Sunday, November 24, 2013

ISP Living

After our first full week of living in Ilhéus, it is certainly starting to feel like home. This week was filled with lots of research, exploring, and of course, cooking. 
On Monday, we all began our ISPs (the research project that we have been preparing for since landing in Brazil). As I am conducting a project on the communication within the public health system, I spent my first week of field research interviewing many different health professionals including nurses, doctors, psychologists, psychiatrists, community health agents, and social workers. So far, it has been incredibly interesting to get so may different perspectives on the complexities and flaws of Brazil's public health care system. 
All this research has also come with its fair share of hilarious experiences. The best so far happened after speaking with a community health agent in a favela clinic. I stayed after the interview to organize my notes and wait to meet with my advisor, but because I was sitting in an examination room and wearing somewhat professional attire, I was confused for a doctor. A woman came rushing into the room with her sick child and pushed her child toward me asking what was wrong with her. I immediately started laughing (definitely the wrong response for a worried mother), and then tried to explain that I was a student doing research. She then assumed I was a medical student and was clearly frustrated by my lack of knowledge about her daughter's illness. 

the policlínica (one of my research locations)
Most days after researching/interviewing in the morning, we come home for lunch, and then usually get kidnapped by one of our advisors to go exploring for the afternoon. Before our advisors see patients at the local clinics, they drop us off at the nearest beach, and pick us up when they are done with the appointments. Sometimes, I feel like a child being taken to my parent's work everyday, but free transportation to and from the beach is VERY hard to turn down. 

beach in Olivença (one of our advisors works at a clinic 5 minutes away) 

In terms of learning how to be a grown up, we are certainly learning. Remember how we broke the sink? We now know how to fix it (and have broken/fixed it three times since the original instance).As for the issue with laundry smelling worse after it has been washed, we have finally learned that the machine must be attached to a sink that is turned on because water is indeed necessary to clean clothes. We have continued to master the art of grocery shopping, and have been taking full advantage of being able to cook all of our meals. We still do not know how to use the oven, but are hoping to figure it out before Thanksgiving! 

salad with fresh mango, avocado, tomatoes, cilantro, and chili marinated chicken

Monday, November 18, 2013

Playing House

SOMEHOW in the past week, I have become a real person.
I am currently living in an apartment with three other friends, we are shopping for and making all of our own food, doing laundry, cleaning, and pretty much pretending real adults. All of this is taking place in Ilhéus, a beautiful and safe city with a plentiful collection of gorgeous beaches and serious public health issues. Doesn't get much better than that!
This week, I will be starting my field research at various medical and mental health clinics around the city. My advisor is a nurse at the free clinic in the favela where I will be doing most of my interviews. Most of our advisors have some kind of involvement with this clinic and the public health system, and have also taken a serious liking to toting us around the city. 
Andrea (another advisor) has pretty much taken us on as her second children and has now kidnapped us for unannounced driving tours of the city and beaches, to her house for snack time, and to the grocery store to teach us how to buy bread and produce. Just for the record, we already new how to go grocery shopping and have been to the grocery store every day since moving in. We're trying to become regulars. 
Our house here in Ilhéus is perfect (with the exception of the army of mosquitos). We have two porches, beautiful views, three bedrooms, two bathrooms and running water. We also have lots of geckos (we started naming them, but it's getting confusing because five of them look the same), friendly neighbors with the loudest dog in Brazil, and arguably the best sunset spot in the city. 
jack jack (one of our pet geckos) who lives on the ceiling of the living room and eats large moths
the view from our back balcony 

our front balcony, complete with two hammocks and the perfect dinner location

So far we have broken the sink once, taken laundry out of the machine smelling worse than when we put it in, lost a spatula behind the gas stove (don't worry we found it after crawling around on the floor for a while), and mastered the art of making salsa out of whatever fruits and vegetables were cheapest at the store. Pretty successful for our first week being real grownups in a foreign country!

mango salsa
our living room 
our kitchen

Monday, November 11, 2013

Remanso

After playing tourist in Lençòis for the weekend, we traveled further into the Interior of Bahia to do a rural village study. For about a week, my program was folded into the quilombo of Remanso (quilombo means runaway slave community). The community is about 80 families and completely secluded from the outside world, with the exception of occasional trips to Lençòis. Each family that lives in the community has ties back to the original slave founders, and, at this point, a large majority of the community is somehow related. The quilombos in Brazil are all protected by the federal government, and within the past 10 years, the government has started to provide water wells and electricity. 
During our time in Remanso, we got a serious taste for rural living. With no running water, simple tasks like brushing teeth became a larger ordeal. Instead of taking showers, we took buckets (taking bucket showers is actually very fun, I would recommend it), and we became close acquaintances with some very large insects. 

Enjoying our backyard hammock with my friend Nicole
My house 
My host mom in Remanso has 7 children (ranging from ages 22 to 4), and is incredibly strong in all ways. Her husband is currently suffering from throat cancer, and because of the lack of health care in the quilombo, he no longer lives in the house and travels for days every month to receive the care that he needs. This leaves my host mom at home to take care of all of the children on her own, and manage their agricultural business (conveniently located in their backyard) of harvesting aipim (cassava/route vegetable). 

Two of my host siblings (Jackson, 4, and Roberta, 7) with some VERY fresh fish
Throughout our time in the village, we pretty much did everything that our host families did, made art projects with the children in the local school, learned capoeira (kind of like zumba if you replace the dancing element with fighting), took a day long excursion down the river to a beautiful waterfall, and had some course discussions about social determinants of health. 

rowing down the river to the waterfall 

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Lençòis Adventures

After two months of Salvador-living, our classroom became completely mobile as we took off for a two week excursion throughout the state of Bahia. To begin, we spent a weekend in Lençòis, a beautiful town nestled in Chapada Diamantina in the interior of Bahia. 
With only one completely free day to conquer one of the most popular tourist destinations in all of Brazil, 11 of us piled into a van with a guide to have an incredibly productive, beautiful, and memorable adventure. 
To begin, we took a short hike to this natural swimming hole in the mountains of Chapada Diamantina. 


After a break to swim, we hiked out and shipped off to our next destination: the natural pools

natural pool that was filled with over-friendly fish

cactus curtain 

inside the cave connected to the natural pool
After an hour of swimming, relaxing, and being nibbled on by fish, it was time for our next stop: a cave filled with stalagmites and stalagtites. We took a 45 minute tour of this series of caves filled with bats and incredible natural sculptures. To top it all off, we all got to wear hard hats and carry giant flash lights (the guides said it was for safety, but I think they just like to make tourists look stupid).

some stalagmites/tites
After our cave expedition, it was time for our last, and arguably most beautiful stop of the day. We went for a perfectly timed hike to watch the sun set over the Chapada Diamantina mountains. 

View from the summit with my friends Colin and Sarabeth

another incredible Brazilian sunset

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Ilha De Mare

During our last week of class in Salvador, we went on a day long excursion to Ilha de Mare with local UFBA nursing and dental students (we had class at the same university so sometimes we would awkwardly interact with them). The Island is about a 40 minute boat ride off the coast of Salvador, and is also the home town of one of our academic directors. Our program was split into smaller groups, combined with the UFBA students, in different neighborhoods all over the island. We spent the day doing health promotion activities with school-aged children and their families.
The boats that we took to Ilha de Mare
On the island, my group worked with elementary schoolers on dental hygiene. After putting on a puppet show with tooth puppets, we did a fluoride demonstration that turned all of the kids' teeth neon pink. Apparently, the fluoride tasted awful because all of the kids winced and tried to scrape it off their tongues. 

the neon pink realization 

although the kids hated the fluoride, they were really into the camera

After spending the day playing with fluoride and children, we went to our academic director's neighborhood for a samba/farewell party. I think I drank my body's weight in coconut water, and almost learned how to samba (which is really just shuffling your feet as fast a possible). To finish our adventure, we caught a beautiful sunset on our way back to Salvador. 

sunset in Praia Grande (hometown of our academic director)

UFBA students and our group mid sunset