PEPFAR girls as of March 2008!

PEPFAR girls as of March 2008!
Ok, Hannah's missing and Jess (far right) just went home, so we're 7

PEPFAR girls-the original group, all 12 of us!

PEPFAR girls-the original group, all 12 of us!
Training group following the swearing in ceremony at the US Ambassor's residence on Nov. 30, 2006

Monday, January 29, 2007

A Day in the Life...

Well, I don’t know if it’s THE life, but it’s mine and I’m happy with it!!
I am sure many of you are wondering about what I do in a typical day. While every day presents unique challenges and moments of pleasant surprises there are some parts of my day that remain the same. Usually, I am awake by 7 am—I don’t have to set an alarm clock because the roosters wake me up! I begin my day by heating a kettle of water so that I can take a warm bucket bath and have some tea or coffee for breakfast. While I wait for that to boil (at least 1 minute to be sure the water is safe) I sweep the four rooms of my house because there always seems to be a lot of dirt and dust! Now, you might be asking “why does she have to make sure the water is safe?” Well, I do not have running water in my home so it has to be collected from a bore hole but you can’t be sure that it is safe because it’s not treated like water back home! Now you’re thinking, “does she collect her own water?!” Always looking for an easy way out I pay someone to collect water for me. Ok, I’m not that lazy but my house is at the top of a very, very steep hill and I would have to carry the jerry can (20 litres) which kills my hands! The people who collect water for my neighbors and me use a bike to push up the cans up the hill-much better than carrying!

Breakfast is usually fairly simple: fruit (usually papaya from one of the trees behind my house) and bread with jam or pancakes or French toast. Breakfast has turned out to be one of the easiest meals for me to make! Once I finish that I leave for “work”…

I take my bike (which doesn’t have a rack to carry water!) or walk to the Resource Centre I have been placed with. It’s about 1 mile from my home but it’s uphill, both ways! Lucky me I don’t have to worry about snow. During this period of adjustment I spend most days practicing the local language with my counterpart. Sometimes people stop in for counseling and testing; other people come in to meet me. Those people usually begin to ask us questions bout HIV/AIDS and malaria and what the Resource Centre is all about. For many, it is their first time visiting us. I am proud to say that our Centre is the first of its kind in the whole of Kibaale District! We offer free voluntary counseling and testing, access to educational materials tat people can borrow free of charge, a club for people who test positive and free condoms. We plan to begin taking information to the villages in the district and testing people from there.

Once the day is over I go home and do some more cleaning—mop the floor, cleaning the pit latrine or check out my garden that my neighbor has helped me plant—or I relax by reading or writing in my journal.

The sun is up for 12 hours so around 7 pm it begins to get dark. I try to begin preparing supper before that time because it’s not that easy to cook by the light of a kerosene lantern or candle! While eating and cleaning up I either listen to the BBC, the Voice of America or the voices in my head! When I go to bed (usually before 1030!) I fall asleep to the sound of a million crickets!