Friday, September 7, 2007

All in a Day´s Work

Now that I been here in Bolivia for a few weeks, my schedule has generally solidified (subject to change, however, at any moment). Here is ¨que pasa¨ (más o menos) each day in the City of the Cross.

La bandera cruceña (Flag of Santa Cruz)
You see this everywhere.

Each morning I wake up around 7:30-8:00 in the room I share with my eldest host sister Paola (19). By this point, my other siblings (Bernabes, 15, and Rebeca, 17) have already left the house. My host mother Charo already has put hot water for tea on the stove and on the table a display of fruit, cereal, yogurt, teas, and usually some sort of cake or cookies that we made the night before. Quite the treatment, no?


L to R: Rosi (friend), me, Paula (sister), Charo (mom), Rebeca


(rotate head counter-clockwise for full effect) Brother Bernabes, Dog León, and our house

After a relatively relaxing and chatty breakfast, I leave for MCC (CCM we say) for language study.
Where I catch the micro from my house (left). The man on the right is stamping the micro driver´s time card--this happens at two different stops on my way to CCM.

Esther, our teacher.

The two hours I have each day with Esther pass rapidly, and before I know it, I´m back on a micro to return home for lunch. Here, almost everyone eats at home and takes a nap before returning to work around 2:00. Its great.
Lunch is a big deal around here, typically including both ¨sopa¨(soup) and ¨segundo¨(meat). I lucked out and got a host family who loves veggies, so we eat a lot of them, too.

Locro, a famous sopa in Santa Cruz. Mmmm.

After lunch, I hop on the micro for yet another 25 minute ride back CCM. The afternoon is filled with catching up with the other SALTers and getting aquainted with the city with our tutors.


My tutor Patricia

Just last week, my tutor helped me know what micros to take to find the church/music school where I will be teaching lessons, playing in a youth orchestra, and observing ¨how things work¨in the SICOR music program here in Santa Cruz. Beginning next week, I will create a schedule to work at the program almost daily.

So, with rehearsals running until 8:30 p.m., my day concludes well after dark and I return home to mi casa and mi familia tired but excited to be here. Yep, I´m still in the honeymoon stage, and I love it.
This weekend I will travel to Santiago de Chiquitos with the other SALTers. Finally, I will see where I will be working. More stories to come...

How often do Mennos make it into grafitti?

4 comments:

Les Helmuth said...

A delightfully informant post. Thanks for the pix and a few stories. Love, Dad

Sharon C. Landis said...

Loved your post, Aubrey. Sounds like you are adjusting well. Thanks for including a few Spanish words ... a painless way for me to learn a bit of the language. :)
Love,
Aunt Sharon

abax said...

what does "fuera collas y menonitas" mean? you're building my enthusiasm about my upcoming Swahili immersion experience starting in January...

Mary Ruth said...

ah. aubrey. looks beautiful and fitting -
think of you often.