Sunday, October 17, 2010

Home

in the United States. And therefore closing this blog out. I could continue to blog about the American things that are surprising/hard to adjust to, but then this blog would last the rest of my life.

Thanks for reading!

Paz y amor.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Despedidas

Left the village this morning for good. And it was a surreal experience.


First of all, since last Friday I have had 4 (4!) goodbye parties. One with the school, one with the community, one with the youth group and one with a random family who wanted to feed me pupusas. By this morning, I was all farewelled out, plus I was EXHAUSTED from barely having slept all week. My last week in site was burning hot and water became scarce all over the village, and I was so dehydrated that I found it hard to sleep. This made me actually kind of happy to leave my site for San Salvador, for a few days if not for good.


So this morning when I left some of the host family came to see me off. Even the dogs I adore came up to me and let me pet them (did they know?) Contrary to many volunteers, I left with dry eyes. I think I was too tired to comprehend what was going on.


My friend with a truck took me to San Salvador with all my suitcases, after a nice final lunch of shrimp on the beach. Now I'm in the capital enjoying air conditioning and wireless Internet. It's weird to think that I'm going home Saturday for good and not just for a two-week vacation.


So now I'm writing the list. The list that all Peace Corps volunteers write. And mine is probably the same as everybody else's. But here it is.


Things I will miss about El Salvador
  • Hammocks
  • Living my life surrounded by natural beauty
  • Living my life outside
  • Eating fruit off trees
  • Being fed and cared for by random neighbors
  • Not being glued to TV and the Internet
  • Having time to read for hours
  • Reggaeton and bachata music
  • Volunteer working hours (i.e. being able to ditch work and have fun whenever I want
  • Random people who know my name and hug me in the streets
  • Pupusas, tamales de elote, fried plantains, red beans and even tortillas
  • Working with cute children
  • Dedicating my life to helping others
Things I will not miss about El Salvador
  • Streets covered in animal poop
  • General dirtiness
  • Having to watch everything I eat and drink for contamination
  • Lack of cultural value for education
  • Lack of cultural value for hard work
  • Handout mentality
  • Scarcity of water
  • Lack of convenient transportation
  • Lack of discipline at home and in the schools that turns kids into rude little criminals
  • Cultural acceptance of bad or unjust situations (instead of the drive to change things)
In general, I think the good outweighs the bad.

Here are some pictures from my goodbye parties:


"Thank you Alia for having shared two years. Welcome Rebecca."



These kids gave me a sweet wooden pineapple with a picture of the school inside.

A band showed up at my community goodbye party and played music while everyone watched this slideshow of pictures from the past two years.

Paz y amor.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Perquín y pescado

Just got back from a few days in Perquín, which was an ill-timed trip considering how much I have to do to wrap up my service...but was actually a good idea, as I didn't want to leave El Salvador without seeing this place, famous for its natural beauty and civil war history.

Tropical Storm whatever-it's-called-this-time (we had two in one week and I've stopped tracking names, since we've had like 15 since April) prevented us from hiking much, but we visited El Mozote, a neighborhood where 1,000 people were massacred during the war, and the civil war museum in town. We did climb a small (and slippery!) hill dotted with bomb holes, and the top afforded us a pretty good view of the surrounding hills and even parts of Honduras.

I can't believe I only have two weeks left. Sometimes I'm sad about it, but usually something happens to cheer me up about leaving before I get too down. For example, this morning my host family left a basket of fish in the shower. Thanks, fam, for lessening my close-of-service regrets.

Pictures from Perquín:
The wall comemmorating the El Mozote victims
American anti-war propaganda (the US government was funding and training the Salvadoran army, which committed atrocities such as the El Mozote massacre)
From the top of Cerro Perquín
Paz y amor.