HR office & detainees
Truth is the property of no individual but is the treasure of all men. -Ralph Waldo Emerson
It's funny the things that seem to become part of you - things that you can't bear to lose even if they're really not intrinsically valuable. Trinkets like a toe-ring for instance. I got a toe ring kind of by accident before they were the rage and everybody started wearing them. I was wandering through downtown Boston with Alicia and Anthony and found a $5 silver ring at a street vendor's cart that I wanted for a pinky ring. I was wearing a couple of gold rings, so I reached down impulsively and put it on my toe, and there it remained until today. It's been through a summer of running around camp, tubing, canoeing, swimming, learning to waterski, learning to wakeboard, and has been complimented by a million different colors of toenailpolish without complaints. Every summer when I visit my dad, he catches me walking around barefoot and inevitably asks, "when did you start wearing that thing on your foot?" It makes me laugh that he asks about it every summer (although I think he forgot this year - or maybe I should say he remembered). It makes me smile that he noticed such a little unimportant detail about me. But today my toering became my gift to the sea. Surfing wasn't easy today. The waves were bigger than they were a couple of weeks ago. Our surfing instructors said they'll keep getting bigger throughout the fall & winter. Being little is a disadvantage when it comes to surfing. I'm not heavy enough to duck dive under the waves with a long board and it takes a lot of energy to turtle roll and then get back up on the board and paddle only to turtle roll again a few seconds later to avoid being picked up and propelled yards backwards. But I'm up for the challenge :) Apparently my toe-ring was not as determined as I was today. Several times I pushed it back up my toe, but didn't really worry about it - it's never left me before! It wasn't until I was walking along the boardwalk trying to catch a taxi back home that I looked down and realized it was missing. So the sea has claimed a little treasure, and I'm left to wonder whether some small girl playing in the sand will find it with delight and treasure it...
I am really feeling like myself again – YAY! I started on the antibiotics on Friday after visiting the Dr, and finally began to feel like I was turning around. I went back to work on Monday and have spent the past couple of days catching up. Thank you for all your thoughts over the past week.
After six days of being sick I am finally feeling better! YAY for medicine! I guess I should have kept my Tuesday Dr’s appointment. Oh well. Next time I will know better…
Ever since my roommates arrived in August, they have been getting these little bites – especially on their legs. I haven’t shared the same misfortune, luckily! The strange thing is that they would get these bites even when they had jeans on in the middle of the day. Finally they went on-line and did a search on their symptoms to figure out what it could be. As it turns out they had all the symptoms of bedbugs. So they did search of their beds and sure enough – they found one of the nasty little creatures. They tell me that bed bugs look like big brown lice until they bite you, and then they turn red. Yucko-plucko! We had a guy come and fumigate our apartment, and take the beds away. For the past 3 nights we have been sleeping on the froshes in the living room (see the picture from Aug 19). Today our bed frames came, but we are still waiting for the mattresses. So we have one more night on the froshes. The living room, or salon, is the room where guests are received and it is lined with this type of furniture kind of like a couch – except they are really hard and uncomfortable. When guests come, the pillows along the backs of the froshes can be taken off to make temporary beds. I guess it is better than sleeping on the tiled floor!
During my first week here I met Collin, an American guy who is starting a surfing company. He and his partner are planning to open a surfing shop and also give surfing lessons. It didn't take long to peak my curiosity. Water skiing to wake-boarding to surfing just seems like a natural progression! So when his shipment of surfing equipment arrived a couple of weeks ago, some of the other teachers and I asked him when he was going to be ready to start lessons.
I had my first "I hate Africa" day this week. As I was walking to where I catch the taxi to go to work on Tuesday I found myself getting really annoyed by the fact that it's impossible to walk on the sidewalks here without feeling like you're in danger of breaking your neck because they are all uneven and broken up in odd places. When you do find an occasional well-tiled sidewalk, you also find they have planted palm trees right in the middle of the side walk forcing any pedestrians off into the street every five feet or so (which is especially annoying when the palm tree has a car parked next to it)... So on this particular morning I was taking the lead of the locals and walking in the middle of the street. I live on a one way street, so as an SUV came barrelling towards me (dodging the cars parked on either side of the street), I ducked in between a couple of cars parked on one side and waited for the SUV to rumble past. I didn't get annoyed until they had past and I started back down the street, only to hear them backing up behind me causing me to look for another space to duck into. That was when it hit me, "I hate Africa"! Immediately I recognized that emotion. I had experienced the same feeling living in Belgium and France. There were just days when I wanted to scream, "I HATE Belgium!!!" or I HATE France!!!" On those days all the little nuisances of life there became reasons to HATE the country. But looking back now I can say, "No, I didn't hate Beglium (or France), I loved it." It's funny to experience opposite emotions at the same time. So on Tuesday, when that "I hate Africa" thought popped into my head, I knew to recognize it as a combination of culture stress and lack of sleep. All day the little things bugged me - like being hot without airconditioning, and having to go for the THIRD day in a row to help someone buy a cell phone (that's a whole 'nother story!), and craving a Starbucks (or Liquid Highway!) Coconut Mocha Frappaccino all day... But I made a point to get a decent amount of sleep and felt much better about life & Africa on Wednesday.