Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Just add water.

Saba definitely has its own unique living experiences. Some of my friends deal with flying cockroaches and some of them with small gecko lizards in their clothes' drawer (happened to a close friend... put on PJ pants without knowing, sat down and felt something crawling on her leg. I think you can imagine the rest of the story). I am having to learn how to live without water for days at a time. The water system on Saba is based on electrical pumps, and mine has a tendency of breaking ( + the 'nearby' construction is affecting the cistern under our house).

(...and by 'nearby' I mean right outside my front door.)


I am a pretty easy going person. When I volunteered in Honduras for 3 months we took bucket showers every day and lived with the bare essentials - it was completely doable, and makes you appreciate the things you have at home a little more. I think having that experience in Honduras is really helping me cope with the water situation here; especially because it happens more than once a semester. When you combine a stressed out, hard working medical student who looks forward to going home to shower to feel refreshed after a 12hour day of studying in the caribbean SUMMER (it's 30+ degrees here everyday) with the lack of water  =   :(

It happened again this weekend. And as I was sitting in my living room/dining/kitchen area and surfing the web as a study break, one of the sites I check regulary is MSF. There it was, front headline: a story about the hardships of fleeing, finding food, getting health care and seeking shelter in the Eastern DRC...

© Emily Lynch/MSF
"I left my village with my family at the beginning of the fighting. On Wednesday, having no food, I returned with some friends to my field to harvest vegetables. We heard weapons fire, and during the shooting  a bullet lodged in my left arm. I returned with my friends who were not wounded to the village where they made a stretcher out of branches to carry me to the main road where we then able to find a motorcycle to the next town. We waited until the next day to come to the hospital because we did not want to travel at night."
- Man (28) with 3 children, North Kivu, May 2012 
read the rest of the story here.


... and there I was complaining about lack of water. It's funny how everything was put into perspective. We take water for granted and forget it is a bare necessity. 
When I came home from my volunteer work in Honduras I had a hard time adjusting back into the 'modern' society I was previously accustomed to; I became more aware/ careful of everything around me. 
Not sure where I wanted to go with this post... but I guess it is about raising awareness. Stop and think. It's unbelievable that such simple hardships still exist in 2012 - even on an island like Saba.





3 comments:

  1. What an adventure! I'd love to hear more about your volunteer experience. Email me at katie at gooverseas.com if you'd be interested in answering some questions for GoOverseas.com.
    Thanks,
    Katie

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  2. Hey this is so weird. I am in Saba. I came in September 2012 - I just ran across your blog lol and saw your pictures and just got the chills - I am sitting in the house you used to live in ( Hazel and Thaddeus Durand) . Such a small world. I am a 3rd semester - super stressed haha but home stretch!!!!!

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    Replies
    1. Krishna! so great to hear from another Saba student living in Thaddeus' place. Please tell him I say hi! .. you are lucky you missed out on all the construction.
      Best of luck in the coming semesters! Third was the toughest for me and I found 4th to be a nice break. Stay strong and keep studying it will go by faster than you think.
      IDL

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