tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-77688575923383475882024-03-05T09:42:41.711-07:00Laura TrinkleThis blog in no way represents the opinions of the Peace Corps or the U.S. government.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.comBlogger131125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-28104731838907818642014-08-25T20:54:00.000-06:002014-08-25T20:54:09.103-06:00To Create a New Blog or Continue on With This One????So, I obviously haven't blogged in a really long time... I've seen many friends create new blogs for new stages of their lives and have been contemplating doing the same. Does this old blog that I've had since before I joined the Peace Corps still fit me? I'm torn, but I think whatever I blog today must have been built on the many things that have happened in the past right? Well, it seems like a lot of work to start a whole new blog and I love this blog and my old posts so I guess I'll just stick with it. So here's the update since my last post about painting our house: We now have an adorable little baby girl who makes me sooooo very happy. There is no way to express how much I love my little one, being a mother is amazing! We also adopted a dog who rounds things out quite nicely with Tigre the cat. Deivin now has his long term permanent resident card and will be on the path to citizenship very soon. Last year we purchased a franchise and I quit my job to try to make it work last year (more to come on this topic). That's the latest, more to come...Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-83276053202851345362012-11-24T20:44:00.000-07:002012-11-24T20:44:53.511-07:00Home ImprovementsAfter painting 1,000 sq ft of the interior of our house it was then time to sand and refinish the floors. I had no idea when we were beginning this task just what it would entail. On the DIY shows they make it sound like: All you have to do is sand it, fill in the cracks and then finish the area. That's it!
That my friends is a total lie! What they should say or show is this: You will begin your project with a trip to home depot where they will rent you a broken/the incorrect machine. You will waste over an hour of your time trying to make this sander work before you realize that it's just not the right one and it just doesn't work! You will then clean off the bad sander, pack it into your car and go back to Home Depot where you will have to return the crap sander and then rent the correct one while you waste yet another hour of your time! Once you have the correct sander the real fun can begin. You will then be stuck in a house sanding and sanding and sanding your floors! If you're lucky like us you will have about 1,000 sq ft of flooring to sand! You will be covered and I mean covered with saw dust. My husband turned completely white from all of the dust! After sanding for 13 hours and pissing off all of your neighbors you will then begin the process of filling in all of the cracks. I won't even comment on this process because it's too terrible! Just know that my hands are still swollen and sore! After doing that for yet another 13 hours you will then get to SAND again and then again! It will take you another 13 hours! It's terrible, and, it's just the beginning! You will now need to start the clean up and let me tell you, that (like everything else) is not at all easy! We haven't even gotten to the finishing part! I keep telling my husband that this is not fun, he just laughs. Anyway, I'm sure we'll finish someday after lots of blisters and sore backs. That is my home improvement vent session, I'm sure there will be more to come. Don't believe the HGTV/DIY shows, they make it all look so easy but that is so not the case! Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-46870020980671308782012-02-23T21:02:00.003-07:002012-02-23T21:11:35.881-07:00In About 2 Weeks...In just 2 short weeks sooooo much has happened! On Feb. 14th Deivin and I had our interview for the green card. I expected all kinds of questions about our relationship and how we met and such. The interviewer just asked Deivin to confirm all of the information on the form that we had already filled out. They were questions like: What is your birthday? What is your name? Do you participate in espionage? I just sat there and listened until the end. It was pretty fast and painless. We found out on the 19th that we had been approved for the green card and it arrived today!!!! I cannot believe how great everything has been going. God has been 100% faithful to us throughout this entire process!<br /><br />Last week Deivin started applying for jobs and it's looking like he will be offered a job from Home Depot sometime next week! It's the perfect job for him and I'm so excited for him, I know he has been dying to work for a really long time! <br /><br />Life is so good!!!!!Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-33980319129037517162012-02-06T20:58:00.003-07:002012-02-06T21:27:18.523-07:00It's Been a WhileFor a long time I haven't felt like I had much to blog about. I think mostly my family reads the blogs to keep up with me, but now I'm living with them or seeing them all the time so there's not much to update them on. <br /><br />Anyway, things have really moved along since August! After the wedding Deivin and I went to Montana and Yellowstone for our honeymoon. It was a great trip but once it was over I knew that my next mission was to find a job for me. I know from past experience just how difficult finding a job is and I was a little worried that I would be looking for months. Thankfully after just a week I was able find a temp to hire position which I had actually already applied for before the wedding. When I had initially read the position description I knew it would be the perfect post Peace Corps job and really wanted the job but after not hearing anything for over a month I figured it was one of those phantom job postings that so many employers put up to see who they get but have no real intention of hiring anyone. Months later the week that we returned from the honeymoon a family friend called to let me know that there was a job fair that week. At the job fair I saw that there was a temp agency with the same job that I had a applied for. So, I signed up with the agency and was working within a week! I feel soooooo blessed! I was hired on permanency a month and a half later and there you have it! <br /><br />More that anything I've felt like I'm just trying to get my feet under me and it's been just in the past few weeks that I feel like things are starting to settle down and I'm finally starting to find normal. Deivin and I still have a long way to go, but we are getting there! Deivin's work permit just arrived and he also just got his learners permit to begin driving. That has been a long journey in it's self, but after many trips to the DMV and hours spent waiting, he now has the permit in hand and now drives us everywhere we go! That's progress! A lady I work with tells me that success is sticking with a plan long enough to succeed, I think she is right. There is still a lot of work to be done, but we just keep chipping away and with Gods help (and He has been a huge help) we are making progress. <br /><br />I'll update more in a few days... So much has happened...Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-65958993318530740252011-08-11T11:33:00.002-06:002011-08-11T11:43:49.691-06:00Two Weeks in ColoradoWe have now been in Colorado for 2 weeks and you can't imagine how busy we have been! Tigre the cat is now feeling really good and comfortable in the house and we are working on the outside. I think she prefers the indoors.
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<br />Deivin had been doing some gardening and is currently working on the wedding gifts that we will give out to our guests at the wedding.
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<br />I don't know if I already said this or not, but planning a wedding is really hard! There is no end to all of the little details. I'm working on checking things off the to do wedding list which turns out to be a full time job. Once I get caught up though I'm sure it will slow down.
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<br />Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-17438826546934228722011-08-06T08:31:00.002-06:002011-08-06T09:42:17.944-06:00Home Sweet HomeWhew! I've been home for a little over a week and it has been so nice to be here! I have been and continue to be super busy with wedding, immigration and general settling in stuff, but I think that being busy is a good thing. Deivin is doing great! He has already totally redone my parents front yard, fixed a door that has been broken for 20 years and is currently teaching my dad how to use a machete. Deivin is keeping very busy with projects and bettering his english. We are no where near bored! <br /><br />I had no idea that planning a wedding would be a full time job! There should be people that you can hire to do it... It will all come together I'm sure, thankfully I don't have a job yet so I can devote lots of time to it.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-41253408828788611342011-07-24T08:24:00.000-06:002011-07-24T08:25:23.563-06:00And let the Bitter Sweet Goodbye BeginI'm now in my final days as a Peace Corps volunteer. For the longest time I have dreamed of getting home and how great it will be and how I just can't wait to get there, but now that it's really close I'm finding that I'm actually really sad. I'm still excited and I can't wait to see my family and friends, but I'm really going to miss people here. Also, leaving Deivin's family and my host family are going to be really hard. I see the sadness in Deivin's mom and it breaks my heart. I know that she wants the best for her son and for him to be happy, but he's the first of her babies to leave her and I can tell that it will be a hard adjustment for her. <br /><br />I'm finally done with all of my projects! Yesterday we had a beach clean up and hung up and moved around a bunch of signs that were all over the places to make things just a little more organized. Deivin made some new signs also that should help the Blue Flag group to get more stars in the coming year. La Palma and Guadalupe hosted the VIDA volunteers again! This is a group that organizes medical, dental and vet clinics that serve people in Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama. They bring students from the respective fields and they get hands on experience working with people and helping them to get free medical attention. They way it works is they have the students break up into small groups and for example the medical students work with a doctor and they do the interview with the patient, learn to take blood pressure, ask the right questions and they even learn to give shots though they only practice on each other. It's a really great program and the students really get a lot out of it.<br /><br />Now Deivin and I have moved on from work to the various lunches, dinners, coffee times, etc that people are inviting us to. This part is always so stressful for me.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-70719679396519432752011-06-29T16:37:00.000-06:002011-06-29T16:38:04.985-06:00One Month to GO!!!!I officially have less than a month left before I'll be home!!!! I can't wait. On July 29th, at this time in one month I'll be in Colorado with dry skin!<br /><br />I'll give you guys a quick work update, I'm actually really, really, really busy right now! It's good because it's making the time go super fast, but man, I have a lot to do. <br /><br />We got our funding for the playground in Guadalupe and I went to San Jose with my community partner (Deivin too since we were already going up for the embassy interview) and we signed our contract and they gave us the money! Yay! So, this week I've been meeting with people in Guadalupe to organize with the parents of kids in the school who is going to cook the meals and who is going to donate what food for the workers (the contract is that we provide a place for them to stay and 3 meals a day). That was actually really easy. One of the teachers at the school helped out by taking the list of who was going to bring what and it was cool to see everyone shouting out a bunch of different things that they wanted to donate. Now, the workers will be here on Tuesday and in 2-3 days we should have our playground all ready to go! Pictures to come. <br /><br />In June we had another spay and neuter your pets clinic and as always, it went great. Ricardo and I have now in La Palma fixed some 144 animals. We have another clinic on July 13th and it's a little sad. I'm going to miss my work with animals. <br /><br />The group VIDA they are volunteers that do medical and vet clinics for free are coming July 19, 20, 21 and I'm organizing that. Yikes! We are going to hold 2 days in Guadalupe and one day in La Palma. <br /><br />I have been trying to get everything ready with Peace Corps to close out my service and trying to figure out what to do about Tigre. We have reservations for her to travel with me inside the airplane, but I feel so bad that my poor baby is going to have to be cooped up for 8 hours+ 2 days in a row. For a while I was thinking of flying to San Jose from Jimenez, but it's just so expensive. I've been taking Tigre on walks to get her used to the cage and next Monday will take her to my English class so that she can brush up on her English a bit and be in the cage for a couple of hours at a time. Hopefully it works. <br /><br />Deivin is almost done with work and is really excited to see Colorado and the US. We are planning to head to Montana for out honeymoon and then in early October do a Grand Canyon hike with my dad. Should be a fun couple of months. I just need to somehow manage to find a job at some point... I'm sure it will happen for me.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-42996122276931019762011-06-14T18:49:00.003-06:002011-06-14T19:21:01.091-06:00Update<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiecIYYItzb-zadYjaMYt9dTr08HxqekmVtbeJ2byvjWV5K4cgp7t1jhpksjMDUA_7W5OSIg6qq1-I7grXdLo1XrNiveMFs2tMIHV1ISiVL8swkM8V-GAq0RjeqA0jASC4vCAzN2jJp-pQ/s1600/100_3621.JPG"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiecIYYItzb-zadYjaMYt9dTr08HxqekmVtbeJ2byvjWV5K4cgp7t1jhpksjMDUA_7W5OSIg6qq1-I7grXdLo1XrNiveMFs2tMIHV1ISiVL8swkM8V-GAq0RjeqA0jASC4vCAzN2jJp-pQ/s320/100_3621.JPG" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5618242836424037762" /></a><br />I have a lot to update! Que dicha – Finally! So, the biggest news of all is that we were approved for the visa!!!!! Now all we have left to do is go back and pick up Deivin's passport with the visa in it. Awesome! There were a few moments during our appointment at the embassy where I was pretty nervous because of my lack of income as a Peace Corps volunteer, but the interviewer just asked me what I was planning to do for work when I got back, I told him probably HR and he was happy with that. Mostly the interviewer wanted to know about my Peace Corps projects. So that's done! Thank God!<br /><br />As far as projects go: We got our funding for the playground in Guadalupe and should be starting/finishing that in a couple of weeks. I'll have pictures coming when we begin construction.<br /><br />Tigre still thinks that her cat box is a bed and now she is bringing the birds that she hunts outside to the box to play with them. A total failure to communicate. Hopefully she'll get it soon!<br /><br />Life is good, God is good!Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-26962410499149489132011-05-24T09:58:00.001-06:002011-05-24T09:59:30.250-06:00Cat Box Training and Visa Interviews5-24-2011<br /><br /> This update is mostly about Tigre the cat. So, Tigre is pretty much my bff here is Costa Rica, she's really the best cat ever. Since she was a baby, Tigre has known that she goes outside to use the bathroom. She's like a dog but better because I have a hole in the screen of one of my windows and just comes and goes when she wants too. Also, when I leave for trips to San Jose, I never have to worry about her starving to death because she is an exceptional hunter and catches birds, lizards and rats all the time. She's pretty much the coolest.<br /><br />Now the time is approaching that we will go to the USA. Yes, Tigre the cat is also going to the states with me, but, I was lazy about training her with the cat box when she was a kitten because I just didn't want to have to clean it and now, what a problem. When we get to the states, she's going to have to be kept inside for at least 2 weeks so that she learns where her home is, otherwise she could get lost. In these 2 weeks, Tigre really needs to hit the target ie, the cat box. So, this last time that I was in San Jose I bought her a cat box and filled it with sand from where she usually goes outside. She's not sure what to make of this box with sand in it that is now in our house. Yesterday, I put her in there and she laid down like it was a new bed for her... At least today she has started to play around with the dirt. Training a dog is so not like training a cat. Hopefully over the next two months she will figure it out...<br /><br />Update on visa stuff:<br /><br /> Last week Deivin and I were in San Jose running all over the place to take care of all the paperwork and stuff that he needs when we go the embassy for our interview. He had to have chest x-rays, blood test, vaccines and a visit to a doctor to make sure he is healthy. Each vaccine was $20! I could not believe it! So expensive. But, luckily they gave him a chicken pox vaccine so should my shingles come back one day, he won't catch a really bad case of chicken pox. Now we are all set for the interview that will be the 14th of June in San Jose. We should have the visa in hand a few days after that. Exciting! Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-36875221148264862012011-05-18T18:54:00.000-06:002011-05-18T18:55:29.467-06:002 more months to go!For the past couple of months there have been no real changes made to any of my projects. I took the scouts on an outing to Jimenez to participate in the international day of the forest and they had lots of fun. I'm still meeting with my english class and am currently planning yet another clinic. I'm still waiting on the money to build the playground so hopefully that will happen soon. No big changes. <br /><br />I do have big changes that happened with the Visa! Deivin and I were approved from the USCIS a few weeks ago and we were then quickly approved by the State Department (it's where they do a background check on me) and the papers were forwarded to the U.S. Embassy in Costa Rica where I was able to pick them up last week while I was in San Jose for Peace Corps stuff. It's all really come together. Now all we need to do it take care of the medical visits, blood test, x-rays for Deivin, call the embassy and schedule an interview. We are just a few weeks away from having the actual visa in hand! Super exciting! We are heading to San Jose tomorrow and after that it usually takes about a week to get an interview and then usually it's the next day that you get the visa. It's all really worked out perfectly! Now we have plenty of time to prepare to leave while we have the visa. We will be able to buy airline tickets, Deivin and give notice to his work. It's all worked out so much better than I could have hoped for. Thank God for that! <br /><br />I'm pretty much in a holding pattern for the next 2 months. I'm sooooooo extremely ready to get back to the states and see my family and friends and find a job and all that good stuff. I have the next 2 months to enjoy my friends and family here and to say goodbye. It will be hard, but I can't wait to see what's next, marry Deivin and start our life together! Life is good!Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-16927151572682935332011-04-25T07:10:00.000-06:002011-04-25T07:11:54.419-06:00Here is a rant:To give some background to this rant... Last week was holy week here in Costa Rica and everyone heads to the beach to be with family and it's a MAJOR holiday here. During this time all the people and things that make my house incredibly loud were visiting their family or they didn't have to get up in the morning and go to work or whatever the reason you can not imagine how peaceful it was last week. Which brings us to today. What a horrible nights sleep that was topped off with a ridiculous symphony of noise starting at 5:30am and ended with me giving up on sleeping at 6:15am. First, one of the dogs here Canela was poisoned 2 days ago. It was really sad, I came across here and we were able to give her some milk and sugar (I was told that was the cure) and she lived! We thought all was good and she was fine yesterday, but all night, I'm saying allllllllll night she was coughing really loud and dry heaving right outside my window. Then, at about 5:30am Oscar the taxi driver is out and messing around with his truck and the alarm on the truck which he manages to turn on and off a bunch of times. Thanks. Then comes Janet and Jose, they live in the cabinas that are connected to my house. Last night they got back from their holy week adventures and brought their little girl with them who for some reason unknown to me was really pissed off this morning and crying a lot. Then comes the final blow, Jose goes out to warm up their car to take Janet to work and leaves it running blaring ranchero music for no one in particular. Not cool or needed and as I write this very blog, it is still not 7:00am, my host dad has deemed it necessary to burn leaves outside of my window. Awesome. I live in a house that has a bunch on windows with no glass, just screen and bars, also, my roof is not fully connected to the walls so pretty much whatever is going on outside is also going on inside. Also, the wall that I share with my neighbors is not exactly sound proof, if they turn on their light it ligths up my room too. Not sound proof at all. Well, that's my rant. It's usually not so bad and I think I just got used to a week of quite and will need to get back to blocking out the noise. I have 3 more months in Costa Rica and then I will back to the peace of my parents house. I can't believe how well I slept when I went home for my visits, it is just so quite and in the winter when there is snow and of the windows are closed, you can't hear anything. Well, I think I can handle just 3 more months of noise, tonight I'll be using some earplugs. <br /><br />My plan for today is a beach clean up at 9:00am with the banera azul committee and english classes in the evening. Should be a good day. Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-43617724582760316452011-04-15T13:59:00.002-06:002011-04-15T14:07:19.706-06:00nada especialLast week ended up being a really busy week with Guias y Scouts meetings, and environmental group meeting and my english classes. At this point I really only have about 3-4 students, but let me just say, I love it! We all know each other so well now and they can speak so well that when we have class it's like friends sitting down to chat. I still teach a little from the book, but I really try and focus on them talking as much as possible and the fact that there are only 3 of them most of the time (sometimes 2) means they get a lot of that. I can't believe how much they know. I think the Matt/Laura combo really worked (he was the volunteer there before me). They had 2 years with Matt and now 2 years with me and I can really see a difference. <br /><br />For the scouts we are taking them to Jimenez on April 30th to participate in the Day of the Forest celebration. Today they are making a work of art (a painting) in which each scout will paint something that makes them think of the forest and then they will take it to Jimenez and present it. Hopefully it goes well. <br /><br />Currently I'm in San Jose just finishing up with the last left overs of shingles stuff and tomorrow will be attending AVC, all volunteer conference. It's pretty much a party for volunteers to get together and hang out. Should be fun and it's always a nice break to have some cable tv and a hot shower. Soon enough my regular life will be filled with both of those things! Weird to think that soon enough I'll have comfortable couches and chairs to sit on and mirrors and good lighting and a big comfortable bed and hot water all the time and a tv that works and most importantly, an oven! I really can't wait to have and oven and a grill, it will be great. I know little tigre is really going to miss hunting all of the lizards that are everywhere and the frogs, but she'll still have birds and rats to eat so hopefully the little dear won't be too sad when we get to Colorado. <br /><br />On the visa front, one of my peace corps friends just got his visa approved! He was about a month ahead of me so hopefully we will move just as fast as he did. There is just no real way to know. <br /><br />P.S.<br /><br />Today was the most productive day I've had in the past 2 years. I was all over town and got tons of stuff done all in time to watch Days Of Our Lives by 11:00am. Not bad!Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-59846334322681561982011-04-11T16:40:00.002-06:002011-04-11T16:43:35.857-06:00Rain, Rain, you can STAY!!!!My parents just came for a visit for the past 2 weeks and we had a really good trip. For the first time I headed over to Drake Bay and it was beautiful. What a cool place! We arrived from La Palma in bus which only took about an hour and a half super easy and direct. Our first day we took a tour out to the caño island where we snorkeled along the way. Super cool. It's actually the second time I've done the tour, but the first time for my parents. We saw tons and tons of cool fish. The next day we went hiking along the beach for most of the day and got caught in the total down pour on the way back. I knew it was a risk when I saw how late we were hiking out and knowing how long it would take us to get back, but what's going to the rainforest without any rain? This was not my first hiking/walking experience in really hard rain, but it was for my parents. It's warm rain so basically you're just totally soaked but not cold. I don't think my mom was such a fan of that part of the hike... I'm happy to report though that none of us were burned by acid rain and we are all still in perfect health (ticos try to get rained on as little as possible saying that it will make you sick or that it could have acid in it). We made our way our of Drake via boat to Sierpe and then in taxi to Palmar where I got a bus going South and my parents headed up North to San Jose where they flew out today early in the morning. All and all a really good trip and they got to spend some more time with Deivin so that they will all know each other well before we temporarily move in with them! Yay living with your parents in the basement ;). <br /><br />I just have to say that I'm soooo happy the rainy season is back! I love the rain here and it is just so much cooler and I can go running at 10am or workout in my house and it's not an oven. It's my favorite season by far, the dry season is waaaay overrated. <br /> <br />Time is going by quickly and at the same time really slow. We are still waiting on the visa and will be for a lot longer. All in it's time...Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-76818602952664961382011-03-23T18:37:00.000-06:002011-03-23T18:38:29.432-06:00CorcovadoLife is rolling along at this point. I have had a ton of fellow Peace Corps volunteers come through my site in the past weeks on their way to Corcovado National park which I myself had the pleasure to hike last Tuesday with Deivin and 3 of my Peace Corps friends. We saw all 4 types of monkeys (3 at the same time), a sloth, a tapir which is a really crazy looking animal, wild hogs, mountain chickens and a weird type of wild turkey, frogs, snakes, and lots and lots of birds. It was a really hard hike but very worth it. We hiked 8 hours through the rain forest (which is hot, but there is no direct sun so not too hot) to arrive at the Sirena ranger station and then we stayed there for 2 nights and headed out. It was a great jump start to getting myself motivated to get back into shape and it was a great adventure. <br /><br />My next project is just for me and it's getting back into shape! I have a wedding dress to shop for when I get home and I want to be ready.<br /><br />In February and March we held clinics and in February fixed 13 animals and in March 14. We are going to hold Aprils clinic in Jimenez. <br /><br />We are still waiting to hear on the visa, hopefully soon...<br /><br />I'll try to post more.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-32244303165103866852011-02-28T07:06:00.000-07:002011-02-28T07:07:30.493-07:00Close of Service CeremonyThis past week I was in San Jose for the close of service conference for my Peace Corps Costa Rica Tico 19 group. We started out as a group of 52 on March 10th 2009 and we are now a group of 47. We lost 2 volunteers in training to medical separations and over the past almost 2 years we lost another 3 also to medical separations. We were a special group in that we didn't have one single ET (early termination) an ET is when someone decides for personal reasons that they just don't want to continue. Usually in each group there is at least one if not several, but Tico 19 was a really cohesive group and we managed to not have a single one! They hold the conference at this time in our service to give us 3 months to tie up all of our loose ends, do the tons of necessary paperwork to leave and also to take care of all of the medical and dental visits that we need to be able to leave. During the conference we talked a lot about what we accomplished in our time here and reflect on our impact as a whole group. It was a great time and it's the last time that all of Tico 19 will be together. After the conference I'm feeling really reflective so I thought I'd write a little re-cap of some of the major events of my service...<br /><br />PST (per-service training) was a great time. I had a great group in Acosta and we had so much fun together. I spent more time in the beginning at Mick and his host families house than my own. We had a lot of fun cafecitos as a group at Mick's house after class and were a group that never had any drama, just a lot of fun. Then we headed to our new communities and I could not have been further away from Mick, Brianna and Chase (my Acosta mates). <br /><br />Next, I had not been in site for 4 days when the shingles struck and struck hard. It was a challenge getting to the hospital and admitting that for the first time in my life, I was sick, really sick. When I actually made it to the hospital I was convinced that I was going to lose my eye and possibly die. I had never stayed in a hospital before and had never had and IV before let alone two going at once, but I knew that I was in really good hands and felt very comforted by my doctors at the Clinica Biblica hospital. After leaving the hospital I went back to Acosta to start the recovery process. After a few weeks I headed back to La Palma to finish out recovering for the next 6 months. In this period I was really unhappy with pretty much everything, but I decided to stick it out until December when I would have a 3 week trip home to decide if I was going to stick it out or give up. I had some small projects going and was just in the basic finding people stage for the Guias y Scouts and had my English classes, but I was not very capable of anything during this time. <br /><br />At Christmas 2009 seven months into my service and ten months in Costa Rica I headed to Colorado to re-group. It was the best thing that I could have done. I remembered what it was like to be me again and had the best time with my family and friends getting to meet for the first time my 2 week old nephew and see Mandy who was in town from Alaska. I had a few R-ball sessions with Jess and Mandy, went skiing with my family and in general had the best time ever. I'm talking a lot about this because this was a major turning point for me in my PC service. I needed this time to remember who I was and to get back to being me. <br /><br />When I got back to La Palma my life changed again the same day that I arrived. I got in on the 8:00pm bus and my host family was there waiting for me and it felt so good to be back! They informed me that night that I was going to go to the dance at the beach with them and since I was feeling so good I said okay and we left maybe 30 min. after I got there. It was there that Deivin and I would start what would turn out to be a great love. I had no idea when he asked me dance that night that he would be the first and only love in my life. We danced and talked that night and began to date from then on. Also at this time, all of my projects started to turn around. Guias y Scouts started to really move along, my English class became a whole lot more enjoyable for me, I started to work a little with the development association and would soon find Tigre my cat which would lead me to probably my most successful project, the castration clinics. Once I had clinics going and the scouts were moving along and I had the flow of my English classes, life got a lot easier. <br /><br />By the mid point of my service things had begun to work out and I had been wondering what was going to happen with Deivin. I knew from that start that I wanted to be with him, but he said that he didn't ever want to leave Costa Rica, that he had a good job, his family and that he never had wanted to leave. I respected this because I too felt that way about the United States, but by this time we knew that we wanted to be together and we knew that there would be more opportunity in the US. After a lot of thinking and as time passed he said that he would be able to go to the states and so we began to plan and think very seriously about the future and if we wanted to really make it happen by getting married. My projects were all going well and I was pretty busy with clinics, Scouts, English and the occasional side project of working with a group of women and teaching people how to make wrapper purses. <br /><br />As time passed I worked on strengthening the scouts (and still continue to work on that), I've had many castration clinics including one 3 day clinic with vets, dentists and doctors and I still have my English classes. Deivin and I are waiting on word about the visa and hope to have it ready by the end of July. I'll be staying 2 extra months which I'm calling my victory laps to help build a playground in the little town of Guadalupe and hopefully wait out the visa. <br /><br />It's been a long crazy ride, but it's been a really good one. I've gone through so much and changed a lot, but all for the best. If we never go through hard times, we never learn just how strong we are and who we are in the face of adversity. I never thought I would come to CR and leave with a Tico fiancee, I never thought I'd almost go blind from shingles. Life is one crazy ride and if you let God take you where you need to go, it's not all roses, but there always seems to be a great reward in the end.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-7827977325321798662011-01-28T12:17:00.000-07:002011-01-28T12:18:05.238-07:00Planning the Scouts Camping TripNext weekend we will be taking the Guias y Scouts older kids on their first ever camping trip and we are all super excited. I think it's really important that we get going on the camping and get the kids a little more familiar with what the Scouts do. At this point we tell them things like they need to have a flag for each troop and each troop needs to have their own call, but I think it really is one of those things that you have to see first. Needless to say the kids are a little lost, so, hopefully camping with a more experienced group will help them to find their way. Also, we want them to start feeling like a team, a family and there is no better thing than a sleep over for that. I'm hoping lots of kids can make it. We were originally going to make it up to Los Patos the national park entrance, but had to change at the last minuet to the beach (not a shabby change). We'll still go up towards the park with just our kids, but it works out easier this way with the other group. This and filling my application for an extension of service and getting organized on the new playground for Guadalupe have kept me pretty busy. <br /><br />On a personal note, Deivin and I celebrated our one year anniversary on the 25th, but he had to work all day and had his computer class until 9:00pm so there was not much of a big celebration, just a nice dinner at home and some ice cream sundaes. Next year we'll have to plan something a little bigger, but for now, ice cream and dinner were just fine. We haven't really heard anything on the visa for a while which is fine. We won't hear anything for a while assuming everything is going well, no news is good news for a while anyway. <br /><br />I have a request from a while ago to write about Mandy and Danny's trip. We did so much that I'm going post a different blog. It feels like so much happened that it's hard to capture it all, I'll post that soon and highlight some of our best adventures...<br /><br />Also, you will notice that my English is horrible now. My brain is working mostly in Spanish these days so while I'm writing in English sometimes I'm using Spanish grammar. I'm sure it will go back to normal when I get back to the States... Anyone wishing to learn another language and have some fun adventures, consider the Peace Corps, you can't help but learn the language and there is no escaping lots and lots of adventure.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-4492389250348554002011-01-19T08:31:00.000-07:002011-01-19T08:33:34.111-07:00Update on meLaura Update...<br /><br />Many people know that over Christmas I got engaged to my boyfriend Deivin. Here's the low down on the day... <br /><br /> After spending Christmas eve day in Guadalupe with Mandy, Danny and Deivin and his family we made our way back to La Palma. It was late (8:00pm) and Mandy and Danny were done for the day. I knew that Deivin really wanted to do our gift exchange at the beach. I've been trying to get him to go to the beach at night with me for months, so I was up for it. The moon was almost full so there was lots of light and it was a beautiful night. So, we jumped on our bikes and headed to the beach, to the place were we had our very first date. It was so perfect, the moon was huge over the gulf, he lit a candle and there was no one anywhere. So, I gave him his present, a pair of shoes. He liked it, but I had a feeling that his present for me was going to be waaaay better. So, he hands me a little handmade wooden box. When I opened it up there was my engagement ring and he asked me to marry him. It was a beautiful night with a perfect ending. We stayed there for a while and then we rode back to La Palma. We have been working on the fiancee visa for a while now and just this week I got word that it was being processes and had been moved from one facility to another. Originally we had hoped to leave at the end of May for the U.S. But due to some unforeseen complications we have changed that plan for the end of July. What are two more months anyway? I'm working to extend my Peace Corps service for those 2 months. While doing the clinics this past week I got some new ideas for projects that will need funding and you can only get funding if you have a certain amount of time left. With the added two months it should be enough. I want to see if we can get a playground for the school in Guadalupe. At the moment they only have 8 car tires that are half buried. Not cool. I'm hoping to get a playground and maybe even a basketball hoop. They already have a flat slab of concrete in the school yard, why no get a hoop and some basketballs and the kids can shoot hoops... <br /><br />That's it for me. Deivin and I are happy and excited to see what the future brings.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-63568625934129990172011-01-04T12:01:00.000-07:002011-01-04T12:05:15.950-07:00Adopt a Family with Guias y ScoutsThis is a post from 12-20-2010, I'm a little behind...<br /><br />Shortly after the teleton success the leaders of the scouts group decided that they wanted to participate in the Scout Navedeno, which is basically adopt a family. Anna one of the newest leaders (dirigentes) was yet again the driving force. I think I'm so wrapped up in all of the other organizing stuff that I just don't have it to be thinking of extra things to do. Anna was very insistent that we do it and I said sure, I'd participate and do whatever, but they had to tell me what to do, I did not want to be the lead. Which, I'm happy to say Anna did a great job. I'm beginning to see her as a real leader and someone with a lot of confidence, something that wasn't there before. So, we all said that we would buy a gift and go around to the stores in town to see what they would donate. <br /><br />Real quick let me tell you about the family. They are a family of 5 kids and a dad. The mom left them a few years ago so it's 4 girls and 1 boy and the dad. The dad has only one functioning hand. The other is kind of there, kind of not, but it doesn't really work. The boy Simone is 9 years old, but cannot talk or walk and has really serious needs. He will never be able to be left alone. He can walk a little, but as we saw, he has no balance and if someone is not there and paying attention, he could seriously hurt himself. There is a 16, 13, 12 and 7 year old girl. They are all just so tiny, but you can tell that their dad had done a really good job of taking care of them because they were all very clean and were wearing cloths that didn't have holes in them. The house that this family lives in is falling apart. The dad was careful to tell us not to lean on the one wall they had inside the house because it was about to fall apart. Their kitchen floor is made of dirt, but it got wet and is now fairly muddy. The dad can't work because he cannot leave the little boy for very long, he does work on occasion, but it's not steady. When we arrived and explained that we were there to bring gifts and things for the house the dad saw the food and said “may God pay you for this, please, go into the kitchen, you'll see that there is no food in there”. So this takes me back to the end of the first paragraph. We had gone to the supermarkets and asked shoppers if they would be willing to donate any food, soap, toilet paper, etc to this family and it was incredible! Two separate people donated $40 dollars worth of food! There was something like 5 big bags of rice, a bunch of beans, oil, sugar, coffee, everything. We had people donate sanitary pad for the older girls, lots of nice smelling soap, people donated body sprays (everyone here wears perfume of some sort), it was just amazing to see how much people were willing to give! The kids, the dad, everyone was excited. We had cloths for everyone, toys for the younger kids, a pair of shoes for the dad. They all loved their gifts, but soon the interest turned to the food and they all wanted to see what food they were going to be eating that night. <br /><br />Even with all the food that we brought and the cloths and the toys, it just wasn't enough, it's just not. We found out that they don't have enough money to pay the registration fees for the two girls in high school, they missed the first dead line because they just don't have the money. Thankfully, at that moment one of the dirigentes present took their names and said that the next day she would pay for both girls. It's something like $12 for both, but they just don't have that. I saw their bedrooms and for 5 people there were only 3 twin size beds. These beds didn't have sheets. We plan to get them sheets! I have seen people in the US that are poor by US standards, but this is different. This is a whole different level. As a scouts group we plan to continue helping this family with their needs, uniforms for all of the kids for school, continue to buy them soap, food, sheets, etc. Once you see how bad it is and how unfair it is, you have to try to do something. <br /><br />Someone actually said to us “Gracias a Dios que hay los Scouts en la palma” or “Thank God that there are Scouts in La Palma”. I'm just happy that there is a way for those who want to help other to do it. If you are thinking about giving, helping, something this holiday season, do it. People aren't poor because they are lazy, sometimes life throws you something like a very handicapped son and there is nothing you can do but love and take care of him the best that you can.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-2101988337350219652010-12-12T16:27:00.002-07:002010-12-12T16:30:02.852-07:00Here is are some things that happened to me today that I thought were really funny:<br /><br />Okay, so it was cloudy and cool today so I decided to go for a walk to the beach at 8:00am. I leave my house and haven't taken 3 steps when I hear someone yelling my name. I looked and found the person near the back of my house. He's a neighbor and I know him so it's no problem. So, I ask him whats going on and he and this other guy are chasing this rooster around and they want me to help them because the rooster is on my side of the fence. I hate the chickens. They make this weird moaning sounds all of the time and they're creepy. So I find the rooster and start to chase it and notice too late that it has a rope on its foot and I only needed to step on the rope, but, it had gone to the other side of the fence. <br /><br />Once I got back from my run I was in my house doing some cleaning and stepped outside for a sec and see my other neighbor running around looking really happy. He sees me and yells “Laura, we're making a ping pong table!” he was sooooooo happy. I was took, I would love to play some ping pong. So, we I yelled something like “awesome, I can't wait”! <br /><br />Today is a good day!<br /><br />P.S. This happened on Friday. I told Deivin about the rooster chasing and he said this "Laura, you don't have to do everything that Pena (my neighbor) says, you don't have to chase the rooster". It totally made me crack up! Love it.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-4659305023342699042010-12-08T08:28:00.000-07:002010-12-08T08:29:41.183-07:00The Teleton 2010This past week Costa Rica held it's annual teleton which is a nation wide fundraiser for the children's hospital. The hospital treats the kids of Costa Rica who have suffered serious burns, who have serious diseases that would normally cost a parent millions of dollars to treat over the course of a lifetime. The kids are given all that they need through the hospital, oxygen, wheel chairs, medicine, everything. So, each year people all over CR tune in and watch the teleton and donate money. Each year the Guias y Scouts of Costa Rica hit the streets with big tin cans to raise money for the cause. I had the great pleasure this year of being able to participate in the even with my Guias y Scouts in La Palma and this will go down as one of my greatest Peace Corps moments.<br /><br />When I was given 12 big cans with slots in the top and told by Ruth the area director that we needed to fill them up I was not really sure how. We put them out in the different businesses so that people could donate, but they were really empty when Anna one of the other leaders and also my host sister in law went to check on them. So, on Wednesday; Anna, Gregory, Sary and I started hitting the streets Thursday and Friday and then organized Saturday as our big day when we would go to the town center and stop cars and have the kids bang drums and blow whistles and ask for money for the teleton. It was awesome! The kids were really excited and you could see that they were really taking ownership of it. They became somewhat possessive over their "alcancia" or can and would compare with each other "mine's heavier, look Laura, mine is the heaviest". There was even a girl who was helping her grandma cook for a church activity who asked if she could come with us to raise money. By the end of the day she had joined the scouts and was really excited to have been able to raise money for the kids. So, after working all day on Saturday we opened up our cans to count and we were all really excited to be able to report that we had raised 308,000 Colones! That's like $600 which is a lot for a little town. When I reported what we had raised to Ruth the area director she was really happy and told me that there were groups that had been formed for years that didn't raise that much. I was so proud of my kids at that moment.<br /><br />So, after all was counted and reported we went home to watch the rest of the teleton. Group after group was going up and showing a giant check of what they had raised and they were doing testimonials from kids who had benefited from the teleton in the past (these were seriously heart wrenching stories). I started to get a little worried that I had missed the Scouts presenting what they had raised because it was getting so late. When they presented the Scouts they brought up the head guy from San Jose and like 6 kids to present the check for all of the Scouts all over Costa Rica and the amount was 125,000,000! After they revealed the amount Anna yelled to me through our shard wall "Laura, did you hear! We did it! This is great!", I yelled back “ I know, this is so cool”. It was such a great moment to know that I was able to be apart of something really great. The next day people were telling me how good they felt about having helped and I even had a neighbor stop by and ask if they could donate more!<br /><br />Here are some things I learned: People who have less almost always give more. Those cruising around in their nice cars wouldn't even stop sometimes while those on bikes with no breaks and a wooden seat would stop to give. It feels good to give, to know that you were involved in something that helped those who need it most. Get involved! Help others to help others.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-66495265217596640552010-11-29T16:26:00.000-07:002010-11-29T16:27:08.153-07:00Nothing muchI've been in San Jose for about five days and it was a really nice break. While Peace Corps volunteers don't put in a huge number of "working" hours per day (depending on who you are and where your community), we do work and feel stress all the time! I am constantly wondering if I'm doing enough, too much, should I be doing something different, etc. Also, there is a lot of stress involved in trying to work in another language and culture. Why am I saying all this? I just want to say that I really needed a break and it felt really nice to have a little mini vacation from La Palma. It's an odd feeling to really want to get out for a while, but, miss Deivin. Mostly, I wish he could travel with me! Today I went to the doctor to have my knees checked out, hopefully we get my knee pain in hand and it all goes away soon! On this trip I got to see the newest Harry Potter movie which was the best yet in my opinion and I also saw Life as We Know It, a romantic comedy. Both really good. Not much else going on, I'm ready to get back to La Palma and see how the Scouts faired this past weekend.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-54947926182942638832010-11-27T21:19:00.002-07:002010-11-27T21:33:44.315-07:00Okay, sorry of the absence of blogs, I don't really have a good reason, or maybe I kind of do, but mostly I was just having some motivation issues. So, I recently had a very interesting Peace Corps experience 2 weeks ago and I wanted to share. Hurricane Matthew was passing over Costa Rica and bringing lots and lots of rain. There was no wind, just a huge amount of rain. Since I'm generally clueless as to what's going on in the world on Thursday the 4th I got a call from the Peace Corps office saying that there was lots of flooding expected in my region and they wanted me to evacuate to Palmar Norte (it's around 3 hours away). I had noticed that there was a lot of rain, but in my community the river was still really low and everything looked pretty safe. But, when the Peace Corps tells you to leave, you have to leave. So, I asked Oscar the taxi driver who has been a friend of mine since I arrived in La Palma if he was interested in driving me to Palmar, he said sure. I don't think either of us had any idea that we would be leaving the safety of the peninsula for a crazy trip into one of the really affected areas. I said my goodbyes to my host family and Deivin and made sure everyone knew that no matter what, SAVE TIGRE! They all thought I was crazy, they were like “she's a cat, she can swim and climb trees, she'll be fine”. I just didn't want her to be all wet and uncomfortable, she's my baby after all. So anyway, we took off and some 3 somewhat sketchy hours of driving later arrived in Palmar where I was to meet up with another volunteer who's community was actually flooded. As Oscar was getting ready to head back we found out that we were all trapped now, all of the roads were closed, there was no possible way to get to La Palma, San Isidro, San Jose, Panama, we were stuck. Luckily for Oscar his mom lives nearby so he headed to her house. I realized right away that I wasn't in La Palma anymore. Palmar Norte has the biggest river in Costa Rica flowing right through it and it was big! The rain there was much more intense and there were dump trucks full of soaking wet people arriving all the time. All of the surrounding farms and some entire towns flooded and people had to find a place to stay and that place was Palmar Norte. Well, I ended up staying in Palmar for 4 days until I was allowed to make my way back to La Palma. I had to take 3 buses, 2 taxis and a ferry to make it back since the main road was washed away and what should have taken 3 hours took 6. Tigre and Deivin were really happy to see me and I was soooo happy to be home. <br /><br />Okay, that all happened a long time ago. Here is a more recent update, I'm currently in San Jose. I was celebrating Thanksgiving with some other volunteers and an embassy family that was nice enough to invite 6 of us to eat and stay with them in their home. They were very nice and incredibly generous. If going into the foreign services didn't mean constant travel I would want to join just so I could work with the type of people that I have met at the embassy over the past year and a half. I'll be in San Jose until Tuesday or Wednesday. I needed a bit of a break from La Palma so this was a nice chance to get away. <br /><br />I promise not to be so bad at blogging!Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-39600698412876206962010-10-22T18:05:00.000-06:002010-10-22T18:06:51.925-06:00Spay and Neuter Your Pets UpdateOn Wednesday the 20th we had our 6th clinic. We have now spayed or neutered 81 animals! I can't believe that this project has and continues to do so well. This clinic was a little bit different for me, usually the vet brings with him a volunteer assistant who helps him with the operations, they do things like clean the blood away while he's performing the operation or they hold up an instrument that needs to be held so the vet can see better or whatever. I normally stay outside with the pet owners and charge, greet, look after the animal that just got done, etc. On Wednesday there was no assistant so I got to be the assistant. That was the first time I've ever done anything like that before. I have seen the surgeries, I've gone in while they were going on, I knew the process, but this was different. I had no idea that it was such hard work. By then end of the day I was exhausted, but I really liked it. For the next clinic we are talking about only doing street dogs. I'm not exactly sure how we are going to be able to do it, but we'll figure out a way. I know of at least 2 female dogs in the town center that we can spay and there are more all the time. <br /><br />On a personal note, last weekend I made a big batch of beans. I have got so many, it's incredible. For two dollars you can eat for weeks! It's an experiment, I think next time I might just make half a bag and then wait a few weeks for the other half but beans are a super food. I've actually been making Gallo Pinto lately and liking it! I'm turning tica. Sadly, Deivin doesn't like beans and is not so into the change. You can't win them all I guess.Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7768857592338347588.post-59670694785571845612010-10-18T16:19:00.002-06:002010-10-18T17:07:23.305-06:00Scouts update!We have been meeting with the kids for about 3 or 4 weeks now and things have been going really well. 2 weekends ago we made tamales (their different from what we see in the states) and went around with the kids to sell them for a fundraiser. It went really well and we were able to raise enough money to buy uniforms. When I say buy uniforms know that it's also different from what you are thinking. In CR it's still really common for people to have their cloths made for them by a taylor. It's usually cheaper and then you get a custom fit. My host mom makes most of the uniforms for the schools and will probably make most of the uniforms for the Scouts. So, our plan is to buy a bunch of cloth and then people can either make the uniforms for their kids of have them made by someone. Also, we are thinking of taking the kids on their first ever camping trip in a couple of months. I'm going to see if I can get some grant money to finance us buying some tents, sleeping bags, etc. so that we can take the trip and have them for the future. We live at the entrance of one of the most famous parks in CR, but the majority of people in La Palma have never been to the park, hopefully we can change that for the scouts. <br /><br />In other news, my english is horrible! Every time I re-read a blog post or my facebook status update I notice that I'm making all the mistakes that my students are making. I think it's getting worse and worse. I'm not really sure how to stop this free fall. I'm always reading and I watch some tv and movies in english, but it's no use! So, if you read this and think, wow, she is really bad at English, know that I was better before!Laurahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04336168857508786904noreply@blogger.com0