Disclainer

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Friday, April 18, 2014

Sorry about this being a gang letter but there are a number of reasons for my not having time to write to you all individually. When you hear all that’s going on I’m sure you will understand.
Pre Service Training is about to finish Week 4 (of 10). I’m living with an Indonesian family. I’m getting ready for a 4 day trip to West Java.
Every day I have4¼ hours of Bahasa Indonesia. This is the language we are learning because it is the national language and most of the people understand it even if they don’t use it. It’s the language of TV and other media. It is not my host family’s first language.  They speak Javanese, understand most of what I am trying to say in Bahasa Indonesia and can help me do my homework most of the time.  I have 5 other PCTs (Trainees) in my language class. The 4 woman and 1 man have an average age of 24. Our class starts at 7:30 a.m. and goes until 11:45. We have a different teacher every week so that we get used to different regional accents. Last week we had the first test. On the day of the test we submitted 200 word essays written at home. I did rather poorly on the written part of the test but did better than I thought I was going to do. I did well on the spoken part of the test and got a 93% on the essay. It will come as no surprise to those who know me that I lost 5 points for spelling wrongly the same word 5 times. Yes, the other 2 points off were for spelling also. I’m having a hard time remembering vocabulary. Peace Corps and I were prepared for the difficulties “older language learners” have remembering new words. However, as a result I have asked for some extra practice and now go to class a ½ hour early to go over difficulties with the teacher of the week. To give you an idea of my problems: One day we had 112 new words all about food and eating. There were names of foods I (and I would guess, you) never heard of. One fruit’s name translates into English as “Snake Fruit”. There were also names of vegetables I am served about 4 times a week and still haven’t figured out what I’m eating.
After class we go out to the courtyard of the city office complex where we have our class and eat the lunches our families have packed for us. After lunch we sardine ourselves and another class of 6 PCTs into a pubic mini-bus kinda thing and go to the next village north of here where we join 2 other language classes from that village for classes on teaching English as a second language. I rather enjoy this 4 hour class because I taught it to PCTs in Madagascar and am able to add some to what is being presented. Since I often tell a story to illustrate what our teachers are talking about, the other PCTs have started to use the expression “WWJD” meaning, “What Would Jay Do”. Most of the PCTs from my village walk back to our village from this class. It’s downhill all the way.  I did this for a couple of weeks but have been playing “the old card” and cramming myself into the public transportation and paying the 15 cents to get home in 5 minutes rather than the ½ hour walk. I get home at about 5:30.
If my chances of staying awake until dinner time are slim, I make myself a cup of coffee. Otherwise I hit the shower. “Shower” is not exactly the right word. The bathroom has a squat toilet and a waist high cement reservoir for water. In the reservoir is a plastic pan with a handle. There is not a toilet paper holder. I don’t want to talk about that any more here. To “shower” I dump a pan of fresh mountain water over my head and lather up. I often have to do some deep breathing before I dump the first pan of cold water over my head. After I soap my head I dump a bucket of water to rinse.   After I get as clean as I set my mind to, I turn on the honest to goodness shower which puts out hot water. I have about 45 seconds from turn of faucet until the water turns from cold to HOT. I mean REALLY HOT. I have the act down so that I can get all of the soap off before I scald myself. A pleasant part of every bathroom experience is the view from the window. Lush verdant volcanic peeks fill the view. It really is beautiful, unless one of the volcanoes goes off which happens from time to time but hasn’t for a while around where I am.
The bathroom is just off of the kitchen. As I pass though, the mother of the family tells me how many of the 4 of us will be eating dinner at the same time and I set the table.
After dinner I wash the family dishes, do my homework and try to memorize vocabulary words until about 8:30 when sleep completely overcomes me. By the time I write my journal, get my clothes ready for the next day, pack my case with books and notebooks and set the bed net I’m asleep by 9:00 so I can get up at 5:00 and start all over again.
This goes on Monday through Thursday and Saturday. Fridays we go about an hour away to The University of Mahammaddah Malang where all the PCTs (we are 64 in total in 6 villages) get together for classes in health, safety and cross-cultural adjustment. Fridays I leave home about 6:00a.m. and get home at about 6:00p.m. We have Sundays free.  Sundays I usually study and spend time with my host family.
I live in the village of Putin. The 1 floor house is on a side street about 2 blocks from the main road that goes farther uphill to some other villages and downhill to the town of Batu. Batu is about 45 minutes from Malang in East Java.  You might be able to find Malang on a large map. The front yard is filled with perhaps 200 seedling trees toward the street and many decorative ornamental plants closer to the verandah. I’m sitting on the verandah as I write this. The house has 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, rather formal living room, TV room, dining room and kitchen. All 4 bedrooms are on one side of the house. My bedroom is in the front with a view of the front garden, next is the husband and wife’s bedroom, then the daughter’s with the last bedroom now used for storage and ironing since the son married and moved to another town. My bedroom has a very large bed and a wardrobe. The bed is flush with 3 walls.  The wardrobe takes the whole other wall. I have about a foot of space between the bed and wardrobe in which to maneuver.  This space is not enough to fully open the wardrobe doors but I can open them enough to get what I need from inside. I can move around a bit in the spaced used to open and shut the door. Judging from the washing machine, fridge, TV, 2 two burner stoves, 3 motorcycles and the hot water shower I would say that the family is well off: not as well off as some of the other host families but better than others.
The father of the family, 13 years younger than my real age, owns an orchard. He says he grows oranges but the fruit he brings home looks, peals and tastes like tangerines. Oranges and tangerines have the same name in Bahasa Indonesia so I’m not exactly sure what I am eating which is a general theme for my food consumption here.  He goes to mosque 5 times a day to pray and many evenings goes to a men’s prayer group to which he has taken me a couple of times. He and his siblings make sure that one of them sleeps each night at their 80 year old widowed mother’s house. The daughter is a midwife with a university degree so speaks some English and is a great help to me with my language.  The wife is a home maker and sometimes takes some of the potted decorative plants and seedling oranges (or tangerines) to sell at the traditional market in Batu. How she does this on her motorcycle I don’t want to think about because I depend on her to feed me. And feed me she does. There is always a foundation of rice. That foundation is always large. There is always something in a sauce or broth to go on top of the rice. There may or may not be chicken, beef or goat meat in this. There is always some form of tofu fried in coconut oil. There is usually some kind of sauce for on top of the tofu. One of these sauces is made with ground peanuts, is wickedly spicy and wonderfully delicious. I very often have no idea what it is I’m eating but it all tastes good so far. There seems to be no specifically breakfast, lunch or dinner foods. What I’m given for breakfast may be packed for my lunch with left-overs served with other things for dinner.  There is always rice. There is always rice.  There is always rice. ALWAYS! The house always has snacks. These might be cookies, some form of pastries or fruit. I am offered snacks at 5 minute intervals while at home and awake. Cleaning my plate or accepting a snack brings an ear to ear smile to the mother’s face.
I leave tomorrow morning for a trip to Cirebon, West Java. Another PCT guy and I will visit a PCV who has finished his first year of service. After we have a teacher training session tomorrow at UMM the other guy, 2 women PCTs and I will be driven 4 hours to Surabaya where we will get on a train for 14 hours (more or less) and arrive the next morning in Cirebon. If the 2 PCVs we will visit cannot get to the train station to meet us at the time the train gets in, we have the name of a hotel we can stay in and wait for the PCVs to show up.  From there we will go to the 2 places where these PCVs live. We will spent 3 nights and 2 days finding out how PCVs live, teach, do with their free time, eat, get along with nationals and in general exist. We have been given 4 pages of questions to ask and things to observe. We will do the reverse trip on Tuesday-Wednesday. Thursday morning the four of us will give a formal report of the trip to the other PCTs who will alo report on their visits. Other PCTs are visiting PCVs who live 2 hours, 4 hours or 6 hours away from Malang. Only the 4 in my group are going as far as we are and getting into West Java. We will not be told where our future sites will be for a couple of weeks.  I have to wonder if PC is considering sending the 4 of us to live in West Java after training. I know West Java is the hottest part of the country which is where I have said all along I want to be.  Therefore, we have to be extra observant and ask all the right kinds of questions in order to make our presentation a reflection of our feelings about our possible future locations of service.
The internet speed at the local café is something around 3 key strokes a minute. The last time I put myself through the experience it took 45 minutes just to load my g-mail account. This afternoon after lunch I will go to the host family of another PCT and use their internet connection to send this (Inshah Allah)
Today most of the PCTs are in Malang having shots and some are taking an optional mock language test. Since I have already had the shot being given today and I opted out of the test, I have today off to put into words some of the things I am doing and the reasons I don’t write as much as I would like to.
I wish you all a Happy Easter. Easter morning I will have just finished a 14 hour train trip.  I wonder what Indonesian trains are like. The adventure continues.
PEACE,
JAY
p.s. I have been 100% well. I hope all of you have been also.