Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Sensitive toothpaste.

India with 12 other Americans is one thing. India on "your own" is another.
In January we got to settle in to our American comfort zones with each other: debrief periodically, keep our American humor all day, be moved together, understand why the other does what they do, possibly question the flavor of a food or a peculiar smell.

After six days, I'm feeling settled. I'm coming to terms with being on my "own". (Sending lengthy emails to Kaj and parents helps me get-out my American-ness.) And best of all, my sleep is on schedule.

For those of you who were so worried about me and the heat: I'm doing just fine. There is an AC in my room that I use at night, and during the day I just deal.

Having a younger brother, Anu, is a lot more fun than I was expecting.We spend most of the day together.
My sister, Kalyani, returns from Sweden (five months at SVF) on Sunday. I'm so sure that having another sister will also be a joy. Shireen, my Indian mom, keeps the family going. And Daniel, who we (Shireen, Anu and I) are helping with his English, is a wonderful man of God. The pet fish are great too. Extremely active in their close quarters.

Yesterday Daniel and I went to Mumbai for a bus tour. Our tour at-a-glance: Gateway to India, boat tour, aquarium, modern art gallery, gardens, Bollywood stars' sea side homes, Mumbai Indians in the bus next to ours, beach along the Arabian sea. I made good friends, well as good as friends as you can be with someone who doesn't speak the same language and you only see for a few hours on a bus tour, with three girls from south India. We shared Sprite and a Rose drink by the sea together.

On Monday I will go to a local village, where the woman's empowerment project is, and start a program for the kids. I'll teach them the English alphabet, a rhyme or two, then venture off into having fun with games. I'm really looking forward to this.

As most of you know I love photography. And I have my camera with me. I'm finding it difficult to take a lot of pictures. There are many things that are memorable, and I think you all should see, but I can't help but think many are intrusive. Because most are of people and their environment. It's hard to point the lens at a situation where the person feels the most comfortable and I observe as an alternate universe. So when I do post pictures, you will get what you get. Otherwise, you will have to visit India on your own, or look at photographers who are more brave than I am.

D-Mart, the Wal-Mart-like store next to our flat, not only has bins full of great looking toothbrushes, but sensitive toothpaste. Something I have recently learned that delicate teeth really want. God provides. (If this doesn't make sense to you, read here: toothbrush.)

Do not fear anything except the LORD Almighty. He alone is the Holy One. If you fear him, you need fear nothing else. - Isaiah 8:13

I could type for hours. This is good for now.

Warmly,
Hannah Joy.

4 comments:

  1. Exciting you will be teaching at the kids program! :) -Rose-

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  2. thank you Hannah! You are a rock star. -sarah otieno

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  3. Hannah darling,

    I am reading your Blogs. Keep them coming.

    Grandfather

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