Tibati Cluster for Life
In Bogo, I was an
hour away from Maroua the regional capital.
Most volunteers were only a couple hours from there. We may have had "clusters", the
administrative organization for work and security, but with all of us so close
to our office/home-away-from-home we didn't really operate like that. The Extreme Northerners were just all in it
together; any time you went to town you were bound to run into somebody. (I'm informed by Erin, my old post mate, that
not only was Bogo a cluster in and of itself, but I was the de facto head of
said cluster. Huh, who knew?)
Tibati Cluster, on
the other hand, is a family. We are some
seven hours from the regional capital of Ngaoundere (baring some tricky stuff
involving hopping a train in another town at five in the morning). We are thus a bit isolated. Isolation breed intimacy (among other things
like insanity). WE DON'T NEED
NGAOUNDERE. Or other people. We have each other.
(and also matching outfits) |
Stephanie, Caitlin,
and myself are all displaced Extreme North volunteers. We all lost our original homes and were sent
off into nowhere to open up new ones.
Start afresh in an area that hasn't had Peace Corps for almost a
decade. They couldn't of sent a better
team! (This is not true; I could have
totally organized a better team and it likely wouldn't have included me. But they couldn't have organized a more
awesome team!) When I tell people who
I'm posted near they are all like, "What?
That's awesome! I wish I was near
Stephanie and Caitlin!" Yea! And they probably say that about me too. Oh.
No. Caitlin says that when she
tells people she's near me they say things like, "Well, THAT guy is
crazy." Yea, but the good kind.
I call them both
Nuna which means "big sister" in Korea. How I got posted near two Asian-Americans of Korean
descent is one of life's mysteries. I'm
clearly the little brother of the family in spite of being physically larger
and also technically older by far. The
important bit is that we are most
definitely a family. A properly
dysfunctional one too. And right now,
I'm laying in a bed at Caitlin's place as she nurses me back to health from
some silly bout of malaria. Yes,
Stephanie, we watched Running Man last night and, yes, I still maintain that it
is some of the greatest television ever produced. My head hurt every time I laughed. Feel Touch Cross!
Sadly Stephanie left
us not too long ago. She has gone on to
bigger and better things in America. The
land of everything. She was replaced by
what is probably a perfectly good human named Liz. She's not Korean though, so I don't really
know what that's about. And she
naturally can't replace Stephanie.
Mostly because I won't let her.
NUUUUUUUUUUUUUNAAAAAAAAAAAA!
Ok, delirium seems
to be setting in again. Here is another
picture:
"CAITLIN, my
water bottle is empty and my head hurts!
Fix it."
Reunion 2020: Seoul
NOTE: In America, I promised myself I would do a
better job of keeping you updated.
Clearly I'm not doing that. Tis
not my fault! My normal internet has
gone from being shitty to being nonexistent.
There is none in Mbakaou and none in Tibati. A short 8 hour drive and I have decent, less
shitty internet, but, alas, I'm not prepared to make that trip so often. We, my friends, have survived worse trials
and shall survive this. Have faith! Plus you can now follow me on twitter
@juggledgeese; I can update that via texts from my phone. AND if you message me there or tweet at me,
it goes directly to my cell here. In
Africa. For free. Technology, you crazy.
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