Unimaginable Differences
By Emma Lena
I  am still in awe of the cultural differences I encountered in Nicaragua.  I was only there a week and even though it felt like longer, it still  wasn't enough time to see everything. You cannot imagine the poverty. I  felt guilty even thinking about complaining about the no-flush toilet.  The optimism these people have will make you think it's not a third  world country. Everywhere we went, people smiled, greeted us, and  invited us to sit with them.
 My sister, Kate, is a Peace Corps volunteer in a  small city, Corinto, on the coast. Although volunteers have been going  to Nicaragua for 30 years, the Peace Corps celebrated its 50th  anniversary just a few weeks ago. In Nicaragua alone, there are about  240 volunteers, working in health, business, environment, agriculture,  and teaching English as a foreign language.  
 My sister works at a youth clinic next to the  hospital. It's small, but the work they do is amazing. All the youth and  women that come to the clinic really trust her and she's already become  a Nicaraguan. She also works at a soup kitchen, which runs solely on  donations which aren’t always reliable. Compared to places like Father  Bill’s in Quincy and the Pine Street Inn in Boston,  it is small and a  lot more crowded, but it’s still open and doing well. 
 Kate is lucky compared to other volunteers when it  comes to living conditions. She has four stone walls, a real roof, and a  window. This is not common in Nicaragua. Even the areas frequented by  tourists are full of begging children and starving animals. Something I  never got used to was how inexpensive everything was to us. We bought  large glasses of wine for $2 and our Christmas dinner, which included  steak and drinks, cost $80 for 8 of us. For Kate, wine is a luxury, and  when we brought her to a laundry mat, she was overwhelmed with  happiness. 
 Although I wouldn’t want to live there, I didn’t  want to leave. Old women were walking around with these beautifully  colorful and intricate aprons, carrying baskets of fruit and bags of  milk on their heads. They walked through the streets  at 8 in the  morning, screaming, "Leche!" It was 80-90 degrees every day and I drank  soda from a bag. Everywhere we went, people stared and smiled. A little  girl asked to take a picture with my aunt and sister because they were  white. We were like freak shows at a carnival. One thing we had to get  used to was the noise. During December, people are shooting off  fireworks and other extremely loud noisemakers constantly during the  day. There was not a moment of quiet all week, except maybe when we were  sleeping...maybe.  
 Being in the Peace Corps and living in this way is  something so foreign to most Americans. While there I got a small taste  of what it is like, and although I believe I adapted well, being there  for 2 1/2 years is something I cannot imagine. I admit I loved the  bucket showers, but I did not love the cold water. If you do not filter  the water there, you could get a parasite. Here in the United States,  even the poorest people have hot water and electricity. 
 Despite all of this, Nicaraguans have free health  care, free education, and they were the friendliest people I have ever  met. The whole country is beautiful and I cannot wait to go back in  January 2013 to visit her again.
Yes, Nicaragua has poor folks, but I have always noticed that small town and rural poor is usually equated with more happiness than you expect. Glad you had such a great experience culturally - now go for the nature experience at our place next to the world's most active volcano!
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