Thursday, June 30, 2011

Aqui estoy ... acabando

They keep making me do things with "final" in the name...
Final dinner
Final presentation
Final exams
I don't think I like this.

Tonight was our cocktail with all the host families. Me and my lovely host mom and sister :)
Other program chicos
Sure, I'm looking forward to things I miss in the US, but I'm not quite ready to leave Peru just yet.
No matter where I am, CT-home, Gordon-home or Lima-home, I'm missing someone.

Thus, I have decided to build a moon colony and bring you all so I can have everyone at once.
Get your spacesuits ready :D
It's an even longer flight than to Lima!

Hasta la proxima

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Aqui estoy ... cumpliendo

Had a great day having breakfast and lunch with the awesome people of my program and my wonderful host family.

(We'll ignore the subsequent obligatory homework time)


Is it cake time yet?


Hasta la proxima

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con dilema

(A serious post that I really would like input/thoughts on:)

Today I brought pencils to give out at Deporte y Vida. Useful, fun and school-related, right?

This caused more problems than I anticipated.

My plan was to give them to kids as they finished their work.

And that worked, for a bit, until word started getting around that somebody was giving out pencils.

And then suddenly the whole neighborhood showed up.

I required them to show me finished homework, but then there were some who "didn't have any" or "already took it home" or "had to wait to do the other part" and "no they didn't have any other subjects." Kid a was telling me that kid b was lying and that kid c already had gotten a pencil. Kid d was shoving kid e and claiming he didn't even attend the program. They were crawling on the table, standing on the bench and generally causing a ruckus. What was supposed to be a reward for doing good work was disrupting others from working. :(

Suddenly I found myself doubting everyone, looking into young kids' eyes and trying to tell if they were lying to me. And I found myself wondering how this could be. Am I really accusing this 8 year old of trying to con me? Is this 8 year old actually trying to cheat for a pencil? Have I seen this kid before? Does he really need a pencil that bad that he would try to fake homework to get one? Who am I to decide who gets one of these pencils?

I don't want to be just another gringa handing out stuff, perpetuating a stereotype. I don't ask that they remember me forever but I would rather that they remember the time spent with them than just pencils.



On the plus side, I found that my teacher voice works in Spanish too.


What do you think people? Could I have done this better? Should I have not done it at all?

How can you reconcile rewarding hard workers with giving to kids who clearly need it?



Hasta la proxima

Aqui estoy ... el martes

Les cuento mi dia martes:
Let me tell you of my Tuesday, day 2 of crazy finals week

(It's not any different in Peru, all final things manage to be scheduled the same week)


First: yet another reason my mom is awesome - she brought me goldfish. My study snack food just in time for studying. (That's my super-attractive I-love-goldfish face there)


Deporte y Vida. Oh yah know, just lighting fires. It's a different life for these kids.


The cutie I worked with today.


My first plate at our delicious program final dinner. I can't believe it's our FINAL dinner. Aaaah!


Monday, June 27, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con palabras

I've learned a lot of new words this semester, from simple to complicated, universal to Lima slang.


Above is just a smattering of them.


(The list I was writing in Incas class when my professor was tangenting about Chile having something to do with Siberia. Shhh)


I like words in general. (If I didn't already have two majors I'd study linguistics too) I like figuring out their multiple meanings and nuances and who uses which ones when.
Some interesting tidbits:



- Lots of Peru-specific words start with ch-. I'm not sure if this is a quechua/aymara influence or just coincidence. Chompa, chalina, chevere, chichon...I could go on.



- Oveja, oreja and abeja are very different things (sheep, ear, bee), despite the fact that the three words can de difficult to distinguish on the fly. Just try to avoid saying the sheep stung you instead of the bee. Or that the ear stung the sheep of your bee. ;)



- The sound similarity difficulty happens in English too. We spent several minutes explaining the difference between live (I live here) and live (a live show) to a Peruvian friend only to find out she was trying to say life and live.



- I'm still figuring out nuances, outerwear for example. Chompa is apparently more of a sweater or fleece. Casaca is of windbreaker fabric. Chaqueta varies. There was also something to do with the having or not of buttons but I've already gotten in confused.



- I will never again forget chalina because I ended up "it" in a musical chairs sort of game for not moving for wearing a chalina. Woops.



- It actually felt a little strange to speak only English to my family rather than Spanish or Spanglish. I think my brain officially functions in Spanglish. (Just wait until I try to learn a third language. Then we'll have something attractive like Sp-ital-ish or Spa-germ-ish)



Hasta la proxima


PS: word cloud thanks to Wordle

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con mi familia!

My gringos have come to visit me
:)
They arrived last night and spent today with me. We walked around my district, along the malecon (cliffwalk) and up Larco (my main street) and had lunch with my host family. Lima even broke the clouds to let them see a sunset.


My not-so-little, now-high-school-graduate brother



Lima conveniently supplied them examples of some of its best randomness:
Some sort of VW Beetle convention.
I didn't know that many Beetles existed in Lima!


The strange new statue of Jesus that lights up and changes color.
Also, kid with a balloon in the shape of a mace.
Thanks Lima.

I'm looking forward to showing them around more of my Lima, my life for this semester
:)



Hasta la proxima

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Aqui estoy ... siguiendo vuelo


Yesterday I skyped with friends and went to Deporte y Vida.

Today I successfully studied 8 chapters of my book about Incas.

Tomorrow I get to spend with my parents!


Life is good.


Hasta la proxima

Friday, June 24, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con foto



I'm not feeling eloquent and I should be studying, so you get a picture.



Jumping in Cusco between Inca walls.
Because we're just that epic.



Speaking of Incas, I should be studying several hundred years of history.

Yay for imperial expansion and fratricide.



News which is way more fun:

My family is coming to visit

TOMORROW



But I'm not excited or anything

:)

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con hermanito no tan "ito"

My little brother is a high school graduate and he's going to college in the fall.

I can't believe it.

Love you brother boy

Congratulations!

I wish I could've been there



And by the way, even if you're taller than me, you'll still always be my little brother <3



Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con pedacitos

Moments of the last couple days...life in Peru

- a leftover Keiko poster, now with horns and Yupi written on it

- micro walls with preschool designs - merry-go-rounds and umbrellas and swingsets

- children who didn't believe my nails were real and tried to pull them off

- the high-maintenance little old lady who tried to get the other little old lady on the micro to give her the seat

- the lady selling q-tips on the micro. Caramelos, chocolate, ice cream, newspapers, jewelry ...but q-tips is a new one

- the guys outside la Cato with bright colored turbans. I think they're selling something. I don't know what.

- Hearing Semi-Charmed Life on the micro. Followed by Message in a Bottle and Under Pressure.

- The guitarrists on the micro...not just guitarrists but electric guitarrists. They had little amps that they clipped onto their belts.

- The Arequipa-Javier Prado underpass-bridge was apparently the first bypass in Peru, at least according to the plaque that I read as my micro was stopped there.

- realizing how thankful I am that I can sit on grass at Gordon. I swear the sprinklers are there to water the grass but to keep la cato students off it :(

- talking about cars with Daniel the taxista to Deporte y Vida. Some things I don't know in English or Spanish.

Aqui estoy ... con arte y IKB

In Historia del Arte we have finally made it to siglo XX, the twentieth century.
(Which means, by the way, that we've covered over 500 years of history just since the midterm)

It also means modern art.
Now I usually try to keep an open mind on these things. Art can be lots of things and it doesn't have to be pretty. I like some and I don't like some, but never have I been quite so bewildered as by the one we saw today:

Yves Klein
He patented his own color.
International Klein Blue

Seriously.
How can you patent a color? What form do you even fill out for that?
And then he paints things all blue. Just blue. Straight up, plain blue.
Apparently some of them have texture, but still, just plain blue.
I mean, I love blue, it's my favorite color. But that's a lot of blue there.

I think I might have to stick with Jackson Pollack on this one.
We looked at Dali too.
But this variation seems appropriate for Peru
(Even it was originally titled Salvador Dali Llama. Whatever)
Can you believe tomorrow is my last day of class?
Me neither.

Hasta la proxima!

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Aqui estoy ... en Deporte y Vida

Deporte y Vida is the afterschool program in Villa El Salvador where I go to volunteer. I took my camera today and like most children, they loved having their pictures taken. It was difficult to get a still picture because there were constantly more kids jumping in or running through or sticking bunny ears in or shoving one another.

Classic anywhere
Chicos
Little model
Another little model

Homework


Love them :)
Hasta la proxima

Monday, June 20, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con costumbres de la cocina

Peruvian kitchen customs have turned out to be a little different than those in the US. Maybe it's a family-to-family thing, maybe it's cultural, maybe it's climate-related. I don't know. All I know is some strike me as a little strange.


Putting plates over things and then leaving them on the counter is a perfectly acceptable way to store them. That bowl contains salad, by the way.

Eggs don't need to be refrigerated. In the grocery, they are on a shelf by the register. In my house, they do go in the refri, but if there's extras, they go here, in the cupboard.

Butter and jelly don't need covered


Freezer burn is not a concept. Those plain old shopping bags have raw chicken and hamburgers in them.


All things must be unplugged after use. That includes toaster, blender, rice-maker and stove.



Putting cheese in a tupperware instead of lightly wrapping it back up in its saran wrap?

Closing the bread bag so it doesn't go stale?

Not washing pans until they cool down?

Not concepts here.



Hmmm.

Anyone else have other-culture kitchen thoughts?


Hasta la proxima

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con otra biblioteca

Today I went to help clean the library at the Casa AGEUP. Basically, it's a house where students from around Peru stay, who belong to the Christian group AGEUP. CBU, the group I go to on campus is part of AGEUP and I like libraries and cleaning and organizing. Thus, perfect.

Even more fun, we found some funny, strange and just plain random books.

Death education...upon further inspection it turns out to be to study for counseling, but still a little startling initially in bright purple.
And Get your hands off my throat...well, what can I even say about that one?
Group guide = good. But penguins?
And, if you can't read it, the little tagline at the bottom says "You want to know what we need around here? I'll tell you what we need around here. We need name tags around here."
Something about electrons...in Portuguese!
Was Karl Marx a satanist? I don't know but that's an awfully harsh question.
The Evangelization of the planet Koyat. Which is apparently a fictional planet. I have no idea how that works.
Random...Microsoft Works 3 (3!)
And, possibly the best one: Philosophic Problems of Nuclear Science. I hope I never have to read such a thing.

Now off to read my rather more useful book for my paper.
Hasta la proxima

Aqui estoy ... con nuevo diseno

As you can see, I suppose, I changed the look of the blog a bit.
I figured you deserve a picture of a real llama, not just a stuffed one.
That is a Machu Picchu llama, posing nicely in front of Wayna Picchu.
The background went red because now it's red, white, red - Peruvian flag colors.
Just figured I mix it up a bit.

Hasta la proxima!

Friday, June 17, 2011

Aqui estoy ... con el clasico

Truth be told ... I am tiring of this Peruvian classic.

White rice, puree of something and an egg. Lunch and dinner today appeared to be puree of beans. Earlier this week was puree of peas.

Appetizing, eh?

Is it possible that after a week at home in the States I will be missing rice? Will I want to put eggs on everything? Will I even wonder where the blender is? It's certainly possible, even likely dare I say.

(The grass is always greener, right? Although I'd have to say the grass probably is greener seeing as how Lima is built in a desert, despite all their water-wasting efforts to the contrary. But I digress)

Maybe I'll have to borrow my roommate's rice maker this year.



What am I hungry for?

New England seafood!! Clam chowder, clam strips, lobster bisque, shrimp, fish...ceviche is good but just not the same

Real milk. A glass of milk that has to be refrigerated and doesn't need water added or come in a bag or box. And a bowl of cereal with said milk.

Peanut butter. Without having to worry about when I'm going to run out and am I really going to pay 17 soles for another little jar.

My mom's bread. Peru has lots of different kinds of bread. And we get it fresh each day. But it's still not my mom's.


mmm, I'm hungry just thinking about this

Hasta la proxima!

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Aqui estoy ... en la noche

I may not be a city girl, but I do like lights at night.




Lima



Arequipa




Cuzco

Hasta la proxima

Aqui estoy ... con cartitas a mi dia

Dear PUCP,
Who told you it was a good idea to change the time and room of classes between their 2 days of the week?

Dear self,
Way to successfully navigate PUCP scheduling until the second-to-last week of classes when you finally forgot that your Thursday class starts at 9, not 10.

Dear government,
Thanks for finally sending our student IDs...less than a month before I leave and less than 2 months before they expire. Nice work there.

Dear cobradores,
SEE, I told you I was a student. Now I have the little card you like so much. I have paid my last sol cincuenta.

Dear library,
Haha, I successfully returned a book and took another one out. Point for me.

Dear Cafetal,
Why do you not have chocolate on the day when I really need it?

Dear micro musicians,
You were AWESOME! I am vastly impressed with your skills of mandolin and pan-flute playing at the same time on a moving bus.

Dear school,
It's a good thing you are almost done because I am seriously lacking homework motivation.

Dear prof C,
Your choice of dates for our final exam are possibly the most inconvenient possible. It is really unfortunate that I will now have to study for your exam on my birthday.

Dear movistar,
I don't think I need your help-via-text with my English. Thanks though.

Dear host mom,
Thanks for giving me chocolate :) It is delicious. But now I am going to eat it all.

Dear deporte y vida,
See you tomorrow! I'm excited. I've missed you.

Dear internet,
I should really turn you off because you are a little too awesome for procrastinating.



And now I should go try to redeem this rather frustrating day by doing something productive. We'll see about that. (See last little letter)

Hasta la proxima

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Aqui estoy ... en Machu Picchu!!

Saturday was our day at Machu Picchu, finally the main attraction :) A bunch of us from the group decided we wanted to climb Wayna Picchu. (You know the classic picture of Machu Picchu with the big mountain in back? That one) But because the path is Inca steps that are crumbling, they only allow 400 people a day so we had to get up really early to be on the first few busses to be one of those 400. (Like 4am early) But it was totally worth it. The hike was nothing compared to Colca canyon and the views were awesome. And after getting our stamps we were into Machu Picchu early so we got to watch the sun come over the mountains and the clouds clear and enjoy time with less people around. (And see some llamas!)

Cloudy still


Starting to clear up
Llamas!
Classic picture
Yeah, that mountain there on the right. The giant one with the sheer rock faces. :D
These feet climbed that mountain
The Incas had some sweet architecture
Starting the climb up...
View back of Machu Picchu
In Peru, sheer drops are not roped off. You can wander wherever you like. I guess they figure if you fall off that's your problem.
Steep stairs for the way down
All in all, gorgeous. Pictures, of course, don't do it justice.
So you should all come to Peru :)

Hasta la proxima