July
1 - First letter from the field
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I've just departed (July 1), so I'm
probably freaking out!!! We went to Washington,
DC to get all our shots on July 2. Note the
typical governmental foresight in giving us our shots
and malaria medication the day before we leave (most
vaccinations should be given a month or so before
exposure...). We then fly from DC to NYC to
Paris to Dakar, where we take ground transport to
Thies, Senegal. This is where we spend 2 months
of our training. The third month will be in
Mamou, Guinea (right close to the border of Sierra
Leone, where there's that coup now). Those who
don't panic and flee (One drop-out estimate was 30%)
will be sworn in as volunteers and placed on site.
The toughest time for volunteers is
the first 6 months. This has been described
to me as "the loneliest time of my life." Culture
shock, isolation, and lack of easy international communication
will be tough... So, my dear friends, please,
WRITE TO ME!!! My addresses are listed below.
Living conditions will be slightly
easier during training, as we'll be in a large town
with electricity. However, the training is intense,
and I'll be living with a host family speaking French
all day. As far as I understand, I'll be doing
language training half the time, and the rest is cultural,
job-skills, and the like. After training, I'll
probably be placed in a large rural village without
electricity or running water. The official language
is French, but only 20% of the population speaks French...most
speak a native tribal language (Pular, Fulani, Malinke...).
Thus, in addition to brushing up on rusty French,
I'll be learning a local language as well.
Malaria is prevalent in West Africa,
as are various diseases, parasites, and gastro-intestinal
problems. As one person told me, "bowel movements
become a daily, almost obsessive, topic of conversation...sort
of like apartments for those who live in New York..."
So, I'll probably be sick often, perhaps seriously.
Health takes a lot of effort in Africa.
A lot of people have been asking me
Why Did I Choose to Go to Africa? I might as
well tell everyone at once. I've travelled quite
a bit in my life, and seeing other cultures has become
very important to me. The Peace Corps seemed
like a relatively easy way to spend several years
in a very different culture. By "easy", I mean
simply that they take care of food, housing, money,
health, transportation, job placement, and evacuation.
I'm really going to learn more than to give -- I see
this as part of my ongoing education. I've been
told that those who enter PC with an idealistic notion
that they're going to save the world are inevitably
disappointed, as the results of one's work in the
PC are often intangible or take years to show.
I also see this as a turning point in my life -- I
could have entered graduate school (in Physics, at
UCSC), but chose instead to embark on an adventure
which will teach me a lot about the US, myself, and
how to live simply and make do with what there is.
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