So I think it´s safe to say that everything is slower in Ecuador haha and I don´t mean that in a negative way at all. Things here are just very different, and getting a strong enough internet connection to actually write a blog post can be somewhat of a challenge, nevermind the confusion and loss of connection associated with actually making a phone call. I will try to update you as best I can.
I have now completed my second full week of working at both Santa Marianita, as well as at Semillas AND we have finished painting the inside of our house and have FINALLY moved in! The kids at Semillas never stop screaming or running around. It´s awesome. Even though it´s a lot to handle, it really is extremely entertaining, and things happen that you never would expect. For example, last week, a goat was charging through the cancha (soccer court). We have no idea how this goat got in or where it came from, since there is a locked fence that surrounds the John Drury School (where Semillas is held every day). The kids there also pronounce my last name as Mariachi, like a mariachi band from Mexico. I feel like I should carry around a pair of maracas.
I am becoming more and more comfortable at Santa Marianita, especially with something I found out this past Thursday. At the end of the mornings I have been going up to the soup kitchen to hang out with Lourdes and her family and to help them serve the food. I hope I´ll be able to learn some Ecua-cooking techniques while I´m here. They´re so wonderful and so patient with me (being the only one speaking English in the school, clinic, and soup kitchen combined was and continues to be very intimidating at times). I am also working some mornings in the medical clinic, probably in the front room, helping to check people in and organize their folders. Everything here is done manually, and computers are really only used for the most basic things. I have also decided to take on two classes per day, Monday through Thursday, meaning I will be sharing my responsibilities for teaching with another professor (not the current one though, since she´s on maternity leave beginning the end of September). I found out this past Thursday that the other professor is actually a student at the University of Guayaquil! She´s studying tourism and therefore has to take English classes. From the sounds of things, she´s probably right around my age so that will be really fun to figure out how to actually teach with another person my own age! I should be starting to take on my own classes next week; this coming week I will still be observing.
That´s something that´s actually hilarious about Ecuador. Classroom etiquette here is not nearly what it is in the US. Kids are up and running around in the middle of class and there´s always lots of noise. I love it. The kids are so funny and really like hearing me speak English because they can tell the way I pronounce things is very different from what they generally hear in class. The other day I got asked multiple times if I personally knew Justin Beiber or Michael Jackson, and if I had a picture with them. Then a kid was humming Lada Gaga during his aporte (like a chapter quiz). I didn´t even tell him to stop because I thought it was too entertaining. This morning I went to Las Olimpiadas at Santa Marianita with Caitlin (basically their version of field day but parents come and each grade performs a dance). That was absolutely hilarious, especially when the teachers did a performance too and all wore costumes representing the different planets. The principal wore a bright yellow, glittering sun outfit. It was hilarious.
My birthdy here was great, and thank you to everyone for the birthday wishes and cards! Jón´s birthday was August 22nd so we had a joint birthday and between three days we had two cakes, chocolate banana bread, chocolate chip pancakes, and I received a tub of Nutella. I didn´t realize how vocal I had been about my apparent need for Nutella haha but it was great. There´s also a tradition in Ecuador for birthdays: you get whipped on the butt with a belt, one time for each year. I was fortunate enough that nobody around had a belt when they decided I needed to start partaking in Ecuadorian customs, so I just got whipped with a flip-flop.
The thing that is becoming most apparent here is how much things cost. Last week, the Arboltio house was responsible for cooking for seventeen people (all the houses were coming together for our monthly meeting). We bought: three pounds of rice, two pounds of lentils, three pounds of carrots, a pound of queso fresco (the type of cheese here), two pounds of tomatoes, a pineapple, eight peppers, five onions, ten cloves of garlic, and twelve eggs. All of that cost $7.50 and it adequately fed 17 people with food left over. In the states, $7.50 would get you a lemonade and a You-Pick-Two combo at Panera. And that would only feed one person. How crazy is that?
The Arbolito house also had a talk the other morning about how to allot our food stipend, like what things should we take out of our weekly food stipend and what things should come out of our personal stipend. We talked about setting a price for breakfast before we ultimately decided on only using the house stipend money for what we actually needed, versus what we just wanted, for breakfast. We were at first thinking that 25 cents per person would be an okay amount to set for breakfast, since most of us buy it on our way to work. 25 CENTS! That would buy a GUMBALL in the US. Here that could buy you five pieces of fresh baked bread. I generally only spend 10 cents on breakfast because two pieces of bread is more than enough!
I´m definitely adjusting to life here in Ecuador, but certain things, like prices for food, just blow me away. It makes me wonder what kind of sticker-shock syndrome I´ll develop when I have to go back to that states. I´m glad I still have eleven more months to figure that one out. I miss friends and family at home, but I am truly growing to love it here.
Paz, Amor, y Ecuador <3
you make me smile! you will be a great teacher and your cooking skills are definitely on the upswing. not sure you could get the lemonade with your panera meal for 7.50....
ReplyDeletewow, 25 cents for breakfast? I can't even imagine. I'm sure it's such an amazing experience and I'm so glad you are enjoying it. Julia wants Justin Bieber's autograph, if you happen to know him..haha!
ReplyDeletewow! i just got home from the Ecua-Immersion trip. i googled duran ecuador n ur image showed up. i saw the pic n was like NO WAY THAT'S THEM! not sure which one of you writes this cuz i took a quick glance n couldn't find a name.
ReplyDeletechevere tho!
keep up the good work.