Tuesday, June 3, 2014

No Rest for the Tired

First of all, excuse me if this post is disoriented or incoherent. I still haven't gotten more than a couple of hours of sleep since arriving in Hanoi. I took 1.5 sleeping pills last night and still couldn't do anything more than lie in my bed begging for sleep or death.

I was expecting the heat, but it's still a struggle. Every drop of water I drink I immediately sweat out. I shouldn't have brought any makeup or a hairdryer--much too hot for that.

The volunteer accommodations here are modest by American standards (no AC, no real shower, no cable) but for Hanoi they are pretty good.

A view that can't be beat 
And in the daytime

Is this the same window? I'm too sleepy to tell
 I'm top bunk in our room which means that every time I get out of bed there's a chance I'll step on a girl's face (no ladders).
The room I share with 6 other girls
The common room, and our clean water supply


Kitchen
If I die here it will be because I'm terrible at chopsticks and starved

The bathroom-- we all share a pair of community flip flops for some reason
I came here having been told that I would work with the NGO SJ Vietnam. The first morning was normal: we did cultural orientation, learned how to count to ten in Vietnamese, and were warned that if we tried to drive a motorbike in the streets we had a 100% chance of death. Also to not drink the sacrificial wine, because somehow that would also kill us. 

That first afternoon I had a meeting with one of the SJV interns. I assumed we would be going over what I would be working on for 2 months. However, when I went in to talk to her she told me that they actually had no work for me with NGOs, and that I would be relocated to Halong City (3 hours away from Hanoi) for the entirety of my 8 weeks.

This was the point where sleep-deprived, culture-shocked Angela started having an inner panic attack. But on the outside, I couldn't think of what to say. The intern was talking very fast and some of her words were hard to understand. 

Basically, I would be working in a completely different program, in a remote city with many more diseases, with no other volunteers.While I'm sure Halong City needs the volunteers, I have not been vaccinated for any of the diseases that are very common in the Vietnamese countryside. If I went to Halong, my chances of getting sick, already pretty high, would only get higher.  I left the office thinking I was going to cry.

After several frantic emails between myself and my mother, I went to bed for 5 hours of restless sweating. I woke up to an email informing me that Good Old (sorry, Young) Mom had taken the initiative and emailed my volunteer organization representative. While this was probably a good move, I did have to be here for 8 weeks and did not want to be hated by my host organization. I did sign a waiver saying that they have no liability for me, so they could poison my water and it would be all my own fault.

I went down to the SJV office and they had me work for 7 hours researching grants and funding, which is the kind of stuff I love. As of now, the plan is that I will be teaching English in the mornings, and will switch off between NGO work and orphanage work in the afternoon. Not what I was expecting but hey, at least I'm not dying of an obscure Vietnamese disease in the countryside. 

Angela

2 comments:

  1. There's a lot of talk about death and dying in today's blog. If something untoward happens to you (or if you decide not to come home because the accommodations are better than at home), can I have your ND band cap?
    Love,
    Dad

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  2. The only reason I wouldn't come back to that inflatable air mattress is if I was literally dead.

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