Monday, January 23, 2012

Yes!

Quick news of the day: 

The hot water was fixed (yessssss!!)

And the monkeys were chased off of our roof as the sun went down by a teenage monk from next door, all the other young monks looking on, laughing.  A show ensued on other rooftops as women baring sticks and cups of water sent them away.  I did see the big 'bastard' snatch an apple and eat it casually... 
They scurried quite quickly from the cup of water.  Duly noted.


Sunday, January 22, 2012

Boudhiful exhaustion


So it's starting to become real, folks.  We've treated for six days straight, 4 days for me at the home clinic, and 2 days at satellite clinics:  Godavari by motorbike (see previous post) and Champi by foot (pictures to come).  After a full day of treating at the home clinic on Friday, having seen almost 200 cases collectively throughout week, Seven, Alison, Elissa and I hopped onto a micro (a minibus, think vanagon with 3 rows of seats), then a bus, (where we puffed past the beginnings of Friday night life in Kathmandu, running parallel to a wierd-looking tractor for 20 minutes that puffed black smoke into the air), and then a tuk tuk (a 3-wheeled truck) that carried us to Boudha.

Stupa maintenance!  On top of this they keep it sparkling clean.
We spent a day of sight-seeing the next day, circling the stupa that we kept calling a square and then laughing because it really is a circle, and we intermittently shopped and ate.  In the afternoon we went to witness the Puja, regularly done at the Gompas around town on a Saturday, Nepal's holy day and rest day.  We then taxied home, a much simpler and of course more expensive (but really only a Portland bus fare each) way to travel, exhausted but happy with our day. Please see the video below to experience a brief moment of the ride! 
Stupa cleaning
So. I have to say that I would have VERY MUCH looked forward to, at the end of our tourist jaunt out of town and back, a nice warm shower.  Perhaps I've mentioned the water at the clinic was solar-heated, and that if the day was sunny (which is 9 out of 10 times the case), one was gauranteed hot water (even enough to turn on the cold) if one desired. Was.

However.  And this happened Friday, just as we were finishing up our treatment day.... 

I hadn't seen the monkeys for a few days, but here they were all of a sudden, the whole family this time, scrambling down our building, past the treatment room window, running quickly across the alley, and scaling the building across the way.  These monkeys, on the first day of arrival, were introduced to us by our delightful, wickedly smart, and witty clinic director, Nicky (who is British, fyi), as the 'Bastard monkeys'.  Out of curiosity and and a hesitancy to judge, I hadn't quite accepted this title for them, although I knew they stole food and such and really, are slightly nerve-wracking to have around.  A wild animal nimbly climbing up and down our two-tiered roof while eating breakfast, who could easily be carrying rabies is not, well, let's say, calming to the nerves.
So anyhow, a few minutes later, we come to find out that the monkeys have taken off the water pipe on the roof (a normal occurrence) and smashed one of the glass tubes (not a normal occurrence) that holds our precious water, warmed to perfection by the sun, now spreading out over the roof and raining on the ground outside our clinic backdoor.   

Well, even if we knew who to call to have this fixed, it might take ages.  So sponge baths it is.  And that is what I did, out of a bucket of thermos water, still warm, when we returned.  It is amazing what one can adapt to.  Enjoying the ride! (most of the time!)

On a last note, our taxi ride home was delightfully given a soundtrack by the driver, and in the bliss of a good day, and in the exhaustion of all the travels, I attempted a recording of some sights and sounds.  I hope it works! 



Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Brick fields and biscuits


Jan 17

Today I hopped on a motorbike with Tsering Sherpa, one of the interpreters at our clinic, and we drove off to Godhavari.  We left the temple grounds at 8:40, the air crisp, the sun just coming over the hills.  The road was bumpy, dirt road most of the way, paved for some it.  As we came around the bend leaving Chapagaon, the landscape opened into green valley to the right of us.  There were a few small smokestacks in the distance--the dark smoke not even close to competing with the misty pink tone of the morning.   We breezed past small houses to the left, women preparing the morning fire, families gathered around their porches, drinking tea, beginning their day.  Goats here, cows down the way, chickens and dogs dotting the scenery.  If it weren’t for the patients scheduled to come to the clinic, I would have insisted on stopping to take photos.   Next time I hope to! At the end of the day. 
Further down the road both sides opened up to terraces of bricks, like a blanket over the rolling hills. Here, Tsering revealed the reason for the smokestacks—this whole area a brick factory.  I have never witnessed industry so beautiful.  Many houses are built with this rich sienna-brown-colored brick, but today’s (this week’s? this month’s?) production was grey.  He explained that they used to make them out of clay, but that recently they have begun making them out of cement.  Color or none, the scene was breathtaking. 
When we arrived at the clinic, our other interpreter for the day, Mishal, had not yet arrived,  so we walked down the road a short way for tea.  As we crossed the small concrete bridge over the tiny brown creek to the patio, three women immediately approached Tsering and began talking to him, concern on their faces.  After a minute or two, he turned to me and said that someone in their family had passed away the day before, and as the custom mandated, they were now supposed to fast all day out of respect for the deceased.  When going for acupuncture, this poses a problem, for anyone who has gone to get a treatment on an empty stomach is a prime candidate for what we call “needle shock”, a phenomenon where one breaks out into a sweat, becomes short of breath, may faint, or sometimes even vomit.  In fact, one of the women now standing there had experienced this very thing the other day.  It made for a great story by the practitioner returning that day, as apparently, in between retching, she had announced to the room “it’s okay, it’s my fault, I didn’t eat today!”  Well, naturally, they were all concerned and were letting us know that they couldn’t make it to clinic.  24 patients had been booked for the day, so we figured that those from surrounding villages who were not associated with the death would still come for treatment. 
So we set up shop, on the third floor patio of a building, out in the sun, overlooking the rest of the village.  This is the Godhavari clinic. The morning was bright, warm (yes!!), and beautiful, and seven patients received needles, some cupping, moxa, and herbs for their complaints.   In the afternoon, the wind picked up, threatening disorganization of our pop-up treatment station, and trying to set sail to our  small paper files.  The ground is covered in dust, and so to avoid dirt and pulverized cement in our eyes, we ventured to the small room adjacent to the rooftop, where we treated another nine patients in a construction-zone, a door lying flat in the middle of the space.    I am learning what relief work is truly like.  It isn’t glamorous.  It’s dirty.   Standards of cleanliness must be shifted, and lots of hand sanitizer gets used.  Alcohol swabs today became some of my best friends (yet still a distant second to the incredible interpreters we work with.  Seriously.  These guys are what really makes this whole operation work).
Slowly, I am learning some key words that help me to directly communicate with my patients.  Duksa, pain.  Is it tender here?  Duksa.  Or, is this okay?  Tiksa tiksa, a patient will say in reply to that question, their heads bobbing from side to side(lateral flexion, no rotation) in an extremely Nepali form of saying, “yes, fine.”   This head shaking had me confused the first day of treatment, as the closest reference I had was the way we might say “yeah, whatever”, or “so,so” but here in Nepal, it has a more affirmative meaning.
Later in the day, in the midst of post-lunch tiredness and restaurant-style rush of patients (in other words, I was slightly overwhelmed) I noticed this beautiful  woman sitting there, waiting for treatment, who I had seen before, but couldn’t quite place where.  A few minutes later, when I could finally sit down for the intake with her, it dawned on me.  She was the woman who had served us tea this morning and who had shown me ultrasounds of all her organs, and doctors notes about sciatic pain for which they were recommending surgery (although no issue was revealed by scans).  She was also one of the ladies who was not going to be eating today, thus having to miss clinic.  “I wasn’t going to come here”, she explained, “but then everyone else was going, and I thought, if everyone else is going, why can’t I?”  Perhaps the custom also allows for sneaking a biscuit so that one can get treated, because this was her strategy! 
As we drove back through the villages, through the small stone-pathed shortcut, through the neighborhoods of people of all ages walking along the side of the road, past children playing ball in a vacant lot, back through the brick fields, up and down through the rolling hills back to the clinic in Chapagaon, I felt enchanted by the scenery, the people, by this life.  We arrived back ‘home’, and rolled up through the iron gates, the young monks playing in the yard, witnessing our return. 
I knew while we rode down the path this morning that this was going to be the day to write about.  Tonight I left our post-dinner chat early, as romantic as it is by candlelight, as it will be lit every night this week.  Our new electricity schedule leaves us with lights and the possibility of connecting over the internet at the most inconvenient of times.  Thankfully it popped on earlier than expected and I didn’t have to wake at midnight to post this, but rather just before 11. And mind you, I am completely aware of this fascination I have with the electricity, or lack thereof...I can't stop talking about it...
I really don’t know how to finish this post!  And there is no time for editing, or picking over it too much.  My hands are cold and I am ready to fall back asleep, provided the dogs outside don’t go berserk as they love to do at intervals throughout the night, and particularly in the morning just before the gongs begin, of course! 
Good night all, Namaste.   Aaah, there go the dogs. 


Monday, January 16, 2012

See you on the darkside

Notification!  We will be out of electricity for 88 hours out of the week.  This is up from 68 hours or so... We only get internet when the electricity is on, and frankly, I am slightly more concerned about boiling water when we have a working plug than hopping onto the interwebzone.  I feel almost as if weening from some lovely addictive substance...
But I will still keep up on updates.  Stay tuned for the trash talk, ala this is how we burn our plastic...

Reading by candle light is quite romantic, and by the way, candles and moxa are our only heat.  In my opinion, I think we should try this at home.  It's also interesting to see how we have gone from scarves, caps, and thermal jackets to a base layer and maybe some handwarmers.  Elissa, our Australian team member says, "I think I'm acclimatizing!" 

Yes we are.  In so many ways.  Loving it here.  

See you on the next go 'round!




Saturday, January 14, 2012

Pushing the words, a Hello from Chapagaon!


Jan 15
I am hoping to get this blog rolling along!  My goal has been one post per week.  We arrived in Nepal one week from tomorrow, so I suppose it’s going well so far.  We began treating patients on Friday, had a day off yesterday, and used the time to traipse through town to see what we could find.  My friend and compatriot, Seven, has been prolific in her musings with the written word and so I will defer to her post that describes some of our adventures of the past few days:
As for me, I’ve been taking a lot in, trying to relax, get acclimated, get warm, get hydrated, and yes, today I did some laundry.  I decided to because the sun is out in its full glory, which will dry what-have-you in a short while, and so, I also decided to wash my hair, bask in the rays on the roof, and allow this last morning of relaxation to sink in.  This afternoon we go back to clinic, and tomorrow begins our 5-day 9-5 schedule, 20 patients per day, our goal. 
I must admit I am noticing a reluctance to post to my blog.  I like saying things with pictures, and so I’ve prepared a set of images to upload for a full display of some sights around Chapagaon.  But I find myself coming to a standstill when I sit down to write.  What do I say?  How do I describe this experience?  How can I paint the fullest picture?  My natural tendency is to want to share it all.   If I can’t share it all, then why share any?  Of course, I am just spitting it all out onto the page at the moment.  “Write from your heart”  advised Seven, and I must say, I am trying to use her example as inspiration, rather than becoming envious of her energy (and her wit! Check out her blog!  It’s fabulous.)
Back to the laundry.  We are washing our clothes and cloth items in plastic buckets.  I chose to use cold water, the majority of my clothing being wool.  With the sun shining so brightly we do have a solar-powered hot water heater, so I thankfully took a warm shower the other day.    
I am coming to understand how little I need in terms of clothing, that is, changes of clothes, and how simple living really can be.  I do think about this at home, how electricity is constantly available, hot water comes at the turn of the tap, heat at the spin of a dial, the flip of a switch.  But our conveniences are just so....convenient.  If they are there, then why not use them?  Just use them with great care, because they are, without a doubt, a luxury. 
Yet living ‘without’ luxury really is quite wonderful.  There is, how can I describe this?  There is so much more time.... to live.  To experience every moment without complaint.  Say, right now I can feel the chilly nip at my fingers and toes.  My down jacket keeps me warm, if I weren’t typing on my computer that desperately needs a charge, I would be sitting outside in that glorious sun, warming my toes.  However, there they are, those silly toes, feeling a little stiff with cold, reminding me...that...I  AM ALIVE.  Yes!  That’s it!  I am alive.  Thank goodness. 
Alright.  That’s it for the day.  If I had more time, I might tell you how wonderful the Nepali people are.  How, even if we are strange, speak a weird language, our skin is white (which is why everyone stared at me the other day as I took a walk on my own down the street, one of the interpreters at the clinic informed me), and we are obviously ‘not from around here’, they are quick to return a smile, warmth and curiosity in their eyes. All ages and genders pass this universal symbol of friendliness along.  No one looks upon us with suspicion or unease.  I feel welcome.  And quickly, I am coming to feel at home.  


Attempting a 180 degree view from the lower roof:

 


Buddhist Monastery next door, home to young monks, and our 6 am alarm of gongs, horns, and drumming. 

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

First Arrival

Jan 9, 2012

We spent a total of 24 hours in flight, in movement, from Portland to Kathmandu.  12-13 hours were on Korean airlines (coming highly recommended!) from LA to Incheon/Seoul, and another 7 hours from there to our final destination.  Seven, Alison, and I thoroughly enjoyed the multiple servings of bi bim bap ingested en route!

The crazy taxi ride through the winding streets of Nepal's capital city was a wet one.  Rare to have rain in the winter here, it felt as if it were a true 'Portland' welcome, as if the weather gods wanted to ease us into the adjustment to our new environment.  Still, the gasoline and dust-filled air made me thankful for the cloth dust mask gifted from a dear friend recently returned from her Nepal trip and clinic stint this fall.  After dodging hundreds of other vehicles, people, and a very close call with a woman pushing a vegetable cart that made my heart skip a little beat, we landed in Thamel, at the Wonderland Hotel.

Outside the constant honking of horns greets our ears, then the stray dogs in the lot outside our window (home to a green pond, dirt piles, and a smattering of trash) hold a howling caucus.  A few minutes later the crows hold conference as well, adding caw caw caws to the incessant bray of taxi and moped horns surrounding the block and neighboring streets. 

Jan 10

Today we are overstimulated, having walked the cobblestone corridors of the Thamel district in Kathmandu.  People approach from everywhere, asking for purchase of their wares.  A layer of invisible dust covers almost everything.  A mother with a young girl at her hip approaches, holding up an empty bottle, attempting to guide us into a store to buy milk for her "baby".  Shaking our heads and avoiding eye contact become the rule.  A moped, taxi, bicycle, or multiples of each in succession whiz by as we try to stick to the edge of the street so as not to be run over, meanwhile avoiding a brown puddle of water from yesterday's downpour, or a small pile of muddy trash that has been swept together for the morning cleanup and awaits a shovel into the back of a garbage truck.  It is impossible to walk the streets and return to the hotel without feeling the grime of the city layer itself onto our skin.  The air smells of incense, like nag champa, with a significant undertone of dirt and human grunge.  The horns don’t stop.  Respite is found in a tea house, or back in the hotel room where the lights work sometimes, and sometimes not, and rarely all at once.  If the electrical socket on this side of the room doesn’t work, try the other on the opposite wall.  You just might be lucky.

Last night we ate dinner in an upper level restaurant, curries and dal, served in brass goblets surrounding our plate of rice.  Midway through the meal, the lights flickered and went dark, the live rock band down the street quieting for a moment.  Over the next ten to fifteen minutes, electricity came back, left, came back and left again.  The waiter came with candle in hand, lit the top and then melted the bottom so it would stick to the table.  John Lennon’s “Imagine” wafted up from the street. Perhaps the blackout was really only on our block.  Somehow, magic here doesn't come and go, but is a constant presence, a reminder that this is my place in the world right now, and beauty is everywhere.


Right now, just past 5 o’clock, just past sundown, the electricity has conveniently gone out.  The single bare bulb on generator power lights our chilly room.  The window view is completely black, save for only a handful of similarly generator-lit rooms across the way.  The dogs are still barking.  This time not howling, but barking in conversation.  “Yep, things are great over here...”  “Let’s meet and run in a pack later on, how about?”  “I’ll be on my way in a little while!”  They are quiet.  My computer battery has nearly run out. 




Viiew from Wonderland Hotel window, midday