Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Real Life

“PST is nothing like your real life here,” I was told recently, by a volunteer who arrived in Kyrgyzstan a year ago. My pre-service training – aka PST – is drawing to a close. In less than a week, I’ll leave the my little village outside Bishkek and the host family I’ve come to love, the cozy bubble of other volunteers and Peace Corps staff, my excellent language teacher and cultural guide, Temirlan. So much energy has gone into adjusting to this place, to settling into this new world – it has been easy to forget that my “real life” here hasn’t begun yet. I’m looking forward to moving to the town that will be my home for the next two years, to meeting the people who will be my friends and colleagues. At the same time, I’m trying to soak up every last minute here in Gavrilovka and enjoy the wonderful people around me now.

The past month has been busy! There have been a few downs – getting bit by a dog was a big one, for sure – but many ups. My Kyrgyz language is coming along, and every conversation with my host mother or a random stranger on the bus, every word that pops into my head just when I need it, is a small victory. Last week was “Culture Day” for Peace Corps trainees, and I made my harmonica performance debut, showcased my burgeoning knowledge of Kyrgyz customs in a skit and got to wear traditional Kyrgyz clothing. I’ve really enjoyed getting to know other volunteers, and feel very lucky to have scored such a great group.

On June 11, I’ll be sworn in as a Peace Corps Volunteer (provided I don’t really screw something up in the next few days) and move to my permanent site – a town called Toktogul, in the further-south province of Jalalabad I will be working at a Health Promotion Unit, essentially a local health department. Right now, I don’t know the specific projects I will be working on – that will depend on the needs identified by my counterparts – but I do know that my work will be fairly unstructured and, consequently, self-driven. My counterparts don’t speak English, so my Kyrgyz language will be forced to come along. It’s definitely intimidating, but I feel increasingly ready to take on that “real life” I’ve heard about, the ambiguity and challenge that I knew I was getting myself into. It’s all about to begin. And it’s very, very exciting.


Language class portrait, minus Max, plus a host mother (aka "apa") and Medina, World's #1 Baby.
Seriously, I am deeply in love with this baby. 

Sydney, apa and Medina
Ok, just one more picture of Medina.
My host mom making oromo, which is a coiled dumpling filled with potatoes, veggies, meat....and a little extra animal fat for good measure. (She's wearing a mask because she had a toothache)
Oromo, ready for the eating! And of course, it wouldn't be a complete meal without a side of fresh bread. 

Real Life

“PST is nothing like your real life here,” I was told recently, by a volunteer who arrived in Kyrgyzstan a year ago. My pre-service training – aka PST – is drawing to a close. In less than a week, I’ll leave the my little village outside Bishkek and the host family I’ve come to love, the cozy bubble of other volunteers and Peace Corps staff, my excellent language teacher and cultural guide, Temirlan. So much energy has gone into adjusting to this place, to settling into this new world – it has been easy to forget that my “real life” here hasn’t begun yet. I’m looking forward to moving to the town that will be my home for the next two years, to meeting the people who will be my friends and colleagues. At the same time, I’m trying to soak up every last minute here in Gavrilovka and enjoy the wonderful people around me now.

The past month has been busy! There have been a few downs – getting bit by a dog was a big one, for sure – but many ups. My Kyrgyz language is coming along, and every conversation with my host mother or a random stranger on the bus, every word that pops into my head just when I need it, is a small victory. Last week was “Culture Day” for Peace Corps trainees, and I made my harmonica performance debut, showcased my burgeoning knowledge of Kyrgyz customs in a skit and got to wear traditional Kyrgyz clothing. I’ve really enjoyed getting to know other volunteers, and feel very lucky to have scored such a great group.

On June 11, I’ll be sworn in as a Peace Corps Volunteer (provided I don’t really mess something up in the next few days) and move to my permanent site – a town called Toktogul, in the further-south province of Jalalabad I will be working at a Health Promotion Unit, essentially a local health department. Right now, I don’t know the specific projects I will be working on – that will depend on the needs identified by my counterparts – but I do know that my work will be fairly unstructured and, consequently, self-driven. My counterparts don’t speak English, so my Kyrgyz language will be forced to come along. It’s definitely intimidating, but I feel increasingly ready to take on that “real life” I’ve heard about, the ambiguity and challenge that I knew I was getting myself into. It’s all about to begin. And it’s very, very exciting.






Saturday, May 11, 2013

Another beautiful day in the K!


Overall, we’ve been having lovely weather here in Kyrgyzstan, and I woke up today to bright sun and chirping birds. The giant wall of mountains due south of me has been visible almost everyday, and never ceases to stun me. Our stretch of sunshine got broken up yesterday by an afternoon hailstorm, which turned out to be the perfect thing to cut the humidity that had been building for a few days. Spring weather here is pretty similar to that in Michigan, and I’ve been enjoying watching everything come into bloom.

This week was the third week of PST (“pre-service training”) and life is beginning to feel routine. We were at our hub site two and a half days this week for group-wide information sessions and sector-specific trainings (I’m in the health sector). The rest of the time, we’ve been in our language courses in our villages. This week, I learned the past tense, present continuous, indirect speech, possessives and a bunch of vocabulary. Sometimes it feels like the language comes in one ear and out the other, especially on our long days of class, but I’m realizing that I have to hear most words and concepts a few times and then they stick. It’s always a pleasant surprise when, in the midst of a conversation later on, I’m able to conjure up some word or phrase that I didn’t realize I’d actually retained. My trusty Peace Corps-issued Kyrgyz-English dictionary, while sometimes lacking in terms of common, useful words, has provided some interesting gems of new vocabulary. For instance: galantereyee (haberdashery), sogoosh (warfare), jaak sogu (jaw bone), zambeerek (howitzer).  Also, the word achoo means both spicy and angry, which I really enjoy.

Speaking of sogoosh: May 9, if you didn’t know, was WWII Victory Day. It’s a big deal here in Kyrgyzstan, as Kyrgyz soldiers fought in the war as part of the Soviet forces. My host brother explained it to me as “Kyrgyzstan beat Hitler,” and then mimed Hitler’s death to really drive home the point. I mentioned that the U.S. was also involved in that war, which was clearly a preposterous suggestion. After some thought, my host mom said that it was possible that the U.S. had been involved in WWII, but if so our role was probably kichinae (small). It’s interesting to be on the other side of revisionist history.

I got home from language class on Victory Day afternoon to find my house PACKED with relatives – my host mom’s parents and sisters, lots of kids running around everywhere. I even learned that one guy who I thought was just my host brother’s friend is actually a cousin (these type of realizations happen to me almost daily. The language barrier keeps life interesting). We barbequed “shashlik” (goat shish kebobs, marinated in a really great spicy sauce) and ate it with thinly sliced, vinegary onions. Midway through the barbeque, the hail came tumbling down and everyone ran for cover – reminded me a 4th of July that got interrupted by a big storm several years ago in Marshall!

Another highlight of my week was making chocolate chip cookies with my host sister, Ainazik. Chocolate chips were improvised by breaking a chocolate bar up into little bits, but otherwise all ingredients were on hand. The cookies turned out surprisingly well, despite the fact that I was eyeballing all measurements. My host family (and a few neighboring Peace Corps volunteers who were magnetically drawn by the smell of baking cookies) enjoyed the “American pechenie” a lot. The best was my 4-year-old host brother Altai, who at first refused to try them. Then he took a nibble of one….then a whole cookie….then another….then another. I think he ate six or seven of them in the end (reminds me of another young man I know. CoughQuinnFlemingCoughCough).

Finally, last week I went on my first hike in Kyrgyzstan! It was pretty short, just a two hour romp up into the hills near the village of some other Peace Corps-ers. Half the adventure was getting to the village and back (modes of transportation utilized: mini-bus, taxi, donkey cart). What I saw was beautiful; it made me realize just how little of the country I’ve seen so far, and whet my appetite for all the traveling, hiking and general adventuring to come. 
Altai, coolest kid on the block.

View from the hike.


Just my daily mountain view.

Ainazik making cookies.


They weren't much to look at....but tasted great.


My language group having lunch at my house. From left: Hilary, Tiffany, Max,
the great Temirlan-agai, Erin and Sydney.

Shashlik.

Whole family digging into some Victory cake. 

Near my village.

Monday, April 29, 2013

I've arrived!


I’ve been in Kyrgyzstan for just under two weeks, and I don’t even know where to begin in describing it. The past 12 days feel like a year and a minute, all at once. So much has happened; I’ve met many new people and crammed many Kyrgyz words into my brain (or attempted to), tried new foods and drank about a thousand cups of tea. I’ve been enjoying the challenge of this new place, the sensory overload, the total exhaustion that sets in around 9pm each night.

The journey here was a little rough – due to flight delays, I was two hours late to “staging” in Philadelphia, where I met my fellow K-21s (we’re the 21st group of Peace Corps volunteers to go to Kyrgyzstan. There are 38 of us) and was slightly concerned that I’d be kicked out of the Peace Corps for being late, which of course was not the case. The next day we got on a bus to New York and hopped flights to Frankfurt, Istanbul and finally Bishkek. By the end of it I barely knew my own name, let alone what time it was and where I was. I will say that I am now a huge fan of Turkish Airlines, mostly because they give you little Turkish candy at the beginning of each flight.

We spent three days at a hotel in Bishkek, attending different orientation sessions and starting our language studies. We weren’t allowed to leave the hotel during that time, which was probably for the best because we are infants in this country.

Once the Peace Corps deemed us sufficiently oriented, we moved in with host families in villages outside of Bishkek. I have two younger host brothers, Azamat and Altai (ages 18 and 4), and a host sister, Ainazik (age 9). My mother is a chemistry teacher and my father is a lawyer who works in Kazakhstan. It is pretty common for family members to leave the country to work, as there aren’t many job opportunities in Kyrgyzstan.

We’re taking intensive language courses in small groups based on which village we live in. There are six of us in my group, and though it’s difficult we’re having a blast. Our teacher is a cool character named Temerlan. He has a wry sense of humor, and keeps things interesting.  This is important because we have up to six hours of language class on some days.

On other days, we head to the “hub site” where we attend orientation sessions with the whole gang of K-21s. We’ve learned about the political/economic situation in Kyrgyzstan and the country’s history, Peace Corps policies and approaches to international development, all the diseases we might get and how to deal with them, and a lot more. The session on the political/economic situation in Kyrgyzstan was by far the most interesting – it was fascinating to hear about Kyrgyzstan’s rocky road since the fall of the Soviet Union. Nonetheless, instant coffee has been pretty crucial to me getting through “hub days.”

Between language courses and hub days, there’s been a lot of new information thrown at me in the past week. However, the most important education so far has been living with a host family, getting to know them and observing their way of life. My family has been so helpful and kind; I’ve been enjoying them a lot. I could go on and on, but I’ll let some pictures do the talking. 

View from the hotel in Bishkek.

My host mother, Nazi. 

My house.

Altai, my little host brother.

Altai again. He's cute, but don't be fooled - 100% trouble.

My host sister, Ainazik. We're buds. We do yoga.

My village, Gavrilovka.

Jade plants in the window of my house. Feels like home.

Near my village.

Sunday, April 7, 2013