After two weeks in the village, I can hardly believe how
well I have adjusted to life in Tiepogovogo. I love it! Life is simple and there is no
speedway or byway. They don’t have electricity, running water or toilets. Every
time you turn around you see either cows, goats, sheep, chickens, ducks, guinea fowl, dogs
or a cat and any combination of those. I even had bats that would go in my
house every night, for a little while (they are taken care of now). Every
morning I awaken to the thud thud thud of women pounding their rice or corn
with these huge mortar and pestle like things and the bahing and stirring of either sheep or
goats outside my house. Yet I have not had a problem getting a good nights
sleep, I am thankful God made me a heavy sleeper. I love all of the sounds, all
of the animals and all of the people.
I have been learning Nyarafolo, I would really like to talk to them all. It is not an easy language
for an Anglophone like me. There
are at least five sounds they use all the time that are not found in any Latin
or Germanic language that I know of. Kp, Gb, Ny, Ŋ have challenged me to learn
to use my mouth and tongue in ways I have not used them before. The grammar is
extremely different too. I am still working on that one though, I’m not even
close to understanding that yet, but hey it has only been two weeks; little by
little, it will come as they say here. I am so looking forward to speaking to
the people I see everyday with more than just greetings which are a little more
complex than hey, how are you?
My accommodations are just right. I live in the village’s
old church. That means I have a concrete floor and walls and a metal roof,
which is different than most of the village. I have a two room latrine about
100 feet from my house. One side has a hole for number 2 in the middle and the
other side has a drain that goes out of one wall this is for number 1 and
bathing. The walls are mud brick, the floors are concrete and there is no roof,
but I have a nice set of doors (none of the other latrines have this, don’t
worry they don’t look). I have a nice cot for sleeping, which is actually quite
comfortable, a mosquito net (good for more than just keeping mosquitoes out), a
large water filter that holds several gallons on a stool, a plastic chair, and
my bags and things and that's it. The simple life is sweet and it has been fun adjusting, I haven't missed much yet.