This week (the week of Jan 10-14) will be a busy one for me*. The village baby weighing Monday, yay babies! I’m helping another PCV with an HIV/AIDS workshop for the next 2 weeks. I’ll be conducting a review session at the end of each day consisting of Q&As and a truth or myth presentation. I’ve also organized a communal workday on market day for the village to mold 500 of the local bricks. With the bricks, we’ll make two bathhouses and a latrine for the nurse I’ve been working to get in the village. My original goal for having the clinic open was January, now I’ll be lucky if we’re open by March. I also will be meeting with the District’s new Medical Director to discuss ideas and goals for the district. I’m looking forward to seeing whether we have similar ambitions. I’m also working on making another garden off the back of our house. It will be a model garden for the clans in the village who want to have a Moringa garden. I’m planning to get funding for enough bamboo for a garden large enough for 40-50 trees for each clan to have a Moringa garden. Kris and I will make our own for reference.
We’ve been at site about 5 months and in Ghana about 7 months and I can tell the rest of our time here will fly by. Kris and I are slowly becoming known for our cooking and baking skills. It’s a pain for other volunteers to travel to our site for a visit, but with mango bread, fresh cow milk and chili, they might keep coming back, I hope so, we love visitors. I keep saying this, but the days do go by slowly, but the months seem to fly by. Before I know it, it’ll be June and there will be some new Peace Corps Trainees in Ghana, I won’t be new anymore, I’ll be one of those older, wiser, tougher and unshakable volunteers. I hope you all are enjoying the New Year. I know it’s cold back home, quit complaining and come visit me! I promise you won’t need to bring more than t-shirts and shorts; you won’t need a sweater like me.
*(written January 12) Lesson learned, don’t overextend yourself. As some of you know, I got dysentery this week. It was not planned into my busy schedule, yet overtook all of my plans. Let’s just say I didn’t think 20 trips to the latrine in one day was possible, especially with no food in ones stomach. I am now into day 3/3 of antibiotics and think I’m beginning to feeling better. I doubt I’ll be at full strength for awhile, but will do my best to take it easy and return to normal. I’m starting to eat again and have been trying my best to replace fluids in greater amounts than they are lost, seemingly impossible without an IV. Kris is holding up his part of the sickness/health bargain (once again). Even though it seems like I’ve been a magnet for illness, I’d rather it be me than him, I’m perfectly fine distracting myself from feeling sick by watching endless amounts of TV shows whereas he’s not quite as patient. Thanks for all of the thoughts, concern, and prayers. I have an amazing support system back home and couldn’t do any of this without you.
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