Quick post today. I had plans to do a longer more involved
one with pictures and everything but the internet is being temperamental.
Anyway, I have been officially sworn in as a Peace Corps
Volunteer! It feels absolutely no different than it did before swearing in but
I guess that’s typical for arbitrary commencements and the like. Shipping off
to site was relatively traumatic as me, and my fellow volunteers, were thrown
into our isolated sites and ripped away from the people we have spent
essentially waking moment of the last three months with. There is a definite
attachment that has grown there which makes the separation difficult, but I am
guessing that is just a Stockholm Syndrome-esque response and that I will
quickly realize exactly how much I despise all those obnoxious obrunis.
I am now living in Bormase, and those readers whose loyalty
I have not yet failed to exhaust will remember it as the village where I will
be spending the next two years of my life. There are approximately five hundred
people in the town and we make gari! I do not want to spoil the joy I felt in
my virginal experience of gari, so I will let those reading do their own
research to discover for themselves what this magical treat is. I will follow
up with a more detailed look at Bormase when I finally upload photos.
There are four other volunteers living near me, and we are
all working with Krobodan(Pronounced with a super hero like emphasis on the
-dan.) Three of these lovely people are in my training group and we have been
going through many of the same trials together. Kofi Adam, our gentle giant,
has generously taken up the cross of the serial pooper for our quartet. Not
that any of us are lacking on that front but he has notably gone above and
beyond the normal human capacity for excretion.
If you weren’t aware, Christmas is next week. Ghana
celebrates it too! My only insight into how they celebrate is when my friend in
town took me to the local distillery to get Akpeteshie, the local moonshine. It
is amazing stuff. Puts hair on the chest and then can be used to burn it right
off again. He purchased two gallons of it.
I want to send some postcards home to friends and family
but strangely I lacked the initiative to collect addresses before leaving. If
you would like me to send you a postcard you can message me your address via
facebook, email (jveritas334@gmail.com),
or through this blog. I will very likely get around to sending something to
everyone in the two years while I am here. If you would like to ensure your
name at the top of that list you can mail me something first! My address is:
Joseph Stein – Peace Corps Volunteer
Peace Corps Ghana
P.O.Box 5796
Accra-North, Ghana
I gotta go. Send me something. Or
don’t. I will only love you marginally less.
Merry Christmas!
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this post do not represent the views of the Peace Corps. They only represent those of the author.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this post do not represent the views of the Peace Corps. They only represent those of the author.
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