Thursday, September 16, 2010

Poems and Latrines

Dobby: A Belizean House-Elf

By: Kevina Casaletto


Choosing the name for our dog,

that wasn’t even ours, was easy.

She was called Dobby,

for like the broken, beaten house-elf...

she loyally loved.


Defending our house with her blood and teeth.

We’d ignore her at the table,

where she laid beneath.


Her belly swelled,

she stole food...we knew.


One day she came,

the belly and beauty gone, our clue.

Replaced with ribs and teets,

A new...desperate look in those eyes once so sweet.


We now cooked for three.

We bathed she,

Got a mange injection from the Farm Feed.


I remember we said, “stay alive,

survive... and we will take you to the states,

to thrive.”

The thought hung over her like a bribe.


A little more than a year and she’d be free,

or a slave, depending on how you see.

Beatings, stones, and long days at the farm,

all of these she endured without apparent harm.


Would she leave a land of wild, free, roaming...

of tamale dinners, fresh water from rapids foaming?

Embrace a plane ride, injections, and not least...

the leash?


Wait little elf,

stay alive,

survive,


We will see.


We will see.

Which life was meant to be.




We No Po!

By: Edward Robert Broaster

(a famous Belizean poet and novelist)


The life style of the West

has been presumed to be the best

Assuming we are not in a good position

they have the ideal and most suitable condition


The Maya were told they are poor

Due to thatch roofs and mud floors

“Me have me corn and everything me need

Look! For next year crop, at all me seeds”


Neither bills nor tax we have to pay

a pleasant life we live I say

How dare you say my people po

Not a soul or bank we ever owe


As the sun rises early over the Earth

So too we in the morn to work the dirt

Without machines we work the land

Most precious asset we health and we hands



Some final thoughts by Greg:

Benefits of a Latrine

By: Greg Casaletto


When I first came to this country I had never used an outhouse or as they call them here latrines. Actually I held off using one of them until we visited the healthy communities training site of Armenia village to attend a training session. I only peed. I was fortunate enough to have a flush toilet at both my host families houses and saved my defecation for them. The next time I used one was approximately two months later when I took a ride out to Jalacte. Again, only pee. Then we moved into a thatch house with a latrine, but still I refused to use it because just 100 yards away there was the schools flush toilets awaiting my bowel movements.


One rainy day when I was either to lazy to take the walk or up for a personal challenge I decided that I would use the latrine. I realized that I was scaring myself for no reason. Here I was just inches away from nature, pineapple plants, coconut palms, and mango and orange trees. The breeze was refreshing and the plastic toilet seat I bought was a familiar comfort. I have now grown to appreciate my time in a latrine and have reassessed my feelings on them. I wanted to give a short thesis on how I feel about this subject. Let me begin with my quarrels with bathrooms.


I really don’t like bathrooms, in fact I am downright grossed out by them. I never really thought about it but it is gross that we keep the place where we defecate so close to where we sleep. And don’t even get me started on when directors decide to put a fight seen in a movie that ends up in a public bathroom, things like that just send chills through my whole body. Being a man I fully take advantage of the “world is my urinal” way of thinking, accentuated but not limited to when the sun goes down.


Indoor bathrooms, unless maintained and cleaned daily, take on a mildewy, moldy, scummy feel. I really only feel comfortable in a bathroom when I taste the bleach fumes that are lingering in a freshly sanitized bathroom. For some reason I don't feel this way about latrines.


Latrines tend to have rather large gaps between the walls and roof and sometimes, as in the case of mine, between the walls and floor. This removes the mildew and mold smell, even though it may still grow there.


As far as my main complaint about latrines, the smell. It really isn't that bad and it pretty much disappears when you sit down. If your thinking to yourself "how is that a benefit?" Well Imagine you are a cute little female PCV who is visiting an even cuter male PCV in Toledo. On your way to visit him you decide to eat one of those burritos in Dangriga. You know the ones, they're really good but they all have an inevitable outcome which will bring you to the latrine later that day. After you make your trip to the already smelly latrine, you can rest assured that said "cute male PCV" will not walk into the latrine and say to himself, "Gross! She stunk up the latrine."


Have you ever gone to someone's house and used there bathroom and clogged the toilet? Of course you have, you wouldn't be human if you didn't. I can guarantee that you will never say "Miss Choco, do you have a plunger? I somehow managed to clog your latrine."


I can hear all of you saying, "Greg, why aren't you talking about those midnight hikes in the rain? The bug bites on your genetalia? The terrifying splashback during the rainy season when your latrine is an extra 2 feet of liquid in it?"


Yea those suck, but why do you have to be so negative? Just remember next time your sitting on your cement throne listening to the dog sniffing around outside and watching the scorpion crawl past your dropped trousers that this latrine is overall better than those flush toilets that the people in town have, no matter what they say.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

"Kevina is it true what the Mayas said about 2012?"

Random Tid Bits of Life
Our world map is nearly complete! The kids wanted to label the countries, so they each got a section and had to use the map to find the countries then label...very educational for me too!
The $400 wedding cake, the most expensive wedding cake seen in Silver Creek. This is right after the ceremony where everyone waits to congratulate the couple and give their gift. You then go outside and sit on a bench and someone will bring you food and a drink. You leave after that, or stay sitting if you want a beer/ rum.
The 10 yard walk from the church to her in-laws house.
Brides parents from the neighboring village of San Miguel.

Repairing the freshly cleaned mosquito net before my Father-in-Law comes.
For computer classes!
I am a huge dork/ love shop paper.
The inside of the library before.
Outside world map...before.
Front entrance before.
We had help painting from many peace corps volunteers, Greg's Dad, Luis (the teacher who lives in the village), Christina (the future librarian) and 4 high school students. It was kind of surreal listening to Billy Joel while painting with high schoolers in the middle of a jungle.
Front AFTER!
School side AFTER!

Inside facing side door. Future children's section.
Facing main door, by the window will be Christina's librarian desk/area!
The view from Christina's desk...the adult section.
View from front door.
My summer workshop...Reading and Writing Launch!
Here teachers are watching videos of themselves doing read alouds last year...we discussed what we liked from each and teachers jotted down ideas to use with their own read alouds.
Looking through books and choosing 'I remember' books for the first two week's read alouds.
We then planned a mini lesson for reading, 'good readers ask questions' and a writing mini lesson on good writers get ideas from what they know, 'I remember' prompt
A review from my workshop... I think this was my best one so far if I do say so myself...and the longest (3 hours)
My injury from the 2 ft hole in our bridge. This happened the same day as a wedding and Christening party... everyone was talking about it and after I went home Greg said there was much debating about my fall and what should be done about the bridge. Greg said they were upset that I got hurt. The chairman came over while I was cleaning it and demanded, "let me see your leg." He gasped and said he was sorry that happened and two days latter we had ourselves a brand new bridge!
Greg with Steve/ Seaford...Our favorite baby!
Lynette and I working on posters for our village football marathon.
Our first baptist wedding. The girl only spoke Spanish and the groom ketchi (he knows some Spanish) the translations of the ceremony were quite funny.
The rainstorm INSIDE our house.
Lets talk about rain:
Every evening x-men like clouds (huge flickering masses of dark billowy clouds) roll in from the East to descend upon and scare the daylights out of the villagers. Thunder is not like in the states. There is none of this 1-Mississippi, 2 Mississippi nonsense...you can't even say 'one' before the crack rips the air. The lightning and thunder are continuous and the thunder sounds like it is ripping space/time itself. I have literally JUMPED straight up in bed TWICE and onto Greg from fear. Was I ever scared of thunder back in the states you ask? No, but then again I had more than a net and leaves over my head. Villagers often ask if we have thunder in the states. I try to explain that yes, but we don't hear it as well because all our houses are sealed up, impossible image to portray to my friends here. So I don't know if it's the sound rebounding back from the Maya mountains, or that the storms are worse, or if we're just closer to the heavens but storms in Belize are unlike anything I've experienced anywhere else...here's to another night 'restful' sleep where we will undoubtedly wake up to a beautiful dawn with chicks chirping like it was all a bad dream.
Me and the women making Poch (ground boiled corn packed onto a waha leaf, folded up and boiled.
Frying pig skin...chi chiron what we all eat the day before the wedding/party when we help bake. (man's work)
Man's work.
Right downstream from where I wash...yummy.
Shaving the pig with hot water and knives...it has already been slaughtered.

So there are some glimses into our lives...Greg is playing a football marathon on Friday with the Silver Creek team so look forward to that! Final story:
Mr. Choc, who owns the shop across from the world map, said he really likes to see how we painted the world map, he'd never seen a world map before. He also said, "Mr. Greg I have a lee piece of land you could have and build a thatch and a garden on. That way you could stay as long as you and kevina want."

Seriously considering it.