Although it is only Tuesday, I can tell you right now one of the highlights of my week: I got to talk to my Grandma last night. She's pretty tech-savvy (though she hates her computer more than just about anything else in her house), and we've been emailing back and forth a bit since I've been here, but my sister was having what we call a "Princess Weekend" (staying over at Grandma's and being treated like royalty), and so I got to talk to them both. Technology continues to astound me -- with even the most basic internet connection (through the cell service here), I can call anyone with the same app, and talk as if we're across the street instead of across the world. Thank you, internet, for allowing me to stay connected even if I am incredibly isolated.
Yesterday was Memorial Day, and while they don't celebrate that here (duh), we do have a holiday tomorrow, Madaraka Day. It "Commemorates the day that Kenya attained internal self-rule in 1963," (thanks, Wikipedia) but it's not their true independence day -- that comes later. I don't think I've ever legit celebrated a holiday midweek (except maybe the 4th of July some years?), but I think working two days, taking a day off, working another two days, and getting a full weekend has got to be the dream. We (the expats) will celebrate tomorrow like Memorial Day, complete with a grilled burgers and hopefully some volleyball. I'm excited to sleep in.
If I was home, this past Sunday would mark the unofficial beginning of summer, with my mom's side of the family all convening at the cabin to get things opened up, cleaned off, and ready for the season. I'm not sure how warm the lake was (I'm assuming it was fairly cold), but from what I've heard, MN has had a lovely spring. Actually, now that I think about it, it was probably a pretty small group at the cabin since many of my siblings/cousins are still in school, out of the country, or otherwise busy. Usually there is at least one weekend over the summer when we're all at the cabin together, but I'm not sure that'll happen this year, mostly because I'm scheduled to be here through the end of September. Bummer.
After several days of not much rain and warmer temps, it rained heavily last night. I don't love being caught in the rain on my way home from work, but I find it to be a really pleasant backdrop as I'm falling asleep (provided there is no hail). It also cooled things down nicely, and I was almost (almost) chilly when I started my run this morning. Two things made me smile while I was running. 1. An older woman carrying a young child on her back called out to me as I passed her, "That's good! That's good!" (So much better than the motorcycle taxi guy: "Good morning, babe." Barf.) I smiled at her and we exchanged greetings, and her little daughter smiled and waved. So cute! Later (in a quieter part of town with fewer motorcycle taxis and just generally less commotion), I saw a man walking on the other side of the road. He was carrying something in a plastic bag (sidenote: Kenyans call plastic bags paper bags, which confuses me to no end), and reached down to pick up a piece of trash on the side of the road! I was completely floored. I don't know if I have ever seen an African pick up trash of his/her own volition (apart from the crews that are hired to sweet and clean the streets). For all the people who saw me (and/or stared at me and/or yelled at me) on my run this morning, those two positive encounters drown out all the others. It was a solid beginning to my Tuesday.
Then I got back home and started in on the morning routine, making coffee and breakfast and trying to figure out which skirt I'm least tired of wearing. Around 8am, my phone rang. My immediate reaction was that my boss was calling and we were going to the field and either I should hurry up or he would be picking me up from work to save time, but it was a number I didn't recognize. The last time I got a call from a number I didn't know, it was the director of one of our partner organizations, calling to talk through their grant proposal. Little did I know, it was my "friend" from a couple weeks ago, the one I made the mistake of sharing my number with, and oh, the one who showed up at my house two weekends ago.
Rewind. Obviously I'd blocked his number the first time. Then he started calling from a number that couldn't be ID'd (which I ignored, that was easy enough). That weekend (a week and a half ago now), as I was leaving my house on Sunday afternoon, I got a "No Caller ID" call, ignored it, and continued to walk out. As I was opening the compound gate, who should I see walking towards me, but that guy. Oh man, I was livid. He asked why I had been avoiding his calls ("I'll give you one guess.") and then said that he had just been wanting to talk to me so he came to my house. I told him he is absolutely not welcome at my home without invitation and stormed off down the hill (with more adrenaline than I've felt in a long time). Did I mention I was mad? Dude, take a hint. Anyway, I didn't hear from him after that, so I figured he maybe got the message and was going to finally leave me alone. Apparently not. He called me again this morning from a new number (which my phone could identify), and I promptly blocked that number too. Ugh.
Let's pause and do a little cultural comparison here. Obviously, I'm not a guy, so I maybe don't have the same perspective, but I feel I can relate nonetheless. You're out, at a bar or a concert or wherever, and you meet an interesting girl. You two chat and by the end of your conversation, you've convinced her to give you her number. Whether or not she is actually into you is unclear, but you have her digits. Now. Think. How long do you wait to call/text? If popular culture has anything to say about it, probably a day or two. Or maybe you're feeling really ballsy or maybe you think your connection was super deep and meaningful, in which case you call her that night. If she answers, great, you talk. If not, she's maybe busy with something else and may or may not call you back. If she does call back, you're lucky; if she doesn't, you probably don't continue to text huge novels professing your love, bragging about yourself, oh, and finally asking her name because you were too busy talking about yourself to ask her name when you were chatting earlier... Again, I'm not a man, so maybe I have the wrong expectations, but as a woman, I assure you, it can be super off-putting when cultural communication styles/expectations/understandings/perceptions are so vastly different... and when "No, I'm not interested" may or may not actually mean that.
Note: I do still feel very safe where I live and work; I don't walk anywhere after dark; I'm careful with how I dress/accessorize. It's unbelievably frustrating (especially since I am nowhere near used to getting anywhere close to this much attention), but I do not think I'm any less safe for it.
Back to happy notes -- July family vacation plans are falling into place ever-so-slowly, and I might even have a fun weekend hiking/camping/adventure trip with friends coming up! I still have not contracted malaria (knock on wood), meaning I only have to make it four more months without it, and I'll be safe! But really, life is pretty good, even if it is a bit slower than I might like right now. I of course miss MN (how could I not, especially now that it's prime patio season), but it's almost always patio season here too (provided you have mosquito repellent)!
Cheers to Memorial Day, Madaraka Day, and the beginning of summer,
Katie
Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Thursday, May 19, 2016
Wednesday Frustrations (or: Men here are the Worst)
Yesterday was a frustrating day. Actually, it just involved a
really frustrating few hours, between 5:30pm (when I was almost home after a
long day) and 7pm (when I got to where I was meeting a few friends for dinner).
One wouldn’t think that much could happen in 90 minutes, but hey, this is
Kenya.
I’d turned off the main road I use on my way home, and
greeted my neighbor, commenting that rain looked imminent (as it often does in
the afternoons, if it’s not already raining). A few steps later, a young man
(probably mid-late 20s) had approached me, “Hey, white woman!” I’m not sure if
this was merely him trying to prove that he was above calling out “Mzungu,” (“European,”
but more commonly used for any “white person”) or what, but I wasn’t especially
impressed. I responded with something along the lines of, “What, black man?” He
laughed and launched into a huge introduction, explaining his name, and then
gave me this spiel about how he was an author and an artist, and he had been
following me for a while because he really wanted to talk to me, but not around
all the people who were on that main road, and he likes having friends from
other cultures and backgrounds because he likes learning, and blah blah blah. Then
it was, “So can we continue this conversation sometime?” to which I responded
“Maybe.” Perhaps leaving it open like this was my first mistake, perhaps it was
my third or fourth; looking back, I’m still not sure. He persisted, and in very
good English (for which I had to give him some credit). I was pretty tired, and
apparently my judgment was impaired and after we talked (read: he talked at me)
some more, ended up giving out my phone number (which I ended up immediately
regretting, and regretting some more later on down the line). Dumb. Dumb, dumb,
dumb. He kept talking probably another ten minutes before I managed to convince
him I was done with the conversation and wanted to go home and rest (and have
my afternoon/pre-dinner snack! I was getting hangry). He insisted we would meet
again. I guarantee we will not.
I made it home, greeted the dogs (the two who were around
and happy to see me), had some yogurt and sat down to relax and look through
some articles to maybe send to some of our interns. Got a text from a friend
asking if I wanted to meet up for dinner… Sigh of relief because it wasn’t that
guy I had just encountered; yes of course, dinner would be great.
I then made the mistake of leaving my house before
confirming mealtime, and when I got the second text message, I was probably
halfway from my house to the restaurant with 30 minutes to spare. I turned around
and headed back towards home, figuring I would just wait around outside along
the road/my driveway and watch the colors in the sunset (which was really
pretty!).
A couple guys came up the hill and started talking to me. Sure
enough, within a few minutes, they too had asked for my name and number. This
one was a much more obvious “no,” and after assuring me we would meet again, they
eventually went on their merry way. Sidenote: One of my favorite responses to
the question, “So, can you give me your numbers?” has become, “Why? What are
you going to do with my phone number?” Usually I get something along the lines
of, “So I can greet you!” You’re talking to me right now, dude, and I’m not
convinced I want you to greet me.
I stood on a big rock and watched the sky for a while, then decided
to see if there was a better view down the hill a little ways, and of course (with
my luck) there was a man walking up the hill, talking on his phone. I
acknowledged him politely (greetings are pretty important here) as we passed
one another, and he continued slowly up the hill. Once I realized that the best
view was in fact going to be on the top of the hill (actually on the rock I’d
been standing on earlier), I went back up. “Madam, are you lost?” I explained
to him I was watching the sky because I like sunsets. “Ah, then I think you can
help me. You see, I am looking for a wife from the other side…” (“The other
side” can mean many things; in this case, it meant he was looking for an
American wife, and believed I would help him). He too introduced himself, and assured
me he was Bernard Lagat’s brother-in-law (HAH, I’m sure), and that he had
family in Texas, and that he had applied for a green card, but if I could only
help him find a wife, it would be much easier for him. At this point I had to
start walking to dinner (and I was getting rather tired of these encounters),
so I sucked it up and walked with him for a while before turning off.
The sky had started getting darker, and while I knew I had
enough time to get to dinner, I started walking at a more American pace (I was
done talking to people, plus it was cooling down, and I was trying to stay
warm). I passed a man carrying a big stick (reminded me of the ones Basotho
commonly carried – and occasionally beat students or cattle with – in Lesotho).
I was fully intending to ignore him, but he greeted me in solid English, so I
responded, and in trying to be friendly (mistake), asked why he was carrying
the cane. Turns out, it belonged to his grandmother who he had just visited in
the hospital, and he was carrying it home. I had passed him, but he started
walking faster, though still a few steps behind me. Then came a question I’d
not heard from a Kenyan before: “Do you go to the gym?” I was a bit caught off
guard as there aren’t many gyms around and working out doesn’t seem like a
common thing around here, but I told him that I liked to run (many people have
seen me in my neighborhood area, so I wasn’t divulging any grand secrets). “I
can tell, because your legs look very sexy and strong.” Perfect. I’m in long
pants and a sweater (not even the skirt I’d worn to work!), and this is the
attention I’m getting. UGH. Ignore it: “Okay, goodnight sir.” I’d reached my destination and could not have
been more relieved to enter the gate.
(Naturally now, sitting at my desk and fuming again, I can
think of a handful of much better responses to that comment: “My legs are strong – watch out or I’ll kick you
where it hurts,” or “I hope you didn’t plan on having kids”… )
Dinner was great. Good to see friends and unwind a bit,
reminisce about life back home, and we even made plans to go hiking one of
these weekends.
After I got home I checked my phone, only to find one missed
call and four very long text messages from the first guy who approached me
several hours earlier. He had just wanted to hear my voice, and say goodnight
to me in person, but in lieu of that, felt like writing two novels would
suffice (I think my favorite part was the last line of the last text where he
asked for my name, because he had been too busy earlier talking about himself
to actually ask anything about me).
Apple and iPhones for the win – there is a “Block this
Number” option. Check plus.
-------
Unfortunately, as I have come to understand first through Lesotho, and now Kenya, this is part of being a white woman in Africa. I don’t
love it. In fact, I really struggle with it. Some of my closest friends at home
are male (duh), but for the most part, as a woman, I just don’t have that
option here. And that sucks. Many people from home have been asking if I’ve
made friends since I’ve been here. I definitely have, but this gives some insight
as to why (for now, anyway) they seem to either be the young women in the
office, or other expats in the area.
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
Kenyan Food, African Dogs, and Kakamega Rains
I said I would try to write weekly, and I did mean it… I’m
just on Kenyan time (meaning: it will probably get done, just maybe not when
you thought it would… or it won’t get done, but don’t take it personally).
In any case, happy Tuesday. May is more than halfway over,
and we’re 3.5 weeks out from the first batch of interns arriving. I won’t lie
and say we’re incredibly busy with preparations, but there is still a good
amount to be done. Maybe it’s the procrastinator in me, but I still don’t feel
much pressure in terms of getting everything ready. I’m guessing that statement
will bite me in the butt in about 3 weeks, but for now, things seem relatively
calm.
I’ve now tried most of the “typical Kenyan” foods, though
there are still some dishes or combinations I’ve heard about and am curious
about, but don’t know if I’ll have the opportunity to try them. There’s a
surprising amount of rice in the Kenyan diet… eaten with beans, vegetables,
ndengu (green grams, sort of like lentils), or pretty much whatever you want. I
find it sort of amusing that they eat rice with potato stew… not my favorite
day. If a meal doesn’t include rice, it might have ugali, which is like papa of
Lesotho (maize meal cooked up into a very thick porridge, to be mixed with the
other dishes and typically eaten with hand). My personal favorite is chapati, a
tortilla-esque bread-thing, but cooked in oil instead of on a dry skillet. Some
are a touch too oily for my taste, but the Kenyan chapati is a great snack.
Last week I also got to try mandazi, which are like doughnuts – typically
triangular-shaped fried dough. Also very tasty. Basically, as in many poverty-stricken
places, there are lots of carbs. Still on my list of things to try are the
local or indigenous chicken (which I will not even try to spell here). I’m told
it’s very sweet (an odd descriptor for meat, I think, but I’ll roll with it),
it takes a long time to cook, and it can be really stringy.
On an unrelated note, the four dogs on the compound where I live have gotten to know me a bit. There are three that look similar – the most common brand of mutt in Kenya, a mostly brown dog with a few black markings, smaller than most labs, but with pointy ears instead of floppy ones. One of these guys likes me and will sometimes approach me to play after I return from my morning runs. One is still a bit wary of me, but recognizes that I get along with his friends, but the third one just absolutely hates me. He growls as I lace up my shoes in the morning (even before I open the door to step outside), and barks non-stop when I return home in the afternoons or later in the evening. I don’t love that dog. Part of me wants badly to gain his trust and befriend him, but a bigger part of me realizes he will probably always hate me. The fourth dog is completely awesome. He is short but fairly round for an African dog, black (with flecks of tan dust) and super fluffy. If he moves around too much, or you pat him on the side or back, you'll see clouds of dust, almost like Pigpen from Charlie Brown. He always waddles over to greet me before flopping down under the vehicles or in the dirt. That dog is old.
What else… It rains a lot. Like, an amazing amount. Usually
in the afternoon or evening, but it’s not always predictable. Sometimes there
is thunder and lightning, and sometimes it’s just rain; sometimes it passes
very quickly, and other times it’ll start in the afternoon and continue into
the evening. Those days are frustrating. It seems like it starts right around
4:30pm, in enough time to turn the non-paved roads and paths to complete mud
before we leave the office at 5, to try to get home before the sprinkles turn
into a downpour and everything is drenched. On the other hand, I find the days
the rain starts after I’ve left the office to be fascinating. There’s this unique
energy in the air around town and on the roads. People know it’s going to rain
(the sky is often very telling), it’s just a matter of the exact moment it will
start, and everyone bustles about, trying to get where they need to be before
the clouds open up. It’s raining right now, fairly heavily with intermittent
thunder. I managed to get home while it was still toasty and dry, the first
time in over a week!
Not a tremendous amount to report otherwise. I got word over
the weekend that my family's cabin is open and functional (even if the water is a bit
chilly). I’ll be sad to not make it up there this summer, but my mom and one of
my sisters are hopefully coming to visit and travel around at some point in
July, so I’ll have that trip to plan look forward to (in a big way).
Love from Kenya,
K
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Cinco de Mayo, Mother's Day, and the Crying Stone
Most importantly: Happy Mother's Day to all you moms out there, be you mine or someone else's! I'm getting to that age where some of my friends have kids, and that's a new thing to think about, a little strange, but only because I'm just in a different stage of life. Mothers are amazing, and deserve to be celebrated!
I realize it has in fact been two weeks since my last update. Oops -- so much for writing every week. Apologies.
Life is pretty good. I hit a little rough patch about the time I last wrote, but things have definitely improved since then. Work has gotten busier, for one. Those of you who know me know I do best when I'm busy, when I have things going on, goals and projects and events. When I first got here, there was enough new to keep me busy, but eventually that slowed down, and life got a little dull, which was frustrating... but like I said, work has picked up, I've met a handful of other expats in the area and made several new friends, and it has been really encouraging.
It's still about a month out from the arrival of our first batch of interns, but this means that developing calendars and setting meetings actually makes some sense now; there's a little more urgency. We're meeting with host organizations to make sure they're ready to put an intern to work "from the word 'go'" (as my supervisor likes to say). We're meeting with host families (not so much me as my local counterparts) to make sure they have adequate setups for their new family members. There is actually quite a lot to do and take care of before the interns come!
Another fun personal fact: I love Mexican food (insert Trump-Hispanics-taco bowl joke here). Some of the other expats and I threw a Cinco de Mayo dinner on Friday evening, and I had forgotten how good black beans taste with melted cheese. I dragged out the Peace Corps cookbook for my old reliable tortilla recipe, and braved flour tortillas (which turned out surprisingly well - they actually held up well when used in a burrito - I was so proud). I also roasted sweet potatoes with some spices, and made black beans (which were not as tender as I wanted, but we were hungry and all the other food was ready). There was also guac, several kinds of tortilla chips, and plenty of veggies. I made new friends, and we feasted. I went home very full, and very content.
Today, the current intern and I went to the site of perhaps Kakamega's only legit "tourist" item (apart from the forest, which will have to happen at some point in the future), called "The Crying Stone," because (when it rains) the rock looks like it is crying. It was quite an ordeal getting there (we took piki-pikis, or motorbikes), and in her words, we ended up paying pretty much the whole village. There was one guy who guided us to where the trail to the stone was, and he needed something. Then there was another guy who actually brought us up to the stone and taught us about the history and stories of the rock, and he needed something. Then there was a woman who merely lived by the stone, and supposedly starred in some World Cup 2010 something something something, and she needed something (that one seemed like a stretch to me). Then there was an old guy, perhaps a former tour guide, who was sitting on his butt and doing nothing, and he needed something. And then once we got back to town, we were told there was a "waiting fee" for the piki drivers, who opted to wait with us while we were there. Ridiculous. What's more, we were there early enough in the day that it had not yet rained, so the "Crying Stone" was not even crying! It was dry. "It cried yesterday." Perfect. Oh well, cross that one off my list - I feel no need to go back and see it again, that's for sure! (Check out some photos below)
Another neat thing! The current intern (we only have one at present) had the final training workshop as a sort of finale to her projects here. It was a two-day poultry training and workshop; the other program coordinator went on the first day, and I went the second day. The woman leading the workshop, someone from the ministry of agriculture, or at least educated in those topics, seemed like she was completely in charge, and very good at her job. She was writing notes in English, and holding a very interactive training conversation with the woman who were eagerly scribbling down everything she wrote on the flipchart paper. It was very endearing to see all these older (middle-aged at least) Kenyan women in their brightly colored, mismatched outfits, sitting and taking notes like they were back in high school. They were definitely more engaged than my students ever were in Lesotho, so maybe I was a little jealous of that... At the end of the workshop, a pickup truck pulled into the lot, and there were close to 80 chickens in the back, just walking around, softly clucking and trying desperately to hide, especially when one guy started picking them up and handing them to the other guy, who then deposited them in boxes, and counted to make sure each box had six before it was handed off to one of the lucky recipients. It was awesome. The women were so, so excited to be receiving these birds, and I really think/want to believe the project will continue after the intern has gone. I think my favorite image of the day was watching these women as they all went off together, carrying chickens in ratty cardboard boxes wrapped in beautiful Kenyan fabrics, on their heads.
Alright, that's all I've got for now. Time to go home and cook dinner!
Love and peace from Kenya,
-K
I realize it has in fact been two weeks since my last update. Oops -- so much for writing every week. Apologies.
Life is pretty good. I hit a little rough patch about the time I last wrote, but things have definitely improved since then. Work has gotten busier, for one. Those of you who know me know I do best when I'm busy, when I have things going on, goals and projects and events. When I first got here, there was enough new to keep me busy, but eventually that slowed down, and life got a little dull, which was frustrating... but like I said, work has picked up, I've met a handful of other expats in the area and made several new friends, and it has been really encouraging.
It's still about a month out from the arrival of our first batch of interns, but this means that developing calendars and setting meetings actually makes some sense now; there's a little more urgency. We're meeting with host organizations to make sure they're ready to put an intern to work "from the word 'go'" (as my supervisor likes to say). We're meeting with host families (not so much me as my local counterparts) to make sure they have adequate setups for their new family members. There is actually quite a lot to do and take care of before the interns come!
Another fun personal fact: I love Mexican food (insert Trump-Hispanics-taco bowl joke here). Some of the other expats and I threw a Cinco de Mayo dinner on Friday evening, and I had forgotten how good black beans taste with melted cheese. I dragged out the Peace Corps cookbook for my old reliable tortilla recipe, and braved flour tortillas (which turned out surprisingly well - they actually held up well when used in a burrito - I was so proud). I also roasted sweet potatoes with some spices, and made black beans (which were not as tender as I wanted, but we were hungry and all the other food was ready). There was also guac, several kinds of tortilla chips, and plenty of veggies. I made new friends, and we feasted. I went home very full, and very content.
Today, the current intern and I went to the site of perhaps Kakamega's only legit "tourist" item (apart from the forest, which will have to happen at some point in the future), called "The Crying Stone," because (when it rains) the rock looks like it is crying. It was quite an ordeal getting there (we took piki-pikis, or motorbikes), and in her words, we ended up paying pretty much the whole village. There was one guy who guided us to where the trail to the stone was, and he needed something. Then there was another guy who actually brought us up to the stone and taught us about the history and stories of the rock, and he needed something. Then there was a woman who merely lived by the stone, and supposedly starred in some World Cup 2010 something something something, and she needed something (that one seemed like a stretch to me). Then there was an old guy, perhaps a former tour guide, who was sitting on his butt and doing nothing, and he needed something. And then once we got back to town, we were told there was a "waiting fee" for the piki drivers, who opted to wait with us while we were there. Ridiculous. What's more, we were there early enough in the day that it had not yet rained, so the "Crying Stone" was not even crying! It was dry. "It cried yesterday." Perfect. Oh well, cross that one off my list - I feel no need to go back and see it again, that's for sure! (Check out some photos below)
Another neat thing! The current intern (we only have one at present) had the final training workshop as a sort of finale to her projects here. It was a two-day poultry training and workshop; the other program coordinator went on the first day, and I went the second day. The woman leading the workshop, someone from the ministry of agriculture, or at least educated in those topics, seemed like she was completely in charge, and very good at her job. She was writing notes in English, and holding a very interactive training conversation with the woman who were eagerly scribbling down everything she wrote on the flipchart paper. It was very endearing to see all these older (middle-aged at least) Kenyan women in their brightly colored, mismatched outfits, sitting and taking notes like they were back in high school. They were definitely more engaged than my students ever were in Lesotho, so maybe I was a little jealous of that... At the end of the workshop, a pickup truck pulled into the lot, and there were close to 80 chickens in the back, just walking around, softly clucking and trying desperately to hide, especially when one guy started picking them up and handing them to the other guy, who then deposited them in boxes, and counted to make sure each box had six before it was handed off to one of the lucky recipients. It was awesome. The women were so, so excited to be receiving these birds, and I really think/want to believe the project will continue after the intern has gone. I think my favorite image of the day was watching these women as they all went off together, carrying chickens in ratty cardboard boxes wrapped in beautiful Kenyan fabrics, on their heads.
Alright, that's all I've got for now. Time to go home and cook dinner!
Love and peace from Kenya,
-K
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