Thursday, November 27, 2008

9/30/08 through 11/11/08

Um . . . so . . . October, eh? Usually it is one of my favorite months, the trees are changing colors, it’s my birthday, Halloween, lots of candy . . . the only constant this year was my birthday, but even though my friends tried to make it special, it didn’t really feel like my birthday.

This year October was hijacked pretty much entirely by AIDS Ride. In the beginning of the month, Ashley and I took motos and rode (as passengers) the entire 170 kilometers of our route in two days, stopping at all the CEGs (middle schools) along the way to remind directors of our impending arrival a week later. I thought I’d be really sore from the moto (before that, the farthest I had moto-ed was six kilometers and even that left me feeling beaten-up), but the moto driver put my bag in front of him and I managed, at times, to loosen my grip enough to even enjoy the ride. We spent the first night at the volunteer’s house in Tohoun and the second night at the transit house in Atakpame.

Just after spending 15,000 cFA a piece (≈$37.50) to moto our route in final preparation we learned from one of our national AIDS Ride coordinators that the budget had been cut and that PSI was cracking down on spending and legitimacy of receipts because last year they were audited. In hashing it out with an ONG that PSI hired to make sure the AIDS Ride budget reports were audit-proof this year, we discovered that the problem wasn’t budget cuts, but rather imprecise and completely lacking line items. Last years coordinators assured us that the budged was adequate and so this year’s national coordinators submitted and identical budget. Last year, however, regional coordinators had the freedom to move money around to accommodate gaps and deficits, but this year PSI wasn’t tolerating sloppiness. They demanded legitimate receipts (meaning with the name, address and phone number of the retailer printed at the top and with the retailer’s personalized stamp) or money back. For certain purchases, like the 30,000 500mL bags of pure water and the gas for the chase car, that wasn’t a problem, but for most of our food it was impossible. The women selling peanut butter in the market don’t have a receipt book at all, much less one with a proper heading and a stamp. We were lucky if they even knew how to sign their own name and had some women just scribble in the signature box, make an “x” or a funny squiggle and we had to present those receipts to the ONG guy working with us. He would just shake his head and repeat over and over “ce n’est pas bon” (it’s no good). For transportation, they wanted us to go to the syndicates and get officially stamped receipts; in our better moments Ashley and I joked that next year they need to include a budget line for getting receipts because when you need a receipt and have to go through the most official channels, everything costs more. In our worse moments, we stressed that we were going to lose large quantities of money to AIDS Ride and end up giving money back to PSI that we had spent but didn’t have “legitimate” receipts for. What you will learn, however, when working in a country like Togo, and what these big auditing organizations perhaps don’t understand or would prefer not to acknowledge, is that there is no such thing as a legitimate receipt in Togo. Echoing my frustrations, my Dad summed up twenty years of experience in the statement: “the paper trail in Africa is worthless.” For 500 hundred cFA here and there receipts can easily be fabricated. Luckily, the ONG we were working with is well versed in the Togolese reality and tried to find creative solutions to our binds. They made spreadsheets for transportation and food that allowed taxi drivers and market/village women to sign, eliminating the need for a receipt.

It was extremely frustrating and stressful at times, but in the end a great learning experience. I have never received any formal instruction on how to prepare a budget and report on expenditures and I learned what constitutes a legitimate receipt, what can cause problems in activity reports (for example participants initialing instead of signing), and how to bend the rules just a little bit. I spent the morning of my birthday nervously fidgeting in the office of the ONG’s financial expert as he reviewed our receipts and reports, but it all worked out and Ashley and I were reimbursed for the thousands of francs we had fronted for the project.

Amid all the budget concerns, Ashley and I had to organize for a chase car, buy mats for sleeping, arrange for food (in some villages no food was available on the streets and so we asked a woman to prepare us beans and rice), stock up on water for 18 people over five days and make last minute homologue substitutions. We were particularly stressed by the condition of the roads as we moto-ed them – after two months of rains and traffic they were gutted with ruts that in some places were several feet deep. We bought a shovel in anticipation of having to dig the car out of the mud on more than one occasion, and discussed the possibility of having to cancel our AIDS Ride half way through because of impassible roads (that would have been catastrophic for our budget report, not to mention all the people we would disappoint).

The night before biking out, a torrential downpour left me sleepless with nervousness about the condition of the roads, but in the end AIDS Ride went more smoothly than we could have hoped. It didn’t rain all week and the car only got stuck once (that mishap was the driver’s fault for recklessly and forcefully reversing the car to scatter school children). All of our sensibilizations took place more or less on time and with a significant audience. No one greeted us with blank stares that soundlessly inquired “what are you doing here?” Everyone was prepared to receive us, in some places with music, food, and dance, and listen to our message. Our sensibilizations, even our first, went really well. The volunteers and homologues took the task at hand seriously and made an effort to make every sensibilization a good one. Each sensibilization lasted about two hours and included lots of questions, games, skits and demonstrations. We began with basic questions to test the knowledge of our audience and then explained the difference between HIV and AIDS. That was followed by a game – in which the body is compared to a chick, the immune system to mother hens, HIV to a snake, and opportunistic infections to hawks – to illustrate how HIV attacks a persons immune system making him/her particularly vulnerable to common diseases. We continued with the modes of transmission and sketches to illustrate the ABCDE’s (Abstinence, Bonne Fidelite (faithful), Condom, Depistage (HIV test), Education) – modes of prevention. Then my infirmier (one of our homologues) explained how multiple concurrent sexual partners facilitate the spread of AIDS. New studies show that having more than one partner at a time (as opposed to many consecutive partners over the course of a lifetime) greatly increases the spread of AIDS because directly after infection a person is more infectious. If that person is having sex with five people at that time, he/she will likely transmit the virus to all five people before he knows he is infected. After “multipartenariat,” we did condom demonstrations, calling both girls and boys out to help us put banana flavored PSI condoms on wooden penises, stressing the need for girls to take responsibility for their own health and future by knowing how to use a condom and by bringing condoms to sexual encounters. Finally, we wrapped up with a sketch and discussion on the effects of discrimination and stigmatization and the answering of questions from the audience. Before leaving we sang a song that evoked, once again, the ABCDE’s (modes of prevention).

It was divided (albeit unintentionally) so that Ashley’s group got most of the village sensibilizations (which tend to be smaller and somewhat simplified due to the lower previous knowledge about HIV/AIDS (in comparison to middle and high school students) and the need to translate into local language) and my group got most of the CEG sensibilizations (from 200 to 500 students at a time). The students were for the most part well behaved, although we had a couple of schools in which the students mocked the volunteers’ French, which was unfortunate, but in general, our sensiblizations were relatively orderly. At two schools we had to stop handing out condoms as rewards for correct answers to questions and active participation during the sensibilization because the students would go wild yelling and laughing each and every time. But we avoided getting mobbed at the end of the sensibilization by giving boxes of condoms to the directors of the schools and instructing them to divide the condoms among their students. In doing it that way, we run the risk that the directors will “bouf” the condoms (keep them all for themselves, sell them, etc.), but we tried to minimize that risk by announcing how many boxes of condoms we were leaving with the director at the end of the sensibilization and threatening that we would send a volunteer (we have three volunteers on our route) to ask CEG students if they received condoms. It worked better than trying to hand out condoms to 500 yelling, pushing, shoving students and I am pretty confident that they will have all received at least one or two. You do what you can.

In my group I had a bit of an issue with a homologue (not my infirmier, but another homologue) who repeatedly went against my instructions not to hand out condoms at the end of a sensibilization. The first time I asked him about it, he lied and said he hadn’t handed out condoms. Then one of my volunteers said they had seen him handing out condoms and then I myself saw him handing out condoms and called him out on it. He acted all remorseful, insisting that he would go to a boutique and buy condoms to replace the ones he handed out. I retorted that it wasn’t a question of condoms (PSI had given us more than a million condoms), it was a question of following instructions and of how one person’s actions affect the whole group. When one of the members of the team hands out condoms after a sensibilization, the students inevitably swarm the other volunteers begging for condoms. Of course everyone has a sob story about how they don’t have the money to buy condoms, but at one point or another each person has to decide that their life is worth 25cFA for a condom because we can’t provide a lifetime supply. What angered me most is that I know he wasn’t handing out condoms because the students’ plea touched his heart, but rather because of the “big man on campus” syndrome. Here, as in many other cultures, important people prove their greatness by redistributing resources, and this homologue enjoyed having controlling the distribution of commodity that other people coveted; it made him feel important, special, powerful.

That wasn’t the only issue that I had with this homologue. He came with high recommendations, but I had never met him before AIDS Ride and wouldn’t recommend him again. While very animated and energetic, he butted in during volunteers’ parts of the sensibilization (I wanted everyone to have a chance to participate – AIDS Ride is a great chance for new volunteers to gain confidence – and I wanted my new volunteers to have the same opportunity to participate that I had last year). His attitude worsened over the course of the week and he started biking off ahead or leaving the sensibilization half-way through so that we had to sub-in for his parts, etc. We also had a transportation reimbursement issue. He and another homologue came from the same town but he asked for almost double reimbursement. I told him that I would only reimburse him the official tariff and that if he did, indeed, spend that much getting to and from AIDS Ride, it was his own fault for taking a more expensive route. Needless to say he was not happy. Oh well, you can’t win them all.

Our other homologues were relatively cooperative. I was really happy with my infirmier for the whole of AIDS Ride. He didn’t complain when the other homologues were complaining about the food (apparently bread and rice and beans is not adequate nourishment) or the sleeping arrangements. I wanted to admonish some of the homologues for complaining for going a week without eating pâte when we leave our homes for two years and come to a country where we can’t get any of the foods we are accustomed to. They even had one “free” meal a day that we had given them 500cFA for so they could go find whatever food they liked, but still they complained.

In terms of food and lodging, everything went more or less smoothly. We had a place to stay, a roof over our heads , and showering accommodations every evening. The first night, was the nicest – a new dispensaire. The next two nights were in CEGs and the last night, the worst – a primary school with a dirt floor, a makeshift shower and slimy pond water. The volunteers were really good sports about showering and bathroom arrangements (or lack thereof). No one complained, for which I was thankful. We also had very good luck with our rice and beans. In each of the four places we asked for someone to prepare us rice and beans (no small feat for 18 people) we were met with well prepared and sufficient food. Again, even though the homologues complained, volunteers agreed that rice and beans was probably the most economic and nutritious option. We had a little bit of a problem with breakfast; we had bought one loaf of bread per person per day and twice we ran out because people were consuming more than their allotted amount of bread, but I found bouillie (porridge) ladies to supplement our fare so that no one would go hungry.

We only had one serious accident, a volunteer who on the second day of biking fell off her bike, hitting her head, and momentarily losing consciousness. She wasn’t in my group and I didn’t witness the event, but the MedUnit wanted her in Lome as soon as possible so they could monitor her injuries and recovery and we had no way of getting her there. Besides our chase car, there were no cars on these roads and sending her on a moto was out of the question. There was a bit of discussion as to why our chase car couldn’t take her to Atakpame, but if that had been necessary, we would have had to call off AIDS Ride as our chase car had all our water and supplies and we had other volunteers in delicate states. She stuck it out with us until the second to last day when we finally found a car, but the MedUnit was not pleased and partially because of our AIDS Ride I think, we have been directed to suspend all organized rides until Peace Corps can look into the safety and security issues. What I don’t understand is why Peace Corps didn’t send one of their cars to come pick her up if it was that urgent.

Ashley flipped over her handlebars as well, but in true Ashley style, just got up and continued biking. She had some impressive bruises to show for her fall.

Lastly, we biked with a really great group of volunteers. Although it sometimes felt like I had just adopted ten children (“Danielle, where do I go to the bathroom? Danielle, where’s the toilet paper? Danielle, when will dinner be ready? Danielle, where are the matches, the spoons, etc?”), everyone was a great sport, working together as a team to make things go as smoothly as possible. When you’re trying to organize so many people, everyone’s individual efforts make a huge difference and I am happy to say that all of our volunteers contributed to the success of our AIDS Ride. The volunteers were also vey appreciative of our organizational efforts and as anyone who has ever tried to coordinate anything knows, a little bit of appreciation goes a long way and makes all the headaches worthwhile. And finally, it was a great opportunity to get to know some of the new volunteers (and get to know old volunteers better) that I wouldn’t have had otherwise (because I avoid big social gatherings like the plague). All in all, I am very pleased by how AIDS Ride turned out, but happy that it is over.

After AIDS Ride, I contracted a terrible cough that I am still recovering from. Ashley and I have decided that her weakest link is her digestive system and mine is my respiratory system.

Other than AIDS Ride, what stands out about this October is death and birthdays. I’ll go for birthdays first. One of my stagemate’s (a small enterprise development volunteer) birthday was on the 16th and we gathered in Atakpame to celebrate. It was a nice small gathering that provided a brief respite during the hectic AIDS Ride planning phase. And then, of course, my own birthday – a quarter of a century, yikes. I feel like 25 is really old. Closer to 30 than to 20. I feel like at some point I need to get serious, get a job, make money, get married, start a family, but then another part of me just wants to let it all happen in its own good time and I don’t see a real job or children in my near future. I would like to go to grad school, so . . .

On the Friday after AIDS Ride, Alicia made me (and another volunteer who shares my birthday) a surprise birthday cake and we celebrated with s’mores – it was a really sweet gesture. On my birthday itself, Ashley made me chocolate chip pancakes for breakfast (we were still hanging out in Atakpame due to AIDS Ride budget work) and took me out to dinner, so that was also really nice. I also got a chance to talk with my parents, with Jorge, and with Jorge’s mom – phone calls make any day special – and that was my birthday.

And now for death. I don’t know why, but October was a month for accidents. Jerome told me of a young man who died in a motorcycle accident – he was decapitated as he hit the curb. And then, right before AIDS Ride, Effoh texted me to tell me that two teenagers from my village died in a motorcycle accident. That one really upset me because I knew the boys. I didn’t get the details until much later, but apparently it was their fault because they were driving fast on the route nationale after dark without a headlight. An oncoming car forced them to the side of the road where, for lack of a headlight, they didn’t see a parked truck and ram-ed into it. And yet I still see twelve and thirteen year olds driving their fathers’ motos around village. It drives me crazy. Then, my Ewe lesson two weeks ago was based on another accident in which a young person from Jerome’s village was crushed by a huge teak tree that he was helping to transport. So many needless deaths.

On a different note, a longstanding mystery was resolved during another Ewe lesson. When I make my early morning rounds greeting my neighbors, I use the greeting “etsobedo” meaning that the last time we greeted each other was yesterday. But then, if and when they came by my house later in the morning, they too would greet me with “estobedo” and I couldn’t help but wonder if they had forgotten that we had already greeted each other once that day. Then I witnessed the same exchange one day with Jerome. He went to greet DaJulie and then she came by the house to greet him and when I asked him about it he said that it is a two way street, that if the person really likes and respects you, it is not enough for you to go to their house to greet them, but they should return the gesture and come to your house to greet you. Interesting.

Between AIDS Rides plans, I was also brainstorming an income-generating activity with Effoh. The idea was that I would lend him money to buy some animals (sheep, pigs and chickens) so that he could get into the animal raising business. I made him come up with a project plan and a projected budget with expenditures and conservative estimates of projected revenues. We figured that with a substantial initial investment, if all went well, he could make enough to pay me back in about a year an a half. If I didn’t extend, or if some disease ravished his animals, that would present a problem. (I later learned from Jerome, who’s help I had enlisted in the planning phase because he is someone I trust and an experienced livestock raiser, that one way for people who don’t have money to get into the livestock raising business is to ask a friend or acquaintance who does have animals to give him one to raise. The person is then in charge of feeding and taking care of the animal and the offspring are split between the owner and the person who is raising the animal. It is kind of like the “sharecropping” of animal husbandry except that in this situation, at least when it is Jerome doing the lending, it seems like a pretty advantageous deal for the borrower).

In the end, I was freed from having to make the decision “to lend or not to lend,” because Effoh decided to go to University in Lome. As all the students left the village to start school again he got more and more restless and irritated by people asking him why he was still there. We joked that if everyone who asked him why he was still in village gave him 1000cFA to continue his studies, he would be long gone. Luckily he had several connected people supporting him (the pastor (who is from Lome), the secretary of the church, and an old teacher who promised to find him a place to stay in Lome, not to mention his family). While on AIDS Ride he texted me and told me that if I agreed to push back the date that his family was expected to pay back the money I leant them, that he would use that money to enroll in university. I’m not in a rush and don’t need the money right now so I agreed. By the time I got back to village he had already enrolled and was just waiting for the teacher to find him a room as promised. The day of the U.S. election he left for Lome, but didn’t find an acceptable lodging until last Sunday. The housing that the teacher found for him was with a fetisher, meaning that all the food he prepared (particularly any meat) had been used for ceremonies and is taboo for a Christian. Luckily he ran into a cousin whose husband agreed to allow Effoh to stay with them (after his brother went all the way down to Lome on Sunday to talk with the man on his behalf – it is so strange how things have to be done here. Effoh is 24 years old and yet he can’t speak for himself but needs his resource-strapped older brother to spend 5,000cFA to come down to Lome to speak for him. It is all about protocol and ways of doing things that are so hard for an outsider to understand. For example, the priest of the Catholic church wanted to see me, but instead of calling me, he asked Jerome to come see him so that he could ask Jerome to ask me to come see him. It seems so round-about to us, but has everything to do with respect, hierarchy and proper channels and ways of doing things). Anyway, Effoh is now adequately (I think) lodged in Lome and should have started classes yesterday. I can’t help but wonder if he was more motivated by “peer pressure” or by a real desire to continue his studies, but after the initial struggle (and the fact that he will still be dependant on his family for several years), I think it will be beneficial to him to have gone to University and hope he will get a well paying job in Lome that will make all his family’s sacrifices worthwhile.

On an entirely different front, the drama with Jorge’s visa to Italy continues to unfold. The first time he tried to present his visa papers (he had already bought an airplane ticket and made some hotel reservations) they sent him away with instructions to make more hotel reservations, to buy a Eurail pass and to get medical insurance. About two weeks ago he finally succeeded in submitting the papers. I was hoping we would find out yesterday about the visa, but Jorge is in Bolivia visiting his family and couldn’t get ahold of the Italian consulate in Uruguay. I am on pins and needles about the whole thing and just want something to be set in stone. I am tired of everything being up in the air. If the visa is granted, I still have to buy airplane tickets between Togo and Italy for the both of us and if the visa isn’t granted, then I have to find some way to get him to Togo. It will be devastating, though, if the visa is not granted. His mom has already spent upwards of two thousand unrefundable dollars to make it possible . . . I am just trying not to think about it too much because there is nothing I can do about it one way or another. I am still hoping that we will have an answer this afternoon. I can’t even really start imagining our reunion because I don’t know for sure where or when it will take place.

Changing topics to a more hopeful subject – how about that election? It still fills me with a giddy glow when I think about it. A group of girls got together at a volunteer’s house in Atakpame to watch the election unfold on CNN. It was so exciting and I felt so lucky to have the opportunity to participate in this historic process even from Togo. We had made all sorts of food (chicken wings, pigs in a blanket, cheese and crackers, cookies, etc) and spent the entire night eating until Obama finally earned enough electoral college votes at 4:00 in the morning to win the presidency. When that number changed on the bottom right hand corner of the screen, the girls let out a rousing yell of joy. After the speeches, by both McCain and Obama, I was too emotionally riled up to even think about sleeping. I couldn’t help the tears during Obama’s speech. I am not naïve in thinking that his election will change everything or anything really (he has a really tough situation to work with), but I am moved by the fact that he was elected and that, in and of itself, says an awful lot. I think of it more as a positive barometer of attitudes in the U.S. than as a positive change (although it is definitely, in my opinion, a positive change). It is the first time in years that I have felt proud to be an American and proud of my country. It is also the first time I have really felt excited about politics and the potential of politics. The high from it still hasn’t gone away.

It is interesting experiencing the election in Africa (Togo particularly, but also comparing feelings here to feelings of other Africans as expressed on the BBC). In my village, no one is really informed or excited, but in larger towns people express the feeling that now that a black man, a son of Africa, is president of the United States of America, Africa will really get a hefty chunk of the pie. I think they are mistaken in attributing their patronage politics to our political system and Obama’s presidency. Here, when someone from your village makes his way to a position of power, your family, your village, and your ethnic group benefit, but if people think Obama is going to favor Africa, I think they are mistaken. In fact, I think unfortunately Obama’s policies towards Africa might be under even higher scrutiny than his other foreign policies and he will have to be quite moderate so as not to be criticized for playing favorites. Finally, as President of the U.S., what people here forget, is that his ultimate allegiance is to the U.S. Sadly, I am afraid people here will be disappointed because what they expect are material returns as opposed to appreciating the symbolic value of his election.

My high from the election was temporarily extinguished by a mishap on the way home from Atakpame. I had brought Giz to Atakpame to get him (FINALLY) vaccinated against rabies. The vaccination itself went well, the vet knew how to hold him and administered the shot successfully on the first try. It was such a relief after the Lome fiasco. On the way home, though, I had him in a cardboard box that I had punched holes in so that he’d have a little bit of air circulation. Ashley thought he needed more air and so widened the holes, but then he started tearing at them himself. As fast as I could duct-tape a hole closed, he would rip another. When I got to Agbatit, I loaded him on my bike, went to speak briefly with the Director of the CEG and joked that I had to get home quickly because Gizmo was tired of being cooped up in a box. I made some (not funny) joke about him not being able to survive in the wild if he escaped because he is too pampered. I biked home and thought that he had settled down until I lifted the carton off the back of my bike and felt how light it was. No Gizmo. I panicked. He could have gotten out anywhere in the 6 kilometers between Agbatit and Avassikpe and surely would be so scared by the moto traffic on the road that he would venture into the bush. I called Ashley, started to cry hysterically (when any living thing accompanies you in your day to day life and is the only present object on which you have to lavish your love and affection, its loss affects you deeply) and got back on my bike to return to Agbatit. I biked slowly, calling him, looking for a streak of white in the brush, and trying to hold back the tears and not dwell on how unlikely, if not impossible it would be to find him. I returned to the CEG. As the words, “I lost Gizmo,” escaped my mouth, so did an uncontrollable sob. How embarrassing. Here I am, proud of the fact that I can count the number of times I have broke down in tears since being in Togo on one hand, standing in the middle of a CEG, hysterical at the loss of my cat. The Director refrained from laughing at me and at least pretended to be sympathetic (I think his concern was sincere, even though he probably privately thought I was over-reacting). He immediately went to each of the classrooms and informed the students that I was in mourning. “ Who died?” “No, no one, she lost her cat.” The response, I am sure, was uncontrollable laughter. Luckily, I wasn’t there to hear the laughter or the student who said that if she found my cat she would eat it; I was already wheeling my bike towards Avassikpe calling out Gizmo’s name. By some amazing stroke of luck or God taking pity on my affection (however misplaced) towards my cat, I hadn’t gone far when I heard a meow in response to my half-hearted “Gizmo, Gizmo.” I had to climb through thorn bushes before I could get him to come to me, but eventually I had him in my hands and in my backpack, just his little head sticking out between the zippers that I had tied together.

The next day (and for the next several months I am sure), I had to laugh at myself for crying over my cat (even though I am sure I would cry again were it to happen again) as the Director recounted the incident with all the theatrics typical of a Togolese story-teller to a teacher and the priest. To boot, all the 500+ students at the CEG now call “Gizmo” at me when I pass or ask, in mock concern, “ou est Gizmo?” (where is Gizmo?). Whatever, I am just glad to have him back.

As for what I have going on in village, not much. I am distressed by the fact that the now eleven month old little girl I have been giving Moringa powder to has not gained so much as 100 grams in the past month. So now she is an eleven month old that weighs 4.7 kilos. She will be a year old in December and is only starting to be able to hold herself up in a sitting position. It is scary. I think maybe something is wrong with her ability to swallow. When breast feeding, she takes a mouthful, and then takes her face away from the breast, takes a couple seconds to swallow with difficulty and then goes back to the breast. No wonder she can’t get enough food in her if she can’t even breastfeed without interruption. I need to advise her mother to take her to the hospital in Notse.

Other than that, I will be starting Peer Educator classes tomorrow in conjunction with the woman professor at the CEG in Agbatit. We will be sharing the task so that she can take over the classes when I am no longer present. I hope it will be less of a burden on me and my time this year and, unfortunately, am not particularly excited about it. It is good that I am doing it with someone, though, because she will sub in when I am not present and will allow the class to progress more smoothly.

I hope to start health classes at the primary school in Avassikpe soon. I have 21 health related drawings that a Sunday School at home might help me photocopy so that each student can have a drawing to take home and ideally share the message with their family.

I have been emailing back and forth with a man I met at the Household Water Treatment and Storage Conference in Accra. He works for an ONG – International AID - affiliated with the Carter Foundation in Ghana and has been working hard to make good on a promise to bring me ten Biosand Filters. Just yesterday I received an email informing me that the filters and sand are ready in Accra and that what remains is transport. I will speak with my APCD to see if Peace Corps can help me transport the filters. I was hoping that Effoh would be in village to help me with the management of the project (the idea was to hold a brief formation and then place filters with mill operators, store owners, gas vendors etc., so that they would be accessible to the whole population for a small fee), but I will have to find someone else to help me.

I spoke at church on Sunday about starting a workshop for married couples; we will see if there is enough interest to actually go through with it.

I am feeling a bit unmotivated and at loose ends. Because AIDS Ride occupied so much of my time in the past couple of months, I didn’t start any new projects in village and now don’t feel as though I have much going on. At least not much that excites me. I might try to organize a HEARTH workshop (ten day long workshop for mothers of under nourished children) in one or two of the villages around Avassikpe, but that will take several months to realize. Ashley and I are also planning a sensibilization campaign for Moringa (using the radio and billboards and a Moringa “festival” or “fair”), but she is busy currently with a different project and isn’t free to work on it yet. Right now I feel as though much of my energy is being drained in missing Jorge and worrying about how and when we will be together again, and I am hoping that his arrival in Togo and sharing in his “discovery” of Togo will re-energize and re-excite me about this experience/opportunity that I am living.

I feel like I am just trying to get through the next couple of months (weeks now?) until Jorge gets here and then I will start living again. Is that sad?

To end on a happy note, I have a college friend coming to visit for a week on the 18th of November. It is almost unbelievable that she is coming all the way out here to visit me and I am really touched by the gesture. She will provide a much needed distraction. After her visit and after Thanksgiving, I will hopefully only have three more weeks (if we get visa and airline issues figured out) of suffering left before Jorge and I will be reunited. If the visa to Italy is granted and we are going to spend Christmas and New Years with his mom in Italy, then I will have to spend those last three weeks figuring out what, on earth I am going to wear. I have no long pants, only two long sleeve shirts and one sweatshirt to weather the Italian winter. Yikes.

That’s it for now. Maybe I will be better about writing in the coming weeks, but somehow I doubt it. Later gaters.

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