I had a really nice weekend in Dakar during training. It was our first weekend and there was an artisan expo that the SED volunteers set-up since we are the new volunteers and we were in Thies, we got to go. It was really cool seeing all the different Senegalese artists. Also, while in Dakar I decided to treat myself and I got a hotel room, it was so nice!! It really made me appreciate what we have in the US.
I’m going to take a moment and point out some things that we take for granted but really shouldn't.
1) Water coming out of your faucet. Think about this, when we turn on the faucet in the US we’d be surprised if water didn’t come out. Here people are surprised when it does because it cuts out so frequently.
2) Hot showers/baths. If you have a shower with running water, you never get to experience a hot shower because we don’t have hot water tanks. If you don’t have running water however, you can always leave your bucket out in the sun to heat up the water
3) The option of whether you want it to be warm in your room or cool. The temperature in my room is dictated by the weather outside and if I don’t like it there isn’t much I can do about it.
4) Appreciating the quiet as you go to sleep. For some reason the Senegalese feel the need to make as much noise as possible, either with their mosques’ loud-speaker going all night or their TV’s blaring.
5) The ability to keep your food preserved in a fridge and not worry about it spoiling overnight due to it being too hot or some animal will eat it.
6) Knowing that if some emergency arose help would get to you within minutes as opposed to hours/days.
7) The ability to drink water whenever you want and not having to wait 5 hours for your filter to finish.
8) Being able to sit down at a restaurant and order off the menu and not having to ask “What do you have today?”
9) Not having to decide in the morning if an outfit is appropriate or not by how much of your knee is showing.
10) Street names and addresses. “Keep going till you get to the third mango tree and make a left” is NOT an acceptable form of directions.
Ok now that I have given you some food for thought, I shall continue my store of Dakar. Not only did I get to stay in a hotel, but I got to visit their mall and feel like I was back in American for a few hours. It was nice. After my little American vacation I had to head back to reality and finish my training in Thies. The second week was hard because it seemed like we had been there forever. However, there was a nice little surprise mid-week, it was Tamkharit, the Muslim New Year. One of our trainers invited us to his mother’s house for the New Year to celebrate. We ate some delicious food which consisted of couscous with lamb and chicken, it was amazing. After dinner his family surprised us with ice cream!!! Now the Muslim New Year is interesting because it is a mix between Halloween, Thanksgiving, and New Year all rolled into one. It’s like Halloween because the kids dress up like old people and men dress up as women and they walk around asking for candy, it’s Thanksgiving because you a LOT of food, and it’s like New Years because they party till the break of dawn. It was great to experience it!
I decided to go to Dakar after IST, where I am sitting now writing this, which getting here was an adventure in and of itself. We found out that a train left Thies to Dakar at 6am so we decided to take the train in. We woke up at 5am to finish packing, by 5:45 we were on our way walking to the train station, only about a mile and a half away, with all of our clothes and books that the Peace Corps gave us stuffed into backpacks and suitcases. Once we reached the train station we were informed by some random man sitting outside the train station that the train doesn’t run on Sundays!!! So 17 of us were sitting outside the train station trying to figure out how to get to Dakar. ***(Note to my family: It was like a scene out of the book “How do we get to the zoo?”) Luckily, some of the other volunteers were lazy and had a cab take them the station so we explained to the cab driver our dilemma and the driver told us he could get us a mini-bus to take us. So we all piled into the bus, baggages and all, and headed off to Dakar. We got here around 8am and are just relaxing for the rest of the day. So that is what has been happening for the past two weeks. I will update my blog after the New Year with what I did for Christmas, still not sure what I am going to do for that. Hope you all have a great Christmas and a Happy New Year!!!
1 comment:
i like the two pics from the hotel. very pretty. oh, and the view behind you is nice, too. ;)
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