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October 23, 2019
Looking back to the end of the previous entry we had just
arrived back to La Paz and were getting settled in. We had chosen La Paz for
several reasons including that it had marinas with “good power” so we could use
our air conditioners (A/C) and made life a bit more bearable, it is an
interesting place and supplies are relatively easy to obtain, we are familiar
with the lay of the land, AND the cruisers’ community is pretty close knit
since I was scheduled to fly off for a month to the Caribbean while Clarice and
Jarvis watched the boat (in the middle of hurricane season) we wanted her (well
at least I wanted her) to have folks she could call on if she had problems.
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Mexican Independence Day just before I left La Paz |
If you look way down to the bottom of the left hand column
of this blog you will find links titled “
Belize Mission Memory Book” and
Belize Mission Memory Book Photos that
takes you back to our musings from when we were medical missionaries in
Southern (read “very, very rural”) Belize for the year of 2004.
I returned in 2009 for a week just to see
what had and hadn’t changed and then we both returned in 2014 to go to the
college graduation of our Goddaughter from nursing school.
The goals of this month long visit were to
allow me to get some patient care time on my resume and allow me to give back something
of value (my skills) to a population I was familiar with.
I had contacted the clinic where we had
previously volunteered and offered that since I was familiar with the clinic,
the area it served, and have a lifetime Belizean RN license I could come for a
month and should be able to quickly be an asset to the clinic.
The Clinic replied that their homecare RN
would be out for maternity leave the end of September and they would appreciate
my help.
We agreed that I would arrive
mid-September and leave mid-October.
Getting to Belize from Baja Mexico proved to be a bit of a
challenge. I could go via Mexico (with
an overnight in Mexico City) or via Dallas and Miami (with an overnight in
Dallas) which proved to be the less expensive option.
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During my stop over in Dallas my very long time friend from
Tacoma made sure I experienced Texas hospitality by touring
half of Texas in 3 hours and eating far to much BBQ |
On my arrival in Punta Gorda Town I was taken
to Cuxlin Ha where I would stay during my visit. Cuxlin Ha is two miles down the same dirt
road beyond the clinic. We had become
familiar with the owners back in 2004 and were VERY surprised to learn that
they were from the same town as us in Washington. Gayle (man) is quite an artist with concrete
and tile (I knew his work as he had made the fountain at the Western Washington
Fair where I was to go if I got separated from my parents back in my
childhood). He and Dona had a dream of
building a timeshare resort AND a living Mayan village together. They then went on to lease two "sand bars" on the Belizian barrier reef and turn them into islands with trees they planted and houses they built. (There latest dream is to build a "Mayan temple tourist attraction in a local village" even though they are both in their 80's!) The resort never took hold ( even though the
main building is well built) but the Mayan village continues to thrive so for
all practical purposes I stayed the month in a Mayan village.
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Looking back from Cuxlin Ha on the road to the village |
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The main resort building |
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My room |
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I was quickly reminded to check the floor and shoes while living in a jungle |
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My veranda and the bicycle I used for primary transportation |
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Main Cuxlin Ha Village road |
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Looking out from the upper floor of the resort building |
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This pool is quite lovely but only had rainwater in it while I was there |
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Waiting at the river to head out to the houses on the reef 2 hours away |
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Our chariot has arrived but needs 4 hours worth of fuel before we can head out |
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Approaching the 2 islands |
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Is that a giant beehive???? |
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It's a concrete house covered with conch shells |
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Another example of Gayle's concrete art |
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We got back just in time for sunset |
I have often wondered what it would be like staying in a
Mayan village for an extended time. Frankly Cuxlin Ha hardly counts as the
residents are used to folks staying at the lodge from when it was more of a
going concern and most of them have jobs in town and the kids commute to school
on a school bus. On the other hand it
was interesting to observe the pace of the village. The women walked to the corn mill in the end
house when they needed corn masa for tortillas (they tell me that with
refrigeration available they can keep it for a couple of days, in the outer
villages 3 meals a day require 3 trips to the mill). Chickens, turkeys, ducks and dogs seem to run
wild but obviously know where they need to go to be safe from wildlife at
night. The older boys have a soccer game
almost every evening with only half of them playing with shoes on the rock
strewn field. Every morning I awoke to
the smell of wood smoke that had settle in as the night cooled since Mayans are
sure that tortillas and beans only taste right if they are cooked over a wood
hearth. Next to the building I was in was a community owned store where I could
buy basic supplies and food and a cold soda.
The woman who often ran the store got to know me and agreed to make
flour tortillas when I ordered them and one of her children would arrive before
I left at 7 in the morning with them to start my day. The RN who I was covering for and her family
also lived in the village and provided a resource when I needed something like
a wrench for my bicycle. In other words
the village folk quickly got used to me being around and were pleasant and
interactive when I talked to them (doing things like helping to unload a
trailer load of cement blocks and cement also helped me ingratiate myself). On the other hand I talked a lot with
Kristine RN who had initially come to Belize as a Mennonite missionary before
she had her RN and lived in a Mayan Village for several years and even learned
to speak some Ketchi. She talked about
it being a society where you take off one layer of onion at a time and in the
Mayan world those layers are very thin and lots of them. She indicated that even as long as she was
involved in the village she still had only scratched the surface of the
cultural milieu.
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Every village is built next to a river |
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The village corn mill |
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Turning corn cooked in lime (calcium carbonate) water into masa |
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The daily after school football (soccer) match |
The clinic has grown tremendously since Clarice and I were
there in 2004. Only two of the current
employees were there when we were. The
good news is that one of the goals of the clinic was to eventually have local healthcare
providers as medical staff. Currently
one RN is Maya, the PTA (Physical Therapy Aide) is Maya as is the pharmacist
the public health director is also a local man who previously worked with the
Ministry of Health. I was a bit caught
off guard as when I was there before I worked incredibly hard (as did Clarice)
trying to fill several roles at once whereas when I arrived this time I wasn’t
sure I was really needed and initially was a bit chagrined that I had taken a
month away from my wife and home when I perceived they could have gotten along without me. The work that I did do was
to visit the home patients who would normally be seen by the RN on maternity
leave. Often the visits included a group
of Physician Assistant, MD, and pharmacy students and since I love to teach I
enjoyed working with them. I was also
able to see that many of the projects we had organized that were just “getting
by” on our arrival in 2004 have now been built on and are functioning well
(e.g. Clarice took the pharmacy from a pile of boxes being attacked by termites
to an organized place with a regular inventory / ordering system, I took the
medical record system from having family charts to individual charts and then
to an electronic tracking system.) I’m afraid that I may have left a bit of a
bad impression with the staff when I let it be known that I didn’t feel they
were making good use of my time but felt it important to say something so that we could (and did) make changes. [Today I received an email from Nurse Kristine thanking me again for my work and noting that she had found her workload to be very heavy after I left since she is now also covering home visits. Her note is very appreciated.]
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Town square for Belize's 38th birthday |
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Punta Gorda market |
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BBQ and "Stew" chicken are Belizian staples |
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Independence Day parade bringing focus to Mayan heritage |
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There are at least 3 places turning local cacao into chocolate
(when we were there in 2004 the cacao was all shipped to England) |
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The house we stayed in in 2004 |
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Barranco Garifuna Village where I used to visit every 6 weeks - this time I made home visits there |
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I expected this house to have blown down by now (it is barely standing)
The man next to it was a child in the house. |
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Mental Health Day. The kids got out of school to display their posters and we had a health table |
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The group of students at the clinic who had arrived the last week I was there |
It was very rewarding to see the changes in the Mayan levels
of education. When I was in the villages
in 2004 I made sure to ask every young child, and especially the young girls,
where they were going to go to high school.
My purpose was to put the idea in their minds that they had alternatives
other than having children while they were 13 – 15 years old. When we worked with Margery, our Goddaughter,
the idea was to let Mayan girls see one of their own succeed in college. Another factor was we were not allowed to
discuss birth control even with a woman experiencing her 15th
pregnancy. Now the clinic provides birth
control education and options (and Kristine tells me that she is observing the
younger women choosing to only have 2-4 children)! There are now 2 high schools with over 1000
students each in the Mayan village areas.
In 2004 we only knew of one Mayan RN (a man) now I know of at least 2 in
Punta Gorda alone and I was followed by a young Mayan woman who wants to be an
MD on some of my visits. For Independence Day (Belize turned 38 this year) the
theme was celebration of the Mayan heritage.
In general the Mayans are proving that they can be upwardly mobile from
their traditional place at the bottom of the social ladder. Since much of my
work in 2004 was in the outer Mayan villages I am very interested in them as a
people.
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Our Goddaughter, Margery, and her new baby (her clothing indicates she is Mennonite) |
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Margery and Elmer are both Mayan, both have been to college, both are Mennonite, BUT
they can't speak to each other except in English. He speaks Ketchi Mayan and she speaks Mopan Mayan. |
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Margery and her husband Elmer's inside kitchen. (Hammocks are everywhere
in Belizian homes, they are tied up during the day.) |
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Margery and Elmer's outdoor traditional kitchen |
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Margery pointed out that this is a "modern" hearth because it is made of
blocks and concrete rather than rocks and soil. |
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Elmer's wood-shop - he seems to be a very successful businessman! |
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Margery and her extended family preparing tortillas for a family BBQ |
I arrived back in La Paz on October 13th and was
greeted by heavy rain showers (the plane was waved off from landing twice
before settling down). Estimates were
that the day I arrived saw 3 inches in 24 hours. In any case I was very happy
to be home again.
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Leaving the rain forest behind as I begin the long journey back to La Paz Mexico |
On a final note I had been planning for some time to attend
a Spanish for Medical Professionals class being offered here in La Paz. The class took 4 days but took in the topics
normally covered in 3 semesters of Spanish.
The good news is I had opted to get the textbook about 2 months ago and
had gone through it from cover to cover several times so I wasn’t left in the
dust in the class sessions. In any case
for the first time I feel like I at least understand how the language is
structured and am no longer just memorizing phrases. After class on the last day the instructor
suggested folks head out to Balandra Bay as a group and I added that we could
take them for a cruise on the way. We
had a great time with enough pot-luck food for an army, perfect swimming water,
and we timed the return trip perfectly for a spectacular sunset. An interesting cultural note was when the
instructor’s mother (her parents live in La Paz) mentioned to Clarice that she
liked this American custom of everyone bringing something so the hostess could
enjoy the party as well rather than the Mexican custom where the hostess is
responsible for feeding and caring for everyone.
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My Spanish class, our instructor and her mother |
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Our Spanish Class potluck. (To the right is the instructor's father) |
While Norman was in Belize, I (Clarice) enjoyed some uninterrupted
time sewing and boat cleaning. One of the weeks Norman was gone a friend came
down to visit. We hadn’t seen each other
for a few years, but it’s the kind of friendship that you just start up where
you left off. We talked, walked, biked…enjoyed the beaches and relaxed. It was
still pretty hot while she was here so we took our mid day rests as per
requirement in Mexico. Ate lots of great food, discovered a fantastic bakery
and visited the local pottery shop. Oh my, it’s a good thing we live on a boat
as the pottery is beautiful and the temptation to buy lots is so great. I
limited myself to a couple of small items, but want to take Norman there and
may have to get a few other treasures. By the fourth week, I was ready to have
my partner back. People sometimes get this concerned look when they hear we
live on a boat and ask “how is it to be so close together all the time?”. While
it is nice to be apart for short stints and do our own thing, we luckily have
the type of relationship that has thrived on our togetherness…. If we are apart
we think of what the other one would enjoy about what we are doing. We enjoy
doing so many of the same things, including working on the boat, that we are
very symbiotic and our chores go much faster with the two of us working
together ( either to help or commiserate as needed). And of course Jarvis was missing Norman tremendously.
He got some doses of petting and his walks with just me, but I obviously don’t
hold a candle to the level of devotion Norman bestows upon him. He literally
was jumping for joy to see Norman. I, for one, am ready to get back to cruising
and enjoying the water. I get pretty tired of being at a marina. I love being
anchored out, enjoying all that nature has to offer without all the stuff
associated with being tied to civilization.
A new plaza was dedicated shortly after I returned and this was the music they offered:
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Our outing this morning to discover more of the area around La Paz |
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