Project Trust Logo

Project Trust Logo

Sunday, 24 November 2013

Well. November has been quite eventful....

Well.  November has been quite eventful...starting with Diwali on the 3rd. It was one of the most terrifying nights of my entire life. In the UK you can’t buy Christmas crackers if you’re under a certain age. In this crazy country I now call home, there were literally toddlers lighting explosives in the middle of the street. I’m not a big fan of fireworks in the UK, so you can only imagine how scared I was here. It was a great evening though. My constant flinching at every boom and bang slowly died down as the evening progressed. However, Chendu (this 10 year old monkey boy with obvious ADHD) didn’t help at all. Especially when he would go about setting off obviously illegal explosives off metres away from the 3 girls in highly flammable 9 metre polyester sarees. Whoever gave that boy fireworks wasn’t thinking straight. Too many times Jo, Emily or I nearly combusted. By the end of the night, my ear drums were burst. My vision blurred. My hands trembling. My heart pounding. And I felt simultaneously sick and hungry. IT WAS AWESOME :D






A few days after Diwali, a group of blind singers came to our school and performed many Telugu hits. The entire school was crammed into the main campus. Hundreds of children sitting cross-legged on the stone slabs. I was put in one of the tiny 1st class rooms with very cute small children and 2 other teachers. One of the teachers told me to sit down on one of the tiny benches. When the ‘concert’ started I started drumming on the desk in time with the music. The children began to copy me. A few songs in, the same teacher told me to dance. So I stood up and that’s exactly what I did. I danced with a classroom full of 5 year olds, while almost the entire school watched in and smiled. I was dancing Bollywood style and there was some Bhangra in there too. Now, you have to remember this ‘classroom’ was about 3m by 3m big and there were benches and desks filling up the whole room. There was about 20 kids dancing on the desks, all copying me and throwing confetti that they made out of, what looked like, their school work. I have never had so much fun! I danced with those kids for well over an hour and by the end I was as red as a tomato. People became concerned for my health, asking me, “Ma’am, Fever?”. I would reply, “Yes. Dance fever.” People laughed.



In other news, I got my nose re-pierced. What you do is, you go to this old lady’s house, give her a thorn from an actual bush/tree, then she will stab that thorn through your nose like there’s no tomorrow. Meanwhile, all the children of the village sit and watch. These kids love to watch piercings being done. Some bring snacks to eat while ‘the show’ goes on. After your nose has been impaled by a thorn, the nice old lady (with bad eye sight) gets out the biggest pair of scissors you have ever seen in your life. She will then proceed to try and cut down the thorn a bit while it’s still painfully just been forced through your nostril. These scissors looked like they could behead me they were so big. Anyway, after at least 4 different people tried to cut the thorn down, it was done. I now have a pierced nose. The first time I got it done was early October, the same time as Emily and Jo, but I accidently took the thorn out too early and couldn’t get it back in. I had to wait for it to heal until I could get it re-pierced. It’s pierced on the right hand side (my right), like everyone else in this region of India. Jo and Emily have it on the left. I still have the thorn in now and it’s a bit swollen and bloody so if anyone wants their nose pierced don’t do it with a thorn. :)

1 comment:

  1. Val this is so inspiring, keep up the great work and updates. Its so exciting to read. And maybe keep away from the Thorns!!! lol Your a true Angel. Bless you Val

    ReplyDelete