. I will be away from the post for 3weeks on my Christmas vacation! If there is anything you want me to have before I leave the village around Dec 21st, Nov 20th is your deadline for mailing everything...even cards/letters!.... Hello all! The end of the term is approaching filled with 9th grade exams and one nervous volunteer, revisions, final touches on events and transfers that cometh! More on the last one later. Last week in grade 8 and 9, we played English Jeopardy for revision. They had so much fun. 9b (the too cool for school class) wanted to play more and even do a debate! This week we had a Camp Glow meeting. Things are coming together nicely. We are $350 away from our goal! Thanks to everyone donating and if you havent its not to late ;-) Rainy season has officially hit Mpumba Village. Water equals life and the village came alive this week with the 1st rains of the season. The highlight of the week was the Kitchen Party yesterday. Ba Julie's (my go to/bff in the village) brother is getting married and I got invited to the kitchen party. This was my kitchen party so I had no idea what to expect. A kitchen party is a house warming and bridal shower in one. Everyone comes with gifts that the bride will need in the kitchen and things she will need to be a good wife. I went to Julies at 10hrs and was feed beans, nshima and katapa(casava leaves) ifisashi with a cup of moncoyo. I then sat and waited for directions which ended up being to sit and wait. While waiting: a mayo told her baby to stop crying and look at the "Muzungu" ("white person"/english speaking person/non Zambian), I was told that the kids were so happy to see me that they didnt want to bath and I met the most adorable little girl ever. She was trying to wear a chitenge scarf around her hair like mine so I tied it for her...her eyes lit up. I also practiced dancing. At kitchen parties the owner of the gift dances the gift to the bride, dances while showing the gift off and then explains the gift. I cant dance like a zambian women but I tried! The ladies at Julie's were happy I tried and they were even semi impressed. The party was at a guest house in the next village and there were over 100 women there. Girls arent allowed to go because the dancing taught and done is mainly
the dancing you do for your husband. The community sets up a commitee to arange everything for the party it was really nice. I even had chicken and a CORN MUFFIN which is rare in the village. The party started out with the bride and her 2sisters crawling in with a chitenge covering them. Every few steps they would lay to the left and right and clap 3times as a sign of respect. We all did this throughout the party. Then a women lights a match and the bride unvails herself. The groome even makes an apperance to give the bride a gift of flowers. The bride also give the groome and three high women in the village(1 being future mother in-law and 1 being the Chief's wife) a cake as a sign of love and respect. The whole time matrons are guiding the bride through the ceremony. The bride doesnt talk or smile during the party to show that she's humble. The party was so much fun! All the women had a good time singing and dancing, even the Chief's wife danced. When it was my turn to dance the Chief's wife handed me her chitenge to dance with...HUGE DEAL. All the teachers got up and danced with me to make me feel more comfortable and everyone cheered! The bamayos in the village may not be impressed with my Bemba but the sure do like my dancing! I had too much fun. I ended a great day riding home staring at the stars and listening to bamayos singing the songs Zambian women have been singing for generations. I hope I get invited to the wedding!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Natural mystic....mini update

Hey Everybody! Hope all is well with everyone. Im in the boma using a computer but don't have much time to type so I apologize in advance for the short post. Things have been going great in the village. Finally got a bookshelf and will get the rest of my furniture just in time for a visit from PCMO(medical officers)! I have started teaching grade 8 English and its really fun. Ive seen so many improvements to my 9a English class and I am so proud of them but my 9b class think they are too cool for school! They have exams in Nov and its crunch time. I really want them to do well. The
We had Honours day(awards day) at my school and it was great. I made certificates for club members, smartest dressed, best actor, best literacy and 1st position in class. The school wrote letters to the community and asked for donations and the day was a success. The teachers loved it and the parents saw value in their child's education. It was sad to see that some parents did care enough to come and accept awards(more that just certificate) with their children but it was amazing to see the teachers step up. You could tell some of these teachers really care about their pupils!
I also went on a field trip to Nachikufu Cave which is the largest Cave in Zambia and its in my district! It was amazing to see these kids go on a "field trip". I didn't even know that was allowed! The wanted to know and do everything. We had to climb up the cave to see somethings and they loved it, even the girls in their skirts and ties had a blast. My co-teacher impressed me, she even did some climbing too. We sang songs on the way to the cave and ate lunch there. There were even rock paintings and tools at the cave that were used and made by the Bush people there. We learned about the spirit of the cave and the wars fought in the area it was nice.
I then headed off to Isanga Bay at Lake Tanganyika Zambia. AMAZING! I did a 4 hr hike to Kalambo falls to see the 2nd tallest falls in Africa and I got to lay on a beach for a few days. R and R was needed. It was nice to see new parts of the country. Zambia is so beautiful is unbelievable.
ok im getting kicked off the computer now. BUT!!!! PLEASE remember to donate to CAMP GLOW throught the Peace Corps website!!!! We are half way to our goal. Also if you are still interested in having a Zambian penpal (other than me) please let me know. I am mailing the first batch of letters next week!!!! So proud of them! Love you all and talk to you soon. Thanks for all the love, support and help that you all continue to give! It means the world to me!!!!

To donate to camp glow to go: http://www.peacecorps.gov/index.cmf?shell=donate.contribute.projDetail&projdesc=611-062 or just go to www.peacecorps.gov click "donate to voulnteer projects" and search under the name "FRITZLER"

seeing is believing...pictures!!!

Chishimba falls with Christine
Chishimbe falls (yes I love this place)

Sunset on the Savanna...literally


Hendrix and her favorite ball

Do you see it? Its a rock painting of an elephant at Nachikufu Cave

Jess and I on the boat after our 4 hour hike to Kalombo falls

Honors day! The school's cultural dance club performing

Mpumba Basic goes on a Field Trip!!!

Grade 8 girls getting ready to explore Nachikufu Cave

All of the grade 8s outside the cave


Ceclia and I after Honors day. She is one of the leaders in the Girl's Club at my School

At Honors day. She won an award for best literacy and she's only in grade 2! She is super smart but since her parents werent there to help her get the award the teacher accepted the award with her....

Honors day!!!! My teachers dancin' it up...


Two of the leaders in the Girl's club reading a speech they wrote for Honors day...I was so proud. I got so nervous when all 4 leaders got up and read a poem we wrote together that I forgot to take pictures....oops!

Saw this little guy while walking home from school...villagers are soo afraid of them. It has something to do with juju (witchcraft).
This ball saves my life!!!


The end result of my 4 hour hike...up a mountain...in hot season....so worth it...but ill never do it again!

playing on rocks at Kalambo Falls

View from Kalambo Falls

Cooling off after our hike!


Rainbow at the top of Kalambo Falls

Isanga Bay- Lake Tanganyika Zambia

Paradise!

The kids in the village where the falls were giving us a send off!



























Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Do you see what I see....(pictures!)

Left to right: 1) My 9th graders joining me for some craft time. 2) At the waterfalls. 3) Hendrix and I. 4) Me stirring Nshima in the biggest pot ever. 5)Jen and Julie my unofficial Bemba/Zambian culture teachers. 6)Sunrise on the Savanna...waiting for a hitch to the boma. 7)More water falls. 8)Hendrix falling asleep in my backpack. 9) My HOUSE! See told you I had a bright blue door. 10) My bathing shelter and Chimbusu (toilet)












Saturday, September 18, 2010

Miss. Rae is teaching. Miss. Rae has been teaching all day

First let me say thank you to everyone taking the time to donate to the Girls Leadership Camp(camp glow) and for the interest in pen pals! You can still donate to the camp through the PeaceCorps website and let me know if you want to be a pen pal! This week was crazy busy! Wednesday I co-lead a community training. This week was about my role and expectations as a pcv and the concepts of development and sustainability.Thursday i taught 3 classes and had 2 meetings all before 11:30am! Friday was open day, think parent teacher conference! But it was a good week even found a new carpenter and tailor this week. The new carpenter was cheaper and is less busy so maybe just maybe by halloween ill be sitting in a chair and not on a jerry can. The tailor is pretty good. I ordered a skirt and a dress from her. Of course they are made from chitenge material. I love both my skirt and my dress but it looks like I need to ride my bike more and fry my soya less! So on thursday I taught all 3 classes by myself all grade 9. I co-planned 1, talked about the other and the 3rd class that was really just for fun. The 1st class was a 80min english comprehension for 9b. The subject was our favorite animals and the passage was about my favorite animal the giraffe. It went well and they did a good job with the lesson. They also wrote about their favorite animals. Their stories were fun to read. In 9a we worked on structure in English. The lesson was on present continuous and present perfect continuous(hince the title of this post). Role play/acting was involved in this lesson and they loved that! They had to create sentences using our new tenses and they got all fancy on me. They really tried, I was proud of them. I continued teaching English when I realized (after the pupils pointed it out and begged me to stop teaching English..hehe) that the period was over and it was time for Religious Education (RE). The teacher was out so I asked them if it was ok for me to teach RE and they said yes. Id never taught RE before and didnt know where to start. We spent approx. 2mins reviewing their previous lesson on sexual feelings but I switched topics because I knew where that was heading! I started by asking them their thoughts on spirituality and religion just to get their opinion. They then started discussing religious text. They told me all the ones they knew and I added 4 noble truths just to see if theyd heard of it. This lead to questions about Islam. We then created a "characteristics chart" of Islam, Judaism and Christianity. For each faith we discussed: phrophets, name of the creator and the meaning of the name, who wrote the text and the language, place of worship and name of worshippers etc. It was AMAZING! They filled in what they knew and I helped with the rest. The topics came from their questions. The whole class was based on their questions and interest. HANDS DOWN THAT WAS MY FAVORITE CLASS/LESSON SO FAR! (Also partly due to the fact that I knew the answers to their question without looking at notes or a book!) I even had 7 pupils come to me during their break to ask me MORE question about the 3 faiths and Buddhism/4 noble truths. Ah cisuma sana! Ill teach that class until the teacher comes back next month. For a Hendrix update: Hendrix is a girl! Long story but my puppy is a girl and her name will stay the same. She had her 1st visit with the "vet" and she did well except for using my hand as a chew toy! The pigs near my house gave her maggots in her paws but shes all better now. She has started staying on a chain when Im at school so she stays out of trouble and doesnt reck my house. All is well this side and Ill be traveling to Kasama next week for a workshop and to visit other pcv's sites. LOVE YOU ALL! P.S. I hate ants and the mouse in my roof! Ants are much worse here and come out of no where and the mouse is annoying and keeps getting louder! T.I.A! AMAPALO...

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Help from Americaland!

Greetings from Bembaland! Its been a busy day. I had a convo with a elderly bamama (grandmother) on my way to school. She was impressed with my Bemba, so was I. I co-taught an 80min 9b English class. The lesson was on past simple/past continuous tense and comprehension. We played a game called "Think fast" where I threw a ball to a student, told them a verb and what tense I wanted them to put the verb in. They had fun with the game. Then I told them a story I made up (but prepared before hand) where they had to identify the verbs, tell me what tense (past or past continuous) the verbs were in and give my story an ending. Lets just say the story ended with Hendrix being eaten by a lion. I will teach the same lesson tomorrow to grade 9a, hopefully they wont kill off my dog. Also tomorrow, we have our 1st Girl's club meeting of the term. Im excited to talk to all my girls again! Im also preparing for a workshop/ community sensitization training im co-leading with the Community Development Officer next week. The training is on my role as a volunteer and community mobilization/development. Super busy but busy is good! So...the real reason for the update. I need help from Americaland! Ive gotten a lot of people asking me what I need or need help with. I added a wish list of sorts on here but there are 2 things I really need help with now now (Zambian for ASAP) : 1)DONATE TO CAMP GLOW! - My district is putting on a empowerment/leadership camp for girls in Dec. Its up to the volunteers to find a hosting site, speakers, materials and funds. All 7 of us have a role (Im helping with arts and crafts and ideas are welcomed) and we all are bringing 1 teacher and 2 studentr to the camp. We have already started planning but we still need to raise money. This is where you can help! But DON'T SEND THE MONEY TO ME! Go to www.peacecorps.gov -then go to "Donate to volunteer projects". You can then either search by volunteer name, in this case its "FRITZLER" or search by the project number, which is "611-062". The project title is "Girl's Leadership Camp". Any amount is helpful! I really appreciate it! Plus its a tax write off! You would be helping at least 14 girls gain self esteem and they will in turn become leaders in their schools & communities. This is why I started the girl's club at my school. 2) PEN PALS!- So my classes are learning how to write letters and they want American pen pals. My classes are grades 5-9 and are between the ages of 10-16. If your kids, family members, classes, youth groups, student teaching classes, the sports teams you coach and even if you want to write to a child in Mpumba Zone PLEASE email me (raekenya.walker@gmail.com) and let me know! We all would appreciate your help with this one. Its also achieves pc goals 2 & 3...CULTURAL EXCHANGE! They have so many questions and want to be heard. It could turn into a good outlet for them too. Im working with 7 schools so the more interest the better! Im willing to sacrifice getting my own letters if it means letters for the kids ;-) Thank you all in advance! I have amazing friends and family back home who I know will help if they can! Ill keep you posted on the Camp. Feel free to email me any questions, suggestions, quotes, positive vibes, etc. Id love to have them! THANK YOU! As a side note to all of this Hendrix got into a "fight" with a goat and lost! He is fine but he has a battle scar on his nose now. Also after spending a full day cooking with bamayos I was told I am a good cook, a good dancer and that I speak the truth! So there you go :-) ... LOVE YOU ALL and miss you much! Amapalo!

Friday, August 27, 2010

6 months in Zambia: Riding rollarcoasters and loving the little things.

Thats right its been 6 months since I embarked on this tiny little adventure! 3mos in the village. I always say a lot has happened since I last wrote but mid July until now has been a rollarcoaster! In training they told us that the few weeks before IST(in service training) there would be a few "dips" in the rollarcoaster...understatement! So the week I was suppose to cook with my womens group I caught the flu. Yup flu in Africa, it lasted about 2weeks. The teachers at my school told me that I wasnt well and forced me to go home during classes. During this same time puppy Hendrix decided to eat, yes eat, my cell phone charger as well as pages from my journal. I was not a happy camper. Luckly the boma sells chargers. I also hurt my ankle during this time. Im clumsy and tripped twice in one day. It didnt seem like a big deal until my ankle was still hurting 3weeks later. While in Lusaka for IST medical made me get an x-ray and concluded that I tore ligaments and tendons in my ankle. I now have to wear a brace/bandage for 4-8 weeks. To top it all off in the grand scheme of it all I was dreading my trip to Lusaka. 2weeks away from the village and my dog and being blinded by the bright city lights, No thanks! But as a nice send off i had my 1st encounter(hopefully my last) with the black mamba. While walking to school I spotted a "hose" in the path. As I got closer, I noticed the "hose" was really a 6ft long black mamba. I told the kids to kill it and everyone came running. It was already dead the kids just left it there to see my reaction. Nice. But the good thing about being here(guess its really how you look at it) is that just as easily as something can change your day and make it seem bad, the tiniest things can turn it all around and make you realize its all about balance. Like sunsets that remind you to say "thank you", school visits where you are told you are a blessing and feed bush rabbit(my new fav meat). When bamayos come to your house to show you their culture and to invite you to be apart of it. When candy, crystal light and dance parties with local kids are kept afloat by the light of a full moon. When you show up to the post and every letter is for you... Its about taking the bad with the good and knowing that your reaction to it all is just as important as the situation it self. During the time of "the dip" I went to a zampop concert and had a really good time with friends in Lusaka so it wasnt all bad. And despite the fact that I still dont have funiture, apparently there are no more dips in the rollarcoaster untill APRIL! There are good days and bad days just like anything else but its the little things that make it worth it!

Saturday, July 17, 2010

Are we together?

Thats the phrase teachers use to make sure pupils are paying attention! Its been a busy month since I last wrote. Ive started co-teaching and meeting with my girls club. Im also meeting with a women's nutriton club and they are too funny! Ive done some school observations, meet some awesome people who let me hitch for free, saw a snake, got a puppy which i named Hendrix and went on my 1st Zambian vacation. I went monitoring with the zonal head aka my head teacher and went to the farthest school in my district Muchelenje it 30k away. The school is a government school but looks like a community school. The school has US sponsors so they have the most materials in the zone but with 4 teachers (literally 4!) theres only so much you can do. When observing the 9th grade class, the deputy head(vice principal) asked me to encourage and motivate the class especially the girls. I didnt do much, my motivational speaking skills need work. I just asked them all to tell me what they wanted to be when the grew up(everything from driver to female pilot to male nurse) and i just explained to them that you need an education for those things. Im sure that was probably the 1st time anyone asked them that question and I hope the teachers remind them of those goals. 2days ago I went to the 2nd closert school (15k bike ride) to do observations. In the middle of my 8th grade English observation the teacher asked me if i had anything to add. I couldnt help myself...i got up and taught! Just a fill in the blank activity but it got more pupils participating which is why im here. Ive co taught 4 classes so far at my center school. I taught 2 civics and 2 english classes all grade 9. Im loving it so far! The kids have fun laughing at my handwriting and my accent (hince the are we together) but i feel like they are getting something. Ive had students ask me to teach english when the teacher is absent and beg me not to leave the class when the period is over. Great feeling. I co taught an unplanned (shhh!) english lesson with the head teacher. It was crazy how we filled in each others gaps and how quickly i thought on my feet. I impressed myself. The head is now a huge fan of co teaching! The girls in the club are opening up and are "being free" with me. Ive had puppy hendrix for a week. He is a feisty yet adorable pup. He eats nshima and kapenta like a true zambian. Saw a snake walking home yesterday. I think it was a boomslang but i didnt stay to find out. For 4th of july 5th of july (hero day) and 6th of july (unity day) i and 4 other volunteers went to kapesha hotsprings in my district. It was a good time with good people. Oh i almost forgot. My too much fun womens nutrition club is coming over monday to show me how to dance, cook, and how to keep my husband. Wonder if i can opt out of that last one for now :-). My phone is telling me im done typing! Sorry for my spelling and if any of this is a repeat. Love you all and hope you are well. Keep the letters coming they are good hut art!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

One Month Down....23 to go!!!!

Muli Shani Bonse! I just wrote this blog once and it erased! Joys and curse of writing on a Computer I guess (beware of spelling and grammar mistakes anyway)! It has been a while since I have written, a lot has happened! I’ve been in the village for about a month now (4 months in Zambia) and I am getting “adjusted”. I am cooking all my meals on the Brazier (thank God for fire starters) and I only use my cook stove for reheating purposes. Cooking is my new favorite past time for several reasons. 1) It takes up so much time 2) Its cold season so being by the fire is nice 3) Its always an adventure to see how my food will come out. So far I’ve made: sweet and sour soya stir fry, spicy veggie lo mein noodles, goulash, spaghetti, “chicken” and rice, “French toast”, Mac and cheese and or course the staples of tuna, egg and oatmeal. I get chicken during my bi-weekly visits to the Boma or when the teachers feed me. They get a kick out of the fact that I like Nshima besides the fact of trying to make me “fat”. I fetch water and do laundry every week and I’m getting into a routine. My hut is becoming a home despite my lack of furniture. I’m going to the carpenter this week to make a deal. The only furniture I have in by house is my bed, a table and jerry cans that double as water carrying containers and chairs. My kitchen (insaka) is also still in the remodeling stages. Once I get a table, a spice rack an someone to put the chain on my door I will move all my food in there and it will be a proper kitchen. At least I’m no longer living out of a suitcase; except for on laundry day (we keep our laundry in our suitcase for 3days after drying to avoid bot flies). I get my water from a boar hole/mono pump and it’s relatively clean but I filter it nonetheless (there are still parasites in the water, unfortunately from experience). I have also developed the habit o f sweeping at least twice a day. Yes it gives me something to do but it is also very sandy in this area. I love my white house with the bright blue door! Although that blue door will become purple in due time. I’ve been had countless introductions with my community where I explain “I am a Black American from the United States Peace Corps and I am here to teach and work in the community for two years. I live in the village just like you and I have no money only knowledge and skills!” Of course I’m supposed to say this in Bemba which is fine until someone screams at me. It’s tricky because the kids want me to speak in English because they want to practice their English. All the adults want me to speak in Bemba 1) because they don’t know English; 2) they want me to be fluent in Bemba, 3) the get a kick out of my accent. Either way someone is always screaming at me. I understand Bemba I just can’t speak it very well. So when a Bamayo came over to visit the other day and told me I needed to sweep my yard in Bemba, she was shocked when I responded.
Since I am in Community Entry (CE) and techniqucally not suppose to work, I’ve just been having a lot of meetings with local leaders, the Community Development Officer and the Clinic staff. I am in the classroom 4 days a week and once a week I will be doing community work. All the projects that I want to do (HIV/AIDS counseling and testing (VCT) days, Child health and nutrition edu, HIV/AIDS awareness, working with women’s groups, local group registration, literacy and food security) will be working with these people. I’m sure they will get tired of me quick. Since I’m still in this integration/CE period I have not done much traveling to schools in my zone. I am a Zonal Volunteer meaning I will eventually work at all the 7 schools (5 governments and 2 community) in my zone in the next two years...in theory. I will work at the 3 closest schools the first year. They are 7k, 9k and 1k away. I am lucky because my Zonal Center School is in my front yard almost (1k) and the ZIC (Zonal In-service Coordinator) and Zonal Head are based there so I get to tag along on all their official zonal meetings/business. A few weeks ago I went to the GRACE mtg. This is where all the schools in the zonal talk about the possible challenges and solutions facing each grade. I will be doing monitoring with the ZIC and Zonal Head for the next 3 weeks which gives me a chance to go to the schools that are the farthest away (24 and 30k). I won’t be riding my bike to those schools just yet…maybe one day.
In addition to co-teaching Ill also be working with the after school clubs. I start my clubs this week! There is only so much I can do in a classroom (laws and such) but these clubs are a way for me to do something positive. I am “starting” an Art club to identify those kids with talent and interest in the arts. There is already a cultural dance, music, and drama club but I am not sure how well they are doing. If they are active then my “art” club will turn into a “sit and write with Ba/Madame Rae “club. Or maybe even a “help me make teacher/learning aids” club. I just want the kids to have an outlet. My “baby” is the girls club, the GLOW club. GLOW stands Girls Leading Our World. It is a club based off of a Camp that Peace Corps Zambia puts on. The camp is for girls grades 6 through 8. The Camp is to empower girls, give them a safe space to discuss any issues or problems they have, to show them they don’t have to feed into the roles that society gives them and to give them a break because they work so hard and do so much. My district (Mpika) is sponsoring the club in December. Each volunteer will bring 2 girls and one teacher to the camp. This is why I’m starting the club so early so I can send the right people in an attempt to find peer educators for the club once I am gone. Clubs started last week and I announced I was starting a club last Monday. I was in Kasama for PC business last Friday but found out today that there were girls looking for me on club day. Sounds Promising! I really want to be there for these girls. They are dealing with way more then I could even imagine at 15 (and in grade 7!). If you all want to help with the Camp, there will be a way for you to donate trough the Peace Corps website, and Ill add a link to blog. We have to submit the grant so Ill keep you posted. Also if anyone has any craft ideas throw them at me, I’m in charge of crafts for the district camp…imagine that.
My bike skills are improving and I blame it all on my Peace Corps neighbor Annie. LOVE HER! It’s so nice to be near someone who gets it. She lives about 2k from one of my schools, which is nice until she leaves me in Sept! good thing she’s getting replaced. It’s good to talk to someone who’s been here for two years and isn’t completely over it yet. She’s my dose of reality. We talk about what can and can’t work and the challenges that are inevitable. I’ve already discovered that some of my goals and ideas just wont work here be it due to law, culture, apathy, language barrier, ignorance or what have you and its better to realize that now. Within the last month I’ve realized that there are something’s that I have to get use to like COLD SEASON, iwe (kids) going through my trash, and random farm animals paying a visit (in fairness I like the random farm animals.) There are something’s I will never get use to like corporal punishment, gender disparity and people staring at me and not speaking even when I greet them in English, Bemba and sometimes Spanish(just to make sure). There will be more challenges then successes but that will just make me savior/cherish the successes that much more.
Things are going well. There are ups and downs, and good days and bad days just like anything else. With every bad day (or sick day) I remember that anything worth having is worth fighting for and that with each rough day comes an indescribable beauty in some way shape or form. My intake (PCV 2010 RED and LIFE) has a saying “TIA- This is Africa”. We always say this when life here does what it wants without talking to us first (good and bad). TIA this is Africa where the stars twinkle, the sunsets are purple and you find happiness/beauty in the simple things. TIA-This is Africa where iwe go through your trash, it takes 2 hours to make pasta, and there is a COLD season…COLD season in AFRICA! Really?! Finding humor in everything is another thing my intake does….
Sorry this was so long, but I figured I should write as much as I could seeing as I’m typing on a computer and not a phone (for the 2nd time today). Also sorry for my bad English! I’ve been using Zamlish and so I’m kind of stuck in broken English mode. Thank you soooooo much for all the letters, cards, packages, email, text messages, and phone calls. It’s so nice to keep in touch with people back home and to get updates from America Land! I LOVE YOU ALLL!!!!! Amapalo (blessings) elyo shalenipo (stay well).

Sorry no pictures of the house me and my flash drive are having issues :(

More pictures! Swear-in and beyond










Chisembe Falls In Kasama Northern Provience! My Provential Capital

















New RED volunteers 2010!






My Swear-In Dress! Had it made out of Chitenge material here in Zambia!


My Bike and morning wait for the curiser buddy....Mallory!








America, Zambia Cimo-Cine! (It means that America and Zambia are One!)














Friday, May 14, 2010

Picture time








So! People wanted me to post some pictures but its a LOT harder then it sounds so this may be it for now but maybe in June (during proventials) I can upload more. Sorry Im actually not in a lot of these but this is a glimpse of what my life has been like so far...enjoy for now!