When I told her about my own surgical tribulations last week, she asked to see the scar. She laughed and then I got ripped on hard in Q'eqchi' for having such a wussy scar compared to the train tracks she now has on her stomach. I'm glad to see she's got a good sense of humor about it all. Here's a couple pics of her with her Dad.
Sunday, April 13, 2008
When I told her about my own surgical tribulations last week, she asked to see the scar. She laughed and then I got ripped on hard in Q'eqchi' for having such a wussy scar compared to the train tracks she now has on her stomach. I'm glad to see she's got a good sense of humor about it all. Here's a couple pics of her with her Dad.
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
Things got interesting last week with a triage mission in northern Alta Verapaz. This time around, we had three docs instead of the normal two, so I spent a lot of extra time and money on promotion. A good week of triage usually results in about 100 patients scheduled for surgery. We ended up at 250 by last Friday. I’d describe the week as loosely controlled mayhem.
Besides the shear number of patients, the types of pathologies coming into the mission were amazing and sometimes heartbreaking. The latter would be the at least 10 patients with various types of terminal cancer. Translating that diagnosis is always depressing, but the families usually know something bad is awry and are thankful that we tell them straight. The flipside is that for the first time we have a team committed to doing pediatric neurosurgery, so kids with spina bifida and hydrocephalus (aka gigantic heads) that we used to have to turn away will now get surgery. We should be able to operate about 30 in May. One patient that I will never forget is a woman who came in on Friday that looked to be pregnant with triplets. Turns out she’s had this growing mass inside of her for 17 years. The
In a previous post, I mentioned my axiom that after living in
By the time we got to
I remember having one lucid moment before the surgery thinking that most foreigners would freak out going under in a Guatemalan OR outside of the capital. Really though, I couldn’t have cared less at that point nor could I have raised much of a fuss. The gynecologist on our trip said he could take it out if need be and that was good enough for me. However, we ended up making some calls and found a recommended doctor who worked with the hospital. Dr. Humberto it was. All in all, it worked out best this way. It wasn’t until during the surgery that they realized the appendix had actually burst. Had we waited much longer, it would have been far more complicated. And if anyone was particularly worried, just have a look at the painting next to my bed; it was actually Dr. Jesus removing my appendix.
Thankfully, this is mostly behind me and another story from
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Since returning from my holiday travels, I have not left Coban for anything more than a day trip. I think that's the longest stint I had here in about a year. Less driving certainly makes my life seem much calmer--no more flattened animals, wrecks, etc. However, my workload has been huge. I'm getting myself ready for three triage missions over the next four months while trying to manage a host of other projects. Furthermore, starting in February, we will have a surgical team down every week for about 3 months. These are definitely the busiest months down here, so I feel like my life is all work. But that's cool. It's what I signed up for and why I'm spending a third year down here.
Here are some of our patients from a big plastic surgery medical mission we had this month. Before every mission, we gather all the patients in Coban from rural areas and then send them down in a group to Antigua. This last mission, we sent in about 20 clefts. These are a handful of patients in Coban right before the mission.



Monday, January 07, 2008
I apologize for the infrequency of these posts. I swear I have plenty of material; it’s just the down time to write up a post that I’m missing. Anyways, since the last update, I’ve gone home for Thanksgiving, completed my 3rd medical mission and spent another Christmas far from home in
Thanksgiving was wonderful. Going home had never felt like such a vacation. I loved seeing everyone and it was totally relaxing. Coming back from KC to
We had the 3rd mission in the Nebaj area of El Quiche about 5 hours due west of Coban in the highlands. I drove out there prior to the mission to set up promotions and then headed down to
Driving to
In
And what of the mischievous puppy that caused this whole mess? Well, after I skidded to a halt, he jumped back and then trotted into the other lane where he was pancaked by a dump-truck. All things considered, he probably got what he deserved.
After the mission, I spent some time working in Coban before slowing things down for Christmas. My old roommate Dave and his sister Justine came back down to Coban and we rented out a cabin outside Coban for Christmas. It was relaxing and we stuffed ourselves silly. From there, we started a grand tour of Gautemala.
Oh, I almost forgot. I finally spotted the quetzal up close driving back to Coban. Here he is.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
More so than most weeks, this last one was rather insane with its high and low points. Really, that’s been
I’ll delve into last week later here, but I’ll start with an update of the last month. Most importantly, I finished my second medical mission. We were in the
After the medical mission, I spent some time in
Last Wednesday I was planning to head down to
When I drove out into the Polochic, I kept thinking worst case scenario of how the family was going to be upset and I would end up getting chased out of town by an angry mob. When I came into town, there was a huge group of people around her house and she was laid out on an altar. I went to the wake and spent the day talking with the family about what had happened. Her children did not get along and no one had been able to really take care of her. When her health went bad, she had called our area manager who had tried to get her to the local hospital. However she decided she’d had enough and didn’t go. She said her goodbyes to her children and passed away shortly thereafter.
It was a difficult experience to digest. We helped with the funeral and the family was very supportive of us. However, mostly it was just a very sad situation. The family was upset they hadn’t been around to help out and did not place any blame. For us, it was incredibly frustrating that we couldn’t convince her to get to the hospital. She was a very strong woman and in the end was not interested in letting anyone else control her future. She decided her time had come that the she would decide the hour of her passing.
So, after going through all of that, I decided to take a day off and go hike a volcano. I went down to
For starters, I got food poisoning on Thursday night and by Friday morning I was still throwing up everything I tried to get down. After my terrible week, I was in no mood to sit around in
At dawn, we got up to see the sunrise over
After sunrise, we packed up and started down the mountain. We passed some other tourists coming up and kept heading down from the crater. My buddy
When we caught up with the other group, they told us there were some cops coming up the mountain with a group of Salvadoran tourists. Just as they mentioned that, we started hearing the gunshots. We knew the thieves only had one shot, so we assumed the police did most of the shooting. When it ended we followed down the mountain and met up with the cops. They said they recognized the robbers and just decided to open fire. That’s how it works in
With all that behind me, I’m still glad I went up Acatenango. Living in

I’ll be home for Thanksgiving.
Friday, September 21, 2007
This last month or so has been all over the place. After getting back from the States in August, I spent a lot of time getting ready for my first medical mission. We had the mission in Chisec and the surrounding villages—about 2 hours north of Coban. I ended up running back and forth a lot to set up radio programs, talk to local health promotors and NGOs to get the word out about the mission.
The mission itself went really well. It was the first one I was responsible for and we had a new group of doctors down, so it was totally stressful and hectic for me. However, we found a record number for patients for surgery, so the bottom line is that it was a great.
Essentially, the rural missions are one half of our total operation where we just look for the patients who might need surgery. The ones we find, we then give them a date and take them into
The planning for the mission starts months in advance so we can promote them as much as possible. During the mission, we worked at a different site over four days. The hope is that a bunch of people are there waiting for us each morning. We start with a presentation to explain what exactly we’re doing and then start passing the patients in to see the doctors. Out of a group of 200, maybe 20-40 will be surgical candidates.
By the end of the week, I was totally exhausted. We found over a 100 patients. Despite Hurricane Felix, flooded roads and all of our Peace Corps translators having to leave mid week because of the storm, we made it through just fine. I’ll definitely change some things for the coming mission in October, but it was a good start.
This is the start of one of the missions giving a talk to all the people waiting outside. We mostly just explain that we're doing and then try to get people in line, it's like herding cats. We also do an introduction of the team. I would always give the first few minutes in Q'eqchi' just to see everyone act all surprised that the gringo speaks Q'eqchi --it's a good ice breaker

Kids crowding in the doors to see what the crazy gringos are doing (we were eating lunch)
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
I had a similar set of realizations when I came home for Christmas from
When I went to
When I first came to
Coming back to the States, I keep finding myself returning to Doña Magda’s anecdote. It’s a simple contrast between the two worlds where I find myself. Her experience can certainly help me appreciate mayhem that is
Besides my culture shock, I had a pretty amazing experience the week before I came home. First, a buddy of mine who was a Peace Corps volunteer in my site before me married a girl from Chirrepec. The wedding was huge and fully Q’eqchi’. Dan’s family came from
Secondly, I spent my week prior to coming home in
We got 43 patients into the hospital 35 of them received operations. Almost all of them were children. A few were sick and couldn’t take anesthesia. Some babies were underweight and will have to stay in the hospital’s nutrition clinic to get them up to weight before they can be operated. Something we come across with cleft palate babies is that they can’t nurse. The deformity makes it so they can’t swallow and they lose weight. If these babies don’t get help, there’s a good change they won’t make it. A week before the mission, I was out in a village and came across an underweight cleft palate child that had lost weight since birth. He looked awful and his parents were afraid to make the trip into the hospital. However, I think they realize how serious it is for the baby and they are going to bring him in this week.
Coming back to the mission, seeing the patients that did get surgery was amazing. Cleft lips are so easy to fix, however the total lack of medical care in
Saturday, July 14, 2007
For starters, transitions suck. Although I’m just starting the new job, it feels good to be doing one thing. On top of that, all the goodbyes are over. Being in Coban over such an extended period of time lends itself to seeing a lot of people come and go. After awhile, you just have to start establishing limits. i.e. if someone is only working here for a couple months, they are really not worth the investment of getting to know. Anyways, all the major goodbyes are over and I’m definitely turning another page down here.
With respect to work, the last two months on the cooperative were all over the place. I traveled pretty much every weekend for job training and tried to get everything finished at the cooperative during the week. Busy as it was, I felt good with where I was by the time I left. My schools are handling the gardening projects on their own and the cooperative is doing a great job with the tourism project.
However, the biggest part about leaving is saying the goodbyes. The almost two years working at the cooperative went by surprisingly quick. With that, convincing people we won’t be seeing each other anymore was difficult. You just get used to being there, and one day, it’s up and over. With that, I spent my final couple weeks visiting families, eating with them and talking over the past couple years. On top of that, the cooperative threw us a couple going away parties; one from the administration and another from the tourism students.
Guatemalan going-away parties are almost standardized. I remember how it went for the past volunteers and it was almost the same. Everyone gets up one by one, talks about how much they appreciate what we’ve done, apologizes for anything they might have done wrong and then starts crying. Marsha and I had a week of this and it was very intense. As taxing as my last week was, it certainly made me feel appreciated. Working there, I got used to being around everyone and sort of lost sight of the big picture on my relationship with everyone. They got used to us as much as we did being there, so when it hits that we’re leaving, it hits everyone hard and sort of clarifies how we were seen over the past couple years. I’m glad I’ll be able to see these people over the next year.
This week, I started the new job and it’s exciting. I’m a lot busier and have a lot more responsibility, but it’s all good. I always sort of dreaded having to drive in Gautemala and Monday, I took the wheel for the first time and had to go into the capital. Just call it a baptism by fire. I picked it up surprisingly fast and am comfortable with it all. Over the next couple weeks, I’ll be traveling around Alta and Baja Verapaz trying to get our sites ready for the fall medical missions. Also, we have a major surgical mission this starting a week from now where 40 of our cleft lip and palate patients will be operated in Antigua. It’ll be the first one I see, so I’m really looking forward to it. On the 28th, I’m headed back to KC for a break.
Here´s a pic of my hot new wheels.

And this is the view from my new apartment (it´s actually in the middle of the city, but on the third floor, so I get this sweet view despite the concrete jungle I live in)
Friday, May 25, 2007
Partner for Surgery was founded 6 years ago by a former Peace Corps volunteer and his father, Frank Peterson. Concerned with the utter lack of surgical care for rural Guatemalans, they began looking for ways to bridge this gap. The short version is that Partner for Surgery looks to connect Guatemala’s neediest surgical patients with visiting surgical teams from abroad. This began with a strong partnership with a major Franciscan charity hospital in Antigua. Over the years, the organization has formed around the ability to send patients to this clinic.

However, the big picture for Partner for Surgery is their connection with the rural areas and their patients. Whereas many surgical teams to Guatemala will operate on whatever patients show up to the area, Partner for Surgery looks to find the patients who have no other chance to receive an operation. This type of person is likely to not even have the means to seek out a free surgery. Predominantly, this will be someone who is from a very rural area that is Mayan and does not speak Spanish.

To make this happen, Partner for Surgery has a rural network of 15 local area managers who live in patient areas. These are Guatemalans who are well-known and respected in their communities. They are responsible for helping to set up triage missions, promote the organization and see to all the patients needs when coming in for a surgery. As it works now, a patient is identified by a visiting doctor in their communities and then booked for a surgery. As the date approaches, the local area managers then go talk to the patients to get them ready for the trip to Antigua. For many people, this might be their first trip out of their area. It is definitely not an easy job for the managers as the patients could be hours away in the mountains. Furthermore, some people are reluctant to leave since they have absolutely no money and a lot of fear built up towards the outside world. That said, the conditions people have push them beyond their reservations and most end up making the trip.
Most surgeries are taken care of in Antigua where visiting surgical teams are booked almost every week in the hospital. The majority of surgeries are things like hernias, cleft lips and palates, prolapsed uteruses, burns, tumors and cysts. Depending on the intensity of surgery, the patients then stay in a recovery dorm until they’re ready to travel. During all of this, the manager is with them to translate and take care of them. The hope is that they’ll go back to their communities and be able to get back into a normal life. Also, we hope they testify to the benefits of surgery so more people are willing to come forth.

So, where do I fit into all of this? Essentially, I’ll be in charge of everything going on outside of the hospital. Mainly, organizing missions to identify patients in rural areas as well as making sure they show up to their dates. The last thing we want is to be given spaces and then not be able to fill them. About 7 times a year, a team of doctors will come down for a week to identify patients. My responsibility is to make sure the managers do a good job promoting the mission as well as to select the areas and get the doctors out there (I’ll have a van). Each one of these will take at least a couple weeks to set up.
Besides the missions, I’ll be working with some side projects and looking to set up additional clinics for our patients. For example, the Rotary Club recently approved a project for 5 motorcycles so that our managers can get out to the rural communities and reconfirm patients. It’ll be my job to set the rules for the motorcycles as well as to train them on safety, maintenance etc. Funny thing is I haven’t even learned to ride yet. However, I’m not really planning to. Basically, I just need to scare everyone enough so they don’t joy-ride the bike off a cliff.
At the moment, Partner for Surgery is looking to have more patients than the Antigua hospital can handle. As such, they’re looking to help set up a small surgical clinic that can focus on PfS patients. There are plenty of surgical teams who have seen PfS patients before and would like to work with them. However, the lack of clinics is the current dilemma, so hopefully over the next year we’ll be able to equip one and start getting more people in.
Sunday, April 29, 2007
Holy Week in
Wednesday morning, I hopped the bus for Guate and it immediately got in a wreck with a pickup. No one died or anything, but it slowed us down and set the tone for the day. Later, it was a total mess trying to catch a bus from Guate to
Besides the lake, Chris’s village was in full celebration of Holy Week. This began with nightly processions to parade Jesus and the Virgin Mary through town. On Good Friday, the town gets out to make alfombras which are carpets made of dyed sawdust, flowers and pine needles. Later on, the processions march over the carpets in celebration. The most unique tradition is the presence of Maximon.
He’s a sort of fallen-saint figure revered by the Mayan communities around the lake. Every community creates his figure out of wood in varying completeness ranging from a stump with a hat (Santiago Atitlan) to a whole body. During the year, people ask him favors that they wouldn’t usually pray for. This could be a small monetary gain or something bigger like asking to have your neighbor whacked. He’s admired for his fallibility as this makes him the deity most similar humans in behavior. Anyways, he’s paraded around all during holy week outside the main church. Finally, on Good Friday, Maximon appears hung dead from the front of the church as he incarnates Judas and his betrayal of Christ. The whole spectacle is a really cool example of the synchronism of Mayan and Catholic beliefs.
So besides the Holy Week trip, I also hiked the Ipala Volcano a few weeks ago. It’s in
To finish up, things are good for now. Finishing up Peace Corps and getting ready for the new job can be hectic, but that’s fine. I’ll mostly be working with my schools. Chris is coming up next weekend and we’re planning to hike into a cloud forest outside Coban known to have the highest concentration of Quetzals in
Lastly, here's a pic of one of my schools I visited last week. I did a garden with them last year and when I showed up recently, they'd already gotten started on another one.
Saturday, March 24, 2007
Since my last post, things have been normal with work. I’m still waiting out the dry season to start my school gardens, but I’ve been plenty busy with our tourism project, worm-composting and family gardens. As for BIG news, it looks like I’m gonna take a job here in Cobán with Partner for Surgery. I will finish Peace Corps in early July, come home for a break at the end of the month before coming back to start in August.
Partner for Surgery is an NGO focused on bringing surgical relief to the most remote regions of
www.partnerforsurgery.org
My technical title will be “Director of Rural Structures,” meaning I’ll be more or less accountable for everything going on outside of
Besides this job news, I had a pretty amazing trip last week out to the western side of the country. I was headed out for meeting and decided to take off an extra day and to hike a volcano with some other PCVs. Getting to the meeting took me a good 8 hours on a chicken bus. From there, it was another 5 to the base of the Volcán Tacaná in the department of
The Western Highlands are a world apart from Cobán. It’s a dry scene of grasslands spotted with peaks and outstanding volcanoes. Furthermore, it’s really cold as the elevation can get up to around 12, 000 feet. After our meeting, we headed out to the tiny town of
I could go on forever describing how sweet this hike was, but I’ll let the pictures do that. Basically, it was a tough 5 hour haul to the top where we camped in the crater (it’s a dormant volcano). The next morning, we got around 4AM to hike to the tip of the volcano and see the sunrise. From there, it was about a 2 hour hike down and then a lovely 13-hour chicken bus ride back to Coban. This hike was awesome. It’s one of those experiences that make me have to pinch myself to believe it was all real.
Friday, March 23, 2007
Here´s a post on my buddy´s site about Chirrepec, my Peace Corps site.
http://gringologue.wordpress.com/2007/03/14/te-chirrepeco/
Wednesday, February 21, 2007
By far the highlight this past month was the trip to Belize. Mom and Dad came down a week earlier to travel around the northern part, and I met them on the second leg in southern Belize. I flew to Belize from Tikal in a tiny 3-person plane and it was sweet. We flew over jungle the entire time and spotted some Mayan ruins. Once in Belize, we spent almost the entire trip on a tiny atoll right on the reef. The scenery was stunning. I managed to get in a couple dives and went fishing for an afternoon with lots of hammock time in between.
We also met up with a friend on our last night in Dangriga which is Garifuna town on the mainland. She had worked there as a JVI volunteer and gave us the grand tour. Overall, I only spent 4 days in Belize, but it was wonderful. It was great to get some time with Mom and Dad to catch up.
With work, I’m just now getting back into my schools. We have to wait till April before we can get the garden going. So for now, I’m just doing some random talks on hygiene and getting the compost piles going. I usually arrange my visits to coincide with Phys. Ed on Fridays so I can play soccer afterwards. This past week, one of my schools waited for me to get back from Belize so I could celebrate Valentine’s Day with them (which fell on Wednesday). In Guatemala, this consists of bringing flour, confetti and confetti-filled egg shells to schools so you can plaster all your friends. I got covered in crap, but definitely dealt more mess than I took. Being 3 feet taller than everyone can come in handy.
Another part of the day is a secret-Santa type gift exchange between all the kids. Basically, everyone brings a gift and the teacher draws names for who exchanges gifts with each other. From there, the kids have to get up, say some cheesy stuff about friendship, exchange gifts and then hug their partner. For same-sex interactions, it went over easy. However, imagine 4-6th grade boys and girls having to hug each other in front of the whole class. Awkward and totally hilarious. Here’s what it looks like:
Beyond all this, things are going well. Marsha (my sitemate) and I are working together on a tourism project for the cooperative. We did I practice run today and it went well, so we´re hoping tourists can start arriving soon. Within a couple weeks I should know whether or not I will stay for another year. Tomorrow, I going to translate with the NGO on one of their medical missions to feel things out. I’m definitely on the fence, but would like to just make my decision so I can plan out the rest of the year accordingly. Will advise.
Here’s some recent photos:
This is Marsha getting swarmed on Valentine´s Day at one of the co-op schools.
These are the ruins of Yax-Ha that I flew over on the way back from Belize. This is where "Survivor Guatemala" was filmed.
Here´s a snapper I caught on the Belize trip. We ate him for lunch.
Here´s a view from right outside the cabin. The reef was right off the beach.
This is a waterfall outside Coban we hiked out to when I had some friends visiting.