27 June 2006

En la lengua nativa...

Bueno, ya que unos me han pedido que escriba algo en español y porque estoy aquí en un país de esa misma lengua, ahora tenemos una entrada para vosotros que no habéis entendido...! Para los que todavía no saben, llegué a Costa Rica en marzo y vivía cerca de San José por los primeros tres meses en el entrenamiento del programa. Al finales de mayo me mandaron para la comunidad de Jabillo (población: 140) en la región de Guanacaste por la parte al noroeste del país. Vivo con una familia genial y me cae todo bien. Vivimos entre gallinas, ganado, loros, patos y congos... todos hacen un ruido que no podríais creer! Hace tanto calor que a veces creo que me voy a derretir. Pero todo es lindísimo y toda la gente está pura vida. Tiene mucho orgullo de la tranquilidad.
Para explicar un poco de que hago, debo empezar con decir que el trabajo que tengo no es nada establecido. Soy voluntaria trabajando en Desarrollo Comunitario Rural. Entonces vivo en un sitio muy pequeño pero sirvo a varias otras comunidades alrededores (son 12 comunidades, aproximadamente 1500 personas).
El trabajo incluye varias metas: (1) desarrollo organizacional, (2) oportunidad económica y (3) educación. Porque el objetivo es desarrollo sostenible, es muy importante que yo conozca a la gente y aprenda de los recursos y organizaciones que la comunidad tiene disponible antes de empezar. Después de cumplir un diagnóstico de las comunidades, cual incluye un censo, información del sistema de educación, la salud, la seguridad, los recursos, las faltas y las recomendaciones, puedo comenzar con proyectos para lograr esas metas. No es solamente un proyecto sino una serie de trabajos. Mi contraparte aquí es la Asociación de Desarrollo Integral, que tiene el objetivo de promover el desarrollo económico, social y cultural. Yo ayudaré con la formación de nuevos grupos o comités en la comunidad, por ejemplo un grupo de mujeres que quiere empezar una panadería o un comité de emergencia. Podré dar clases de inglés y facilitar la organización de cursos de talleres o nuevos fuentes de recreación y recreación. Lo que ahora ahora mismo es hacer entrevistas con las familias para enterrarme de las necesidades más graves y como solucionarlas. Es un proceso muy lento, pero sé que al fin, voy a poder ayudar más por haberlo hecho. Poquito a poco, logramos las metas para ser mejores...

Note to all the people who do not speak Spanish: Don´t worry, I will continue to write in English! And mad props to my most consistent blog commenter, Melissa Smelly!

19 June 2006

What I Do (Actually)

So now that you´ve read the theoretical explanation of my daily life, I´ll give you a dose of how it really is down here. When I first arrived at night, I didn´t even recognize my stop in the dark, so my mom boarded the bus to look for me! In the morning, I saw that the whole landscape had changed in two weeks. For those who don´t know about Costa Rican weather patterns, there are two seasons: summer and winter. Dry in summer, rains all winter. The rainy season had started so now it rains every day and will do so until December or so.With the onset of the rain, came the green wildlife Costa Rica is famous for, converting my site into a beautiful paradise.

I started out with a bang, attending 3 meetings in 3 days and interviewing the school teacher. I thought I was set, but then the activities drizzled down. My host family doesn´t leave the house all that often, at least not on a daily basis. That´s one of the biggest issues in the community. There´s nothing to do - no recreation, few community activities, etc. Since I didn´t have anywhere to go, it was difficult to leave the house. So I read like a fiend and tried to get organized. The first two weeks were hardest and the third week I just flat out decided that I would learn how to leave my house without having a destination. Thus started my family interviews. I ask people about the health, education, security, resources, etc, in the community and give them a chance to ask me some questions as well. I have spent several days simply going from house to house, introducing myself, and conducting an informal interview. Depending on how well I know the family and how much they like to talk, each visit takes between 30 minutes and 3 hours. It was on such an expedition to the furthest house in Jabillo that I got lost in the jungle.
I ended up in a mango grove with a troop of howler monkeys and let me tell you, they can make some noise! I had about 20 of the little dudes swarming around above my head and howling their little lungs out. When I continued, they only got louder, so I turned back to the last house. There I met a Tica who does not leave the house. She´s a old-timer and an animal lover, so much that she feeds the chickens, the dogs and even some of the pigs inside her home! After I explained why I came and she rambled on for about 2 hours straight, she offered something to drink... and she spiked it! I was wondering why fresco de piña tasted so bad until a neighbor came and called her out on it!

Anyway, every day is different as I have no set schedule yet. I go to soccer matches, visit other towns, tour the high school, attend catequesis class at the church, and meet as many people as possible. I go into the nearest town about once a week for 2 hours of Internet time. I have also made friends with another gringa, a World Teach volunteer in a town about 10 km away. I go for long runs walk around in my protective but surprisingly not-so-uncomfortable rubber black rubber boots. I´m the only woman to wear them in my town! At least that I´ve seen so far... I spend time getting to know my family and play Memory with my little host sister. When I met with the Association of Development, they wanted me to have a meeting in another community. (One of the other towns with which my town works.) So we set up a date for La Y Griega and I put some of my training exercises into effect. I didn´t expect to have help with the meeting, which was good because I certainly didn´t get any! I was worried no one would show up so I lobbied for a few days with house visits and interviews. In a community of about 150 people, 30 came out to hear me talk. We did a diagnostic exercise to recognize strengths and weaknesses in the community and brainstormed for possibly community improvement projects. I was really nervous about the meeting, but it went well and I was satisfied with the result. Luckily, that day the mailman on his motorcycle stopped me on the street (he didn´t have a problem recognizing the only gringa in town!) because he had real mail for me! Many thanks to the brave souls - my friend Megan, a fellow au pair in Spain and Eileen Smith, my former boss at The Emory Wheel - who sent mail to the sketchy address! Now (thanks to Eileen) if you send me mail, I can write you back on the stationary she included in her care package! That mailman was like my new best friend!

05 June 2006

What do you do? (Theoretically...)


To reiterate, my program is Rural Community Development. A lot of people have asked what that means and what I will do. It's hard to give a clear answer because it is different for each person. All the sites are (as the title says) rural. Which means they are small and may not have a lot of resources. At this point, I don't know enough about my community to know specifically what I will be working on, but here are some examples of possibilities:

  • Working with the Asociación de Desarrollo (Association of Development)
    The organization is responsible for nearly all general community improvement (fixing roads, forming new committees for projects, health and water issues, etc)
  • Working with existing Women's Groups or forming new ones
  • Forming Youth Groups and other recreation for children
  • Organizing continuing education for children and adults (workshops/ sessions on health, nutrition, AIDS, micro-enterprise, baking bread, accounting... whatever seems necessary)
  • Fundraising for projects like building (or rather finishing) the salon comunal
  • Teaching English, to children or adults

I may help with some of these things or all at one point or another. There is plenty to do, it's just a matter of finding the resources and providing the motivation and organization to follow through. So it's not a single project and there's no single objective. Strong emphasis lies in sustainable development. Which means that I am here to help the people help themselves. The whole point is that I work with my community to form projects that will continue after my departure, thus generating the need for my community to trust me and form a bond.

For a little clarification, the overall experience goes like this:

Staging: 2 days in Washington DC before arrival in country

Training: 3 months living with a family about an hour outside of San Jose which includes:

  • Spanish classes
  • Various excursions to rural sites around Costa Rica - visiting volunteers, etc
  • Trips to San Jose office for technical training, safety & health issues, and cross-cultural understanding
  • Swear-In and Juramentación!

Service: 2 years (this is the long one!)

  • First 3 months: Community Entry (Basically means I will learn the ropes in my community - get to know the people, the organizations, the benefits, the problems, etc. The idea is that we don't go in and impose our own agendas, but rather work with the ideas and needs of the people.)
  • Afterwards: Incorporate all the things I learned in training with the needs of the community, adapting knowledge, resources, and organization to create sustainable projects and other good stuff...