So the reason I didn’t write yesterday is because I was in the hospital again – but this time for a really good reason. J Dave’s brother Tim and his wife Paola had their baby! Ana Leah DeYoung. She is beautiful and BIG – 9 pounds and not sure how many ounces because the Dominicans just say “Nueve pica” – like 9 something. But she is very pretty with blue eyes – everyone says she looks more like Tim but I think it will take a while to decide. So yesterday we talked one of the other volunteers who works in the office to let us borrow the “Chana” – this smushed looking truck thing that is the biggest piece you could ever imagine – to go down to the capitol to meet our new niece. The windows and the air conditioning are both broken, so I arrived to the hospital with a new sunburn and absolutely drenched as if I had jumped out of swimming pool, and the car stalled out like every 5-10 minutes, the doors even swung open as we were driving on the highway, and we couldn’t make it up even the tiniest hills, but we still arrived as excited as ever. The hospital room had quite a crowd of visitors and everyone was super stoked (see pictures of the beautiful baby girl below) – Dominicans get quite loud and emotional in times like this – especially Paola’s mom. After visiting with the baby, Dave wanted to buy some new sandals and eat out at Papa John’s so we had Tim draw us a map of Santo Domingo that was so not to scale, and so we ended up super lost on a wild goose chase for two hours lost in the crazy chana car. The capitol has sooooo much traffic and all the lights are set on 90 second timers so it can take hours to even cross town, so we decided to finally navigate on foot, which was more fun to explore the city. The pizza was like 3x what you’d paid in the states and we never found any sandals but it ended up being a fun date night… a long one since we got back home to the orphanage at almost midnight.
Okay so I guess now I’ll rewind back to last week and just walk through the highlights in chronological order day by day…
Monday we started a new week in our zoo animal unit and another week with Italian volunteer Valeria helping in my class and Santa Ana house. She taught us new dances everyday, and she was so goofy and fun. It’s crazy how some people have such a presence and can make your life a million times better just by being there. In our animal unit, we read about and acted out life cycles, cut and pasted animals into their habitats, sang and acted out animal songs, “painted” animal crackers with pineapple marmalade (and food coloring) with paintbrushes, made twirly snakes to match the story “Verdi”, created a toilet paper tube zoo, read lots of animal stories, played matching games with animals to their babies, and so much more I can’t come to think of at the moment, and Friday we culminated it all with a trip to the zoo.
Tuesday I had just come in to start teaching for the afternoon when I heard screaming (screaming is not unusual in the school, but this was of an unusual type) in the hall. I came out to find little Dion, one of the pre-school kids from the batey had fainted in class and the teacher was carrying him unconscious to the kitchen. The custodian kept rubbing alcohol all over his face but couldn’t wake him up. It was so scary. I saw some Canadian teenagers hanging out on the playground so ran out to tell them to go find a doctor to send to the school. I saw a few minutes later they were still hanging on the playground equipment so I became a little bit less friendly and yelled at them to run and send a doctor in a car. It was a super hot day and the clinic is far so I was really proud of them for running all the way there. Finally they got him to open his eyes but he still laid limp and his eyes just rolled around in his head. His dad, who works on the school grounds landscaping, came to take him home but I insisted on the clinic instead and spent the afternoon in the clinic with him translating for his dad and the doctors. Turns out he was just super dehydrated because the batey had no water for 2 days and the only thing he had eaten was a couple of cookies that day. The batey is just right around the corner, so from there the Canadians said they would make sure that lots of water would be sent over. Water – such a life staple that we just so take for granted…. everyday here I learn more and more what we actually can and can’t live without. Thankfully Dion was back in school 2 days later - shining his bright white smile and belting out the national athem in “formation line” again.
Tuesday night was Nikki and Collin’s goodbye parties which we did as a pizza party (Dave was LOVING it). Collin returning to Cali after 2 months of driving trucks everyday to Haiti, and Nikki onto her next adventure in the Galapagos Islands after a year as phys. therapist here. Nikki was the first friend I made here in August, so I was sad to see her go, but I am getting more and more used to the revolving door to our house and the weekly goodbye parties. We had pizza night with the volunteers with lots of crazy stories. I feel like such a homebody after listening to stories from nearly every roommate about backpacking across multiple continents, conversing in 4-5 languages…. Like Guesa, new dentist / professional kiteboarder from Switzerland who is planning to break 2 Guinness world records this fall when he kiteboards from Russia to Alaska – he already has $56,000 invested from sponsors….. or Jacob, the Texan lawyer who studied culinary arts in France and now volunteers in the special needs house, and who has already started his plans to open a franchise of coffee house daycares when he goes back to the states in May. There are some really outrageous people coming through our front door everyday.
Wednesday was an early morning as I snuck into the school at sunrise to start decorating the room for Maria’s birthday (my lovely teaching assistant who’s more like a sister). I covered the room in streamers, posters, cards, presents, and made a purple cake with a big heart. She was turning 29 and said with tears in her eyes that it was the first time anyone had ever celebrated her birthday and said it was the best birthday she ever had. It was definitely worth getting up early for.
Thursday highlight was pasta night with Valeria. She came over to the Santa Ana house with me that night and cooked up amaaaazing Italian pasta. It was fun and so delicious. And then I accompanied the Canadians all night translating for them as they brought new stuff animals to all the kids in their beds, riling them up for all the tias. It was a late night, but worth it for all the hugs and smiles.
Friday was our zoo trip, which was another 2 hours lost in Santo Domingo with our driver Mario, but a very fun trip. It was a beautiful zoo and much bigger than I expected (not like Detroit but awesome for the DR) and the kids loved taking the train all around to see the animals. Friday afternoon the Canadians planned the Olympic games for the orphanage which ended in a huge crazy water fight, and Moises has not stopped talking and laughing for 4 days now about how he “got my husband Davey so wet”. Friday night we had movie night in the park and I sat and cuddled up among the 200 kids and watched Scooby Doo on the big screen.
Saturday was up bright and early again for “Dominican Experience” – a group that hosts foreigners on service learning trips – NPH is one stop among many. I will be helping take this over when Mark, other roomy, isn’t here so I’m learning how to coordinate, give little speeches, try to encourage sponsorship, etc. Seems like it’s pretty up my alley other than more work on Saturdays. After that we loaded up in the bus, and went with the Canadians to these underground caves called “Cuevas Maravillosas” – they were amazing and full of these Taino Indian drawings that were supposedly 900 years old but to me they looked like Pokemon and cartoon characters that one of my students could have drawn. After that we went with them to stay at a hotel for a night, on them, which was soooo nice (not the nicest hotel but so great to get away off the “terreno” for a night and bond just the two of us – plus 40 Canadians :) Met lots of new people, lots of new stories…. Including Anita, who had recently had cancer and had her entire tongue and jaw cut out, and spent the week in a mask but still pretty remarkable that despite the obstacles, she’s here on a mission trip in the DR.
And Sunday they paid for 40 of the kids from the orphanage to come to the hotel to swim in the pool and have lunch – it was packed and a recipe for disaster – it didn’t take long before little Antonio had fallen and busted his head open and we were speeding to the hospital. The only available vehicle was the “Jungle Safari” bus – the size of a semi with outdoor seating and broken brakes, so it was a little nerve wracking but Dave got us there safely. It took 4 of us to hold 4 year old Antonio down on the bed while they gave multiple injections and put in seven stitches, then stuck a tetanus shot in his butt (after we promised it was all over). Another crazy day…. then hurried home to bake a cake in time for Valeria’s goodbye party at Santa Ana.
Another week full circle, still lots of details left out but feels like I am writing just waaay too much again. Let me know what you want to hear if you are reading – what’s interesting, what’s boring, what’s just too depressing or offensive. I don’t really know anymore. Pray this week for all the kids here who are sick – HIV, AIDS, cancer, heart conditions, etc. We had another very near death experience with one of the kids this weekend and it’s just so scary sometimes.
Hope all is well back home…. Here is SOOOOOO hot again. Dave’s mom comes Sunday so that is exciting. We got a new guitar for the volunteer house so the roommates are singing along to Ben Harper and the likes. Take care and keep in touch. J
Pics below are baby Anna Leah, zoo trip, kids painting animal crackers, baptism pictures, Papa Johns, views from our hotel, and Dave pretending to pee on the Chana car.
Love, peace, and prayers,
Kristin
| My new neice Ana Leah! |