Wait, what day is it...

Ahh!

Summer!

Summer Two!

Summer Two is!

Summer Two is, is, is COMING!!

TODAY?!?

Quick! Strip the beds in the apartment, wash the towels, mop the kitchen, print out the welcome booklets, find the lost apartment keys, refill the gas, sweep the upstairs, restock the firewood, draft an email for nervous parents, buy new water jugs, wipe down the showers, empty the recycling, print out flight schedules, shop for the cook, sweep the front steps, get the parasite medication, re-hang the hammocks!!!

Shower. Must remember to shower.

Interviews: In Summation

A few wrap-ups:

1. Of course, 20 minutes after making fun of Dana for having pink eye, guess who was smote for her mockery...that's right. We both will be wearing our glasses from here on out of abject fear of recurrence.

2. Yes, I realize I spelled chef incorrectly in my interview video (thanks for pointing that one out, Craig)... what can I say, other than I will never win any awards when it comes to spelling.

3. Want to know what happened to the extra footage from all the interviews? Oh, I have plans (besides using some of it as future blackmail for any of our politically-interested PDs, cough cough Eliah), and these plans involve putting together random segments each week. Live in fear, other PDs, live in fear.

That's all :)
(oh, and Happy Sunday, too!)
~Holly

Interview a PD: Holly Ward

Hey all!

Here it is, the final installment of the Interview a PD series we started over 2 months ago. I was overwhelmed by how many questions we received this time around; poor Dana and Jos had to spend a long evening behind the camera as I blabbered my way through them all, imitating animal mating calls and discussing White Castle.

These have been so fun to do, mostly because I've gotten some hysterical questions catered perfectly to each interview-ee. Case in point: out of all the questions I was asked, 12 were about art and 10 about food... you all just know me so well :)

So here you have it: the Holly Ward interview. Thanks for watching!

Health Notice

(Mark Hand, guest blogger extraordinaire. Thanks for another awesome entry, Mark!)

"Swine Flue Hits Manna Project!

No, not like that, mothers. We at MPIE are all happy and relatively healthy (if you ignore for the moment that both Dana and Holly have pink eye of all things) and - while sometimes the men act like pigs - none of us are suffering from H1M16 or whatever it is that has replaced sharks as America's obligatory summer phobia.

But MPIE has been hit by the gripe in a way we hadn't anticipated. Over the last two weeks, our library attendance has fluctuated wildly - falling from a range of 20-35 children in April to 8-25 children in May. We've been scratching our heads, reorganizing, playing a lot of Blokus and re-engaging to make sure our library is at full tilt.

At a community meal last week, however, the mother of one of library's youngest patrons informed Holly as to why Rumilomans were avoiding MPI headquarters: that's right, swine flu. Given that Ecuador's ten cases of swine flu have all stemmed from foreign travel, our new summer volunteers are, apparently, suspect.

The solution? According to our informant, we should a) take our next round of summer volunteers to the Ministry of Health for H1N1 screening, and b) publicly post a "None of us have swine flu" notice outside the library. Thoughts?

~Mark"

Planificación Familiar


Mark has a theory, and that is this: we PDs will never be able to master the art of "lucid dreaming" while living in Ecuador. In order to lucidly dream, one must be able to differentiate, while dreaming, between the dream and reality. In order to train one's mind to accomplish this, one must continually ask the question "is this real?" while awake. But, when you find yourself participating in an hour long parade through the streets of South America carrying an enormous banner behind a group of baton twirlers and in front of 50 marching band drummers, telling the difference between what's real and what's not becomes a little more challenging.

Yesterday, as a part of a health charla (the best translation we've come up with equates charla to "talk" or "presentation") with the Conocoto Ministry of Salud, we organized a "Planificacion Familiar" booth, ie. Family Planning. And by booth I mean tent. And by we I mean Serena. She has been working, along with Priya and Perry (our two "health" summer vols) non-stop for the past week putting together the information, posters, activities, and games for our tent. Thanks to our partner and friend Jens and his incredible organization HealtheChildren we were able to screen-print 150 tee-shirts, which we used as a prize for those people who were able to answer questions about family planning, natural and artificial birth control, and overall sexual health.

As Jos, Dana and Seth helped register 500 little runners for the 5k marathon, Mark taped up our posters and manned the tent while Perry, Serena and I marched through Conocoto with the rest of the parade participants. The rest of the day was spent handing out tee-shirts, explaining how to use cycle beads as an indication of fertility (Mark was the master of this which supported his theory of lucid dreaming, as he kept asking "Am I really explaining about fertility to Ecuadorian women using beads? Is this real?!") distributing condoms, playing "pin the contraceptive on the uterus" and referring everyone with any kind of question to Serena. With over 1,500 people in attendance, we had a full booth and a full day.

The day went off without a hitch thanks to the unbelievable work that Serena put in. I was in awe of how much she knew, how confidently and tactfully she explained different sexual health topics, and how welcoming and positive her every encounter was with all who came to talk with us. Way to go, Serena!

~Holly

(Making some last minute posters)

(Perry and I get ready to start walking in the parade)

(Where we work; Manna sites and spring break 2009 locations)

(The front table with Serena at the center)

("Pick a question. You'll receive a free shirt if you answer it correctly. Good luck!")

(Pin the Contraceptive on the Sex Organ game!)

(Jos explains the rules of the game)

(Natural birth control methods, poster made by Priya)

(Artificial birth control methods, put together by Perry)

(Perry models the tee shirt and answers questions)

(Manna Project programs poster. Always a chance to advertise.)

(A taste of how packed our tent was the entire day! our tent is on the right...)