... these are the thoughts and updates on my life as I begin my 27 month service as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Nicaragua in the health sector, "Estilo de la vida saluable.." This is for my family, closest friends, anyone interested in the Peace Corps, or anyone interested in Nicaragua really. Enjoy!

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Boiling Water, Best Decision Ever


        I am two months into my Peace Corps service (about to enter month 3!) and I would like to take a moment to reminisce on my first days here, and one of the best showers of my life. I was still a trainee in San Fernando on my site visit in March 2012. Site visit is one week where all trainees go to visit their assigned sites, they meet the families they will be living with, the people they will be working with, and the town they will be living in…for the next two years of their life. It can be a pretty overwhelming time and many volunteers have horror stories about their site visits; they got there and the family hadn’t actually yet agreed for them to live there and refused to feed them for the week or they had absolutely no colleagues to work with so they sat on a hammock and re-read the same book fifty times over wondering if this was going to be their life. Volunteers have told me they spent their site visit crying, convinced they would be going back to the states immediately. In my case, San Fernando is not the most happening place (it is comparable to Rutherfordton Country, except everyone speaks Spanish- with the Nicaraguan equivalent of a southern accent- and farms coffee), but I was one of the lucky ones who had a good health center staff that took me with them to the communities for the vaccination campaign, I was able to network the school directors and local leaders, and house I was assigned to live with had a room with a door. However, one looming factor remained. I was cold.

       Okay, okay so I know that Nicaragua is a tropical country, but I was not prepared for Nueva Segovia. Nicaragua has mountains? I was much more focused on the famous beaches and volcanic islands of Nicaragua to consider that my site would be a little more north. That was my first flaw, if I have learned anything from Peace Corps, you’ve got to be flexible. Creating expectations only allows them to be broken, and doing Peace Corps to learn how to surf isn’t exactly what it’s about. The job of a Peace Corps Volunteer is to do what you can, where you are and with what you have. Ok, so lesson learned, but I was still cold. The days in San Fernando would actually get pretty hot with the sun overhead, but it was the mornings and the nights that got to me. I would wake up in the middle of the night under my borrowed blanket and wish I’d packed more than my Miami bikinis (ha, kidding about that but I do wish I’d brought more layers). The worst thing was the shower. The family I live with has an outside shower, and like all showers in Nicaragua homes, there are two temperatures, cold and cold. Everyday of site visit I would come home after a day dropping vitamin A drops into the mouths of screaming Nicaraguan babies to a moral dilemma, to shower or not to shower. The thought of the cold icy water hitting my vulnerably body made me question how much I really needed a shower that day, or that week, but then I remembered PC telling us during training Nicaraguans’ appreciation for hygiene, not showering for a day could only further contribute to the “grungy American hippie” image than PC volunteers had acquired. Therefore, I showered, but I was not happy about it. So one day I came back, a little discouraged and dreading the shower ahead. I was in my bathrobe walking outside to the shower when Yesley, my first friend of San Fernando, popped up and asked what I was doing.

...(translations provided)
“Quiero banarme pero tengo frio!” (I want to bath but I'm cold!)
“Pues, porque no hierve el agua?” (Well, why don't 

       Boil the water? Why hadn’t I thought of that? The idea was so new and foreign to me. In the States, I would not occupy my time with boiling water for bathing, I’ve got a wonderful shower that does it for me. However, when you do not have a shower with multiple temperatures, if you want a hot (or lukewarm) shower, you’ve got to create it. Yesley and I lit the wood burning stove stuck a pot of water over the fire. A few pots later I had my shower bucket filled, and the result was delicious. While taking that shower, I remember thinking that this could easily be the best shower of my life and that there was hope for me yet. Since returning to site for service, I have been getting tougher and have not had to boil water again, but knowing that I have that ability warms my soul when I think about the colder months of November, December, or January.

       Before coming to Nicaragua, I had heard rumors about their diet of all carbs and no proteins, a body builder’s nightmare. I talked to current volunteers who warned to “savor my last moments with vegetables and food that was not fried and covered in salt.” I heard that peanut butter is a strictly American thing, so smuggled in two jars of crunchy- one of which is still half full (or empty depending on how you look at it). So, what did I find when I got here? Gallo pinto, which is rice and red beans in salt and oil, cooked together and served with breakfast, lunch, and dinner, sometimes as a side and sometimes as the main course. All kinds of meat, such as mondongo, which is cow stomach and is white with a disturbingly undulating texture (my host family in Corazo had given me this is few times before my friend Natalie told me what is was), hidago (liver, which is actually just ate yesterday, a little salty but not too bad) and some of the best chicken I’ve ever tasted. All the carbs you could ever want in rice and corn tortillas galore. And sweets. One thing that I have got to bring back with me to the States is the deliciousness that is known as the “chocobanano.” For 2 or 3 cords you (10 or 15 cents) I can buy a frozen bananas wrapped in cold crunchy chocolate. It’s delightful. It is very ingrained in the culture here to shun vegetables and gravitate towards simple sugars. Here in Nueva Segovia is some of the best coffee in the world, and I’m that girl that likes her “cafĂ© amargo,” or without sugar. Families here have huge thermoses filled with steaming coffee for guests and family, prepared with about 5 cups of sugar per liter of thermos. With this hot, sugary coffee Nicaraguans eat “pan” which means bread but is a form of cookie, pound cake, or sweet bread glazed with sugar over it, which they then dip into the coffee. I do enjoy this custom and I have made it my own by joining my family or friends with freshly brewed ginger tea and “rosquillas” (which are little crunchy sweet cracker/cookie things that are meant to be dipped in hot liquids and I think are quite delicious, another thing that I’ve got to bring back).

       The point I want to make with all of this is that despite their not ideal diet of too much sugar-the majority of people in my town have large silver caps on their teeth- and not a good balance of nutritious carbohydrates/proteins to simple carbs/fats, there are not many obese Nicaraguans. Of course, a diet of tortillas and cheese paired with a dislike for running (most Nicaraguans do not “workout,” although this is changing one powerwalking woman at a time) does not give you a killer body, and many Nicaraguans I had not given this matter much thought until my neighbors had some American relatives visit, and they were big. By “big” I mean both stature and weight, these siblings towered over their Nicaraguan family members, as well as consumed enough gallo pinto for a small family. It just reiterates the statistics,we are big in America, in our size and in our consumption. We can have all of the gyms in the world and still be just as unhealthy as a developing country if we fill our bodies with large amounts of processed foods. Which is better, eating rice and beans followed by sugary coffee and cookies or eating some form of fast food that is wrongly labeled as healthy and then eating too much of it? Neither is that great, there is definitely room for improvement on both sides. The whole realization just made me step back and remember that even the United States, the most developed nation in the world, has its room for improvement and Nicaragua, even with it’s dislike for vegetables or love for sweets, the people are still holding in there. Although as someone who studied nutrition, worked as a personal trainer, and is now a health volunteer, I’m hoping to change the mindset of a few willing Nicaraguans -I’m not sure how long I can live without some vegetables and protein (“where’s my protein Ma?!!?)