Going out to Kisumu Town with my big sister. Should lead to an interesting night.
Oh and Lucky was born without a tail...silly kitty!
October 29, 2011
October 27, 2011
Wearing a sweater on an 80 degree day
Read up!
Crowded world awaits 7 billionth person to be born on Monday
By EDITH FORTUNATE efortunate@ke.nationmedia.com AND GATONYE GATHURA gathura@ke.nationmedia.com Posted Tuesday, October 25 2011 at 20:34
On Monday night, a woman will give birth to a most significant child to the country and maybe even to the whole world. Where the child is born — whether Kibera, Dadaab or Runda — will greatly determine its future and whether it survives, thrives or dies in misery. This significant child could also be born in a rich town in Denmark but most likely it will be in a poor village in populous India. All these children are remarkable, because any of them could be the seventh billion human being on earth. If the baby will be Kenyan, it will also double up as the 41.6th million citizen.
By the time the national census was conducted in 2009, there were about 39 million people in Kenya.
As it prepares for this day, the UN Population Fund will on Wednesday release the State of World Population Report 2011: People and Possibilities in a World of 7 billion. The fund notes that this milestone “will be marked by achievements, setbacks and paradoxes”. Setbacks because the children in Kibera or Dadaab will most likely be born in the absence of qualified medical practitioner, are not assured of shelter, security, food or a future education. To the ‘Rundan’ and the Dane all these can be taken for granted but they are also at a greater danger of early obesity, diabetes and strokes. “Welcome,” the fund tells the seven billionth global citizen, “to a dangerously warming world facing huge food deficits, unfolding economic crises and increasing chronic diseases.”
Ageing community
Crowded world awaits 7 billionth person to be born on Monday
By EDITH FORTUNATE efortunate@ke.nationmedia.com AND GATONYE GATHURA gathura@ke.nationmedia.com Posted Tuesday, October 25 2011 at 20:34
On Monday night, a woman will give birth to a most significant child to the country and maybe even to the whole world. Where the child is born — whether Kibera, Dadaab or Runda — will greatly determine its future and whether it survives, thrives or dies in misery. This significant child could also be born in a rich town in Denmark but most likely it will be in a poor village in populous India. All these children are remarkable, because any of them could be the seventh billion human being on earth. If the baby will be Kenyan, it will also double up as the 41.6th million citizen.
By the time the national census was conducted in 2009, there were about 39 million people in Kenya.
The 41.6 million, according to Mr George Kichamu, the communication manager at the National Coordinating Agency for Population and Development (NCAPD), is the number of people Kenya will be adding to the world population as it hits the 7 billion mark on Monday, October 31.
As it prepares for this day, the UN Population Fund will on Wednesday release the State of World Population Report 2011: People and Possibilities in a World of 7 billion. The fund notes that this milestone “will be marked by achievements, setbacks and paradoxes”. Setbacks because the children in Kibera or Dadaab will most likely be born in the absence of qualified medical practitioner, are not assured of shelter, security, food or a future education. To the ‘Rundan’ and the Dane all these can be taken for granted but they are also at a greater danger of early obesity, diabetes and strokes. “Welcome,” the fund tells the seven billionth global citizen, “to a dangerously warming world facing huge food deficits, unfolding economic crises and increasing chronic diseases.”
Ageing community
Every year, Kenya is bringing about one million more mouths to the dining table but at the same time the food deficit is increasing annually. For example, for the last five years, this country has not been producing enough maize, the main staple food, to feed itself. Unfortunately, this will continue into the future with serious consequences.
The Danish child will be born in an ageing community that will highly welcome some young hands to help in the job market, while the Kenyan will come into a much more complex population mix.
The Danish child will be born in an ageing community that will highly welcome some young hands to help in the job market, while the Kenyan will come into a much more complex population mix.
As the new baby bids goodbye to its mother’s womb, if most unlucky, it may have to contend with a birth canal mined with the Aids causing virus and land into a backyard where medical services and care are extremely scarce. A dark world may welcome the baby, according to the African Economic Outlook 2011, which estimates that 50 per cent of health facilities in Kenya lack electrical power, water and sanitation. There is a high chance that the infant and even the mother could die in childbirth, says the current Global Health Initiative Kenya Strategy. “One in every 19 babies born in Kenya this year will die before their first birthday,” it says. “These appalling mortality statistics implicate dysfunctional health systems as being the principal obstacle for addressing these challenges and preventing pre-mature mortality,” says the government report. A solution is not easy, say medical experts but propose an aggressive family planning programme, better health infrastructure and above all a robust economy. “We are working on a massive campaign that will encourage a lot of women to seek family planning measures. “This is one of the ways to save the situation we are in until the economy stabilises,” said the NCAPD director-general, Dr Boniface K’Oyugi.
Such campaigns seem to be reaching some families. One such family is that of Ms Hilda Ndung’u, 31. Ms Ndung’u and her husband meticulously planned for their second child expected within a few months, but she now feels this no longer looks like a good idea.
Their monthly income
Such campaigns seem to be reaching some families. One such family is that of Ms Hilda Ndung’u, 31. Ms Ndung’u and her husband meticulously planned for their second child expected within a few months, but she now feels this no longer looks like a good idea.
Their monthly income
Around May, her husband and herself calculated their monthly income, which amounted to Sh35,000.
They were optimistic that this would comfortably accommodate the expected child and leave about Sh8,000 for a rainy day. But now the mother says after reviewing their plans they feel that a smaller family is the better option. “Today, we can rarely manage to stick to a planned budget with food prices rising by the day,” she said.
The State of World Population Report makes the case for sound planning and investment in people.
The State of World Population Report makes the case for sound planning and investment in people.
October 23, 2011
My life for the past two weeks...
Okay, I've been slacking on my blogposts! So here's a quick update on all the not that exciting things that have been happening in my life. First, I got my hair cut off, the shortest ever, but I love it. It's so nice and breezy! Second, I had my first (and better be only) African emergency room experience. I got a bacterial infection and ended up staying all night. This was the lowest I've felt since I've been here and was putting off blogging because I was fairly homesick. Other than that, I've been working on papers due at the end of the semester. I also want to remind you that I'm living in a city of three million people...so my life is nothing like the Lion King. People everywhere...tons of polution...and lots of tea!
I finished classes on Wednesday! For our last class, two people came to teach us some traditional song and dance. Those of us who joined in had a great time!
Downtown Nairobi
Uhuru Park
I finished classes on Wednesday! For our last class, two people came to teach us some traditional song and dance. Those of us who joined in had a great time!
So that's my life in a nutshell. I moved to Kisumu today and am currently sweating profusely under a mosquito net. There's a gecko in my room eating all the spideys :) I start my internship at Family Health Options Kenya tomorrow and my new family is amazing! More to come...I promise...
October 16, 2011
Paradise lies under the feat of the mother...
Happy Birthday Mom! Since I cannot be home for your birthday, here are some pretty African flowers for a beautiful American lady. Thank you for the sweet life you have given me and for supporting my decisions even when I frighten you (like making the choice to come to Kenya). Sending all my love from Nairobi to New Ulm!
October 9, 2011
Hell's Gate
I had the best weekend! Grace and I met up with friends at Fisherman's Camp in Naivasha. Rachelle cooked a lovely dinner of goat and potatoes, and we had a great time laughing around the fire that Grace (not the boys) started. We rented bikes Saturday morning and biked to Hell's Gate. We spent the whole day biking through the park, hiking, and feeling the hot springs. This was definitely my favorite weekend since I've been here! Hell's Gate has the most beautiful landscape and we got super close to the animals (zebras, warthogs, dik diks, twiggas). I have lots of pictures to show off:
I fell in love with this tree
the main tower...those are geysers on the left
hot springs
view from the top...I made it all the way with these terrible shoes...
I'm never showing up unprepared again :)
I'm never showing up unprepared again :)
Check out more pictures here: http://morningiswheniamawake.blogspot.com/p/hells-gate.html
I hope you all had a wonderful weekend too! But now I'm back to real life again and putting off my homework. I've decided to cut my hair off this week! It's too much work...time to do it like the Africans and get rid of it.
I hope you all had a wonderful weekend too! But now I'm back to real life again and putting off my homework. I've decided to cut my hair off this week! It's too much work...time to do it like the Africans and get rid of it.
If you hadn't noticed, I put up more of my pictures and friends' pictures. Check out the links at the top of the page!
October 3, 2011
Home Is Whenever I'm With You
I realized I haven't shared much about my homestay family. It's hard to describe what it's like to stay with a different family in a different culture. Here are a few pictures I've taken of my house...
My mum likes to decorate (just like my mom!) so I feel fairly at home in our brightly colored house (orange, red, lime green...)
I helped my mum pick out a new vase at a hand-made glass blowing shop. They had glass mugs with glass-blown elephant heads as handles. I was really tempted to buy them but realized they probably wouldn't make it home in one piece.
I share a bedroom with my 9 year old sister Tamara. She makes me laugh every morning as she rolls out of bed. I'm not used to little siblings so I'm thankful that my family is hosting me and allowing me to gain some much needed patience.
My family just moved into our house in July. Every weekend I'm away, I come home to something different, the walls painted a different color or a new tree planted in the yard.
I hope to share more about my family, but as I said before, it's hard to describe. I also don't want to violate their privacy and share too much. I'll be moving to a new homestay family when I move to Kisumu in two weeks. I think I've already said this, but time is going by so fast!
Children constantly watch TV here. I've been trying to get creative to get Tamara away from the trashy Mexican soap operas that are always on. I promised I'd get paper from the store so we could water-color paint today. Maybe if you're lucky, I'll paint a picture for you :)
October 1, 2011
Three more weeks!
Jambo! Jama (our head professor) took us on a field trip this week to see the differences between the formal and informal economy in Kenya. Because the formal economy cannot handle the flood of people into the city centers, many Kenyans have resorted to the informal economy for money. We traveled through areas surrounding Nairobi. The most interesting stop was a small town where men used recycled materials to make pots, kettles, and other household goods. Jama took us into the center to see men hammering away at metal scraps. It was so impressive and something I wish I could show all of you, but I felt rude taking a picture of intensive labor. Jama encouraged us not to feel guilty because we were not there to watch but to learn. We then drove by a market full of beaded jewelry, so of course, all us girls returned the next day!
I returned home from the market to discover a goat head roasting over an open flame on my front porch...teeth, eyes, the whole thing (two days earlier, Maxi, our house help, was butchering the body on our kitchen floor). I only ate vegetables for dinner...
This weekend is chill. I decided I needed to get a start on the 50 plus pages of essays I have due at the end of the semester. Tugi and Tamara looked sad when I left this morning for Java House. They told me it was boring when I'm not there and that I looked pretty today. I love them.
I think I'm starting to get used to this place. The trip through Nairobi with Jama certainly helped. It is hard for me to think just as I'm getting the hang of it, I'll leave. Only three more weeks left in Nairobi before I head to Kisumu for my internship. I guess that's the way things work.
check out these earrings....
I returned home from the market to discover a goat head roasting over an open flame on my front porch...teeth, eyes, the whole thing (two days earlier, Maxi, our house help, was butchering the body on our kitchen floor). I only ate vegetables for dinner...
This weekend is chill. I decided I needed to get a start on the 50 plus pages of essays I have due at the end of the semester. Tugi and Tamara looked sad when I left this morning for Java House. They told me it was boring when I'm not there and that I looked pretty today. I love them.
I think I'm starting to get used to this place. The trip through Nairobi with Jama certainly helped. It is hard for me to think just as I'm getting the hang of it, I'll leave. Only three more weeks left in Nairobi before I head to Kisumu for my internship. I guess that's the way things work.
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