Monday, November 21, 2011

MuSTaches

     MST has come and gone, and I'm back home in Clarin listening to a cacophony of throaty calls coming from the rooster farm next door.  Gone only a week, yet all my house spiders took to opportunity to spin themselves giant new webs that stretch across each room exactly at head level, which I've been accidentally tearing down, face first, since I arrived.  It's like Halloween come three weeks late.

     Mid-Service Medical and Mid-Service Training mark a vague middle of our Peace Corps service.  Time for Batch 269 to get the one thorough, in-person check-up we will have, and attend a conference strategically placed to coincide with another low point on the roller coaster chart of volunteer emotional health.  The medical portion is invasive enough that I will spare you too many details here, but suffice it to say that there was ample poking, prodding, uncomfortable questions, and that anything that can be extracted from the human body was bottled and taken away for lab tests.  The sexually active male volunteers may have had it the worst though - with one particularly uncomfortable test involving an extra long cotton swab.  Sometimes celibacy does pay.

     The conference was pretty standard, but with one marked difference.  For the first time, in addition to the sessions on volunteer alcoholism, coping with stress, sexual harassment, and policy updates, we also started having sessions on topics like career planning, understanding the Non-Competitive Eligibility status we will have for government jobs for the year following Peace Corps, and the Peace Corps Follows program offered at many graduate schools.  See the common theme?  Life after Peace Corps.  A few fun and informative electives were offered as well.  I attended sessions on alternative livelihood projects, organic gardening, and one excellent session on taking the GRE by talented education volunteer Mark Fullmer.  There was also, of course, the company of 116 other volunteers to enjoy, and plenty of non-Filipino food to go crazy over.  Peace Corps has an uncanny ability to guess what a bunch of raggedy, mildly homesick, 15-months-in volunteers want to eat during conferences like MST (ie. soft tacos, chocolate chip pancakes, sandwiches, and bacon).

     The highlight of the week was the long-awaited occurrence of the premier social event of the season (who are we kidding, of the year), 'Stache Bash 2011 - for which plenty of male PCVs had been planning for months prior, as evidenced by the staggering amount of facial hair present in otherwise sobering sessions.  The second night of MST, these bearded gentlemen all locked themselves in a room together for a couple hours of male bonding and mustache-shaping.  Meanwhile, those of us endowed with double Xs gathered in another room to pass around bottles of Red Horse and speculate about what designs they were finally settling on next door.  That's when CRM volunteer Morgan Chow got her hands on a brown eyeliner pencil, and doodled up a nice whimsical 'stache of her own.  I was next with a nice fat horseshoe, the mustache I would have been born to wear would I have been born male.  Over the next half hour, I had the immense privileged of 'stache-ing up about twenty women.  Interestingly, while it had taken many of the men weeks of agonizing to come up with their designs (which, to be fair, were expected to be competition-caliber), each and every woman seemed to know instantly exactly which mustache would best suit her personality and/or bone structure, and after all were finished, there was not an identical shape among them.

     The event itself was a wildly good time, and a testament to the creativity and shamelessness of the PCV.  Each man strutted or sashayed down the aisle to a theme song chosen to match his mustache and costume, and displayed himself either flirtatiously or boldly in front of a panel of judges that included both PC staff members and volunteers.  The MC, education volunteer Claire Pelley (who herself had opted for a Frida Kahlo brown instead of a 'stache) regaled the rowdy audience with barely-appropriate quips and jokes while, in true PC fashion, two "Save Don't Shave!" protesters cried out emphatically about beard rights.

     In the midst of all of it - the medical exams and the conference and the madness - a rather important date managed to slip by, quite unnoticed.  It was November 18 before I realized what had happened, that November 16 had come and gone.  November 16, 2012 is the Close of Service date of Batch 269, and a date that is drilled well and deep into the skulls of even the most contented volunteers.  So, when its 2011 counterpart came and went, it took with us what feels to me like the most significant milestone so far.  By the time I looked at the date on my watch on the 18th, we officially had less than a year to go in our Peace Corps service.

     I might dwell on this further - try to analyse what this milestone means to me, try to wrap my head around what I have accomplished in the last year and were I have failed, and how to best use the remaining (slightly less than) twelve months, but saving me from all that uncomfortable self-examination is the very near date of November 28 and what feels like the most important milestone of all - seeing my mother and brother for the first time in well over a year.  So, with extra pillows to buy and spider webs to tame and an air mattress to track down, I'll have to save all the existential pondering for December.

The pollution enhanced Manila sunset

Watching the sunset on Roxas

Mindy doing magic

Jess and Abs

Pre-Bash 'Stache-ing

Whimsical, Middle School Fuzz, Horseshoe, and Dad Stache

Gender Bender

Business time

An excited audience. Except me. This is a serious mustache.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Culasi

It takes a long time to get to Culasi from Clarin.  It takes a trike to Tubigon, then a midnight ferry to Cebu, then an early plane ride to Iloilo City on Panay.  The flight is so short you might think it unnecessary, but without it, the island of Negros stands in your way and that is something you may not want to mess with.  From the airport in Iloilo it's a van ride into the city proper, where finally, you catch a 4-6 hour bus ride to Culasi itself.  By this time it's dark, and after one final trike ride, the only thing left is to let a small boy to quietly guide you down the road to the house where Dan lives.  Now, if you are me, and if this is October 22, you'll find Dan out front kicking a ball around with some children.  You'll laugh awkwardly to get his attention, and then you'll go inside the bamboo and nipa house where you'll be staying for the next eight days, set your backpack down, and text Todd and Amy to see how there progress is coming along the same journey.  And then Dan will make you dinner, which, trust me, is a great thing.

What follows is three meticulously planned, two-two day environmental science workshops at local high schools.  Todd and Amy (his delightful visiting girlfriend) and I had made the trip from Bohol to help facilitate, an offer we jumped at because work-related travel is one of those magical things about Peace Corps that everyone wishes they could do more of.  You get to see someone else's site, get an idea of the ways they are choosing to conduct CRM work in their town, and usually come away feeling both productive and inspired.  Plus, it breaks up routine, and I can't say enough good things about that. 

Starting out the week with a nice little hike 
Todd and Amy, through the saw grass

Dan leads the way through a rice field

A lively round of the echolocation game

The school officials selecting the mural design from the students' drawings

Stef explaining the trash segregation game

Sketching 

Painters

Stef and I, with a bunch of girls, being short

Mural number one, finished!

Dan's hands

Yeah. That's really up on the wall. Of a public school. 

Todd leading "balay ni Superman" like a champ

Stef talks SWM

Amy and Todd on the far left, Dan, myself, and Stef in the center., with all  out students, in front of mural number two

With some female students, being tall

Checking out the progress

Mixing paint. What I was born to do.

The final mural



 

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Robert Ballard on exploring the oceans | Video on TED.com

It's no secret that I love Bob Ballard. He is right up there with Monty Roberts and Rosalind Franklin as a close personal hero of my ten year old (and perpetual ten year old) self. Recently, digging through TED Talks, I remembered why.

Watch this, and watch it to the end, it's worth it!


Robert Ballard on exploring the oceans | Video on TED.com