I'm very proud of this picture. The first time all my children and grandchildren have been together, plus all in-laws. A day I will cherish for a very long time. |
Furthermore, I have learnt a valuable lesson tonight. When you have two groups of Literacy books to mark, 23 belonging to Group A (classic A as in slightly more able than Group B) as well 21 belonging to the said Group B. Always mark Group B’s work first! If you start with Group A and 2 hours later move onto Group B, you will eventually ( I’m not sure, that use of eventually actually qualifies as a connective) want to bang your head on a wall! Finally, I have now used all fourteen connectives from our lesson in Week 3, Term 1. Thus (again, because I like thus a lot) the Blog can begin.
A great by-product of that little exercise, I feel a little more compassionate towards my pupils, especially those for whom English is a second language. It was quite taxing on my brain. I now see why so many of them drifted off into the realms of ‘nonsense writing’.
Still trying to avoid the use of ‘so’ to start a paragraph. Here I am back in Burundi for a third year. 6L of 2014 to 2015, have made a much more positive start than the previous 6L. The previous 6L are now consigned to the history book. Now I can look back and laugh! And oh how I’m laughing, well on the inside, sort of, well at least I’m not sobbing anymore, I can at least smile about the experience. The new 6L, have no lesson saboteurs, no academic terrorists, no concentration killing guerrillas. The new 6L are that usual mix of, nice, naughty, spacey, serious, quirky, quaint and just what you’d expect to find in every Year 6 class. It’s looking so good, that I am in fact planning to take both Year 6 Literacy classes to the Post Office for a ‘field trip’, as I did in my first year here.
The many faces of Harry J Salmon. Newest grandson. I spent many precious hours with him over the Summer. Miss him rather a lot now. |
Sweepings from the kitchen floor, after and over-night Baygon spraying!! |
This
incident led to a very serious dilemma. I have trained myself to get used to
the somewhat claustrophobic confines of a mosquito net. I have even reached the
place where I prefer to sleep with a net, because I hate being woken by that pppppfffffeeeeeeeeeeeeettt
noise in the wee small hours. But if something that size can find its way in, I
am not sure I want to be tucked up beside it.
My only consolation was the fact that I was using a temporary mosquito
net, which didn’t quite fit the bed. With the arrival of the proper net, I
decided to continue keeping the mosquitoes out and me in. The net is so well tucked in though, that it
is a major manoeuvre getting in at night. A number of times I have been safely
ensconced in my den with, torch, phone, alarm clock, inhaler (yes it is a huge
bed) only to look out and see my kindle sitting happily on the outside, smiling
at me!
Having spent
another Summer at ‘home’ and returning once more to Burundi the edges are
beginning to blur around the boundaries of where I feel home is now. Although I was made aware of how unsuited I
still am, to some aspects of life here.
It was Friday afternoon, I had gone to visit the cash machine, up the
main road. I was escorted by my son’s
dog (Sparta) and housemate (Ed). Unusually we’d had a successful visit to the
cash point, actually coming away with cash in our pockets. It’s great that Burundi now has cash
machines, what’s not so great is that they are not very reliable, more often
than not they make all the right noises but fail to spit any cash out. However,
this fine day, we were successful. We were happily striding back down the hill
towards home, when I noticed a rather fearful sight heading up the hill towards
us. A herd of Long-horn Burundi cows. It’s been a long time since I have
faced this particular cultural
challenge. Very quickly, I informed Ed that I was not very ‘good’ with cows. He
seemed unaffected by this revelation. No, Ed I really don’t like cows. Again,
Ed seemed unmoved by this revelation. And they were getting closer. My instinct
was to run in the opposite direction, back up the hill. But clearly that would
be a ridiculous course of action. I spotted two cars parked at the side of the
road and announced to Ed that I would stand by them, hoping that Ed would
protect my open flank. But oh no! Horror of horrors, Ed nonchalantly wanders
off to the other side of the road. He abandons me. The cows are literally yards away.
All the
while this is going on, there sits a very jolly Burundian, on a wall just feet
from where I am cowering behind the cars. He is happily informing that he is
hungry and has no money. I have already said I’m sorry about that. In the next
few seconds my life turns into a horror movie. The cows split up and come
around both sides of the car, I am rapidly becoming surrounded. That’s when
total panic sets in, I flee the 6 feet it takes to get to the jolly Burundian,
and I quite literally hide behind him. He displays a mixture of mirth and
confusion, what on earth is the crazy muzungu doing? A cow with huge horns stops and faces the
strange sight of laughing Burundian and quivering muzungu. I communicate to my
protector that he should make the cow stop staring at us. Which he does
amazingly easily, considering the obvious danger we are, with the flick of his
fingers. Then it’s over. The cows have gone and I am safe once more, if not a
little embarrassed at my rather pathetic ability to cope with the ordinary. My
jolly Burundian informs me once more that he is in fact still hungry. Now I
have a real dilemma, he has just protected me. Can I really just walk away and
not offer him some reward? But all I have in my pockets are 10,000 fbu notes.
10,000 fbu is like a month’s wages to this man. It’s far too much to give. But
it’s that or nothing, which is far too little. I ponder for a few seconds, then
the decision is made. Why not? Everybody deserves a ‘lucky’ day, and today it
can be his. I pressed the 10,000 into his hand and dashed away, to sound of his
enthusiastic thanks. Despite the trauma, it was good to feel that I had the
opportunity to do something surprising for someone else.
So ........(I had to
do it in the end!) many things in life here are finally feeling normal. Power
cuts, cold showers, mosquito nets, white boards that are not connected to
anything, cobblestone roads, the absence of Supermarkets, milk in bags. But
every so often something catches me and reminds me I’m far from ‘home’. Like
cows and cockroaches and children begging in the streets.
(My sincere apologies for the random placing of photos around this Blog. The computer just didn't want to play ball!)