Friday, July 9, 2010

How fast things change.

I think the typical story of a Peace Corps Volunteer is the following: Inconsistency. Some weeks and months there is not too much going on and you spend your extra time on hobbies or passing time with friends all the while trying to think of new work for yourself. Then, all of a sudden, you are overwhelmed with work all week and all weekend, without a moment to breath and when you are about to go crazy, BAM! you get sick. This has been my usual pattern ever since I arrived in Altos, so maybe that pattern is a sort of consistency.. ha.. But that is exactly what happened to me this past month. We got handed over the library local by the municipality at the same time I was getting the camera kits for Ahecha (photography workshop) and I was put in charge of planning the despedida (good-bye party for my training group) and preparing for a 5-day training of the new volunteers in my site. All of this was during the weekend and on the weekend I had two weekends doing a tourism workshop, a trip to buy goods for the library to one of the bigger cities about 5 hours from where I live, and then the actual despedida and the 4th of July celebration weekend in Asuncion. Along with my usual English classes on Tuesdays and Wednesdays and a couple other promises I had made to help out here ad there, I was quite busy and overwhelmed. The day before I was scheduled to go to Guarambare to help with a training session, I got very sick (as expected) and I wasn't able to go to Guarambare and I had to cancel a trip I was going to take to the southern part of the country to a town called Ayolas, to attend a leadership camp with a youth from my town. It was unfortunate timing because, as I write this, they are probably having a wonderful experience on an island that was converted to an ecoreserve but I knew my body just could not handle the long trip and I desperately needed rest. It's weird when you are secretly relieved to be feeling horrible and unable to get out of bed because you know it is exactly what you need.

Today it has been raining non-stop so I have done all the work that I could and have now retired to reading and interneting to catch up with my blog and other things I have been severely neglecting these past couple weeks.

I have been teaching English since January, not because I had a burning desire to teach the language but because there was a obvious need and desire to have English classes that were accessible to people of all economic backgrounds. However, these last two weeks I have been teaching photography in an 8th grade classroom and I truly enjoy every aspect of these classes and that is good feeling!

My photography class is sooooo basic, but it's good. None of the students I am working with have a camera in their homes and literally the first day with the cameras was all about how to turn them on, using the wrist strap so that the camera doesn't fall... and very little about technique. Given, the cameras they are using are not professional by any means but we are going to focus mostly on composition of a photo more than anything else. This week I just told them I want them to get to know the cameras and try to take pictures using each setting- for portraits, landscape, motion and all that. Each week after this they are going to have an aspect of photography to focus on. One week will be lighting... taking a photo from the same place at different times of day, one will be portraits and so on... I think it should work out well!

I also got my new camera brought to me by Shavonda! BIG THANKS for bringing it all the way to Paraguay!! And I love it! It is a canon 780IS and it is perfect for my needs :) I hope to upload some new photos that I have taken very soon. There was a traditional fiesta for San Pablo and San Pedro on the outskirts of my town that was very interesting. I hope to post the pics soon and I will give more detail!

lots of love,
Julie

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