Friday, October 19, 2007

shots

I'm at the PC office in Ashgabat getting shots which seems to be important given all the health threats around me (dogs, children, whatever). I'm not sick at the moment which means I'm in a pretty decent mood, however I'm getting frustrated trying to learn insane amounts of vocab and grammer in a very short time period.

Friday, October 12, 2007

first week in the village

I've been living in a village with a host family for the past week. There are 4 other PC trainees in my village, and we have Turkmen language class for about 4-5 hours each day, which means too much vocab for my brain to process. However the people in my group are pretty cool and our language teacher is awesome; she's 18 and is fluent in 4 languages. I hope hanging out with a bunch of Americans isn't a bad influence on her.

My host mom is a sweetie and about the same age as my real mom. I live with her, her younger son and his wife (who are each a few years older than me), and their two kids; and 4 year old girl and 2 year old boy. The 4 year is really good about showing me how to do things and correcting my pronounciation. The 2 year old is a cutie and super funny; I know the word for "mischievous child" in Turkmen and it comes in handy.

Traveling With Russians

10/1/07
I was psyched for my Lufthansa flight because I thought it would be more luxurious than my last international flight, which was on Aeroflot (a Russian airline). I was initially dismayed to find I was sitting behind some Russian sailors from Kaliningrad who were busy knocking back shots of amaretto and Jack Daniels. But then Genye, the giant and somewhat foul man across the isle, offered me a drink and we stared talking (in Russian). After a while I decided these guys were pretty alright, and definitely more entertaining that in the in-flight movie. At the back of the plane, another sailor, Demetri, showed me his pictures from Ghana, Congo, and New Orleans on his laptop. We were getting in a heavy political conversation (he knew a decent amount of English) when an old American guy said, “It’s 4 am. I’m trying to sleep. Keep it down.” Not quite true. It was 4 am Frankfurt time—our destination. Our flight had departed from Washington, DC were it was only 10 pm. However, by this point the whole back half of the plane was probably getting annoyed with us, so I broke up the conversation. A couple of my fellow volunteers had quietly asked me if it was OK. Yeah, I’m fine. It’s not my first time traveling with Russians.