About Me

So here it is...finally I have got round to creating a blog (something I should have done months ago)! Hopefully this will be of some interest to someone out there...? Either way, it will be a place for me to keep track of my journey with Project Trust, and record my highs, lows, and most memorable experiences in South Africa. I will be spending 12 months volunteering in Thembelihle, a home of safety for at-risk children in Mthatha, starting 25th August 2011...'a year in the life of a Project Trust volunteer'!

Monday 31 October 2011

Halloween

I must say I do get pretty excited about all the celebrations throughout the year; Halloween, Christmas and Easter, birthdays etc. So I felt like a bit of a kid myself when it came to organising a Halloween party for the Thembelihle abantwana. I dressed as a witch with a bin bag wrapped around my waist and my hair backcombed…the children’s reaction was priceless when they saw me – a mix of amusement and horror! Each child got a little paper invite and turned up wearing the special Halloween masks they made in Art & Culture and the classroom was decorated with the egg carton spiders which they had also made! We played pin the bone on the skeleton which involved me drawing a ‘masterpiece’ of a skeleton on the blackboard with chalk. We had music playing, a treasure hunt and apple bobbing. I must say though, that the highlight of the party was at the end when we asked the children to spend 10 minutes practising a ‘trick’ of their choice before coming to knock on our bedroom door for ‘trick or treat’. I was very impressed with the performances they came up with which featured a mix of traditional Xhosa dancing and High School Musical performances – all pretty surreal in the dark with only a torch shining on their spooky masks! Explaining the idea of trick or treat was slightly more difficult with some of the kids. We had some knocking on our door coming in, grabbing a handful of sweets and running off back to the classroom! Others didn’t knock but just started singing to a closed door…very cute, and the smiles and hugs at the end made it all worth it!  Possibly one of my favourite nights here at Thembelihle so far!

Wednesday 26 October 2011

Emotions

Today I think was the first time I have felt properly home sick since I arrived here. No idea why…maybe because I finally got round to reading all your lovely emails and messages as I haven’t had much access to internet recently (don’t get me wrong, I love hearing from all of you so keep it coming!!!).
Anyway, today I found myself acting as a mother to a girl only a year younger than me…a strange feeling, but as I cuddled her and gave her a kiss to calm her down, I realised how much I enjoy providing emotional support to the children. After a little chat in broken Xhosa/English I managed to help her sort out the problem and by the end of the day she seemed much more relaxed and happy about the situation.
This evening I went to evening prayers in the dim light of the children’s sitting room, as I do nearly every evening at 7pm. It started as usual with singing and then the usual chorus of whispers followed by the shaking of hands before a circle was formed for the final song - quite a cheery one today which was sung a total of about 5 times just for the fun of it! Smiles, clapping and loud singing are always a good way to end a day…then BAM! The birthday girl, usually the most confident and loudest of the lot in the classroom, plods over to me from the other side of the circle with watery eyes and head hung to her shoulders, she bursts into tears in my arms as all the other children continue to sing happily around her with only a few glances over to see if she is ok. Although I still don’t know why she was crying, I can have a pretty good guess why - no one wants to spend their birthday away from home, especially when you have just turned 10. As I sat her on my lap and hugged her for the rest of the prayers, I could actually feel the lump growing in my throat, this time not from missing home, but for her…a strange switch from how I had been feeling the rest of the day.
As I looked around the room, I also watched a 9 year old singing his heart out during prayers…a young boy who has spent half his life in the home, still with the biggest cheekiest grin on his face…
There’s no time for me to feel homesick here when the children that surround me day in-day out are often so unexpectedly taken away from their own families with no idea when they will be returned home. For now, I’m still happy to be here and to be their ‘Mama’ as I am now more frequently being called.
Hats off to mum back home <3 xxx

Monday 24 October 2011

JUNGLE MONKEYYY!!!

October’s weekend off was spent in Port St. John, about a two hour drive from Mthatha. Staying in the Jungle Monkey backpackers was brilliant…again I got to meet some other travellers and found out from a wise old man whilst sitting around a fire, that my name means ‘illusion’?! Surrounded by ocean, jungle and mountains, I got a taste of it all. A bouncy boat ride out to sea in a rubber duck with a motor, gave me a glimpse of dolphins and humpback whales…many of which came right up to the boat and I was a bit wary at one point that it was going to capsize us! A slow boat trip up the river in the evening, followed by an early morning start for a trek through the jungle, guided by two men in bare feet…so glad they were there - I would NOT have been able to spot the apparently poisonous spiders which were strung across our path. A fluorescent green frog which jumped on my forehead and super glued itself there (serves me right for picking it up), along with lots of other strange looking insects! I came out with a couple more bites than I started with, but playing Tarzan on the natural woody swing across a rocky river was definitely worth it! The sundowner on the top of a mountain on Saturday evening was definitely a highlight, as was the bumpy bukka ride back to the backpackers in the dark, through the jungle where fireflies lit the trees above us and I even found a glow worm! :D South Africa is amazing.

Saturday 15 October 2011

This one’s for you Dad! x

I know how much you love gardening; planting your tomatoes and beans and coming in with a huge grin on your face when you’ve managed to pick a handful for tea, and today I thought of you as we cleared out the Thembelihle garden, watered the plants, painted the bricks separating the grass and the driveway and dug up the weeds (with the forks we eat our lunch with, haha). So if you’re still up for sending out some of those seeds of yours I’m sure the kids would love it J I hope you enjoy the photos I took for you…
xxx

Big Momma

I hate spiders. Anyone who knows me well enough will know that. I was laying on my bed just chilling yesterday break time looking at the posters on my wardrobe door that the kids had drawn/painted to welcome me to their home. You know when things don’t register straight away with you? Well my eyes skimmed over one of the paintings and onto the next, just as I thought to myself…’oh that’s strange I’m sure I’ve never seen that picture before, why would one of the kids draw a spider for me?’. Then my hands went clammy, and my body started shaking and I swear my body temperature must have increased by a couple of degrees as I stared into the eyes of what you could call a tarantula (a skinny one to be fair), but a tarantula still – one which literally stretched from one corner of the A4 paper to the other. So I ended up not chilling that break time and went into my preschool lesson just a little shaken up.
Talking of creepy crawlies, the kids all have worms, there are still ants in my kitchen (no matter how much I clean the surfaces and wash up my dishes straight after using them) and I’ve come across way too many giant centipedes for my liking. I’ve been told that now Summer has started, the Cockroaches are on their way too…
…not everything good comes with hot weather.

Black Curls

So I lapped on the sunscreen ready to go to the field with the kids when I was told the children would be spending the afternoon having their heads shaved…something they have done every couple of weeks or so, I guess to keep the nits away and to keep them cool in the 36°C heat we’ve been having! So I offered a hand and ended up spending most of my afternoon doing it – was actually a very satisfying job (just look at the concentration on my face, haha)! Shame about the sticky sunscreen though, as I came away speckled in teeny little black curls all over my body which would NOT wash off!
I’ve decided if all else fails, I’ll be a hairdresser when I return home…

Thursday 6 October 2011

Karate

This morning, I heard a little ‘knock-knock’ on my door…something which isn’t that unusual here J I invited her in and we had a little chat over breakfast. She told me she wanted my help with something, before completely opening up to me about her past. I obviously can’t repeat what she said, but it was pretty horrific and she’s recently found that she gets angry about little things. She burst into tears and begged me to help her by teaching her Karate. Now, I’ve already tried to get permission to hold a Karate class for all the kids, but this is something which isn’t really possible here due to their behaviour and individual circumstances. But I’m hoping this time it will be different as I have been asked directly by one of the children for help. So fingers crossed it will all work out.
One thing is for sure though, and that is that for once I am almost 100% sure I’m making a difference to these children’s lives. For one of them to actually come up to me and be so honest shows me she has a lot of trust in me.  And for me to be able to offer her an emotional form of help, makes me even more motivated to do well at this project. This is definitely a conversation I will never forget and when times get tough, I will be able to think back to this day and why I am here and how I am making a difference to her life.
I’m looking forward to getting back into training after this short break away from it all and it will mean I'm getting some exercise which doesn’t involve lifting small children and spinning them round which is always good J
I just wanted to say thanks to Sensei for training me in the sport for…nearly 9 years is it now? Thank you J

RIP Josh…training won’t be the same without you <3 xxx

Monday 3 October 2011

Storm

After having what must have been the hottest day here since I arrived, a massive thunderstorm followed in the evening! Actual thunderbolt shaped lights flying through the sky, and big rumbles followed by tons of rain which was cool to listen to, especially as our room has a 60 year old corrugated Iron roof!!! I was just sitting in my bed praying that the builders had actually finished replacing it as they had been here all week making rather a lot of noise doing it!
Epic.