Saturday, September 20, 2008

My surroundings...

The med unit is nice. There are three bedrooms with multiple beds (with spring mattresses!!) in each room. Each med room has it's own bathroom and A/C unit. Volunteers come and stay in the med unit for COS (close of service) exams, Mid-service exams, and general sickness (like me). There is a movie room with a large number of bad movies and, of course I have access to the bureau Internet room and library. Eating in Cotonou is expensive (and by expensive I mean 6-10 dollars a meal compared to .50-2 dollars in village) but volunteers get increased per diem (money allowance) for staying here. In Benin the currency is CFA, or West African Francs. It comes in coins of 10, 25, 50, 100, 200, 250, and 500 franc denominations and 1000, 2000, 5000, and 10000 CFA billls. It is different from Americain money (and other moneys of the western world) because American dollars have US symbols and pictures on them since they are minted and controlled by the US government. The CFA is used by many West African governments, so there is no symbols or pictures on the currency linking it to Benin, specifically. All the sodas here are made with REAL sugar...no high fructose corn syrup or anything, so cokes and sprites and especially Mt. Dews taste different. As far as NEEDING anything, I don't. This will be the second day of anti-malarial treatment and I had no fever yesterday so I am very optimistic. I am 90% certain I will be out of here on Monday. I went to a western-type super market (we call them yovo-stores) and bought some cereal and milk to eat with my medications (it says milk increases absorption) but the milk here is very interesting. Since they have little/no refrigeration and this milk comes from France or the Mid-East it is some special 'long-lasting' milk. It actually has a 1-year expiration date (if you don't open it) and you can ship it unrefrigerated. As you can imagine it does not taste quite like real milk but it was good enough for my coco chrispies (these were imported from the UK and they also did not taste quite right. Foods for foreign markets, even produced by familiar companies are formulated for that foreign market and their tastes). I'm here till Monday so if Kellie or any of her classmates have any questions just email or leave a comment, thanks!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

SO HAPPY TO HEAR YOU ARE WITHOUT FEVER!!!!SO YOU DO NOT REALLY NEED ANYTHING BUT IS THERE SOMETHING THAT WOULD MAKE YOUR STAY A LITTLE MORE EASY THAT YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED YET! ?!?!?!?!?!? {:

LOVE,
KELLI&AUNT JILL

Mike Chadsey said...

other than m&ms, snickers, or oreos something I think might be fun is a 'CIA' shirt like J. Depp had on in Desperado...i think its funny that a lot of people here in Benin think that we are working here as spies and we want to steal their industrial secrets!!! I know, I know, they don't have engineers in this country and they don't even know what a modern factory looks like but they think we are here trying to steal secrets....I think it is leftover sentiments from Benin's solcialist days

Ashley A. said...

Glad to hear you are finally feeling better!

rchadsey said...

I have a stash of cookies that are almost ready for their voyage overseas. They couldn't be happier to join the brave cookies that have gone before them. At least we know that you will not be longing for cookies while you are in Africa. Now if only these cookies could protect you against those pesky "amoebas" and other flesh-eating viruses that seek warmth and comfort in your body, you'd be set. I love you, Michael, stay safe and (relatively) healthy!

R.A. McKibbin said...

I can see the headlines now, "Local CIA Operative shot in the line of Duty." Perhaps a nice pair of work gloves instead. Praying for ya.