Wednesday, March 2, 2011

so long sweet summer.

During the month of November, many days my only comfort was thinking, "just make it to December." Between workshops, meetings, certificates, graduations, end of the year activities, I found myself working from 7 in the morning to 10 at night. I had overbooked my schedule in a country where efficiency is not a priority and walking distances are never short. Che kane'oiterei... I was tiiired. All I wanted was to rest.
And then finally, December came. Beautiful, tranquilo, HOT. Aside from Art Camp 2K10 which I put on for a week with Erik for his students in Yatytay, my only goals for the month of December were to relax, read, and spend time with people. In November, as I ran from place to place, I hardly had time to talk to my neighbors, play with the kids, or even drink terere! Now that, in Paraguay, is inexcusable. So in December, my days were left open. I could sleep as late as I wanted and wake up with my only plans being to wander and be free. Life was good.


December flew and soon arrived Christmas and New Year's. Lots of houses put up Christmas lights and artificial trees. Everywhere you looked, there was red and green, but unlike in the US, the Christmas colors here came from sandia, watermelon. December and January is watermelon season, and in every household, it is common to see people sitting outside with a half of a watermelon in their laps, eating it with a spoon. I quickly adapted to this custom and spent many days after lunch scooping out juicy sandia as my dessert. Paraguayans celebrate Christmas and New Year's at midnight and both in the same manner. Starting on Christmas and New Year's Eve, everyone cooks a huge asado feast and around 9 or 10, the family eats dinner altogether. Then cold Brahma beers are passed around until the clock strikes 12 when everybody shoots off fireworks, cheers to a sweet champagne, and gives hugs and kisses all around. I spent both holidays with my host family, and both nights, we headed over to Ceferina's sister's house where the whole family came together to hug, kiss, cry, dance, and drink more beer. Both holidays were very calm (and slightly boring) as compared to the big to-dos that we have in the States, but surprisingly enough, I never had an emotional breakdown, an overwhelming homesickness, as I had expected. Christmas morning I handed out the presents I had bought to my host family, their 1st ever Christmas presents, and they loved them. Ceferina even cried. I video Skyped with my family, and as they went around opening their presents, I also opened my presents from the Christmas package that my mom had sent me. I was thrilled to unwrap Ziploc bags and Clorox wipes, Sharpies and a French press. I honestly had a great Christmas, and I felt very blessed for all of the wonderful people and places in my life.




In January, opa la vacacion; my vacation was over. I went back to work, giving a summer school course with the principal of my school for children who didn't pass the grade. Out of 380 students, 76 didn't pass, 47 of the 76 being in 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grade. I taught literacy, 3 courses a day, and the principal taught math. I thought this would be an easy and effective way for me to help the students and at the same time, validate to the teachers that my ideas and strategies work. In reality, it was quite the opposite. Instead of feeling like I had success with the students, I really ended up feeling very frustrated and hopeless. Instead of producing students who could miraculously read and write, I diagnosed the students as having very low basic skills, a lack of imagination, and inability to work independently and think for themselves. It was very depressing and still, until now, leaves me questioning my ability to have an impact, to make a real difference here.
But, if I wasn't a dreamer, I would have never signed up for the Peace Corps. The other day, I came across this quote. "You have the right to work, but for the work's sake only. You have no rights to the fruits of work. Desire for the fruits of work must never be your motive in working. Never give way to laziness, either... Work done with anxiety about results is far inferior to work done without such anxiety, in the calm of self-surrender... They who work selfishly for results are miserable."
I see it as, I can't only work or try things with the end product in mind because I might always end up disappointed. I have to approach this situation from all different angles, keep trying different ideas and strategies hoping that maybe one of them will pull through. School has now started, and I have become very aware that I only have one more year here. Instead of letting myself get down, I am committed to making the most of it, for myself and my Paraguay.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Comments on Christmas in Paraguay

An excerpt from my journal this morning:
12/23/10
Wow I'm blown away when I write that date. I can't believe it's almost Christmas and I'm ... here. This is just such a weird decision I made to stay here. It's so unlike me. I love holidays; I love Christmas, buying presents, being with my family and friends. And it's not like I couldn't have gone home. It would have made perfect sense to go. Good timing, an opportunity to see everyone, a special time of the year. 2 weeks ago I woke up looking at plane tickets, my heart set on a last-minute trip.
But I just... didn't. For the past year, I was debating whether or not I would go for Christmas, and I think part of me wanted to just put it off to the point where I end up not making a decision and am forced to break the mold, forced to take a risk and make a decision I probably would never actively make. To stay. Here.
But now I am going to get to experience Christmas in a different culture with different people. I'll get to share my traditions. I already bought presents for my family and friends here and I wasn't even stingy because I wanted to share with them to the extent that I would share with my people at home. Now I'm reading this thinking - so what you get to spend Christmas in another culture. You already know what they do, how they celebrate it because everyone has already told you. (It sounds like it's not thaaat different from any other day. To be honest, it sounds like it sucks.) Plus you already spend everyday in another culture so can the cultural hoop-la.
So what is it really? And now I just realized... I want to share Christmas in this country with these people to prove to them and to myself that I love them just as much as my own people. To show that this love affair I have with Paraguay is real. To show that they ARE members of my ring of family and friends. I already know I'm going to be sad the next couple of days. I'm going to cry and miss my family and feel homesick. But those feelings of sadness don't replace the joy I feel for being here; they just live beside it. They reside together as I celebrate my beautiful, tragic, bittersweet, memorable Paraguayan Christmas. Feliz Navidad.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

the many faces of time.

10 months have passed since I arrived in Paraguay. A lot can be done in 10 months. You can have a baby, finish a school year, some people sign a 10-month lease. 10 months is a sufficient amount of time to spend in something, somewhere, with someone, enough to be able to say one is accomplishing a lot with that something, familiar with that somewhere, involved with that someone.
When you're counting 27 on your fingers and toes and limbs and teeth, each month is a milestone and inevitably brings about a bit of reflection. Am I accomplishing anything? Do I feel like I know my community? Can I name people with whom I can say I have true, genuine relationships? Here at my 10 month checkpoint, I feel I am swinging on a pendulum between the extremes. One day, everything is a hopeless disaster; the next, I couldn't feel more happy and fulfilled in my life. There is never one factor that consistently makes or breaks my day; it is usually just a big dust cloud of ins and outs and ups and downs, eventually ending in a steady tone for everything I do in that day. I lay down at night feeling exhausted either because I poured my entire self into Paraguay or because Paraguay sucked me dry that day. Just as temperamental as my attitude is, so is my relationship with time. Some days feel like an eternity, and my thoughts flutter between memories from the past, comforts from home, and daydreams of the "picture-perfect, care-free" life that awaits me in the United States once my time here is finished. As always, we never remember pain; everything I remember and everything I imagine at home is clear, clean, easy.
Then there are days where I wake up and feel like time is flying by me, like the train is running and I'm trying to jump on. I realize how quickly my 2 years here is passing, and I feel short of breath thinking that I won't have enough time to complete my work or share my ideas or appreciate everything about this experience. That there's not enough time to show my profound love for this country, this culture, these people. I find myself in a twilight zone; I see myself in the future missing this time in my life, and I feel a nostalgia for the present moment. The phases of time are intertwined.

Which is funny considering that I'm living in a culture that overwhelmingly lives in the present. Can you tell who's the American here? Paraguayans function on a timeline of a few days no mas. For my presentation ceremony at the school, we planned everything and invited people only two days before. I cross paths with someone I haven't seen for a couple days, and they emotionally hug my neck, calling out, "Tanto tiempo! Long time, no see!" I run into a woman from my exercise group on Thursday who hasn't come since Monday, and she says to me, "No me voy mas... I don't go anymore." In Guarani, they hardly use anything but the present tense. Rarely do conversations turn to analysis of the past or worry of the future but consist in the small cycle of Now. Ahora. Koaga. Everything is reduced to short, simple.
As a development worker, I sometimes hate this concept. It's not conducive to improvement or sustainability. There is no looking back to recognize factors and cause and effect; no analysis, discussion, change. There is no preparation for the future, sometimes not even a regard, a concern for it. When the whole country is sitting in the shade with a cool breeze, drinking terere, chatting with friends, I can look through my Westerner's lens and pinpoint why this country is stricken with sickness and poverty, living left behind.
But at the same time, as a person, I appreciate, I envy, the ability to enjoy with every ounce of themselves that terere, that while they spent under a tree in their backyard. We talk about the blur of the moment, but for them the past and the future is a blur. This moment is clear and is the only thing they have, the only thing they are guaranteed in this unjust, complicated, difficult world. So why not make the most of it?

My 10 months here have been a mixture of contradicting time, emotions, and thoughts. I doubt I will ever come to a point where I see or feel just one thing, but I think that's what happens when we truly begin to live. Begin to explore. We open ourselves and fill up with a hundred different ideas from a million different angles leaving us confused and tired. But in these weak and hard times, we grow and change. I know I am a different person now than I was 10 months ago and than I will be 17 months from now. The only thing I can hope for in all of this, is that when I do leave in that distant/near date, that I take a bit of Paraguay with me and leave a bit of myself behind.
Whatever that means...

Thursday, November 18, 2010

books books books!!!

You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink. But what if you teach the horse to drink but there is no water??

Since August, I have been giving weekly workshops with the elementary teachers at my school. Every Friday afternoon, the children go outside to play, and we meet for an hour and a half. In these meetings, I share different techniques and materials with them, and then their job is to implement the new methodology in their classrooms. So far I have been focusing on literacy and attempting to convince the teachers that my pedagogy works. I always like to give as a motivation to my teachers the example that to pass Kindergarten in the United States, you must be able to read and write. I then proceed to say that I refuse to believe that American children are naturally smarter than Paraguayans, so what is missing? The answer? Good teaching, commitment to education, and high standards.
The traditional way of teaching reading is by using syllables. A consonant is tacked on to each vowel and the children are supposed to memorize the 5 syllables. For example, ma-me-mi-mo-mu. As students go along reading, they say the names of the letters and then their syllable. For example, for the word "mamá" m-a-ma. m-a-ma. mamá. This technique is painfully terrible. It is not practical, efficient nor effective. A hilarious example of flaws in the Paraguayan school system was in a joke I found in a newspaper using the words for grapefruit; in Spanish, "pomelo" and in Guarani, "grei fu." It showed a picture of a grapefruit and a child reading the word "p-o-po. m-e-me. l-o-lo." The teacher then asks the child what is the word and the child says "grei fu." Thankfully I am leading my teachers away from the syllabic method. We have now put abecedarios (alphabets) in each classroom, and the teachers are now teaching literacy by individual letters and their sounds.
Although this is a mammoth step for the education of Paraguayan children, it is only one small part of teaching literacy. Knowing letter sounds helps for decoding words, but ensuring that children actually understand what they are reading and even more, thinking critically about the material they digest is an entire different process. I feel that I have arrived at the point with my teachers and with the students at my school where they are ready to move to this next step. They are anxious for more stimulating ideas, and it is plain to see that the children are in need of more support to continue advancing. The next step in my plan is to start a comprehension initiative and show teachers the importance of using all different kinds of reading and writing in the classroom. But every time I sit down to start planning my workshops, I am faced with the same problem: there are no books. How are we supposed to teach reading if there are no books that we can use?

Back in July, along with the women I work with in the Supervision office, various members of the community, and the future mayor (she just won this past Sunday!!), we formed a Pro-Library Commission to build a public library in Natalio. Plans are in the works; we already have the plot of land and are discussing with the architect. We are currently planning our first fundraiser - the Miss Natalio Beauty Pageant, which will be held on November 27th and is usually extremely successful. (And should be hilarious.)
As a Peace Corps Volunteer, one part of my job is to connect people with resources. Seeing as there are lots of organizations and embassies that have large quantities of books just begging to be donated, my job in our Commission is to contact these agencies to begin requesting books. While the most important component of my projects is sustainability, teaching people how to self-motivate and encouraging resources and development to come from within the community, at the same time, I know I have lots of dear family and friends back in the States wondering how they could possibly support me and my community. As I have been highly impressed by the participation and motivation from my community, I think it would be only appropriate to make this library project a collaborative effort between my Paraguayan network and my network in the States.
So, en este momento, I would like to invite you all to be a part of my library project by donating books.

Logistics:
- books should be IN SPANISH
- for any level
- books should be mailed in a package to me, as a gift to me, and then I in turn will donate "my" books to the library (My address is to the right.)
- I will continue to accept book donations until the end of my service in April 2012.
- For large-scale book or monetary donations, please email me at lizzie.greer@gmail.com so I can consult Peace Corps regulations and can work out a way to receive your donation.

With the support and dedication from the community along with your help, I believe that this project can and will be made a reality. It is my goal, my dream, to see classrooms where instead of copying off the board, students are reading, writing, learning, laughing, living. I want to close with a quote from a poster that is in my office at the Supervision.

Con ilusión empecé
Con esperanza seguí
y con esfuerzo llegué
a la meta que soñé.

With illusion I began
with hope I continued
and with strength I arrived
at the goal that I dreamed.



Saturday, October 23, 2010

Familia.

Peace Corps Paraguay has the rule that when Volunteers first arrive in site, they must live with a family for the first 3 months. When I first came to my site in May, I lived with a profesora named Celmira, her husband Rolando, and her two sons, Fabian (10) and Adrian (11). I had a great experience living with them; they were kind but not forceful, included me in their family but also gave me the independence and freedom I needed to get to know my new community. I have no complaints about my time living with them, but I still felt anxious for August when I would be able to live on my own.
At the beginning of July, as I was preparing to rent a house in the middle of town, I was invited by a woman named Ceferina to come live in her house for 2 weeks. Seeing as I still lacked a few weeks until I was officially allowed to move to my house, I accepted, and one Saturday morning I took my clothes and my bolsa de dormir (sleeping bag) and moved to Ceferina's house.
Ceferina, or Tepeli, as the barrio children call her, has a house on arguably the most peaceful, beautiful piece of land in our district. It is located a little ways out of town and its back view looks out towards Argentina over fields of mandioca and yerba. In her barn, she has chickens, roosters, pigs, and cows, and her daily tasks consist of feeding and taking care of these animals, along with cleaning her house, cooking 3 meals a day, washing all of her family's clothes by hand, taking care of her nephew, and the hardest job of all: being my Paraguayan mama. And if she is my mom, then her 4 sons are my hermanitos, my little brothers: Dani (21), Enrique (20), Fredy (17), and Marcos (13). Sharing laughs, clothes, fights, beds, decisions, and most importantly, love, I can call these people my family in the purest sense of the word.
In what started as 2 weeks and grew into 3 months, I had a range of experiences living with the Zelayas. This is a collection of my stories.

The day that I moved to Ceferina's was the first day of the 2 week winter vacation. Dani and Enrique were home from seminary, and although we had already talked on the phone, the day I arrived was the first time we met in person. Also visiting from Buenos Aires was Ceferina's brother, Ito. So many visitors, new and old, called for a celebration - we were going to kill a pig. Kindly enough, the family decided to wait until I arrived to begin the process, and once we began, we didn't stop working (and eating) until 9:00 that night.
Most people know that pigs are my favorite animals, and my brothers could hardly contain their excitement to force me to watch as they slaughtered the kure (pig in Guarani). First they began with the little guys. Completely unphased by the heart-wrenching squealing as they drug the baby pigs out of their pens, they then sliced them open from behind and popped out each of their testicles. The little babies then walked around uncomfortably as blood dripped onto the ground. And I thought that that was bad...
Then came the time for the real show. As if preparing for a soccer game, each person took their position around and in the pig pen. Animal instinct at its finest, the pig sensed what was about to happen and began to squeal very nervously. As Marcos straddled it and Ceferina and my host dad, Francisco, held the pig still from outside the pen, Enrique squatted down and grabbed onto the pig's neck. He told me to come closer and get my camera ready. I squatted down beside him and prepared. Mentally. He then shoved the knife into the pig's neck, and everyone else had to take hold to secure the pig as it scrambled. Enrique pulled out the knife, and my aunt hurried in with a bowl to catch the blood as it dripped out of the pig's neck. Although I had my ears covered, the squeals were intensely loud, and I remember at one point, turning my head and screaming while still snapping pictures with my other hand. After what felt like an eternity, the squeals subsided; the pig breathed its last breath, and everyone relaxed.
They then pulled the pig out of its pen and began to clean it while shaving off its hair with knives and spoons. When it was bare, white, and cold, they skinned it and cut off its head. A pleasant sight to see a pig head hanging alongside its bloody body. I learned a lot that day about how Paraguayans use pigs, and most importantly, I learned that NOTHING goes to waste. Of course, the pig meat is thrown on the "grill" and eaten as asado, a word for the typical cookout, and we ate that for lunch. We also pulled out a string of raw meat to leave to dry and make pork jerky. The rest of the afternoon we spent preparing the rest of the pig. A majority of the time, I sat with Tepeli and cut the pig fat off of the skin in little cubes. We fried this in a pot over the fire and made chicharron, a kind of pork rinds. The rest of the pig fat we melted down for her to save and use in her everyday cooking. Using the blood that my aunt caught and the intestines that we had pulled out, we made morcilla, blood sausage. We also cut up the heart, liver, and other insides, mixed it with garlic and onions then spread it across the pig skin. You then roll it up like a cinnamon bun and cook it over the fire to make enrollado. We then took down the head. After cutting and prying the jaw open, we boiled the pig head to be eaten. They also use the head meat to make a lunchmeat of sorts called queso de chancho, pig cheese. As I said, nothing goes to waste. The prime example being when I looked over to the fire and saw my aunt clipping off the hoofs of the leg and then later cutting up and eating the tail.
Had we not been drinking wine all day or had I not been desensitized to the shock factor in Paraguay, maybe this all would have been a bit more traumatizing for me. But at the end of the day, I only remember us sitting in the dark around the fire, exhausted, sweaty, full.

Unfortunately my camera with the pig-killing pictures was stolen, but this is a picture of a mama pig and her piglets, whom I witnessed be born.


When I first met my new host brother Dani, he had just gotten back from the hospital. He was sitting at the kitchen table with his head in his hands. He looked exhausted, desperate. He was sweating and had no color in his face. He had plastic wrapped around his head, and his hair was wet. He stood up and kissed me and apologized for having no energy.
I remembered that 2 weeks before when Ceferina was visiting Dani and Enrique in Villarrica, Dani was in the hospital. He was there all weekend. He was very sick; he had some kind of problem with his stomach.
Saturday night we ate dinner just me and Dani. We ate vegetable soup with egg. It was really good, light but filling. He told me that's the kind of food he has to eat; he has to be careful because some foods make him sick. I asked him what was wrong with him. He told me the doctor says he has a virus in his head that is entering his blood, traveling to his heart and his stomach, making him sick.
Sunday morning I ate breakfast with the 4 boys. We drank coffee with milk and ate coquitos. At 8, Marcos, Fredy, and Enrique went to church. Dani stayed; he said he wasn't feeling well.
We sat at the kitchen table talking again, just the 2 of us. He told me that the coffee had made him sick. I asked him again about what was wrong with him. He told me again about the "virus in his head" and then said that the doctor in Villarrica said he had a digestive problem. He then told me he has kidney stones, which is a sickness apart from his stomach problems. Then he told me about how he also has a problem with the bones in his back and it sometimes hurts in his lungs and in his back.
A little bit later, I was about to walk out the door to go to Celmira's house; we were going to Rolando's grandma's birthday party. Dani asked me to accompany him somewhere. We started walking down the path alongside the mandioca fields. We started talking again. He told me he got sick 7 years ago. The symptoms come and go, but there is a constant ache, something not quite right.
We arrived at the wooden shacks not far from Ceferina's house. The senora invited us in and Dani gave her the milk and food Ceferina had sent. We then said hello to the senor and sat in chairs alongside his bed.
He looked about 30 years old. His head was on a pillow; he was covered with a blanket. He kept bending and then straightening his legs. He kept rubbing his fingers together. His hands were shaking. He never stayed still. His face was pale and glistening. His eyes were filled with confusion and fear, and when he talked, his voice was high-pitched. At one point, he pulled himself on his side.
I was fighting back tears the whole time.
We said goodbye and left the house. I saw one of my students, one of the middle school girls. She rushed up and hugged me. She said Esperame wait a second and ran off. She came back with 3 mandarinas and threw her arms around my neck. She kissed my shoulder and then kissed my cheek.
We started walking home. Dani started talking about how the man had had a moto accident about a month ago. He went on to talk about how asi es la vida, that's how life is and started to talk about God and Jesus and how through the Espiritu Santo we can feel things.
I left and went to the birthday party in Yatytay. After we got back, I was walking in the dark, in the rain back to Ceferina's house. I was overwhelmed with the thought; I almost doubled over crying; I felt sick to my stomach. How... How is it that I was born in the richest, most powerful country in the world? With access to everything I need? Born to a smart, successful, loving family?
HOW?

The 2 weeks of winter break ended up being the coldest days that I've experienced here. It rained everyday, and it was intensely cold. A couple of mornings, there was even frost. Although we didn't have heat, I still found our house to be much warmer than outside, and I pretty much fell off the face of the planet to the rest of my town because I hardly left the comfort of my sleeping bag. The only time I left my house was to go for a run in the afternoon. And the only reason I went for a run was to warm up my body so that the cold water of the shower wouldn't feel so frigid. The water was soo cold!! After about 3 weeks of living with the Zelayas and taking cold showers, Fredy showed me how to work the hot water. I had been embarrassed to say anything thinking that they didn't have hot water when really in the end, I was just embarrassed by my ignorance. They still love to laugh at the fact that I was taking freezing showers for 3 weeks.

August 16th, el Dia del Nino, is the Day of the Child. This day is a longstanding tradition because a long time ago when Paraguay was at war, there were no more men to fight so thousands and thousands of children went into the battlefields to fight for their country. For this reason, el 16 de agosto celebrates the children of Paraguay. In the school we had a big party; there was food, candy, cake, balloons... At the end of the day, the teachers got together for a game of volleyball, and they asked me to play. A little reluctant but unable to say no, I stepped in and started playing. As many of you know, I played volleyball all throughout high school, and it is definitely my favorite sport, but sadly Paraguayans put the game to shame. They play uglyyy volleyball without rules which means lots of cheating and lots of illegal hits. My team lost the first game, and I was annoyed. For the second game, I was determined to give a better show. A ball came flying deep and I set it into the air, but my momentum sent me flying backwards. To catch my fall, I put my hands down and CRACK! I jumped up and ran off towards the office. "Rompi mi brazo" I kept repeating. "I broke my arm." I looked down and saw the hump, my distorted bone. "I need someone to take me to the hospital in Hohenau," I announced calmly, Hohenau being a German town about an hour away. Then came the protests: "Why do you have to go all the way there?" "Why don't you go to the hospital here?" "I know this guy who could fix that for you." My thoughts: Have you seen how disgusting the hospital is here? And thanks but I don't want some toothless witch doctor rubbing herbs on my arm and massaging the bone back in place. I somehow survived the long and bumpy ride to Hohenau but eventually arrived to the Adventist Hospital, which turned out to be beautiful and well worth the trip. I ended up staying the night, and I often reminisce on that night of such peaceful sleep. I miss the luxury of a comfortable bed, heat, and an IV with "calmante" meds. I doubt many people would say they enjoyed their time in the hospital, but I would have gladly stayed longer.
The next day, in typical Paraguayan fashion, a procedure that was meant to start in the morning took place at 3 pm. I was put to sleep and woke up with my bone reset, a small pin in my wrist, and a huge plaster cast up above my elbow. I was to wear the cast for a month, and what a long month that was. I was lucky to have Ceferina, Fredy, and Marcos to take care of me; helping me put up my hair, get dressed, bathe. Uncomfortable, heavy, and limiting - that cast was my nemesis. At the same time though, it had some unseen benefits. One of the main goals of Peace Corps is sustainability, that is, teaching people to be proactive and self-sufficient. This is one of the challenges though, because a lot of our Paraguayan counterparts would rather be handed materials, resources, or ideas. During the time I had my cast, a lot of my projects in the schools were taking off. Since I was unable to use my arm, it removed me from being capable to do a lot of the things my teachers wanted me to do, therefore forcing them to do it.
During the month that I had my cast, I really came to appreciate having good health and good health care. I had a few really dark days during that time, where I felt sad, homesick, hopeless. It made me realize that those days, the days that I feel lazy, unmotivated, angry, or when my mind is somewhere else, are the days when I'm tired or sick. I learned that each day I have to prioritize making sure I am personally ok before I can commit the rest of my day to serving Paraguayans. It feels odd that the first step to being selfless involves being a bit selfish...
I couldn't have been happier to finally get my cast off. While it was not the first time that I had broken my arm (the 4th actually), it hopefully will be the last and definitely the most memorable.

Sometimes when reading memoirs or stories of people's travels, you read a conversation and think, "surely they didn't really say that.. Or at least, not in that way." Some conversations just seem disconnected or outlandish, and you feel like there's no way someone actually said that or had that train of thought. Well, I can now attest that sometimes those conversations are real. Word for word.
One evening, Ceferina and I were sitting at the kitchen table. She was in a particularly talkative mood so I stayed quiet and let her talk. Some prefacing important details are that 1) Paraguay has a problem with infidelity, 2) the culture in Paraguay is traditionally very machista, sexist, and 3) Ceferina has a 6th grade education and has never worked outside of her house. Our "conversation" went a bit like this:
Ceferina: I'm worried about Dani and Enrique studying to be priests. I don't know if they should do what people say or do what God says. They don't have any money, and they're not going to make any money. My sister says I should stop giving them money. How are they going to support themselves? And what are we going to do when my husband stops working? Who is going to support us? ... I would love to be able to work. I want to work in the church. I want to clean in the church. But my husband won't let me. He's too jealous. He says that I want to go work in the church so I can find another man. But I would never cheat on my husband because he told me if I did, he would kill me. Like he really would kill me... And I never text with anyone that lives around here. Because people here gossip. And if I was texting with someone, my husband would find out. So I text with men that live in Asuncion. I really love my boyfriend from when I was 13 years old. Sometimes I text with him... But I know my husband's been with other girls. When he's traveling. I won't tell you which one but before he tried to get with one of my sisters. I'm very jealous of her. You are the only woman in the world that I trust with my husband. I know you would never do anything... Really I would love to open a lavanderia (a place to wash clothes) from my house. People could bring their clothes here and pay me and I could wash and dry and iron them. Although I hate ironing... (she stops to think)
Me: What are you thinking about?
Ceferina: I'm just thinking about who I'm going to text with tonight...



Ceferina, Enrique, and Marcos in the back
From the moment I moved in with the Zelayas in July, the invitation was extended for me to live with them for my entire 2 years, the issue being that I had already signed the contract for my house in town. After making many pros and cons lists, after many protests from Fredy and Ceferina, after long conversations with my mom analyzing the internal conflict I was experiencing, I took the leap, and at the end of September, I moved into my own house. I don't know why I had so much anxiety about moving to live alone; I think I just really fell in love with that family and was afraid that I was going to miss out on an incredible experience of living with them for 2 years. If I could go back in time, I probably never would have signed the contract and would have stayed with my familia paraguaya pero asi es la vida. Now I am embracing the incredible personal experience of living alone. Turning a house into a home. Learning how to cook, clean, be completely independent. Travel to the depths of myself and back again. Should be a good trip. Stay tuned...



The view from my window at Ceferina's house one foggy sunrise.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

FUERZA ALBIRROJA

Ever since I arrived in Paraguay in February, there was a constant buzz in the air. Everyone was talking, anxiously waiting, counting down to the moment where Paraguay, a country often forgotten, would be seen by people across the world. This moment finally came when June 11th began the magical month of the Copa Mundial: the World Cup.
Paraguay had qualified as one of the South American teams and then was devastated when the team's best player, Salvador Cabanas, was shot in the head in a bar in Mexico. Although he fortunately survived the attack, it was obvious the Albirroja, Paraguay's team's nickname, would have to go to South Africa without him.
In the month leading up to the World Cup, the excitement was overflowing. The one channel on basic TV used every commercial break to do a countdown to Paraguay's first game. Mayor candidates printed off and passed out World Cup schedules in little pamphlets with their pictures and a "Vote for me!" cheesy smile on the back. And the red and white striped jersey became a national uniform, each fanatico sporting his or her favorite player's number.
Por fin, the games began. The one TV channel showed each and every game. Everywhere you looked people were crowded around a small TV screen, enjoying their two favorite things: futbol y terere. It was almost impossible to get any work done due to lack of motivation and the distraction of Shakira's "Waka Waka" World Cup theme song blasting from everyone's houses, cars, and cell phones.

June 14 - Paraguay vs. Italy


Our first game against who else but the world champions, the winners of 2006. With a patriotic hopefulness and a hint of fear, everyone donned their Albirrojas and found their seats in front of a TV. I came to my school on that day and found all of the students had brought their desks outside to set up camp in front of a redneck-rigged big screen TV. They had hung up a big black tarp to block the glare, and the kids were waving little Paraguay flags that they had colored. After the teachers spent an hour lecturing the kids on how they couldn't talk or get up during the game, we got word from the Municipalidad (last minute, in typical Paraguayan fashion) that it was a national holiday, canceling school and work. We stayed since everything was already set up, but needless to say, for the other games, the school was empty.
The national anthem played, the players took the field, and the first ball was kicked. Nerves raced through my entire body; I was freaking out! Paraguay scored the first goal and the screams, the horns, the fireworks let loose! Later Italy got their revenge, and we ended up tying 1-1. Regardless we emerged into the streets proud of our team and wiping the sweat off our brows that we survived our first partido.

June 20 - Paraguay vs. Slovakia

The family I was living with during the World Cup has 2 sons, ages 10 and 11, and they are futbol fanatics. Entonces when Paraguay's next game was scheduled for Sunday morning at 8:30, we were up at 5:00 am watching all of the coverage leading up to the game. They wanted me to teach them how to make waffles or "hotcakes cuadrados" as they say in Los Simpsons, but since there are no waffle makers in Paraguay, we settled for pancakes. After 10 pancakes and only one "batter spilled on Adrian's jersey" crisis, we sat down at the table to eat our pancakes and watch our team. Paraguay won easily 2-0 and left everyone feeling confident.

June 24 - Paraguay vs. New Zealand
On this game day, a high school near by invited my friend De Los Santos and I to chaperone a field trip to visit the Yacyreta Dam, the second largest dam in the world. It's about 4 hours from my site, in the department of Misiones on the border with Argentina. Up at 5 am and traveling all morning, we finally arrived at the Visitors' Center. We passed through the Museum of Natural History, and as interesting as the animals, insects, and artifacts were, it was apparent that everyone was concerned about one thing: where were we going to watch the game? The dam's HR person showed up and announced that they had arranged for a projector screen, and everyone sighed with relief. Along with the students, teachers, and museum staff, we sat and watched Paraguay tie 0-0, "bore their way to the second round" as some newspapers said but we didn't care: we were in the second round!
We spent the afternoon touring the dam and looking out over the River Paraguay. It was incredible to witness something so powerful and so innovative in a country so desolate. And for me, it was even more incredible to watch the high school students get the chance to see something new, something outside of the tiny towns where they have spent their entire lives. Coupled with the success of the Albirroja, I have really fond memories of that day.

June 29 - Paraguay vs. Japan

Progressing as first in our group, we arrived to the second round, where the elimination begins. "Si o si," yes or yes, we had to win to advance. I watched this game at home with my two host brothers and some neighbors, and by the end of the game, I had no more fingernails.
Despite all of our awesome chances, we could not score, but luckily Japan couldn't either and the game resulted in penalty kicks. In a nervous excitement, I could hardly watch each time a player stepped up to take his shot, and the moment when a player from Japan's shot hit the crossbar will always replay in my mind. Their mistake, our win. Exactly as the players were rushing and dogpiling on the field so were all the little boys in my house. I did my best to take pictures of the celebration, but as always, it's hard to capture a moment so perfect. We rushed out to the street and headed towards the end of town where everybody in their jerseys on their motos, in their cars, with their flags constituted the caravan that drove up and down the main avenue for 2 hours. We were ecstatic.

July 3 - Paraguay vs. Spain
Before each game, I was always overwhelmed with excitement, washing by hand my Albirroja jersey and making plans for where to watch the game, but always in the back of the mind, I was fearing the moment when our World Cup road would finish. I was dreading it; I didn't want the magic to end.
On July 2nd, I was reunited with all my Peace Corps friends when we all arrived in Asuncion. We had all traveled to the capital to attend the annual 4th of July cookout at the U.S. Embassy and spend the weekend in hotels with hot showers and speaking English. Although it was the middle of winter, Friday was a beautiful, warm day, and with the hamburgers, hot dogs, and Budweiser, I could have sworn we were back in the States.
Saturday morning, we headed with our terere and our red and white jerseys towards the plaza in the middle of the city to secure a spot for the game. There was music blaring, clowns on stilts, people on horses with carts painted red, white, and blue - a typical day in Paraguay. We grabbed seats in the bleachers in front of a giant screen which one of the mayor candidates had sponsored to show the game. As he yelled into a microphone over Waka Waka, people shot off fireworks and stretched a giant flag over the stands like a parachute. The buzz that I had felt since February was at its height.
The game was a wave of emotions - Absolute thrill when we scored a goal, which they ended up calling back... Hot anger when the referees made calls against us... Relief when Spain missed their PK too... And in the end, complete devastation when the clock ticked to 90 minutes and Spain left the field as the winners.
Our road had ended, but the caravans, the Albirrojas, the Waka Waka, the patriotism continued regardless.
When I was walking back to my hotel, this guy yelled out to me, in English, "We lost! But nobody cares... We're still the best."
I believe it, Paraguay... Lo creo.