Friday, December 27, 2013

XMAS!

I survived my first Christmas away from home!  After finding out that Lee, Luca, and Gisela would all be out of town for the day of, I was firmly prepared to have an absolutely lonely and depressing holiday spent crying and planning my return the US.  On December 23rd, when I was juggling all the invitations of exactly no one, I subtly asked my counterpart what she was doing for Christmas.  She avoided my gaze and mumbled something about how busy she would be, but what was I doing?  Hadn’t people invited me over?  I told her curtly that no, no one had.  She laughed awkwardly and that was that.
Anyway, fortunately, after that point the invitations started rolling in.  By the end of the day I was committed to spending Christmas with Leonard and Carine, Geoffrey and Barbara (Anglophone neighbors who are very friendly and I’ve been getting to know.  Geoffrey weirdly insists on calling me “Tonia” as a special nickname.), Alima’s family, and John (Another Anglophone friend from the neighborhood).  So things were starting to look up.  Then on Christmas Eve as I was working on my secret santa gift (details to follow after the exchange because I am pretty proud of how it turned out), my doorbell rang.  It was Leonard and Carine’s son telling me that I was expected for a Christmas Eve dinner at the Landlord’s house.  I went over with Ricky, Leonard, and Carine, and we joined the landlord and his family for a feast!  I was reminded of the Christmas Eve party my family went to every year growing up, and this was a nice substitute.
When we sat down, Richard (the landlord) asked us what we would like to drink.  “We have whiskey, wine, and cognac.  But we’re drinking wine with dinner and cognac after, so you’d better start with whiskey,” I was instructed.  For anyone wondering the role of alcohol in Cameroon, there is a lot of it.  We drank well and we ate well.  The menu was braised fish, baton de manioc, fried plantains, potatoes, and cabbage.  We ate with our hands and everything was wonderful and I felt happy to be fêting with nice people.  It actually felt like Christmas Eve, with the synthetic light-up sapin de noel in the corner of the room.  Conversation drifted between French and English for the whole night as we discussed music and love and everything in between.
My landlord is a cool guy.  He’s 75 years old (but like all Cameroonians, looks way younger – not a day over 60) and shared the story of how he met one of the first Peace Corps volunteers EVER.  He was studying in Senegal in 1962 and met PCVs back then.  I guess he has had connections with the Peace Corps ever since.  He’s also generally really nice and chill about the fact that I paid rent more than halfway through the month.  “Don’t worry!  We operate on trust!”  He assured me.  Anyway, it was a lovely Christmas Eve and the first time it felt like the holiday season.
The next morning I woke up and was too consumed in working on my sercret santa present to remember to do Christmas.  After I finally tore myself away from it, I ate scrambled eggs and hot chocolate and spice cake, and opened the gifts that my family sent six weeks ago.  I thought opening presents alone would be sad, but it was actually great – I got to dwell over the pages of my new African scat guide without regard to anyone else’s schedule or desires.  My gifts were wonderful and all perfect and relevant (a jar of chocolate almond butter just as my Nutella reserves dwindled!  A learn to crotchet book to occupy my free time!  A lovingly homemade calendar of the cats!  More!).  Around 1 I went over to Leonard and Carine’s for Christmas dinner of rice and stew and fried chicken and cous cous and legumes.  We spent the day eating and drinking and playing scrabble and fêting.  The day turned out to be way less depressing than anticipated and it was actually lovely.  I stopped by Geoffrey and Barbara’s and Alima’s for a bit and they fed me more until I burst.  Anyway.  It was a nice Christmas, and although I was sad not to be with my family, I got to talk to them on the phone.
Last week water was out for five days.  I was freaking out and totally unequipped to deal with life sans eau.  I bought another water jug and made friends with a local moto guy who filled them for me.  Suddenly luxuries like showering or flushing the toilet were out of my reach and the dishes piled up as I used my only remaining drops to water my thirsty herb garden.  Basically life is super hard.  Then water went out again this week and was out for Christmas!  Oh to live in a developing country!
Our Westies Girls Club had another of our weekly sleepovers last week at Lara’s.  It was a ton of fun – wine, eggplant parmesan, girl time, American time, Maureen in from Adamawa, Bailey’s hot chocolate with candy canes.  Lara’s house is amazing and she’s stupidly bien integrée, greeting an infinite stream of visitors to her house.  I also finally got to explore Bafoussam a little and learn the ropes of where to get food, where to go shopping, etc.  It is a nice place but Bafang really has everything I need.
I agreed to teach English starting after winter break.  My counterpart said I can use the class time to also teach business/enterprise or life skills or whatever I want.  Also I went to a cyber café in Bafang and was impressed by how decent and inexpensive the internet was.
Cultural notes of Cameroon:
-          People pee everywhere.  All the time.  A guy was walking me home from a late event and stopped on the road, mid-conversation, and whipped it out as I tried not to break eye contact.  The world is our latrine.
-          Even though I live in a Francophone region, I am picking up some Anglophone Cameroonian English quirks.  If someone says something surprising, instead of saying “really?” they will say, “true?”  And no one ever says “hello.”  It’s always “good morning” or “good afternoon” or “good evening”.  Some of my Anglophones are also trying to teach me a little Pidgin, telling me to say “I no go finish som” when I’m not going to finish my beer.
-          Produce here is not like produce in the US.  Everything is smaller and scrappier and dirtier than you would ever see it in America.  Our oranges aren’t orange.  Our apples are slightly bigger than golf balls.
-          It’s rude to cross your legs here, which is horrible because it’s an impossible habit to break.  It implies that you think you’re the most important person in the room, so to do so around an official or authority figure would be really disrespectful.  I am trying so, so hard to break the habit but when I’m alone in my house I indulge in long, private, sessions of leg crossing.
-          Cameroonians will state obvious facts by forms of making conversation.  “You are returning home.” “You are reading.”  Yes, yes I am.
-          Everyone wants to buy my moto helmet.  I have no idea why it’s such a hot commodity, especially since very few moto drivers actually wear one of their own.  A guy in the car with me yesterday harped on the issue for hours as he pleaded with me, a little too aggressively.  I would have bopped him on the head with it, but then we would have continued to be pressed against each other in the car for another half hour on our way to Bafoussam.
-          People will call me “Mama” as a sign of respect.  Sometimes it’s weird when it’s women who I also call Mama.  Can we be each other’s Mamas?  Also sometimes old-ass men (including my 75-year-old land lord) call me Mama and I want to say, dude, you could be my grandfather.


Now I’m headed to Foumban for the West volunteer Christmas celebration, and after that, onto Bamenda for New Years!

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Haves and Have Nots


I put together a list of things that are and aren’t available in Bafang.  It’s not exactly comprehensive and there are some gray-area items (like pringles, which are found in one store but kind of too expensive to be considered available).  Anyway, it was just for fun in case you’re curious!

 

(starred items are either kind of rare or expensive)

 

AVAILABLE:

-          Bananas

-          Pineapple

-          Papaya

-          Apples*

-          Oranges

-          Lemons

-          Limes

-          Watermelon

-          Black fruit (more like an olive than a fruit)

-          Coconut

-          Corn

-          Pringles*

-          Green beans

-          Avocados

-          Green bell peppers

-          Hot peppers (pimante/pepe)

-          Onions

-          Garlic

-          Ginger

-          Okra

-          Tomato

-          Squash

-          Lettuce

-          Cabbage

-          Leaves (huckleberry, bitter leaves)

-          Carrots

-          Eggplant*

-          Plantains

-          Potatoes

-          Macabo

-          Cous cous de mais

-          Mangos, apparently, seasonally

-          Inyams

-          Cassava

-          Rice

-          Bread, baked goods

-          Spaghetti/pasta

-          Fish

-          (Live) chicken

-          Beef

-          Pork

-          Beans (kidney beans are everywhere, black and white beans available)

-          Peanuts

-          Popcorn

-          Corn flakes

-          “chocolate”

-          Soft serve ice cream (with amoebas included!)

-          Yogurt

-          Orange or strawberry jelly

-          Wine

-          Some liquor: Whiskey, vodka, gin.  Mostly unknown brands plus a few familiar expensive ones.

-          Many unfamiliar cookies

-          Bleach, liquid dish soap, bar soap, powder detergent

-          Toilet paper

-          Ovaltine and related

-          Pads

-          Toothbrushes and paste

-          Sunscreen and bug spray

-          Pens, pencils, notebooks, tape, rulers, etc

-          Palm oil

-          Olive oil*

-          Margarine

-          Real butter*

-          Fresh basil

-          Some spices: Pepper, cloves, paprika, cinnamon, thyme, I think weirdly herbes de provence?

 

NOT AVAILABLE:

-          Pears

-          Grapes (Although I saw them in Bafoussam, apparently for the price of 50 CFA/ten cents per grape!)

-          Dried fruit

-          Any nuts except peanuts

-          Berries of any kind

-          Peaches

-          Salad greens other than one kind of lettuce

-          Spinach

-          Broccoli

-          Asparagus

-          Mushrooms L L

-          Shrimp L L L

-          Milk other than powdered milk, cream

-          Cheese other than the laughing cow (*although one store in my town has swiss, brie, and camembert for lots of CFA)

-          Brown rice/quinoa/kale/whatever you hippies eat

-          Actual cous cous

-          Actual chocolate

-          Cereal other than corn flakes

-          Ziplock bags

-          Paper towels

-          Already-jarred peanut butter

-          Chips or crackers or cheese its, etc

-          Tequila L or margarita mix L L or cocktails anywhere at all

-          Familiar cookies or candy (one store sells snickers and mars bars though!)

-          Face wash

-          Body wash

-          Contact lens stuff

-          Tampons

-          Deodorant

-          Frozen food of any kind lol

 

Of course Bafoussam has slightly more available than Bafang (like oatmeal and cucumbers) and Yaounde has more available still (burgers and pizza and margaritas!). 

Monday, December 23, 2013

Cue My Blog's Dream Sequence

The other night I dreamt that I took a hot air balloon to another planet.  It was so far that it wasn't even in our solar system and I don't think I was ever planning to return.  During the balloon ride, I couldn't remember the name of the planet I was going to.  I kept thinking it was called Cameroon and then remembering no, I've already gone there.

I guess my brain is feeling pretty far from home right about now.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

I'll Be Home for Christmas...

I am kind of rushed as I’m writing this, so here’s a bit of what I’ve done for the past week and a half:

-          Last Friday I went to Bafoussam and had a sleepover at Danielle’s house with the other girls in the West from my stage.  It was great fun and we ate cheese and talked about all kinds of good stuff.  The next day we went to Dschang to go swimming for Erich’s birthday, but then the plan changed from swimming to paddle boats, but then the plan changed from paddle boats to sitting around and chatting all day.  Dschang seems like a really cool city, with cute cafés (which I miss so much about America) and a nice market and, I mean, come on, paddle boats!  We ended up crashing the night like hobos in a recently departed PCV’s empty house in Dschang, which was sketchy and mildly thrilling.  Then I made my way back navigating the Cameroonian public and private transportation systems. [Which brings me to my first cultural note of the entry: Hitchhiking.  It’s super common here and generally seen as the better method of travel, since buses will wait around, possibly for hours, until they fill up, and even after then they might stop along the road to pick up more passengers.  Private cars charge the same as the buses but take less time and are even considered safer by some.]
-          The next day, Leonard invited me to come to a meeting of teachers from his area in the North West.  It was a lot like the other meeting I went to, also with cous cous de mais and legumes served, but without the dancing and with a lot more financial dealings.  The group’s main function, I guess, is as an “njangi” – village savings and loans group.  People put money in each time they meet and then if someone has a project or whatever they can apply to withdraw a loan from the group.
-          Monday I went into my host organization, the Center for the Promotion of Women and Family (CPF).  I can’t remember how much I’ve said about it already, but it’s basically like if they had vocational school that was all home ec class.  There are three classes of girls, maybe about 50 in total, and they sew and cook and learn how to make tofu and cocoa butter.  On this day when I went in, my counterpart told me she hoped I could help the girls with English and yes, right now.  So that was the time I taught an impromptu English class to a group of Cameroonian girls.  I am kind of hoping that I don’t end up teaching English long-term, but we’ll see.  At least I hope that I get some advanced notice next time.  In the afternoon, I helped grade their final exams in cooking, which is to say, I was basically the guest judge on Iron Chef CPF.  I sat there with two of the women who work there as the girls served us meal after meal and we graded them on presentation, explanation, and taste.  It was, all in all, a good day’s work.
-          The next day was a big one.  I saw the new building where the CPF will be moving, and then my counterpart invited me over to her house to meet the chief.  We sat on the couch together watching TV and eating crepes and drinking Fanta and it was very surreal because he is the king of Bafang.  He’s also SUPER nice and speaks some English and was much more relaxed than I expected.  I’ve heard a ton about how you can’t greet the chief, you must just clap twice, and you can NEVER extend your hand for a handshake first.  So I was caught a little off guard when he approached me, smiling, hand extended, before I could even think to clap.  But he was super chill about it and basically we’re buddies now.  Then I went home and dug up those old tires full of dirt and planted some basil, cilantro, and rosemary seeds!  I am not optimistic about their chances of success but I’m happy to get my rubber tire urb garden up and running. 
-          I had been feeling like I’d been having a hard time meeting my neighbors, and that everyone said people would just come over to my house and introduce themselves but no one actually did that.  So that afternoon I swung both sides of my gate wide open and hung out in my porch hammock, messing around on Lee’s guitar.  Well, it worked like a charm!  It was a huge turning point in my integration because finally people approached me and we had conversations and some of the neighborhood kids came into my yard and hung out.  Friendships are happening and integration is happening, slowly but surely.
-          Wednesday I finally got some furniture for my big empty room!  My bamboo living room set of a couch, two chairs, and a table (plus a set of shelves for my kitchen which have made me SO HAPPY), cost 12000 CFA altogether – that’s, $24 USD.  Not bad!  In order to get the stuff from the market to my house, I paid one of these kids who pushes carts from the market.  His name was Boris and he turned out to be an absolute sweetheart.  He told me that when he grows up he hopes to go to America and become an FBI agent.  When I asked him why not join the police here, he explained that it was too corrupt.  How old is this kid, ten??  He was awesome.  He also told me that Cameroon is a dangerous place to live because of all the sorcery.  :-/  Sometimes living here is weird.  And then that night I got a beer with Ricky, and John, and Yvette, and Martin and my neighbors Geoffrey and Barbara, (all of whom, minus my postmate Ricky, are Anglophones from the South West) and I felt like maybe I do actually have friends here after all, and it was cool!  And John started crafting a plan for a group of us to the South West together and I don’t know how serious he was but I was just excited to have that as a thought!  Cameroonian friends!!
-          Thursday there was this big event at the chefferie to welcome the new Prefect.  I met him just after I arrived when I was doing protocol, and he’s really nice and friendly.  The event had all the public schools in Bafang represented, plus groups of drummers and dancers and singers, and all kinds of delegates and important people.  I managed to score an invite because of my sweet connection with the chef’s wife, and I was treated like her special guest.  It was pretty cool!  I was sitting up on stage with the VIPs, and when the Prefect arrived, Anne Marie had me come with her to line up to greet him.  One by one, everyone in line said their name and affiliation and he shook their hand.  When it came to me, he smiled and remembered me and said, “Antonia!  Comment ça va?” Oh did I blush.  Then there were speeches.  When the chef ended his speech by wishing us all a merry Christmas and happy 2014 I got a little choked up realizing that it was the first time I’d heard anyone say that all season.  Next, there was a feast, and I miraculously again was allowed to attend.  So that was pretty cool.
-          Friday I got a care package of Christmas presents!!! :D  :D  I also finally went to meet the Sous-Prefect.  When I originally was going around meeting hot shots, he wasn’t in the office, so I didn’t get a chance to introduce myself.  Then when he was at the event the day before, I started to feel self-conscious that maybe he was seeing me there, feeling offended and insulted that I hadn’t gone to introduce myself to him.  So when I did go in on Friday, I was trying to read if he seemed at all hostile.  After my introduction, I said to him, “Well, I hope we can have a good working relationship for the next two years,” (or something along those lines).  I waited.  He opened his mouth.  “No.”  Oh god.  Oh god.  I have to switch communities, I’ve already blown it in this one.  “No, no problem.”  That’s when I remembered cultural note #2: Cameroonians often begin affirmative statements with “no”.  It’s very confusing.  For example: “Did you have a good weekend?” “No, no, it was fine, thank you.”  Whose idea this was, I have no idea.  But anyway.  Pretty sure the Sous-Prefect and I are on good terms after all.
-          Saturday I had a list of things to do which all when to hell when I slashed my thumb open first thing in the morning.  I was trying to get a can open and was pulling on a piece of it.  I thought to myself, “You know, this is really stupid.  I am almost certainly going to hurt myself.”  Approximately  three seconds later, the thing I was pulling broke loose and I felt it cut my finger.  Of course.  And then I looked at it and it was WAY DEEPER than I expected and I FREAKED OUT because I was alone and what do I do and there are no paper towels so what towel do I use to control the bleeding or do I just bleed all over my house and who will find my dead body in however long if ever??  Anyway it’s fine now but it definitely freaked me out and my thumb has been out of commission for a few days.  That being said, it’s surprisingly not painful and not inconvenient.  I thought thumbs were all important and stuff but it has been pretty easy to keep out of the way.
-          Later I hung out with Alima – she showed me a little around the neighborhood, and answered some of my French questions, and then I went over to her house and played cards with her and her siblings.  They kind of remind me of my host family – there’s a boy around Fit’s age, and Alima is very reminiscent of Ericka, and I am also friends with their mom (and friendly with their dad).  They’re also like my host family because they’re the ones who wake me up at 6 am with noise that sounds, every time, like it’s actually inside my house.
-          Today I went to Saint Mary’s, an Anglophone Catholic school where there has been a significant PCV presence, to introduce myself.  Everyone was really nice and the kiddos are absolutely adorable.  Ricky and I went into every classroom from kindergarten to sixth grade, and each time the kids all stood up and greeted us in unison.  As the kids got older the greetings got longer.  It started with the five year olds: They stood, did a little bow/curtsey, and chanted in slow, drawn out melody, “Good moooorning”.  The 7-8 year olds got a little more complex; as Ricky walked in first, then me, they all chanted “Good moooorning sir.  Good moooorning madam.”  Finally, when we got to fifth and sixth grade, our entrance was met by, still painfully slow and drawn out, “Good mooorning sir.  May God bless you this day.  Good moooorning madam.  May God bless you this day.”  These students are so freaking cute and seem so well behaved and nothing like those scoundrels I taught to in Bafia.  Anyway, I am not sure yet to what extent I’ll be working with Saint Mary’s, but it seems like a great school and I hope to find something to do there.

Other little notes:
-          Is it possible to overdose on bananas?  I ask because I ate 14 bananas in 5 days.  When you’re living alone and you get a gift of a dozen bananas, most people would regift or let them go bad, right?  NOT THIS GIRL.  I AM WAY TOO CHEAP FOR THAT SHIT.  Plus with my newly-discovered blender, I can have banana milk for breakfast and pretend I’m back in Taiwan!
-          In case you are wondering what my typical morning looks like, this is an accurate portrayal:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mx1MmY1Bb50
-          On white people in Africa: I can count on both hands the number of non-Peace Corps affiliated white people I’ve seen since getting here (other than that time at the missionary’s house, which was a Caucasian goldmine).  There was some stranger white guy in Bafang the other day.  I was on the street near the market and Boris, as he pushed my furniture, pointed and said, “look, your brother!” I figured it would be Ricky or Luca (since Lee is out of town) and was SHOCKED to find that it was some other white guy!  I didn’t get to talk to him but my point is just that this is very rare.  One time in Bafia, a big group of us were walking and we saw a group of white people across the street and we all freaked out.  I think people were getting a little competitive; I know I heard the phrase “but WE’RE the weird white people in town!!”.  They turned out to be French, visiting from Yaoundé.  And then there was this one other time there was a white person on the street and that’s about it.  I know some volunteers get offended when people on the street call to them “la blanche” but I, too, get excited and confused with every white person I see, so can I blame anyone else for doing the same?
-          On Christmas:  I had been feeling bummed about missing the Christmas season: carols playing in department stores, rosy red cheeks and noses, decorations and lights and Christmas parties and pumpkin spice whatever, and all that jazz.  The other day, though, it hit me for the first time that on Christmas morning itself, I’m going to have to wake up in my empty house in Cameroon and make my solitary breakfast and open my care package presents all alone and not be with my family for any of it.  So that sucks.
-          I’m getting a kitten!!   Alima’s family’s cat just gave birth this morning to three little orange furballs, one of whom has my name on it.  I knew I had dibsed one of her kittens but I had no idea it would be orange!  So excited to add my little ginger snap to the family! 
-          (In case you’re not already getting it, haha) So far the hardest part of my Peace Corps service has had nothing to do with being in Cameroon or working as a YD volunteer, but just living alone.  Cooking for myself and having an empty, echoey house, and most of all, not having anyone to talk to when random thoughts pop into my head or I need to bounce ideas off someone or I cut my finger and am bleeding out in the sink.  I mean, don’t get me wrong: I hate living with people.  I absolutely can’t stand roommates and all of the dishes they don’t clean and trash they don’t take out and belongings they put… places.  But that being said, I think this lonely environment may drive me insane.  And I mean that literally because I know it’s not healthy to talk to yourself this much.  So that cat will be much needed and much appreciated.  And I might get a dog too, just for good measure.  You know, so that we can have some diverse opinions represented in our conversations.
-          Internet has not been working with my key lately.  About 2/3 of the time, I plug it in and it claims a download speed of 0 and I can’t load a single page.  Half of the time it actually works, it’s excruciatingly slow, and the other half it’s alright.  Might get a different key with more reliable service, but I mean, I still have more internet than many PCVs so I’m not actually complaining or stressing.
-          I finally uploaded some photos to Facebook!  See here:
-          I’ve been here now for over three months, but I still all the time have these moments of wow, here I am, Africa, I can’t believe this is really happening.  I wonder if that’s normal or if I’m supposed to be used to it by now.  I wonder if I’ll ever get used to it.


Okay until next time!

Friday, December 6, 2013

An American Thanksgiving in Cameroon

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!  As you may know, Thanksgiving is an American holiday and not widely celebrated in Cameroon.  I say “not widely” because it is celebrated narrowly – among PCVs.  Oh it may be a little different, but who’s to say what defines a true Thanksgiving??  Is it coming together with family and eating Turkey in the cool, crisp days of autumn as the leaves turn orange and red?  OR, is it gathering with a bunch of people you met two months ago, eating bush meat (crocodile?  Lizard?  Unidentified but probably endangered mammal?  Hell, it’s meat!), and getting drunk during an eternal equatorial summer?  I think we can agree the thanksgiving is in the eye of the beholder on this one.
A short while before arriving at post I was informed that the West region Thanksgiving celebration would be held in none other than Bafang!  That is, at my house!  We do have a pretty ideal set-up for hosting something like this – three houses of PCVs right in a row, three kitchens available for cooking many different courses, water that comes out of faucets, electricity, and lots of spare mattresses, sleeping bags, yoga mats, and floor for crashing on.  The fact that my house has two bathrooms became acutely relevant to many of our lives, as you will hear.  But I’m getting ahead of myself.
Because our stage is brand spanking new at post and everyone is already dying to see familiar faces, we had perfect West-region attendance!  Plus, Anna and Liz, in the nearby Southwest and Littoral regions, came as well.  Some other folks (from Lee’s stage or just somewhere in the West) were there too.  Although our official celebration was scheduled for Saturday (because it’s not like they get school off for it here), guests trickled in starting Thursday night.  On Friday, five of my friends and stagemates were here, plus two of Lee’s, and we all went out together for a nice, jolly dinner at a newly-discovered gem of a restaurant.  It was really great seeing some of the old gang – gosh, it sure felt like more than one week since we were separated.  But seriously, it was a great time.  I ordered goat stew just to be adventurous (my first time tasting goat!) and because I so trusted the food to be delicious after eating one of my absolutely best Cameroonian meals so far at the same place the night before.  When my food arrived, it took me a minute to identify exactly what was on my plate next to the ribs before I realized that it was a hoof!  How fun!  Of course, there was no actual meat, so I left it untouched until eventually nibbling a little at some tender piece of hoof and a bit of ankle cartilage.  Yum, right?  Well, not really, but the sauce was good and I didn’t think there was any way I could possibly regret my actions.
Several hours later as I knelt on the bathroom floor and revisited that dinner, I knew how wrong I was.  Thus commenced the night of the worst food poisoning of my life.  Every hour I got up and returned to my porcelain palace where I made myself at home, as unspeakable things emerged from both ends of my body.  Even when I was able to go back to bed, my stomach was in a lot of pain and I couldn’t get much sleep until the next time I would need to rush to the bathroom.  Happy Thanksgiving, right?  So when my alarm went off an hour and a half after my final bout of heaving up whatever could possibly still be inside my body, I told my guests to go have fun at the market buying the ingredients for the day’s feast because there was no way I was going to make it.  Luckily, they were all really nice and understanding and rose to the occasion.  I got a little bit of actual sleep while they were gone, and then (like a normal Thanksgiving) the morning was spent with pots and pans being expertly coordinated to accommodate everyone’s dish at the right time, as five busy ladies chopped, sautéed, pureed, “baked” (in quotes because I don’t have an oven), and seasoned up a Thanksgiving meal, as I lay on the floor complaining.  They are angels.
More people came throughout the day so by the time we were ready to eat we had 15 (give or take a few) guests and perhaps as many courses to be enjoyed.  There was Turkey (yes, a real one!).  There was stuffing.  There were mashed potatoes, and cranberry sauce, and squash, and coleslaw, and green bean casserole, and sautéed green beans, and green bean salad (green beans are great!), and guacamole, and fried plantains, and mac and cheese, and REAL CHEESE brought by Liz (!!!!), and pumpkin pie, and pumpkin-inspired carrot pie, and key lime pie.  It was just about as traditional Thanksgiving as you can possibly get here in Cameroon – even more so, since I’m pretty sure the macaroni’s cheese, cranberry sauce, and pumpkin pie filling all were care package goodies from the US.  It was a little bittersweet because it was the first time for many of us having Thanksgiving away from our families.  Still, it was so nice having friendly, familiar faces around, and it may not have felt quite like home, but it sure felt like a break from Cameroon.  It was a wildly successful meal, preceded and followed by sangria and beer and laughter and festivities.
Luckily, by the time our meal came around, I was starting to be able to keep some food down, so I put myself together a tiny plate with mini-samples of each dish.  I didn’t come close to finishing that pathetic plate, but I did get to taste pretty much everything, and although I couldn’t drink or dance and I still complained a lot and, from time to time, lay down on the floor in a corner of the room, I still was very happy to be there and would overall consider it a great time.  Oh, and I wasn’t the only one having digestive issues.  We sent out for more toilet paper as several of us negotiated bathroom time based on urgency.  My toilets got a whole lot of love and attention that weekend!
Before everyone arrived, I thought to myself that I couldn’t believe how quickly my one week at post had gone by.  By the time they all left and my house was again spotless, it already felt like I’d been here forever.  Now, can’t wait for Peace Corps Christmas!


As for the rest of my life: First, work stuff (if it can be called that).  The day after I last wrote, I met up with my counterpart to do protocol.  We marched around town delivering letters to the mayor, prefect, sous-prefect, commander of the gendarmerie, and various ministers and delegates to announce my presence in town.  Unfortunately, many of those people weren’t in their office so I think I am supposed to return some time soon.  The most priceless moment of our trip came when Anne Marie and I walked into the office of the commander of the gendarmerie (sort of like police?).  He shook our hands and told us to sit down.  I started talking, saying that I was a Peace Corps volunteer, I have been stationed in Bafang, I’ll be here for the next two years working with youths, etc etc, when he stops me and looks at my counterpart and says, okay, that’s all very well, but who are you??  The one other guy in the room’s eyes widened as he said the French equivalent of “oh shit, man!  You don’t want to ask that!!” and the guy in front of us returned, “What??  I don’t know who she is!  And if I don’t know, I’m going to ask!”  She was very gracious, saying (translated roughly), “of course!  It’s no problem!  If he doesn’t know, he should ask.  Don’t worry don’t worry.  Um, well, I’m the queen of Bafang.  And I’m also the director of the Center for the Promotion of Women and Family.  So yeah.”  The gendarmes’ eyes also widened.  He visibly slunk into his chair as he stammered out a bashful apology, explaining that she really did look so familiar and he’s so sorry, your highness.  I hope this little encounter means he will be extra careful to look out for my safety and not embarrass himself again!
The next day, I went into the center again and we all went to a local high school to do a presentation.  I knew nothing about the presentation before going, and was not expected to say anything.  It turned out to be on the importance of dressing decently.  This is a hot issue in Cameroon, with a law being discussed (or maybe already passed?) that essentially will enact a national dress code to keep teen girls looking a little more respectable. (*for my non-blog suitable thoughts on the issue and the experience, feel free to shoot me an email.)  The assembly was something like a thousand students, and because they had no room to fit them all, they gathered outside around the flagpole as I and three people from the CPF (Centre de Promotion de la Femme et de la Famille) stood in the center.  Of course it was a terrible setup for a presentation because they were surrounding us, so the presenters had to alternate shouting at various segments of the circle.  That being said, everything went fine and at the end a few kids started insisting that I talk (oh, to be so sought after in America!).  So I introduced myself and said hi in French, English, and Fe’fe, which is always good for a few laughs.  After the presentation, the principal arranged for the four of us from the center to have spaghetti omelets, bread, and tea!  I was shocked that this was part of the package, but not complaining!  And then, crazily, after we finished, he told us that actually the students have also prepared us some food and he hopes we saved some room.  So we went into a classroom where the students had done a project preparing food from all the regions of Cameroon, and the students served us even more.  Not bad pay for just half an hour’s talk (and for me personally, about thirty seconds of talk and preparation put together).
Yesterday I called the center and asked if they wanted me to come in, and Anne Marie said sure, that they were going to another workshop in a neighboring town and I should come along.  Getting to the neighboring town turned out to be a little complicated – every gas station in Bafang was out of gas, and Anne Marie didn’t want her car to run out somewhere on the way there or on the way home.  So we got a taxi, Cameroonian-style: two in the passenger seat, four in the back seat, and some guy hopped in the trunk at the last minute.  During the drive I realized that this was actually the first time I’ve been to any village.  Between Bafia and Bafang (and Bafoussam, Bamenda, and Yaoundé, the only other places I’ve been in Cameroon), everywhere I’ve visited has been either a pretty large town or city.  As we took a dirt road as wide as our two tires, it became clear that my experiences have not been telling the whole story.  It was beautiful, the whole drive, and when we arrived, it looked like we were in the middle of the jungle with just a small building up the hill ahead.  It was really magical and made me realize the cost of all my city’s amenities.
The workshop turned out to be on making cocoa butter as an income generating activity.  It was given at the Babone community center to about thirty adults representing economic interest groups in their respective communities, plus us.  I think the day showcased several key elements of Cameroonian culture that I had heard about but never really experienced (and some that I had).  The invitation said we would start precisely at ten; we started shortly after 11.  After the lecture section, we all went outside for a demonstration, and they served us lunch!  And palm wine.  And beer.  And we all prayed before eating.  Can you imagine, in America, mixing religion and alcohol with work??  If you can, you’ve been watching too much Mad Men.  I chatted with some nice Cameroonians (who asked, of course, “Two years?? But – what about your husband??!”) in French, English, and Fe’fe, which again won me some laughs.  Plus, I learned how to make cocoa butter!  It seems really easy and the best part is that from the leftover stuff, you can make chocolate!  Not sure why it wasn’t “with your leftovers from making chocolate you can make cocoa butter”, which seems far more logical to me, but I guess that’s neither here nor there.
Other stuff I’ve been up to:  I have my first Cameroonian friend in village!  She’s nine years old and her name is Alima.  She lives directly behind me.  After meeting once in the neighborhood, I bumped into her in town and she called my name and hugged me.  After that we were fast friends, and she accompanied me on my errands around the market and we walked home together.  She invited me over where her super nice mom fed me a huge and delicious meal.  When I casually asked her if there were any beignet mamas in our neighborhood, she told me yes, and then knocked on my door later to tell me that the woman was already frying if I wanted to go, and then knocked on my door again later to say that she was going to that area if I wanted to come, so she could show me who made the good ones and who’s weren’t really that good.  She is sweet and respectful and doesn’t invade my personal space or leave a mess or break crayons.  She also came over today and we played cards and looked at countries on my inflatable globe.  There’s also William.  He is not exactly a friend but he is the only other visitor I ever get, usually to ask me for money or food or if he can do any of my chores for money or food.  He’s around Alima’s age.  One time he came to my door and told me how hungry he was and how there was nothing to eat at the house, and don’t I have anything?  A little money?  A little food?  Just some bread?  Just some.. flour?  Feeling uncomfortable, I told him (honestly) that I really didn’t have much food but I was sorry.  After carrying on like this for a few minutes, he finally broke into a smile and said, “Ha!  I was just derangin’ ya.  I already ate dinner at home.  Bye!”  So that’s William.
The exploration of my new house and belongings continues… I recently discovered that one of the mysterious tools I inherited is a handheld blender!  Needless to say I have made myself several smoothies, consumed through pink bendy straws while lying in my porch hammock in this tropical paradise.  It’s a serious quality of life booster.  I also finally explored one of the other mysterious instruments.  You’re probably not familiar with it because there’s no effing way this thing is legal in the US.  It’s basically a metal coil that you stick in a bucket of water to heat it, and, if you’re lucky, electrocute anyone or thing nearby.  I know I mentioned before how cold my shower water is… I have been mostly taking hot bucket baths by heating water on the stove.  I also discovered that on warmer mornings, the shower water can be kind of refreshing, so I’ve done some of each.  But today was my first shot with the metal death stick!  Being very careful with the order in which I inserted or removed from the water, plugged in, and turned on this crazy device, I figured everything would be okay and I’d have a hot bucket bath with just a little bit less effort.  Well, after a while I started smelling burned rubber and found that the wire for the power strip this thing was plugged into was burning its own coating.  I think it might harness demonic powers to operate.  Today was the first and last time I tried that guy out.  I am too scared to see what more damage it can cause.  Into the give away pile it goes.
Lee and I played scrabble at Leonard and Karine’s!  I am honored to be a part of this tradition that predates my presence in Bafang.  Also they are the closest I have to Cameroonian friends (past the age of 10) in this town.  I didn’t win because I wanted to, you know, take it easy on them all, but next time I’m ready to dominate.  The next day, we had our first TVP adventure.  One of the strange things left for me when I moved in was two untouched bags of TVP (that’s, textured vegetable protein) and a TVP cookbook.  The package boasted that it is a meat substitute that is high in fiber and high in protein, probably the two things our diet most lacks here.  I finally got up the guts and inspiration to give it a try, making a chili-like concoction with beans (also my first time preparing beans but I guess that’s less exciting), TVP, tomato paste, pasta, and seasoning from my extensive spice cabinet.  I thought it turned out well!  The TVP turned very ground beef-like and soaked up the flavor of the seasoning nicely.  Lee brought over leftover thanksgiving coleslaw plus some squash, so we had a fine three course meal.  Living alone isn’t so bad!  I can feed myself after all!
Random little notes and anecdotes:
-          The reason so many places start with “Ba” is because that means “the people of”.  So, this city is basically the land of “the people of Fang”.  I know a lot of people have been confused between Bafia (where I was) and Bafang (where I am), so that’s the explanation.  Also one time someone casually referred to Bafoussam in a text message as “Baf”, which I found funny given that it clarified exactly nothing since Bafia, Bafang, and Bafoussam all start the same way.
-          My water was out for a day.  And sometimes it goes out for a few hours in the middle of the day.  And sometimes I lose electricity, for like, 10-30 seconds.  So yeah it’s not all posh corps all the time!!!  Just wanted to be clear!!!!!!
-          When I applied for my bank account, I needed to provide information about where I live.  In America, you would write down your address.  Here, because no one has addresses, I had to draw a map to my house.  It was absolutely ridiculous because I’d only been in town for three days and did not really know what to draw.  My map literally looked like this:

     … And that’ll get you a bank account, ladies and gentlemen.  I guess if they need to find you they follow the map as best they can and then call out your name loudly until your head pops out of some front door.  Also if anyone is planning to come visit plz print out that drawing so I don’t have to give you directions.
-          Can’t remember if I’ve ever said anything about the seasons here, but we just transitioned from the rainy season to the dry season.  When I first was learning about them with my host family, I thought it sounded silly how exact they were about dates.  It rains every day during rainy season and then BAM.  November 10th or 15th and it stops altogether.  But weirdly it kind of worked.  In Bafia, it was raining, hard, every single night until one day it wasn’t.  And maybe it rained once a after a week or so, but it basically stopped on a dime.  Here it was a little rougher, raining almost every day for the first week I was here (effects of climate change, according to Rose Nichole), but now it has stopped and it turns out dry season really is dry after all.  That makes it hotter, which is eh, but I can leave my clothes on the line for a couple days if necessary without worrying about them getting wet again.  But yeah we don’t have winter or anything and I’ll only be dreaming of a white Christmas this year.
-          Peace Corps stressed in the application process that we will be “living in a fishbowl”, where people notice us and observe us all the time.  My first real “fishbowl” moment came last week when Ricky introduced me to this Cameroonian guy he knows, Martin.  Martin immediately, “Oh yeah!  I saw you at express union, getting your money out.  I said hi, and you said hi back, but you didn’t know me then.  And then I also saw you sitting over there the other day eating koki for lunch.”  Those times when I felt totally alone and independent?  Just a fish swimming under the watchful eyes of many.  It was kind of jarring to fully realize.  Also, several moto guys have dropped me exactly at my front door without me directing them at all, so unless they somehow got their hands on my bank account map, people in town just know where I live.
-          This one time this cop asked me if I was single, told me he was single, and that he wanted me to be his wife, but he wanted me to be his second wife.  I think this is an insult because everyone knows the first wife is the one a man really loves the most.  Then he and the other guys around all laughed because America doesn’t have polygamy and isn’t that silly?
-          Today I was walking and exploring and trying not to feel creeped out by the guy walking toward me with a bushy beard and winter hat.  As I passed him he stopped in his tracks, stared me dead in the eye, and pointed to his tooth, and then his foot.  I have no idea.  I kept walking.

Thanks for reading, folks.  Until next time.