Thursday, January 30, 2014

Posting an Update

Who can believe we are at the end of January???  I thought the days and months were supposed to drag on after the fun of the holiday season!

February means the Hubs and I have been living in Costa Rica for two years!  We moved February 22, 2012 (the Little Brother's birthday).  February also means that we official have 3 months left in our quaint little town.  With only 3 months left we can no longer take vacation (which is fine since we used all 48 days+ 2 leave without pay days).  It means we are finally following through with promises to visit friends' communities.  Finishing up projects, helping our counterparts prepare for the year without us (we have some major things happening in our school and area!), enjoying our 1 1/2 hour bus ride to the beach, fresh fruit, walking everywhere, and saying good bye.

But I want to save the official reflect and goodbye posts till a later date.  Today's post is to fill you in on what we have been doing in January.

January is still our summer vacation time in Costa Rica.  The Hubs and I had no real plans on how to spend it.  Many of our fellow volunteers held a camp called Jump Start. Jump Start is a month long intensive English camps for incoming 7th graders.  High schools in Costa Rica start with 7th grade.  While Costa Rica is striving to be bilingual, with a focus on English, many of our elementary schools do not have English classes.  This is because of funding, smaller schools do not have the funding to have anything but the regular teacher(s).  So Jump Start is to help offset the inequality of English in the 7th grade schools.  Since many schools feed into the same high school, there will be students who have had the full 6 years of English, no English, and somewhere in between.  The camps are currently led by Peace Corps Volunteers (PCV) and supported by public school teachers.  The camp is free to all students who make their way to camp by foot, bike, or bus.  The students receive fun and engaging lessons on basic English, and they walk away for the experience with irreplaceable confidence and knowledge of the language.
Picture from a Jump Start last year

The Hubs and I decided to be more in a supportive role for these camps instead of hosting our own.  There is a camp with 40 students being hosted at the large high school across town by our geographically closest volunteer (she is about 15 minute bus ride away).  She is helped by a couple from the States (who willingly paid to come and volunteer in a camp AND live with a Tico family) as well as two Tico teachers.  The Hubs has been going to the camp when he can to relieve the PCV of teaching so she can accomplish any administrative tasks she is called to do.  We also visited another PCV, who lives and works about 1 1/2 hour bus ride away, to interview her little darlings.  Part of this project is to track the progress of these students.  So all little darlings are interviewed at the beginning of camp, again at the end, and possibly throughout the school year.

January is a busy month in Santa Cruz.  We have our annual fiestas which include fair rides, bull riding, vendors, concerts, loud music in general, greasy good food, and drinking.  We tried to go out everyday at some point.  Sadly, we did not cheer on the bull watch the bulling riding very much this year.  But we enjoyed seeing friends and volunteers while eating and laughing until our hearts were content.
Again from last year.  I need to get on this picture taking thing
We celebrated our favorite six year old's birthday.  Our neighbors'/landlords' son turned six this month.  We partied hard.  haha  He loves the payasos (see picture below), so we had a parade with them leading up to the party area.  We dressed as good Guanacasticos do and "helped" the kids get the candy from the piñata.
Those tall, masked things are payasos

CANDY!

That joyful boy in the middle is the birthday boy with his family and friends
Last week we spent time in the capitol for a spelling bee meeting with the regional English leaders and for the National Teaching English Conference.

Three years ago, the spelling bee was a dream and now we are preparing for an opportunity for a nation wide competition next year.  We are also readying everything to give the responsibility to the leaders and teachers soon, oh so soon.  What an opportunity to talk to the leaders and vice minister about a project our organization created!  Many leaders were excited to get this project started in their district.  My counterpart and I even got to share our experience of leading 24 schools in our first ever spelling bee last year!  

This is my second year to present at the NTEC Conference.  I thoroughly enjoyed it!  Last year, the Hubs and I co-presented, but this year he decided he would rather volunteer with some of the behind the scenes things.  This year I had one presentation on classroom procedures and the other on classroom management.  I had a blast (and the Hubs even said I was goofy and funny-win)!  The teachers were responsive and full of ideas.  What a great experience all around. 

Now that we are saying "Adios!" to January, we are welcoming Febuary with the annual Super Bowl party.  Don't worry we will be streaming the game live on a computer to see the commercials.  Then we will help with a few Jump Start activities next week as they finish out their camps.  Beach trips are in order this month.  And our Close of Service (COS) conference to round out the ever short month.  

Here's to 2014!  


Caring for your Volunteer

This post comes from almost two years of experience of living and serving abroad.  This post comes after talking to other Volunteers about what we wish those we left at home knew.

  We miss you.  Some days we don't want to get out of bed and face what the day might hold without our friends and family.  But sometimes we surprise ourselves and realize while we still miss everyone back "home" we also call here "home".  We learn we have two homes.

We try not to show you our dark days, our failed projects, or our frustrations.  But sometimes those slip out.  We need to be able to talk about those at times, but we have great days too!  Ask us about what went well that week, month, or day (however often you talk to us).  Ask us about what is our favorite thing, funniest thing, greatest achievement!  That helps us in many ways as well as connects you to Peace Corps and our host country.

Initiate the conversation.  Send the first text, facebook chat us first, or send a card/care package for no reason.  We love to be reminded that we are remembered even though daily life gets in the way here and there. We LOVE having something in our mailboxes!  There is something special about snail mail.

We try to do the same.  But sometimes mailing a card is expensive, our internet is finicky, or we have no money on our phones for a text.  But we try to bring you into our world.  We are missing so much by being here.  Graduations, babies, marriages, deaths, and knowing your daily life.  We want to be a part of that.

We carry you with us where ever we live.  We talk to other volunteers about you like they know you.  Our neighbors have seen your pictures.  Our students have sung you happy birthday.

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Recapping 2013 and welcoming 2014

Goodbye 2013...what a year you have been!  The best yet!  You brought tears, smiles, joy, frustration, achievement,, and love.

January- We started the year off right with our community’s feistas.  Then the Hubs and I presented at the National Teaching English Conference, celebrated the 50th anniversary of Peace Corps in Costa Rica, and went with a small group to cheer on the Costa Rican national at the national stadium later in the month.

One of the rides at the fiesta
the Hubs and I at the 50th anniversary
Vamos Sele!  
The crew who cheered 
February- I had to say goodbye to a dear PCV friend who went home.  And our group celebrated 1 year in Costa Rica by visiting the active Poás volcano.
Before we said goodbye
Poás volcano


March- Uncle M came to visit, and he took us to wonderful hotels as well as feed us delicious food.  We celebrated Holy Week with parades and spent Easter with A and T at Brasilito Beach. The Hubs and I started a community conversation club AND started tutoring a boy that goes to a local bilingual school this month. Oh, and we dealt with an invasion of ants.  
Zip lining with Uncle M
Host niece in the parade
My friend as Mary Magdalene 
Our landlady and her daughter
Happy Easter!
No matching outfits this year

The massacre 
April- The Hubs and I celebrated 5 years of being together with a dinner out at a favorite local restaurant. We hiked a giant hill in Nicoya with one of our community conversation club participant’s family, and had tech week with 3 new TEFL volunteers.  We also visited another volunteer’s site.  Spelling Bee and my second round of MEP conversation clubs started this month. 
We have been together for a long time, ask him
We reached the top!
They really did work that week
Visited this beautiful girl and her site
 May- The Hubs and I met saw  President Obama!  We also battled a giant moth.  And our cluster had to say goodbye to two of our volunteers. 
 
The man, the myth, the legend 

Proof we were there 
Much larger in real life 


June- We celebrated 3 years of marriage at our favorite hostel and beach.  My third round of MEP conversation clubs started, we attended our 1 year training session in San Jose,  and held a baby shower for the other couple in our group (as well as said goodbye to them).  And we welcomed 4 new volunteers into our cluster!  
Year 3 for the books
Baby Nugget's shower
MST (Mid-Service Training) became Mustache Service Training

July- I had waited a long time for this month.  Semester vacationsyes! July brought the end of the institutional and circuit spelling bees, my family visited, and a trip to Nicaragua. To end it we celebrated the annexation of Guanacaste from Nicaragua with parades (that the Hubs was in) and rodeos. 
These dominated the beginning of 2013
He is famous...in a parade AND on TV
We zipped, ate, hiked, swam, snorkeled, and laughed 
The crew that dominated Nicaragua 
Beautiful view of the lagoon 
Eat my dust! I was the fastest volcano boarder that day
August- I presented at another English conference, we walked about 8 miles for the Romeria, and the Hubs danced in his school’s talent show.  And we had our regional spelling bee
Apparently we could have taken a bus 
Speaks for itself 

September- We celebrated Costa Rica’s independence with what else… but parades!  And the Hubs started his English bachillerato (high school exit exams) review course for seniors.  We checked Machu Picchu  off our bucket list when we visited Peru and Colombia.   
Isn't he cute teaching?

We love parades 
Colombia salt mines
Cuy in Peru
Machu Picchu 
We hiked a mountain, no big deal
October- The landlady’s daughter had her first communion, Lumi had her last set of puppies which included Shadow (who we are fostering), we hosted a Halloween party, and said goodbye to another volunteer.  And started my last round of conversation clubs.  Oh yea, I got stunk by a bee on my ring finger.  
She is pretty inside and out
Saying bye to S
Please take any rings off if you get stunk on your fingers other wise your hand looks like that and your rings have to be cut off
Happy Halloween!

Shadow's brother 
November- The interregional (national) spelling bee where we dominated! We also were able to visit the States for Thanksgiving and to take the GRE.
Our participants at the spelling bee 
My beautiful mom and her boys
My fam bam 
  
Our traditional Thanksgiving family photo shoot

Some of our favorite people
Another of my favorite people 



December-  We were lucky enough to get to visit the States again for Christmas but we rang in the New Year Tico style back in Costa Rica (grilling on the front porch and watching fireworks and payosos). 
With the Hubs and his siblings

Harry joined my birthday celebrations...we were excited to have him
Proof my side of the family got together

They won the jackpot
Mr. Cars spent Christmas with us 
Tradition, we match every year 
Reading the letter Santa wrote back to Mr. Cars on Christmas morning 
He was excited

We were definitely the oldest people at Elevation 
Proof Boomer likes his uncle 

The grill master  
Heading to the fireworks 
First picture of 2014
   Hello 2014 you will include some big changes for this nomadic family.  We will be ending our Peace Corps service in a few short months, moving back to the Hometown for a small time, and then moving to where the Hubs will be attending grad school.  I will be going back to work as a teacher and then applying for grad schools for the next fall.  Can’t wait to see what else you have in store 2014!