Monday, November 26, 2007

Malawi at last and with a phone at that

peace corpsMalawi Blog


Ladies and Gentlemen Boys and Girls: Welcome to the first installment of Spencer’s Blog in Malawi. I just wanted to update everyone a little bit, tell you some news and funny stories. So, fasten ur seatbelt, its going to be a bumpy road. Ok, maybe it won’t be that exciting, but I hope that u will enjoy it. By the way, I really want to express how much fun I am having, but how much I miss everyone. There happens to be one beautiful girl named Sarah that I happen to miss more than everyone else!
Well first off, I am writing this on my laptop at the Malawi College of Forestry in Dedza, Malawi. MACOFO is situated in the beautiful Dedza District in Central Malawi. We have a great small mountain behind the college that most of us have climbed at least once and some as many as ten. I just finished a very important period of the Peace Corps experience called Village Home Stay. I lived in a large (compared to the other villages that PCT’s stayed at) village called Kanyama for 6 weeks getting adjusted to the culture and language while at the same time getting involved in practice teaching at Makota Community Day Secondary School (C.D.S.S). It was a lot of fun and although I am glad to be getting closer to my own site, I will miss my family that I stayed with. They we a lot of fun and we always had people stopping by because the Amayi and Abambo (mother and father) Binga have 9 kids that all live close. For the first week I met another member of my family at least once a day.
I will write more about VHS later, but I also wanted to tell about my future site. I will be living in the Central Region in the Kasungu District. I cannot tell any more details than that because of Peace Corps Safety Guidelines, but you can learn all about the district online if you want ;) I will be teaching Physical Science and whatever else. Physical Science here in Malawi is a eclectic mix of Chemistry and Physics that the students are tested on in the 2nd and 4th form (Sophmore and Senior year). I am also really excited to start a garden at my house if I will be able to do that while leaving plenty of time for Bao and Draft which are the local board games.
Here are a few of the cultural observations about Malawi (aka things that I think are funny, different, or neat): Malawians are big on formalities in the sense of introductions. There are understood scripts when greeting people in this country. They are not, however, big on the formality of being on time. This I feel will probably be the most frustrating aspect for me. I have heard that you can schedule a meeting and receive acknowledgment for one time and Malawians can easily come 2-5 hours late. Apparently, if you are not the last person to arrive, you are not late!
On the whole they are friendly, patient, and all around nice people. I really felt very welcomed to the village and the country. Every time I arrive someplace new it seems I am welcomed with song and dance.
The language that I am learning, Chichewa, is a Bantu language and is a very simple language in the sense of it having a lot of consistency. It is very difficult in the sense of it having almost no similarities with English, pronunciation, and the fact that you can have one-word sentences that are close to 30 letters long. A short and easy example is Ndidzakulemberani – which means I will write a letter to you. I am really excited to get better at Chichewa and eventually to become fluent.
Ok, before I finish this blog, I want to tell a funny story about the language experience. Malawians are very shy about bodily functions and parts as well as sex. If you mention certain awkward anatomy in public than people will think there is something wrong with you. So, with that background, let me tell you a brief story. I was walking to one of my brother’s houses to take a picture of his family. Vitaliano and I were walking in the road and I looked up at a beautiful cloud formation and said “Ndimakonda Mitumbo!” he quickly corrected me and said “Ayi, Ndimakonda Mitambo” (no I like clouds/sky). I didn’t think too much about it until later that night when I realized that Mitumbo means anuses. So if u didn't catch that, I told my Malawian brother that I like anuses instead of the sky. Oops!!! Anyway, I thought I would share that with you. I will be getting a cell phone pretty soon and would LOVE to receive phone calls from everyone. Also, please continue to send letters and packages. I cannot tell you how happy it makes me to receive things from the states! Much love, and I hope to hear from many of you soon.

p.s. i have a phone which u can call or text. it is not too expensive using an internet program like JaJa (sp?) if u do please remember the time difference: here it is 0112659118490. I hope to talk to u soon!

Monday, September 24, 2007

Final pre-Africa blog

So I am officially a Peace Corps Trainee. It feels very strange to have that title. On the one hand I am so very excited to be heading to Malawi tomorrow. On the other, I find myself much more saddened to be leaving my girlfriend, along with other friends and family. I will be going from talking to Sarah roughly 2-5 hours a day on the phone, to no internet or phone access for the next 3 months. I am excited as well as concerned.

The training has been great. I think that I expected it to be very dull and uninformative, but Peter, or staging director, has done a great job of getting us involved and we have all learned a lot. My Staging group is AWESOME. There are 26 of us heading to Malawi and we already seem to have this really cool Peace Corps bond. Although I would say I am the loudest and most annoying one, we have some other outgoing peeps along with the reserved ones. We have different backgrounds but similar interests and so on. I am really excited to get to know everyone better over the next years.

I just wanted to share with everyone some of my Aspirations and Anxieties which were really good to write out on paper and share with the other trainees and see that I am not the only one. So here they our in no specific order so you can feel free to pray for this or anything else would be appreciated:

Aspirations – learn a new language and culture, experience new things, help out in Malawi, learn to SCUBA, travel, make a difference, make great friends, make great photographs, develop my teaching style and become a master teacher, learn more about myself, the unknown

Axieties – missing my friends, family and one girl in particular, boredom, loneliness, ineffectiveness, not fitting in, everything changing when I am gone, missing cheese, my cat, hygiene, the internet and other amenities, reintegration, getting sick, HIV/Aids, the unknown.

So as I head to Malwi, please remember me and write me as this will be my last internet post for around 3 months. Thank you for all your love and support. I miss you and hope to read from you soon. In closing I want to end with a quote from an Australian aboriginal woman:

If you came here to save me and my people, you can go home again. If however, you see your future united with ours then perhaps we can work together.

Love, Spencer

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

the time aproacheth...

Well two weeks from today will end my current routine of life. I will finish up at FUMC in my very important and life changing job as a recreation/fellowship assistant. This job entails sitting a desk and doing whatever I want until someone, somewhere needs me which might happen once a day. It is at this illustrious job that I now sit addressing all of you fine people.

Two days after I finish up at FUMC I will no longer work at Carinos either. Although I don’t like it, it seems as if complaining about that job is a job description to work there – I am continually guilty of it. Although I have enjoyed working there for the last year, I cannot say that I will be sorry to see it go. I will miss my coworkers most of all but the fact that I will no longer have to sort dirty silverware of people I have never met and may not care too gets close to making up for it.

After completing my employment tour of duty, I plan on taking a brief road trip to East and Central Texas to say adios to friends and family. After that I will be heading to California to visit a good friend of the female persuasion that I happen to like quite a bit. (if you don’t know, then I have been trying to avoid something like this since I knew that I was heading to the Peace Corps, so I am very angry at two girls named Sarah – and yes I meant to say two… long story.)

Just to kind of give everyone a clue of what my time will look like in Malawi I thought I would talk a little bit about what my schedule will look like. I will arrive in Malawi on Sept. 27th after quite a bit of flying. After that, I will begin my Pre-service Training. That entails about 12 weeks of intensive language and cultural training during which I will be staying with a village family. We will have class from mon-sat. and have very little free time. I will have no phone or internet access for my first 3 months, so PLEASE WRITE ME!!! After a few weeks I will also begin a kind of teaching internship in a local school. After the 12 weeks are finished I will be placed at a site where I will stay for the next two years. There I will teach physical science and some other subjects to high school students.

If any one feels the need to send me a care package (hint, hint), I would love it!!! If you would like any ideas, I have a couple. Candy is always good. Cereal, books, parmesan cheese in any form, pictures, letters, burned DVDs and CDs (i will have my laptop and occasional electricity), and other little comfort items will be great. Either way I am looking forward to this adventure as well as sharing it with all of my friends and family. Tiwonana Posachedwa (see you soon!)

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

A couple of goals and expectations


This is the Flag of Malawi

Moni (hello) - i have been practicing my survival Chichewa which is what i will be speaking.

So I wanted to let everyone know what some of my goals are going to be while in Malawi.
Daily Goals:
- read
- practice the harmonica
- exercise
- practice the language
- write in my journal
- write letters
- love people

So those are a few of the things that i would like to do every day and maybe get a schedule down. A couple of problems present themself. 1) I cant play the harmonica - just purchased one. 2) I will prolly not have electricity so reading becomes difficult after dark. 3) I do very poorly when it comes to doing something every day (see: exercise) 4) there is no formula for love. All things considered I hope to meet these goals as often as possible.

A few of the expectations i have involve the time i have spent in developing nations (Mexico and Morocco), people that i have talked too, and things that i have read . I have never before been surrounded by as much poverty as i will be in Africa and i expect it to be very eye opening. I expect to miss my friends and family. I expect to be discouraged and encouraged by my experiences. I expect to become very good at squatting over a hole to take care of business. I expect to have a great time. I expect to get sick. I expect to not have much flavor in most of my food. I expect to become a part of the culture. I expect to make lifelong friends. I expect to see a lot of death. I expect to see a lot of life. Finally, I expect to learn to take a shower out of a bucket and enjoy it.

I will have no internet or phone access for my first two months in Malawi and plan on writing as much as possible as that will be my only form of communication stateside. Please write me as often as you can. My addie for the first 2-3months will be as follows:

Spencer Martin, PCT
Peace Corps
P.O. Box 208

Lilongwe, Malawi


Every blog I read mentions how much Volunteers enjoy receiving letters from home and how it makes the transition much easier. I will love u forever and ever if u write me!!!! Please label letters "air mail" and "par avion" Also feel free to send me protein (like beef jerky, nuts, bars etc), dried fruit, tasty healthy snacks, tasty unhealthy snacks, and things that i could use in a developing nation and to teach.

I would like to say thank you to all my friends and family for their love and support. If anyone has any questions let me know. You can find me on Facebook and Myspace or just leave one here.

By way of conclusion, let me end with some of the most important phrases in Chichewa: Chimbudzi chili kuti? (where is the toilet) and Ndili gwa ngati mwala (I am strong like a rock)

Much love,

Spencer

Monday, August 20, 2007

Preparations

So I have about a month until i head to Philly for staging and then 3 days after that I head straight to the Sub-Sahara. For those of you who don't know, the Sub-Sahara is that which is below the Sahara...in Africa...the continent. I am going as a Peace Corps Trainee and will after about 10 weeks be sworn in as a Peace Corps Volunteer for the next two years after that.

I applied for the PC last November and have been excited about it ever since. I am going as an educator and will be teaching physical science to a rural high school in the country of Malawi, Africa. Malawi has no idea what is about to hit it. hehehehe I have been reading and talking to people and so excited about the time that I will spend there. I had a random Malawian guy who sent me a message on Facebook asking if I expected the Hollywood version of Africa and that I should not because of the poverty and the mosquitoes and such. I wanted to respond and say, "now when u say Hollywood version, do you mean Blood Diamond or Hotel Rwanda?" but i didn't because i have such great control over my mouth and what comes out of it.

There are many things i am looking forward to including scuba diving, safari, and the world cup in South Africa in 2010. I am not really nervous about anything except the teaching with little or no materials. Malawi seems like a great place with great people and I am very excited to experience and be changed by the experience. I told a friend today that although i am not sure that i like it about myself, I feel more excited about the adventure then the idealism or opportunity for philanthropy. I do want to help out in the world, but i have a feeling that i will be changed much more than i will instigate anything or anyone else to change. The end...for now....