I'm from a small town where people don't really leave. I didn't want to leave either...until my 11th grade English teacher made me believe I could. Then "getting out" became all I could think about. Became the thing that I wanted most and dreaded most.
The night before I left for college (located a whopping 300 miles from the only home I'd ever known) I hung out with my friends in the 24-hour supermarket (yeah, that's right, in the supermarket-suburban kids know how to party) and the diner, and just generally drove around, relishing the last moments of having regular access to a car, soaking in all of the familiarity and warmth of those friendships before I left on my new adventure.
Most of that night (turned to day) has faded from memory, but one moment that has remained was when my friend Greg gave me two little plastic troll-monsters that he bought from one of the gumball machines at the supermarket as a going away present.
Blue Buddies in Panama
These two little creatures have lived on my dresser for the past 8 years (currently accompanied by a bunch of shells I found on a beach in Cocle, a peace crane made out of a post-it by another volunteer, and the tiniest sombrero pintado). In the past 8 years I've moved around alot, but I still think that first move to my college dorm room was the biggest one.
A week before I left for Peace Corps I met up with Greg and two other friends for dinner in New York City. That night Greg gave me a disposable camera. I kept it safe in one of my bags through the whirlwind of training until I finally got to site 3 months into service.
At which point I kicked myself for not opening it sooner. It has 27 exposures, one for every month of this adventure.
So, that's my new art project, one photo every month for the next 23 months to be developed when I COS (Close Of Service).
Más ahora I'll finish the entries about embroidery, time, and gender adventures.
Hasta Pronto!
Peace Corps adventures in Panama as an Education and Youth Development Volunteer.
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Sunday, June 21, 2015
One Month!
I've been in site for just over a month! It's been a wild month of adjusting to my new life and starting to work at the school.
In Panama Education Volunteers primarily work to support Panamanian English teacher counterparts. I work in a school for Prekindergarten-9th grade and I have three counterparts at the school.
During my first three months in site I'm expected to observe my counterparts as they teach their classes so I can learn more about the Panamanian education system and my counterparts' teaching styles. I spent two weeks observing Maria who teaches English for PreK, Kindergarten, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grade. She's also my Community Guide (the counterpart who traveled with me from Panama City to site the first time I came here), so we've had a lot of time to get to know each other and she's really fun to hang out with.
Last week I started observing with Milania who teaches English for 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th grade. It was really fun to meet more of the students. My first day in the 4th grade classroom I ended up covered in stickers! At the beginning of the week the kids were a bit shy, but by the end of the week they were coming up to me in the back of the room and asking me to translate words into English and all sorts of questions about the United States (popular ones include: My parents' names, if I have siblings, if it snows in the United States, and how to sing "We Wish You a Merry Christmas").
It was a little hard to get a good flow going during the first month because I arrived to site just before the end of the first trimester, so I only had a few weeks at school before a weeklong break and then I had to be out of site for agency meetings with organizations that we work with as PCVs and then for our Regional Meeting.
Every 4 months each province has a Regional Meeting where Peace Corps Staff and other organizations (VAC, Seeders, GAD) meet in the provincial capital (Santiago, in my case) with all the volunteers from the province to discuss admin, health, safety and security, and to discuss our sector projects (Teaching English, Conservation, etc.). It was really cool to meet all the other volunteers in Veraguas and to hear about other sectors' projects.
Outside of school I've been spending most of my time reading and talking to my host family. They're really nice, but it's still strange living with a family after spending so many years living on my own.
And now for something completely different:
In my stage management life I spent a fair amount of time sewing. Usually precipitated by the telltale sound of a loose button in a dryer or by an actor holding a piece of clothing in their hands with a horrified look on their face (or the many times I had to patch the human-sized bags for the chase sequence in that Italian farce...). My sewing skills are ok, but it was never an activity I did for fun...until a few weeks ago. All of my wardrobe and costume inclined friends may laugh at this, but I've started embroidering...and I love it.
For the past month (or more) there has been a Tipico (Traditional Panamanian) sewing class happening in the afternoons after school lets out. It took me a few weeks to find time to go to Santiago to get the right kind of cloth and a seam ripper (deshilador), so I wasn't able to join the class until two weeks before it ended, but I learned a fair amount in a short time. It was also a really great way to meet more women in my community. I'm now friends with the 2nd Grade Teacher (Prima) and we have future (hopefully recurring) sewing date plans.
Immediate future plans include preparing for my SECNA (School Entry Community Needs Assessment) which is a paper that I have to write about my community and school that I will then present to my counterparts, community members, and Peace Corps Staff in August.
Also, I'm probably adopting a kitten named Claire from our Safety and Security Manager once I get my own place in August and I'm beyond excited!
Yay first month in Site!
Examples of my sewing adventures (eventually I'll remember to take pictures of things):
In Panama Education Volunteers primarily work to support Panamanian English teacher counterparts. I work in a school for Prekindergarten-9th grade and I have three counterparts at the school.
During my first three months in site I'm expected to observe my counterparts as they teach their classes so I can learn more about the Panamanian education system and my counterparts' teaching styles. I spent two weeks observing Maria who teaches English for PreK, Kindergarten, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd grade. She's also my Community Guide (the counterpart who traveled with me from Panama City to site the first time I came here), so we've had a lot of time to get to know each other and she's really fun to hang out with.
Last week I started observing with Milania who teaches English for 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th grade. It was really fun to meet more of the students. My first day in the 4th grade classroom I ended up covered in stickers! At the beginning of the week the kids were a bit shy, but by the end of the week they were coming up to me in the back of the room and asking me to translate words into English and all sorts of questions about the United States (popular ones include: My parents' names, if I have siblings, if it snows in the United States, and how to sing "We Wish You a Merry Christmas").
It was a little hard to get a good flow going during the first month because I arrived to site just before the end of the first trimester, so I only had a few weeks at school before a weeklong break and then I had to be out of site for agency meetings with organizations that we work with as PCVs and then for our Regional Meeting.
Every 4 months each province has a Regional Meeting where Peace Corps Staff and other organizations (VAC, Seeders, GAD) meet in the provincial capital (Santiago, in my case) with all the volunteers from the province to discuss admin, health, safety and security, and to discuss our sector projects (Teaching English, Conservation, etc.). It was really cool to meet all the other volunteers in Veraguas and to hear about other sectors' projects.
Outside of school I've been spending most of my time reading and talking to my host family. They're really nice, but it's still strange living with a family after spending so many years living on my own.
And now for something completely different:
In my stage management life I spent a fair amount of time sewing. Usually precipitated by the telltale sound of a loose button in a dryer or by an actor holding a piece of clothing in their hands with a horrified look on their face (or the many times I had to patch the human-sized bags for the chase sequence in that Italian farce...). My sewing skills are ok, but it was never an activity I did for fun...until a few weeks ago. All of my wardrobe and costume inclined friends may laugh at this, but I've started embroidering...and I love it.
For the past month (or more) there has been a Tipico (Traditional Panamanian) sewing class happening in the afternoons after school lets out. It took me a few weeks to find time to go to Santiago to get the right kind of cloth and a seam ripper (deshilador), so I wasn't able to join the class until two weeks before it ended, but I learned a fair amount in a short time. It was also a really great way to meet more women in my community. I'm now friends with the 2nd Grade Teacher (Prima) and we have future (hopefully recurring) sewing date plans.
Immediate future plans include preparing for my SECNA (School Entry Community Needs Assessment) which is a paper that I have to write about my community and school that I will then present to my counterparts, community members, and Peace Corps Staff in August.
Also, I'm probably adopting a kitten named Claire from our Safety and Security Manager once I get my own place in August and I'm beyond excited!
Yay first month in Site!
Examples of my sewing adventures (eventually I'll remember to take pictures of things):
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