The January meeting in UB was kind of surreal. It was held in the Chingis Khan hotel, not to be confused with the Khan Palace hotel around the corner. You can’t swing a marmot in UB without hitting something named after Chingis. The hotel is really nice and if it weren’t for all the Mongolians, you’d think you were in any other hotel conference room in the world. The meeting itself was 9-4 Monday to Friday. All the aimag and UB staffs were there. Each section got to give a presentation. I had a reputation for making good Power Points in grad school, not to toot my own horn. So, it was kind of painful watching the Mongolian presentations. It takes of almost twice as many words to say something in Mongolian than in English. Most of you know what it’s like to see a someone read and entire slide worth of text. Now imagine that and then having a translator repeat three sentences into your ear. You feel gypped and bored at the same time.
All the other Mercy Corps PCVs got to give presentations. I feel kind of out in the wilderness sometimes, because the word RURAL is on the front of my program’s name. I asked the new country director to send an experienced counterpart out to my aimag to help my supervisors make a real work plan for me. I should be careful what I ask for. This week they’ve been pressing me to write a plan before I have more help and I’ve had more offers to teach English all over the place. I want to concentrate on teaching at the market and doing some computer lessons. I’ll have a better idea of what I’ll be dong after the final Peace Corps training in February.
Everyone in the country is busy preparing for Tsagaan Sar. It’s the Mongolian celebration of the lunar New Year. Regular new year’s, which the Mongols absorbed from the Russians along with vodka and bad dance music, is celebrated in the last week in December with big employees only work parties. You’d think a people so prone to gossip would let spouses in to tamp the rumors down. New Year’s eve itself was weird, because around 12:00 almost everyone left the club I was at and went home. They all came back a few minutes later. Apparently, it’s bad luck to be out at the stroke of midnight. Tsagaan Sar officially lasts three days and mostly involves visiting relatives’ families in the order of seniority and giving gifts and such. It’s supposed last three days, but I get the impression that in the countryside it turns into a month-long mutton induced bender. Should I hyphenate mutton induced?
There are some other developments that I won’t get into now. I’ll see how Tsagaan Sar goes. Then I should finally get started teaching at the market and working on a long-term non-mercy corps project. I look forward to comments and mail as always. Don’t click on the envelope unless you want to send a post to someone else. And no, it’s not as cold as they say.
Friday, January 27, 2006
Friday, January 13, 2006
New address and wishlist
My office moved to a new building so I had to update my address label. It's pretty much the same except that you don't need the name of the building anymore. That never really mattered, because they don't have direct mail delivery anyway. Also, here is a new wishlist on Amazon. I'll add some more stuff to it, but this should give you an idea of stuff I'd like. Going to UB tomorrow for a big Mercy Corps meeting. I'll do a post from peace corps and let you know how it went.
**Editor's note - fixed the link to the wishlist
Wednesday, January 11, 2006
Your comments are welcome
In case there is still confusion about how the comment system on blogger works, here's a better explanation.
- You do not need my email address to comment on a blog post only to send me a private email.
- To comment just click on the word comment(s) after the post regardless of how many comments have already been made.
- You have three options after leaving your comment. If you have a blogger account, enter your username and password. If not, click other and enter your name and website if you have one. It would be a good idea to enter your email address here, but use the words "at" and "dot" instead of the @ symbol and "." in .com. This will make it harder for someone to add your address to a spam email list. Finally, you can select anonymous and not leave any information other than your comment.
- The word verification feature makes it harder for people to send me spam posing as a comment, because a computer (so far) can't figure out that the picture contains letters and/or numbers. Prove that you're smarter than a machine. Make it happen people.
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