Saturday, October 10, 2015

Here's to....

I have been at site for two weeks, and after training, I am officially a Peace Corps Volunteer. I have been through a lot and a little in two weeks, two weeks that feels like two months. I decided I didn't want to write a big block piece that took up a lot of time for me to piece together in a logical way, so I wrote a sort of ode to my first two weeks here in my lovely town. It is super stream of consciousness just floating bits and pieces that my memory kicked up while writing. It's beautiful and ugly, good and not so good, but it's real and it's mine and I'm in a good place. Thanks for following me, it feels warm and fuzzy to send snippets of my life, snippets of something bizarre and crazy, but also not at all--this is just one reality of many, it just happens to be put through my brain and my lens. So enjoy

Here’s to….

Here’s to the jingle jangle of music drifting from the Wat to my house, flailing like a fish to remind us we’re in the thick of a holiday
Here’s to some of my students who live there, who tell me in great English how their families couldn’t afford to house them anymore
Here’s to when I visited for said holiday and did most things mostly okay, but many things majorly wrong
Here’s to the plethora of comments about how I cross and fold my legs, always getting more attention than what they’re attached to (me)
Here’s to the monks that snickered slightly when I showed up to a ceremony, sitting almost in the front row, taking up easily three spots with not only my largeness but also my awkwardness
Here’s to the perfumed water I was drenched in, hoping everyday its blessings kick in
Here’s to the confusion and acceptance that greets me everyday
Here’s to the girl who welcomed me to her family’s restaurant with a selfie
Here’s to the guy at another restaurant who smiles at me and we do a sort of like head-nod, thumbs up, unspoken charade to express, “you know, not bad!” as if we’re old strangers saying hi to each other from across a Village Inn
Here’s to him also speaking plenty of English, but it’s intimidating speaking a foreign language!
Here’s to my host family saying his food is unhygienic
Here’s to the market full of a number of things I can’t fathom, that hide in the depths of the piles of the things and things and things
Here’s to the dust that kicks up easily from the national highway that cuts through town
Here’s to that road I biked 10km on to the big city and back
Here’s to the terror I feel when crossing it that never dissipates
Here’s to my bike that makes life easier
Here’s to my high school and the rice paddies and cows that take utility to a new level
Here’s to the teachers I’ve met that have been nothing but nice
Here’s to the two Peace Corps murals already painted on two walls, two maps
Here’s to the pregnant woman who lives and has a shop on the corner with her husband, I adore them
Here’s to the other family across the street who always has a shop, I adore them too
Here’s to the grandmother up the street who greeted me my first day with perfect English, “where are you from?” and how she teaches me khmer while I refresh her memory with English, and how we talk about our lives and how when she was 20 her French teacher at the university paid her way to France and how he asked her parents to get married and they said no, and how I wonder where she would be now, what she would be doing
Here’s to my favorite wifi café
Here’s to the families that run both the café and the barbershop next door
Here’s to them being genuine people who take care of me and talk to me and teach me and are genuinely happy to see me
Here’s to the people asking me if I drink beer
Here’s to my excuse, “I can’t I take medicine, my stomach will hurt!”
Here’s to rice
Here’s to keeping in touch
Here’s to forgetting what I’m doing
Here’s to diarrhea
Here’s to the days that drip away, similarly to diarrhea, when you’re suffering from, well, diarrhea
Here’s to a community effort to help you get better and figure out what caused it
Here’s to never knowing what or why, but it doesn’t matter
Here’s to being around a bunch of people who have their own lives
Here’s to sitting around them not understanding a word, and them not really talking to you
Here’s to when they do talk and you don’t understand
Here’s to when you do understand
Here’s to the patience and impatience
Here’s to speaking something detailed and great, eliciting a genuine awe
Here’s to speaking the same thing the next day, but it comes out like sand, clumsy and ugly
Here’s to another moment of fluidity that keeps you motivated
Here’s to learning a beautiful language that you never ever ever ever thought you would
Here’s to Cambodia
Here’s to my house where I live
Here’s to the mattress my family showed off to me
Here’s to me totally digging that
Here’s to my little brothers, twins, 16
Here’s to my little sister, cutie, 5
Here’s to my older brother-father, 30
Here’s to my older sister-mother, 34
Here’s to us for the next two years
Here’s to us building something we’re all experimenting with

Here’s to me, 24, volunteer, and those moments of SOMETHING you have when you’re half-naked, surrounded by palm trees, sweating, hanging up clothes you hand-washed to dry, looking up, looking down, realizing you’re in the thick of things, darling, and no one can take it away.