Saturday, October 28, 2006

Tour du Burkina

Tour du Burkina is a bike race around this country. Today they came through our city and I was front row! I got some great pics! It was fantastic and now I am heading to the celebration ceremony! Not sure which countries are here, but who cares?
This has been a great week...
I started yoga classes week! That really does a body good after my crazy hectic days. The director of our technical sessions is an instructor and has classes on Tues and Thur evenings. He does it in Franglish - a little bit of english and a little bit of french) but we get what he is saying. I definitely know the word for "relax" in French:) It is wonderful - hot of course so it is like doing yoga in a sauna - but wonderful nonetheless! I am just now comletely adjusted (to the climate, the food, the parasites...just kidding) and will start running this week. It is actually really nice at 5:30 in the morning (only about 86°) before the sun starts blazing. Biking is going really great too. I am whipping all around this city everyday!
Last night the host family of one of the volunteers threw him an ENORMOUS bday party - tons of food, drinks, dancing. There were like 70 people there! It was really fun. The people here are so nice.
I took my language proficiency test today. I think it went ok. I obviously started at the novice level when I got here and have to be at least intermediate-mid before Nov 30. I find out my current level on Monday.
We head to the capital city on Thursday for the pan-African art festival! There will be art from all over the continent!
And on Thursday we find out where our sites will be. Keeping those fingers crossed:)
I miss everyone! Hope all is well!

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Back in action

Bonjour everyone! I have been back at training for a few days and am on fire with the french! Actually it has been difficult but it is coming along petit a petit (little by little). My host father asked me to decide on a topic each night to practice various french words and phrases. He really wants to help me get better. My host mom is always saying bravo Nanette! Your french is fantastic! (all in french of course).
Yesterday was Ramadan, a national holiday here. It was so interesting! I have mentioned before that my host dad is Muslim and the mom is Catholic, but everyone just takes a day of celebration and they do it all together. My host mom fixed a bunch of food and many people stopped by to eat and have drinks ( soda for the muslims, beer for the catholics, etc) and dance and visit. And the little kids get dressed in their nice dresses and little suits and walk from house to house for money! It is like trick-or-treating but in really nice clothes and for money! Everyone had a great day - christians, muslims, african traditionalists.

For those of you interested in calling - check out the comment from my friend Robbie under the "Lots of news" post a few back. There is an internet way to get a number to call me - should you so desire.

We have interviews tomorrow to help determine where we will be placed for the next 2 years and then we find out next week.

My host mom informed me that this weekend I will help her make yogurt! woohooo! I will let you know how all this goes. Love you all and thanks for the comments and emails!

Thursday, October 19, 2006

Country music

Earlier this week I finally got my ipod out for the first time since leaving the states. Naturally, my host brother was in love at first sight. But since I have a pretty diverse taste in music there was something for everyone. My host brother got to listen to it first (this lasted about a day) - he loved the hip hop, r&b and reggae - which I have the most of. I was somewhat surprised to find out how many artists he knew pretty well, but then why would I be surprised - he has satellite tv. My host dad came home the next night to let me know that he had listened to it after I went to sleep the night before, and that after jazz music (which is the best according to him) country music is his favorite. What?? Of course I had a hard time picking myself up off the floor after at least 5 minutes of uncontrollable laughter. He couldn't figure out what I found so funny - country music is fantastic. Oh brother. I'm not the biggest fan of country music, but I do have some Kenny Rogers and Dixie Chicks and he was quite happy with that. The next night I asked my host mom what kind of music she liked, and she told me she liked church music. So I put the headphones on her and she jammed to the soundtrack of Sister Act II all night. I love this family.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

All clear!

I just got back from the eye dr and he gave me the thumbs up! The eye is healed and I am to go forth and prosper! wooohoooo!

Ok, I got the scoop on the Afican calling cards for those of you in Indy. This is from a guy from the Ivory Coast who was getting his MBA at Butler when I was. There is a liquor store on the NW corner of 79th and Michigan. Next to the liquor store is a tropical foods store that also sells Africa calling cards. Tell the woman you want to call Burkina Faso and she should be able to advice you on which card you need. Ok, we'll see how this works. Sometimes you will buy a card that says you can talk for an hour and you get 10 minutes, sometimes you get an hour. We'll see. But it's definitely cheaper than just calling. Fantastic!

Ok, for anyone sending a package: rumor has it that the cheapest way to send anything is in those flat envelopes with the bubble plastic stuff on the inside. They sell them at wal-mart or at the post office. Make sure to write "West Africa" next to Burkina Faso so it's easier for them to know where in the world it's going. I guess Burkina is not on the top 5 countries known all over the world. Lastly, if you do send a package and have to fill out one of those customs forms, just put that the box contains used clothes or old magazines so it won't tempt anyone to open it and so it gets through customs. It is best to take it to a United States Postal Office and not UPS or FedEx. That's all I have for now. I love you and miss you all!!

Lots of news

I'm back in the capital for my follow-up eye appt. Somehow I have just not been able to get on the internet in my training city. The reasons for this are a few - like I noted in my last post, my new goal is mastering the French language. This has taken a decent amount of time. I am being tutored by the director of the language program here in Burkina. He is an amazing teacher. I have an hour session with him every morning at 7 and each night I have homework. So that has been keeping me busy. Reason 2 is the fact that just about everything (except restaurants) close between noon and 3. Why, you might ask? Because it's freaking HOT, and everyone takes this time to nap because it's ridiculous to try to do anything. Everyone, that is, except the Peace Corps people who move right along according to the plan. The third reason is I love my host family, so I want to spend as much time with them as possible. The fourth reason is the internet is not open on the weekends. All this has left me without the chance to make it to the cyber cafe. But now I'm back in the air-conditioned Peace Corps office and can update you on all the good stuff that has been going on:)

SICK - As soon as I got back to my training site last week I got really sick. I went from here (the capital city) straight back to class in the training city. I started getting sick around noon and spent the rest of the afternoon vomitting, so PC drove me home. By the time I got there I was really tired and had a decent fever. My host family hadn't seen me for 5 days and all I could do was literally pass out on my bed - no mosquito net (which we are required to sleep under at night to prevent mosquito bites), didn't bathe or change clothes or even turn my light off. I was incapable of moving. The temp in my room read 100F and I couldn't even get up to turn the fan on. I slept until about 9:30 the next day (classes start at 8) when the PC staff showed up at my house to find out what was wrong. This made me happy that I can't be "missing" for more than an hour and a half before someone comes to find me. I bathed and got dressed and they drove me to school and I started feeling much better. My whole host family was there to see me off - no one had gone to school or work, I'm thinking because they probably thought the Amercian living at their house was dead. Since then I have been much much better. I feel blessed because my sickness only lasted not even 24 hours. A couple of people in our group have had bacteria and amoeabas (sp?) and have had to be on antibiotics. Not me not yet - keep those prayers coming:) I think this might be in part because I really try to not eat anywhere except school and at my host family's house. My host family is excellent with cleanliness in general and especially when it comes to food preparation. And the food is fantastic (see "Food" below). And I ONLY drink my filtered water. This limits my potential to come in contact with the array of things that could get into my body and make me sick.

CELL PHONE - I now have a cell phone! wooohoooo! It's not like having a cell phone in the states where I have a monthly payment plan with so many minutes and unlimited texting. I can receive calls and texts, but I have to buy these little cards with minutes on them in order to make calls or send texts. Essentially, it's like a prepaid phone. So, from the states one would call 011 226 76185075. The 011 is the country code for Burkina. I'm guessing the 226 is like the area code or something. And the last 8 digits are my phone number. According to currently serving volunteers, one of the best ways for someone from the states to call me is to buy a calling card specific to Africa (one might find these in an area of the city where African people would be found). Maybe one of my friends in Indy could research this a little bit and let me know so I can forward that info to my fam. It is very expensive to just pick up the phone and call me. I will research other options and update with those later.

FRENCH - As I mentioned earlier, my french has improved tremendously due to my tutoring sessions. This has allowed much more communication with my host family and I have found out a few other pieces of information. My host dad is 50 and was a track star when he was younger. He competed in Asia, Belgium, and other European countries. He used to run the 800 in 1:48. That sounds ridiculously fast to me considering I am good to get around the track once in 2 minutes:) My host mom is 41 and is very Catholic. In 2003 a car hit here and she broke 5 areas of her body. Both legs and other parts that didn't seem clear to me. However, you would never know it because she is such a hard worker, never complains - even though I know she must be in pain. Reminds me of Dad.

THE PRIEST - My host mom has a huge number of friends. People know her everywhere we go. There are always people stopping by to visit. She is one of the most social people I have ever met. And these friends of hers also belong to a higher class than most here. They dress beautifully and arrive on mopeds. One of her friends stopped by my host mom's boutique in her Mercedes (more on this later). But my favorite of her friends is the Priest. His name is Armand and he is one of my favorite people in this country. If I had to guess his age, I would put him at about 40. I first met him during my first week with the family. He is fluent in 9 languages! 3 local Burkinabe languages, French, Italian (he studied in Rome for 3 years), German, Latin, Greek, and ENGLISH! He is VERY fluent in English, so when he comes over I get to have such in-depth conversations like I can't with anyone else here except the other Americans. And he is FUNNY! So funny. He loves to laugh and he really gets my humor. He is so intersted in me and what I did before I came and what I will be doing here. And I can actually explain things to him that I can't yet in French to my host family. And, like any priest, he loves to drink red wine. So we have a great time when he comes over. He has such an interesting perspective - he has born and raised in Burkina, has traveled the world, and now lives here again. I have so much to learn from him. Our last conversations revolved around the AIDS situation here in Burkina. He doesn't have a parish here (doesn't conduct mass at the big Catholic churches). He has been put in charge of a new project with the CRS (Catholic Relief Services) to teach and provide nutrition to people living with HIV/AIDS. Apparently the Priest comes over regularly, but most times after I have gone to sleep. The people in my family stay up so very late (because they napped while I was going strong with my PC training sessions), so I miss a lot of what goes on at night. My host mom always tells me that the Priest asked about me, and whenever he calls on the phone she puts me on to talk with him. It's fantastic!

NASAARA - This is the Moore (local language) word for "white person" or "stranger." It's not derrogatory. Every morning and every evening I bike about 20 minutes to and from school. I have learned different routes (see "Directionally challenged" below), but regardless of the route I take, there are small children in the "streets" running out to cheer "Nasaara, Nasaara!" Once the first child starts, it's like a "call to all to come see the white girl biking down the street wearing a helmet," (at least that's what I'm thinking it means) and it causes a chain reaction usually for the length of the street. It makes me laugh every time. Sometimes they run along and they always wave and smile, and when I wave back it makes them so happy. There are a couple of little girls who remind me of cheerleading captains. When they see me coming, they start jumping and clapping and SCREAMING "Nasaara! Nasaara!" like they are responsible for getting the cheer started. It's so funny. The children (and adults) who know more French chant "Le Blanc," which literally translates to "the white," but also indicates stranger. It has become the norm to me here, but I was thinking what someone at home might think if I video taped this one day and sent it back, so I wanted to share.

DIRECTIONALLY CHALLENGED - Those of you who know me, know that I am generally extremely good with directions, knowing where I am and how to get places, regardless of the city I am in. I am usually very quick to figure out and understand new places - but this is usually because I only have to look at a map once or twice to understand directions and important locations. This has not been the case thus far in my training city. For 2 weeks, I have been biking around town virtually clueless of where I was at any given time or how to get anywhere. This is because of 3 reasons - I have yet to see a map of this place, the roads don't always continue straight, and many of my points of reference are mobile (the ox that was on this corner this morning is no longer here). I learned one way to school from my host family house and had to base everywhere else I traveled on that - sometimes having to go all the way to my house in order to go back to the cyber cafe or a certain restaurant. It has been extremely frustrating to me. The first week at my host family's house I went out with some other volunteers. On our way home, I could not figure out where I lived and made them ride around for an hour in the dark before my host dad zipped by on his moped and took me home. Last week I started tutoring sessions in the evenings and on my way home, passed my street. A little 8-year old boy came after me yelling, "Le blanc, le blanc, ici, ici!" This means, "stranger, stranger, here, here." I asked him if he knew where I lived and he told me he did, and accompanied me there. Oh, thank God for this country of friendly people who know everything about each other. But last week it clicked and suddenly I understood the town and where everything was and how to get everywhere. The light bulb instantly came on and now I'm having a great time taking different routes to get places (and getting there so much faster) and seeing a bunch of new places! wooohoooo!

PROFESSIONAL BIKE MECHANIC - When I was reading the various requirements for becoming a PC volunteer, I must have completely missed the one that said, "you must know how to disassemble, reassemble, and fix every potential broken part of a 21 speed mountain bike in no less than 105F heat." I must have just missed that. The PC issues volunteers a mountain bike. These are good bikes, but they are used, are used in extremely rough environments (extremely highly dusty/dirty, unpaved, enormous pothole roads), and end up being mangled on public transportation. It's no wonder why these bikes break a lot. The main problem with this is the fact that these bikes are our #1 mode of transportation and I have never had to do more than ride on one. I am now on my third bike. This is unusual, since the PC basically wants us to figure it out so we can maintain our own bikes. My first bike had serious issues with the gears. The second bike had a perpetually flat tire, which is fixable, but when I was sick the logistics guy felt sorry for me and just gave me another one. This last bike has proven itself as dependable so far, but it's a few sizes too small for me. At the end of the day I will take a bike that will work every time over a bike that fits. Perhaps I will get my flat tire bike back, but for now I'm fine, and I know I can get a job as a professional bike mechanic when I'm finished here:)

CHURCH - Sunday morning I went to Catholic mass with my host mother. The church is one block from her boutique. It is a very large church (about the size of St. Rock) and was filled to capacity. The 7am service is in Moore (the local language), however I was able to at least understand the different parts even though I couldn't understand the words - there was standing and sitting and kneeling at all the places I remembered there should be. The priest looked like Don Cheadle (movie actor in Crash, Hotel Rwanda, etc), which made it almost seem like I was in a movie. And the music was awesome. There was a drummer at the front who kept the service more lively than one might find in Indy. The songs were beautiful. The service lasted an hour and a half (which would throw some Americans into a frenzy) which gave me a good chunk of time to pray and reflect and give thanks for all my blessings. I told my host mom that I would go with her all the weeks I lived with her and that made her quite happy. I am just happy to be in an environment where I can attend church.

FOOD - After church on Sunday my host mom and I went to the market to buy food for the week. What an experience that was! She picked out the live chicken she wanted to have killed and defeathered and delivered to our house, she picked out the slab of beef from the hanging carcass in the butcher area of the market (which had various legs of animals lying on the ground under the butcher tables), she asked me what I wanted to eat this week and went around and picked up everything I said I liked - watermelon (straight from the freezer which I eat at breakfast and dinner EVERYDAY) pineapple, oranges, limes, cucumbers, tomatoes, and then I saw the spinach leaves! Fresh spinach!! So I asked her if I could make spinach that night. Of course she said yes, so we got that too. So, I helped her cook lunch when we got home and the priest came over to eat and drink red wine with me:) I showed my host mom how sometimes we put a slice of cucumber in our water and she has been doing that ever since. We hung out that afternoon, then I took a 3-hour nap. When I woke up she asked me to make the spinach. I told her I made it with garlic and olive oil (I'm pretty sure my host family doesn't use olive oil for anything). So my host brother leaves and returns within 10 minutes with a bottle of olive oil that had a price on it of 7,500CFAs! This was more than my host mother had paid for EVERYTHING at the market that day. I felt horrible. I tried to give them the money for it, but they explained to me that the priest gave it to them and they would not take my money:) Gotta love the priest! So, I showed my host mom and the other helper girls how I made spinach and they had a hard time understanding what I mixed with it. Nothing in the country is eaten alone - something (rice or to or couscous) is mixed with some kind of sauce or soup. They kept asking me what I was going to add to the "sauce." So I showed them how a typical plate of food would look where I come from - spinach separate from the couscous separate from the chicken. Of course it was foreign and strange to them, but they did love the cooked spinach. I think it was a good learning experience.

PEOPLE OF BURKINA - I think the world has a lot to learn from the people of Burkina. Never have I been in a place so friendly, accepting, helpful, peaceful, thankful, non-judgmental. The people of this country are happy. They are so poor by my standards and they know they don't have money to do many things that people in this world do, but that doesn't consume their thoughts. They help each other out. They are not so concerned about themselves that they forget simple human decencies such as helping someone with a flat tire (whether they know them or not, whether they are Burkinabe or American, whether they have someplace they need to be or not), or giving someone half of the very little food they are eating, or scooting down so that they are uncomfortably crowded on a bench but so you don't have to stand, or practicing whatever religion they practice and being happy for you to practice yours and still loving each other and living side by side in harmony. I am a Christian and I believe God has 2 main requirements of me - love Him and love others. One of the main reasons for me coming here was to make those 2 requirements my 2 main priorities in life. This country makes it so easy to love others. For that, and for so many other blessings, I am thankful.

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Eye is better

Do you like my broken english? Ok, that was cheesy, but my eye is getting better AND I is better:) I just saw the eye Dr and he said it's better but not finished. So the drops continue for another week, then I will be back to see him. That's a relief. I leave to rejoin my other trainees tomorrow at 8am. This works out great because I'm catching a ride in the Peace Corps car rather than having to take public transportation. This is fantastic in many ways. Peace Corps car has just me and the driver and air conditioning and some interesting music selection like Dolly Parton or Phil Collins. Public transport, on the other hand, has 5 people per 4 person seat, goats and chickens loaded on top, crying babies, some sort of Indian music (do not ask me), and it's hot hot hot. So wooohoooo to the nice trip that awaits me in the am.
I have obviously fallen behind on the schedule (though I can't really complain - the pool was super great on this super hot day!), so I've decided to get a french tutor to get better faster. I've been hanging out with volunteers who have been here for a year. They travel around by themselves, bebop over to the American Embassy and to the market, bargain with the taxi drivers and vendors everywhere, and I simply cannot do that yet. My success here hinges on my ability to communicate en francais. I made it here and know I can handle the culture, so french is my #1 focus for the next couple of weeks.
I appreciate all of your well wishes and prayers! Keep 'em coming!! Miss you all.
Nette

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Burkina Faso tidbits

I've been putting the drops in my eye and hopefully it's getting better. Still painful and red and very sensitive to light (which is not convenient in a country where the sun shines all the time). I can see out of it, which is good:)
I'm going swimming today with some volunteers who are currently in the capital for mid-service physicals, then we will watch a movie, then I think we will have pizza:) wooohoooo! I know I've only been here for 11 days and I act like I haven't had American food for 1,000 years, but 11 straight days of rice with vegetables feels like a lot longer. I don't just eat rice, there is also to (pronounced "toe") - which I can take or leave, or couscous or pasta to go wtih the vegetables or leaf sauce or peanut sauce (my fav). And I have bananas and watermelon and grapefruit for breakfast or dessert. And my host mom prepares a salad made up of tomatoes and cucumbers with my own special oil and vinegar - the rest of my fam eats dressing made with mayo, but I'm avoiding mayo for now. And I have baguettes with honey and milk (powdered mixed with boiled water) with sugar to drink for breakfast sometimes too. My host mom has given me chicken and goat, neither of which I'm loving, but that may change after some time. So, food has been good so far, in large part because of my very sweet and generous host family.

So the rest of this post is dedicated to some descriptions of some things that are common here:
1. Dirt - everything is dirty, by my old standards. If someone from home came to visit me, they would think it's really dirty here. I don't see it as bad, just common here.
2. Dirt roads - paved roads are a luxury and not common in most of this country. And the dirt here (at least in the capital and between the capital and my training city) is reddish, not so brown.
3. Bicycles and mopeds - the vast majority of transportation here is by bike and moped. They are everywhere. Cars are not driven by most.
4. Animals - animals are everywhere. Goats, chickens, dogs (and they are all the same kind of dog - a pretty average-looking mutt with short reddish-brown hair...the same color as the dirt:), cows, ox (big ones live down the street from me - on the street), and donkeys. I see these animals all over the place. I have yet to see anything exciting like monkeys or giraffes or elephants.
5. Women carrying babies wrapped to their backs - the babies are so beautiful.

That's all for now. Anyone sending a care package soon can include AA batteries and individual packets of powerade and nutella if you want. I don't need them today, but if I get it one day that would make me happy!! Love you all!
Nette

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Infirmary

Well it didn't take long to land here at the infirmary. In Africa for 10 days and here I am - but fear not, I'm ok (I think). Yesterday I got something in my eye and it got more painful throughout the night. So the Medical Officer had me come to the capital city where I saw an eye Dr this morning (that was a wonderful 2 1/2 hour bus ride). My eye is scratched, so he gave me some drops and wants to see me Tues or Wed. What all of this means is... cheeseburgers and pizza and air conditioning and french fries and movies (American ones in English!) and air conditioning and free internet on an English keyboard and seeing all the other PC volunteers who come through the capital city and did I mention air conditioning?? There is a really good restaurant at the international school here that serves American food (the school also has a beautiful swimming pool!). There is also a good restaurant at the embassy that I will try to make it to before this little sick trip ends. Looks like I will be getting "sick" more often than I planned:) I'm kidding, but there are some perks to being here in the PC infirmary. One guy came in, as I was heading to the eye Dr, who had malaria. He looks amazingly good for someone who has malaria (like I know what someone who has malaria looks like) - though he probably doesn't feel great.
The rest of my group went to visit another current volunteer at her site to see a real "day in the life" of a PC volunteer. It's a good idea to show us what we'll really be doing so people have a reference as we go through training. Hopefully I will get to visit someone later since I had to miss this one.
I have had the chance to hang out with some current volunteers who are halfway done with service and it's interesting to see their perspective after having been here a year already. Makes me wonder where I will be in a year.
I miss everyone and hope you are great! I'll be on the internet for the next 4 days, so more to come...

Thursday, October 05, 2006

"Africa hot"

I am pretty sure I now know the meaning of "Africa hot." My digital thermometer on my alarm clock in my room read 88F this morning when I woke up at 6am. I refuse to look at it during the day. I don't even want to know.
I am doing AWESOME, no doubt due to the prayers of my loved ones back home! My host family is absolutely wonderful. The mother is the business owner and seems to have some status in the community since other women curtsy to her. She is beautiful and caring and generous and patient with me. She comes home from her boutique in the evenings to make sure my meal is being prepared properly according to PC standards(by the girls who live in my compound who I think are the nieces of the father)so I don't get sick, and then goes back to her boutique to close up shop. She (as well as the rest of the family) are always up when I wake in the morning and when I go to sleep at night. The father is an administrator for the athletic association in this city (I'm pretty sure). He is also very nice and caring. I think my accent is too much for him beause he understands less of what I try to say than anyone else, though he continues to try until my 20th "Je ne comprend pas," when he breaks it down in english for me:) He is great. Their son is 16 and my favorite of the family. He is always helping me and his sister and his mom and dad. He is learning english as I am learning french so we compare notes. You teach me and I teach you. He plays soccer (although I'm not sure when) so my goal is to get out there and play with him soon. The daughter is 7 and oh is she 7. She is sweet and always somewhere close to me watching every move and helping me practice pronunciation of the easy stuff - counting to 100 (which my host father would not let me quit when I got to 80), days of the week, months of the year, etc. The father is Muslim and everyone else is Catholic. I have recently befriended the very fluent english speaking Priest who comes to dinner sometimes. The family dynamics are so wonderful (and so different from the families a lot of volunteers have). The 4 of them interact so nicely. I love it.
The compound I live in is interesting. There is the building I live in which contains 3 seperate really small apartments - me and the mom and dad in 1, the kids in another, and not sure what's in the other. There is another identical building which houses some members of the father's extended family. The "shower" and "toilet" areas are at the far corner of the compound. I am required to bathe twice per day - before breakfast and dinner - which I have no probleme with (see Africa hot at top of post). Bathing under the stars is something else. Also in our compound are 2 goats (1 baby), 2 dogs, and 5 chickens. So yes mom, I finally live on the farm you always wanted me to - though I don't do any related work:)
So a day in the life...wake at 6am (to the sound of that darn rooster for the 4th hour) and bathe. Then I have breakfast with my host sister and brother. Discuss the night's plans with the host mom and dad and say good-bye. Bike to school where I have 4 2-hr training sessions varying between french, safety and security, culture, and health (Thursdays are shots days - today I got 2). Bike home, study, bathe, eat dinner, "talk" (fumble through french) with the fam about the days activities, go to bed. I stay really busy, but I am learning a lot and getting to know some really great people.
That's all for now. I'll be gone until Tuesday, so I'll try to catch up then. Thanks so much for all the well-wishes. Love you all!!

Monday, October 02, 2006

Host Family

Ok, I apologize for the lack of communication. We have been really busy! I am now in my training site about 2 hours n/nw of the capital. It is a nice city, cleaner than the capital but with the same amenities. It is hotter here so I have been nice and drenched the entire time. You get used to it. We stayed for 2 nights at the really nice facilities at the training building 4 to a room - like a big slumber party. My co-trainees are really great, as are the PC staff. Then I got my host family last night and stayed at their house in my own room. This was my first rough time here due to a lack of ability to really communicate and some mis expectations, but we worked it out (with the help of the PC staff)à and all is great now. They are really patient with my lack of french skills and I think will be able to teach me a lot about their culture and the language. My french is getting better by the minute and I have already learned some of the local language (which is much easier than french). My family has satellite tv (how funny is that) so they turn on cnn for a little bit for me:) The facilities will take some getting used to, but that comes with the new culture. Nobody said change was easy.

Any care packages are great - if you want to include some things I can always use:

small kleenex packages (this is my travel toilet paper), cheese and crackers, granola/nutrigrain bars, bar soap, soduko book, chocolate (m&ms); GUM - sugar free.

I miss everyone. I will try to update as often as possible. Dad, I will call soon too. Love you!!