Sunday, August 8, 2010
My top 10 lists
1. My friends at Grameen- the posse, some who have gone already and some who will be there for awhile still. Miss you guys! We sure have survived some interesting experiences together!
2. The home cooking- my favorite Bangla food was the food made by the love of a Bangladeshi mom!
3. The cheap stuff- all kinds of stuff, clothes, food, shoes, little knick knacks
4. Taking photos with Professor Yunus! He is my favorite old man, except for my grandpa of course!
5. The beauty of the country that lies outside of Dhaka- in Srimongol, and Cox's Bazaar
6. The Ispahani milk tea! I wonder how long my 100 tea bags will last me.
7. The Nocilla, coconut crackers, and Mango juice that were a staple of my diet.
8. The very nice Bangladeshis I met along the way- Sigma, Nuheen, Rashed, and Milton.
9. How we did everything we weren't supposed to do, and still survived to tell everyone about it.
10. The free wi-fi at the airport!
Top ten things I will NOT miss about Bangladesh:
1. The inevitable traffic jams and horrible pollution and the layer of black film on my face and my clothes from being in a CNG for 1.5 hours trying to go 8 km.
2. The dirtiness of the streets, the trash that is everywhere, and the random smells of the toilet in the air.
3. The people staring at me in an impolite and uncomfortable way and not responding when I smile or wave back.
4. The rickshaw and CNG drivers always trying to cheat me and getting mad at me when I actually pay them the rate we agreeed upon.
5. The Grand Prince Hotel, the shady manager at the front desk, and the cancer causing bug spray used on my mattress and pillows to kill bed bugs
6. The Bed bugs, cockroaches, spiders, and mosquitoes
7. Jannat-E-Quanine and Mr. Babor Ali, my two least favorite employees of the International Dept at Grameen Bank
8. The electicity outages at the most inconvenient times (like right before a World Cup game or while I am in the elevator)
9. The ridiculously inefficient immigration officers at the airport that take 30 minutes per foreigner
10. The fact that women had to cover themselves up while the men could run around wearing whatever they wanted to.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Out of Grand Prince, into the Peace and Quiet
While I do enjoy the peace and quiet, I still can't go out at night by myself. It may be more dangerous for me to be out here by myself at night because it's so quiet. While in Mirpur there are too many people around, there are too few people outside in Banani. If something happened to me, no one would see and no one would know. So, I think I'll wait for Ben to come back from the village to go out at night and enjoy the area. This is why it's nice to have a driver.. dang it. I should have put driver costs into my ICF application. I wonder if Julie would have approved it. haha.
Last night, Ben and I had an interesting adventure trying to find a place with Korean bbq, soju, and beer. He didn't believe me when I told him how chaotic Dhaka was until our long, painful, and frustrating CNG ride last night. I don't think anyone actually understands what the city is like until they actually come here and get to experience it. And then it won't seem like I am complaining excessively :)
Ironically, I do kind of miss the hustle and bustle of Mirpur-1 and of being able to see all the interns just hanging around the hotel. Here I am a world away. I took a rickshaw by huge mansions and gated estates while i was on my way to the market to buy a new luggage. This is where all the money is in Dhaka. I saw a few Land Rovers and Lexuses maneuvering around the bumpy dirt roads. Hella Ballas! Maybe this is me discriminating against the rich, but a part of me suspects that many of the people in this area may be corrupt, and by hoarding money for themselves, are perpetuating the poverty of the millions of Bangladeshis that I spent the last eight weeks trying to help.
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Frustration, frustration, frustration
My happiness from eating my great meal at dhaba wore off about 30 minutes into the wait. I was so happy when I finally got home (I can't believe I am actually calling the Grand Prince Hotel my home) last night, but even happier that I finally knocked some sense into myself and am moving to the Pacific Inn Hotel in the more convenient (to eatable places), cleaner, a little bit less crazy ex-pat area in Banani next week.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Three star hotel, Bangladeshi style
I just had to swat a cockroach away from my bed. one inch from where I lay my head down to sleep. Who knows how many more there are hidden under the carpeting and crawling over my stuff as we speak. I don't even want to know what all the stains are from on my wall nor do I want to think about how I can smell the cancer causing bug spray they use to kill the bed bugs in the beds here.
I hate being such a complainer, but I couldn't hold it in any longer. I thought I'd be used to it after six weeks, coming on seven, but I can't get myself to swat the cockroach away and smile at it at the same time anymore.
Sigh. And this is supposed to be a three star hotel. Bangladeshi style I suppose. I guess on the bright side, the cockroaches aren't monstrously ginormous like they were in the village. I can intimidate them.
Yes, I am looking forward to checking out of this hotel for good.
[End of Rant]
Sand, Waves, and some night time escapades
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Calcutta: my peaceful escape from the chaos of Dhaka
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Food Adventures
Monday, July 12, 2010
Full, Happy, and Sleepy
The one hour, seriously bruising CNG ride back to the hotel in the suffocating pollution kind of took away my food buzz. But Dhaba is my new favorite place! Good Bangladeshi food DOES EXIST!
Nite peeps. Tomorrow I will post more exciting things, I promise.
Saturday, July 10, 2010
My buddy Yunus and I
Friday, July 9, 2010
All in a Day's work: Cute kids and Green Tech
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Calling all Foreigners!
There MUST be foreigners in the country, but I suspect they all get driven around by their drivers and live in their cushy private company-or NGO-paid apartments in the ex-pat district. They definitely don't live in our shady sub-district of Mirpur. I guess the only "visible" foreigners are the foreigners who can't afford to be invisible (ie unpaid Grameen interns). Instead, the Grameen interns get to walk in the blistering heat, take shady taxi cabs and dangerous golf-cart like contraptions, and endanger our lives to cross the street every day. Talk about segregation of the rich and the poor :) Damn. Bottom-of-the-pyramid!
Today this CNG (dangerous golf-cart like contraption) driver agreed to 50 taka for a ride, and then tried to give me back only 40 in change (even though he definitely had enough change) from a 100 taka bill. Really? Come on now. I know I am a foreigner, but I ain't no sucker! I know it's only 1/7 of a US dollar, but if you agree to a price and I get in to your vehicle, that means I am assuming I am paying you that price!! It's not the money, it's the principle.
SO then feisty Jinny (yes, the one that some of you have had the pleasure to witness first hand before) appeared and demanded my 100 taka bill back since he was trying to cheat me. I don't think Bangladeshi culture allows women to yell at men in public, so I am glad I showed him that I wasn't going to let him get away with it!
Oh and this is how used I am already to Dhaka's little quirks. I got into the elevator and then five seconds later, the power went out. Rather than freaking out, Rosanna and I just kind of laughed, and we're like, oh great. But, we know it's Dhaka, so we just waited. Unlike in the U.S., if the elevator breaks down, it's probably a big problem. In Dhaka, it's just a part of life.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Blogging is hard work!
You wonder how that shirt you are wearing came to be?
Ironing the shirts before they get packaged.
Srimongol, Part 1
Monday, July 5, 2010
New Adventures
We also went to see Grameen Knitware, a nicer version of a sweatshop owned and operated by Grameen. It was super interesting to see how our clothes actually come to be. And I got a free polo shirt. I love free things.
We risked our lives tonight for supposedly the best Mexican restaurant in all of South Asia, El Toro. The picture above shows the teeny weeny burrito I got. Maybe I am spoiled from El Farolito's $5 Burrito Supreme's but I was HIGHLY disappointed. Tasty, but not big enough for my big American belly. But what should I expect, it's Bangladesh.
That's my tag line for the summer: It's Bangladesh. What did you expect?
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Village people
This is a "rich" person's house. It has tin walls and a tin roof, and a solid wood door.
The scenery in the village.
I Have Bad Luck
Right as I take out my camera to take photos of us all dressed up in our beautiful three piece Bangladeshi outfits, the lens decides to break. I knew all that sand from the Philippines would catch up with me sometime,but I was just praying that my camera would last me through time in Bangladesh!
Therefore, I have NO pictures of the Bangladeshi wedding I went to. But, I can pilfer them from the others....
Dear Lord, why do you hate me so?
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Random thoughts.
So I am two weeks late in starting my blog, and it feels like a lifetime since I have been here. I don't even know where to begin.
Dhaka is like nowhere I have ever been. People people people are everywhere. I thought people were kidding when they said Dhaka was crowded. Think Tokyo subway, but everywhere on the streets. The city's inadequate waste disposal infrastructure and transportation infrastructure results in the worst traffic jams imaginable and some pretty nasty smells of excrement in the air.
Everytime I get into a CNG (compressed natural gas vehicle), which is like a golf cart with doors, I feel like I am going to die. Like literally, get smooshed between two gigantic buses. However, I have to say that if you can drive in Dhaka, you can drive anywhere. I took a video of a ride in a CNG, will post later. Also, using your horn in Dhaka is the way driver's communicate to eachother. Rather than being rude, it's expected. If you don't honk every five seconds, you shouldn't be on the road.
AND, I have to be SOBER while trying to survive this city. It's illegal for Bangladeshi citizens to be in possession of alcoholic beverages (that really sucks) and it's not readily available for alcoholic foreigners like myself to get our hands on the good stuff. Sad that it felt SOO good when I finally had a beer and a glass of wine at the Nordic Club while watching World Cup soccer with a bunch of other "heathen" foreigners who were happily enjoying our little escape from the chaos outside.
Bangladeshis, like the Spanish, like to take two hour siestas for lunch. Everyday we get a lunch break from 1-3 PM. Good thing too, since the only restaurant the Grameen interns go eat at takes about 1 hour to serve us, and another 30 minutes to bring us the bill. Everything runs on Bangladeshi time, which is basically whenever they feel like it. For those of you who know me, my personality and my past life as a consultant has made me very impatient. This country drives me insane sometimes, but it's good for me, to chillax a bit and just go with the flow.
I met Yunus two days ago, he's the nicest old man. We celebrated his 70th birthday at a Social Venture conference in Dhaka, and I got my picture taken and my books signed! LEt me know if anyone wants any of his books, I can get them here for cheap.
Going to a Bangladeshi wedding tonight, will post pics later. The interns and I bought three piece suits to wear to the wedding. Exciting!
Alright, peacing out for now.