Sunday, May 27, 2007

Save the Children....Save the World!

India, Day 5:

Things I know:
  1. I am the tallest woman in the city of Bangalore
  2. If you sit on your left hand, you are less likely to accidentally eat with it
  3. Sridhar is secretly my Grandma--his biggest concern is making sure that I eat
  4. The cows are trained to go home at night

Things I haven't quite figured out yet:
  1. The "Indian Bobble Head"---seems to be some sort of head movement that can mean a variety of things possibly including but not limited to: "Yes" "No" "Maybe" "I'm not sure" "That's crazy talk" "Not on your life" "Hell will freeze over first you mad MAD American"
  2. Why okra tastes good here
  3. If sticking your hand out and doing a dramatic jazz hand is a foul, no-go, no point or some sort of do over
  4. Where the cows go home to

I just finished a three day Appreciative Inquiry Youth Leadership Summit with underprivileged kids from 13-19. It was so SO great!! Most of the summit was conducted in Kannada--the local dialect--with some English involved. As per usual, I was entirely clueless but at least this time I had reason! It was a challenge to have to rely a;most entirely on body language to understand, but also a great learning experience. By the end I was leading parts of the session and also facilitating the session hotwash and design planning. It was exhausting, invigorating, and crazy all at the same time, but I am so glad to be here and participate in this work. The most entertaining part: when one of the girls wanted to know why I wasn't married yet, and then determined that I need to be married by age 30. It really makes you think when an 18 year old hands down a decree like that! I also managed to use my mad skills to introduce "duck duck goose" to India and it was well received. Especially when I failed to run fast enough and ended up as the rotten egg.

So, so far, so good. I've eaten in a variety of "interesting" establishments (think Vienna Inn meets a jail dining hall but not as classy) where the food was, in the trend of sketchy diners, completely awesome!! I've also had Indian Chinese food, random fruits I can't even identify, and the best mango in the world. I've gone from slums to really posh houses, and I've only stuck my toothbrush in tap water twice. I feel good about that. So, all in all, a good beginning. I'm hoping my stomach continues to be made of steel because I suspect that the spice factor is going to go up this week!

So--tomorrow I go and volunteer directly at a children's center. Does anyone have any great children's games that can be communicated almost completely in sign language?**

** (Kbibs--I'm looking at you).

4 comments:

Gloria said...

Question # 4. "Holy Cow" - I hear they are rounded up at night by urban cowboys and shipped outside the city limits. What must it be like in the surburbs?
And for a game suggestion, how about "Do you love your neighbor"?

TallDave said...

OK, the left-handed thing would totally screw me over. I would look like a 2 year old with a chocolate cake at his birthday party after every meal.

Bibs said...

I totally got a shout-out on the Live Deep blog. I am so cool. As for using sign language with children, I would go with a song or monologue about swimming. You know, sing about doing the backstroke, sidestroke, diving, etc. Kids love songs and stories. Try it- they will think you are great. Trust me; I am the KBibs.

a! said...

C! I swear, you ought to publish this stuff. You are a Class A comedian! And your hi-jinks are hilarious! This stuff could only happen to you. If I went to India I would just blend in as one more short, dark person looking formless (covers up the pudge) in a sari. :)