The nation-wide shut down correlates almost exactly with Group 6's six month anniversary of arriving in Swaziland. After six months we're well o our way to adjusting, settlign into routines, and this is starting to actually feel like our lives again. The edge wearing off coupled with the cgloom of the holidays away from home in addition to the lack of work mean it's time for vacation.
PCVs vacation hard. For us (at least for some) travel is not to get out and experience a new local culture and more what Africa has to offer. It is for a change of scenery and to grasp some of the things we sorely miss. In Maputo, we didn't go to museums, local markets, or cultural shows. Rather, we h ung out at the malle, saw a movie (Nim's Island. . . not that great), went to several coffee shops (and a juice bar!), showered three times a day, and ate a ton of seafood.
Soem might be disappointed in me when I say that I spent more time with Afrikaners than Mozambiquans. Partially because there aren't too many locals in hostels, but also because I miss speaking English at a native level. I miss being sarcastic, I miss being able to not take my work home with me. On vacation we get to take a break from the fish-bowl effect. In Moxambique I could order a drink from a bar and not have to worry about my host family, my community, and the PC office hearing about it. I h ad conversations where no one asked me to marry them, give them money, or find them a job. I had conversations where no one cares that I was white. It was glorious.
We did try the local cuisine, and it was delicious. But we also spent a couple nights havign pizza or just cheese and crackers. Certainly, we weren't looking to avoid local culture. But we've had a big dose of culture these past months and we're not looking to be good travelers or even laid-back tourists. For me, this trip was about being my authentic, Western, non-working self, in a beautiful country away from the prying eyes of my Swazi friends and family.
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2 comments:
Nothing wrong with any of that, especially the seafood part. Seafood is gooood!
Hello - we don't know each other, but I came across your blog as I was searching for information about Swaziland. I'm scheduled to come there for 2 months (June - August) to work for Save the Children in Mbabane, and I was wondering if you could please write me at claireberman@gmail.com to tell me more about living there. My family is kind of worried about my safety b/c I'm traveling there alone. I'd really appreciate it if you could write to me!
Thanks,
Claire Berman
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