Saturday, August 28, 2010

August 28, 2010: Mother's Day.

NOTE: we're a little behind the curve on this post - it was written a week ago, but with the week of training we just finished, we hadn't had a chance to polish it up. And now, with all the thoughts inspired by IST (in-service training for the non-volunteer and/or acronym impaired), we want to write another post. So you get this one in all of it's unpolished glory. And also a beautiful picture Lena took that has almost nothing to do with the post, except that it has some mothers in it.


A modern invention of the nationalist age and the card-flower industrial complex, Mother’s Day is not celebrated on the same day everywhere. Although May is a big favorite around the world, in Costa Rica (and apparently a small part of Belgium) August 15th is the day. And it is a big day—bigger than in the US. It is a national holiday with a day off granted to state workers and some schools are closed. Sales for presents are high, as in the US, and many businesses consider Mother’s Day as their way to stay in the black until Christmas arrives. Flowers, clothes, perfumes and home appliances are all hyped in advertisements for months ahead of the day – not too different from American tastes, except for the large number of ads attempting to entice you to buy hotpants and short shorts for your sainted mother.

When we were in church on Sunday the 15th, we learned why Costa Rica chose this date. Costa Rica is the longest-lasting democracy in Latin America, yet it does not have church-state separation. The Catholic Church is the official state Church, and the 15th is the feast day of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into Heaven, where she is crowned the Queen of Heaven by Jesus.

According to some of the teachers we know, there is a tradition of local schools holding big parties for their communities on Mother’s Day. Many schools, overburdened with other, more academic, tasks no longer commit the time and resources required, but my town is an exception. We were asked to help set up and then invited to attend the festivities, and, not realizing what a big deal Mother’s Day is, we did not know what we were getting into.

The first clue that we had no idea how intense this celebration was going to be was that there was a theme: Hawaiian luau. This evening, the town hall was filled with streamers, balloons, and a gigantic welcome sign featuring two large-eyed waifs in grass skirts dancing on an island and wishing the reader a happy Mother’s Day (as a side note: if the creators of Precious Moments were ever to sue for back royalties due to the unauthorized use of their work, just in the province of Puntarenas alone, they would be entitled to billions of dollars in damages). Enough tables and chairs were set up for 100 people, and in the centerpiece was a pineapple, covered with candy that had been speared with toothpicks and then jabbed into the fruit, making an already bizarre-looking fruit that much more surreal. At the front of the room, two large tables were stacked high with ribboned and sparkled loot to be handed out to parents that night through the raffle, because it is written in the constitution of Costa Rica that raffles must be held every three to 15 days.

We were given the task of greeting people, which consisted of a polite buenas tardes, making the person sign in on the appropriate sheet (one for men and one for women), and then giving them a raffle number, a piece of candy, and, finally, draping a plastic lei over their head. We ended up with over 100 people – probably 120 – but at least a quarter of the population of Portalón.

Then the madness began.

Actually, that’s a lie: the madness began while we were signing people in. The LCD projector, sound system, and a computer had been brought over from the school for use as the evening’s AV system. At some point during sign-in, everyone in the room was suddenly startled by a horrible, repetitive car crash sound effect, played at what seemed to be 5000 decibels. One of the teachers had put together a slide show, complete with sound effects and music, of what started out as a series of pictures of unusual car crashes, but which quickly devolved into a series of pictures of morbidly obese people in bikinis and cats in zany situations. This was to set the tone for the rest of the evening.

Next was the first dinámica of the night, which is just the Costa Rica way of saying “embarrassing party game,” in which we were all asked to stand up and dance. Everyone seemed fine with the standing up part, but, when it came to dancing, there weren’t many takers. At this point, the MC began haranguing the crowd over the mic, at great length and at great volume. “COME ON! DANCE! THIS IS FUN! THIS IS A NIGHT TO HAVE FUN! DANCE!” Unmoved, the crowd continued to, for the most part, watch the teachers dance. Then the threats began: “IF YOU DON’T DANCE, YOU WILL HAVE TO COME UP HERE IN FRONT OF EVERYONE AND DO THE CHICKEN DANCE!” Guards were posted throughout the room to identify the non-dancing scofflaws and drag them to the front of the room.

This, of course, is the point in which Nate was dragged up to the front of the room and instructed to do the chicken dance. Not that he hadn’t been dancing before, mind you, but let’s consider the logic: just say you’re running an event. The crowd isn’t really responding, but you feel compelled by some intense, uncontrollable, pathological urge to make them dance. After threatening them with public embarrassment if they don’t dance, you obviously have to follow through, otherwise you lose face and all control over the evening. On the other hand, if you actually force someone to embarrass themselves, you may very well scare everyone away, as they flee your terrifying totalitarian dance party. The answer? Make the gringo dance. Gringos dancing is universally considered to be funny is Latin America. Luckily, Nate has been conditioned by years of high school drama and working with children and is not easily given to embarrassment, and he was a good sport in sating the appetites and curiosity of the party-goers.

The night continued on, sometimes interminably so: at least 4 more dinámicas were done, dinner was served, raffles numbers read until every single adult ticket holder received a present (somewhat defeating the purpose of having a raffle, now that we think about it), and the teachers and hosts for the evening did an amateur dancer number in spandex and luau flowers which involved a lot of booty-shaking at the audience. Some of these women were over 40, and several were not in peak condition, making even Lena look like a swimsuit model. It was one of those situations in which you would be embarrassed for the lot, but since the party was now well into hour 4, all you could do was look on with mild perplexity, hope vaguely that you would not be pulled to the front of the room to shake your white ass, and remind yourself that later you should look into the armchair sociologist theory that one culture’s shame is another culture’s entertainment. And then smile wanly, knowing it was important for the guest gringo to seem to be having a good time.

But the real high point of the evening was yet to come. It involved the enactment of a skit claiming, as stated in the introduction, to represent a “typical Costa Rican family situation.” The plot was simple: a busty and booty-heavy Costa Rican housewife works hard to do the housework and feed her family. Her wayward and shallow husband goes out drinking at the local cantina, picks up slutty women, and comes home drunk. The wife kicks him out but he returns to repent. Harmony is restored when she, and her two daughters, forgive all. Now, we actually found this particular celebration of motherhood to be entirely depressing, but it was probably the most popular event of the night (other than the free stuff from the raffle). It relied on that well-worn trope of community theatre everywhere: put the most well-known town leaders into wigs, use pillows for potbellies and balloons for boobs, and watch the audience erupt in laughter. Despite the light-heartedness of this skit, Lena had a hard time seeing anything other than an almost entirely negative depiction of a rural woman’s life. They say good comedy tells the truth, and maybe that’s why so many women, as well as men, were laughing.

Friday, August 6, 2010

August 6, 2010: El Empache & Cold Water (by Lena)

Anyone who has ever been told by a mother or grandmother that they must lie still while vapo-rub is swabbed over their chest or that the ancient recipe of tea with brandy, lemon and honey will cure their cough, must be aware that we all have certain beliefs about health and sickness that have not been, to put it mildly, subjected to evidence-based medicine. Costa Ricans are no exception. I learned this first from a handout given to me in Spanish class that explained words like quebranto (“a mysterious elevation of the body’s temperature that is not enough to cause a fever but serious enough to warrant missing work”) and empacho (“indigestion brought about by ‘heavy food’ especially of the sort that comes in a can, rather than being homemade, and including such diverse comestibles as tuna, fruit, and pigs’ feet”). Now, as a nurse with a certain anthropological interest and an at times self-satisfied sense of open-mindedness, I thought, “How interesting! How different!” and maybe even, I must admit, “How cute!”

Seeing the handout come to life did not take long. During training, my host family provided first-hand experience. Thus, Doña V, a motherly and gregarious woman in her 60’s, was convinced that I had contracted a cold with sore throat due to the fact that I had been drinking too much cold water. With every intention of being helpful, cold water was denied to me for the next two months. This same venerable señora was also convinced that if she did not wear a hat outside on nights when temperatures dipped to, say 68 degrees Fahrenheit, she would catch the serena, which my handout helpfully identified as “a mysterious substance that comes down at night as a cold breeze and affects children and the elderly who do not use well-wrapped scarves.” I was also encouraged to wear either a scarf or sweater to avoid this night air, although, luckily, as a 33-year-old, my life was not considered to be at risk. Later, when made miserable for a day or two by an inevitable but light bout of travel’s diarrhea, I was told it could not possibly be food poisoning, but rather must be the “heavy food” I had to eat on the days I went to class and missed a regular home-cooked meal.

My initial reaction to all these events was to take the position of an amused foreigner willing to dialogue about cultural differences. The Peace Corps would have been proud. In fact, I imagine there is another handout somewhere about this, with such helpful advice as: “Use the new perspective presented to you as an opportunity to learn. Do not make rash, judgmental remarks. Ask questions about your new friend’s viewpoint with curiosity, but also with respect. Perhaps this is a chance for you to share your culture, too, as you open up a new way of thinking and begin a cultural dialogue, etc. etc.” But, as the months passed, I found myself in the lot of all long-term travelers, getting less patient with this idea and less interested in the attractions of a cultural dialogue I’d already had countless times. One can only be warned away from the open fridge after exercising so many times before something snaps.

It is thus with embarrassment that I relate the following:

I was not feeling particularly patient, and I did not have a Peace Corps handout available when I ran into D the other day on the road to the school. It was about a million degrees out and I had just arrived by bike and I looked like a hot, sweaty gringa. In contrast, D, as most women here are mysteriously able to manage, looked as fresh and clean as a flower. She gave me a sympathetic nod, which nonetheless said, “You look terrible.” Here is the subsequent dialogue about health that we ought to have had, as it could have appeared in the Peace Corps handout:

D: What a hot day. Did you bike from Matapalo?

Me: Yes, it’s so hot. But I just stopped by the river to stick my feet in, so I feel refreshed.

D (with concerned look): Oh, you shouldn’t do that, it’s very dangerous.

Me: What? Why?

D: Because if you are very hot and then you cool down too quickly with very cold water you will get sick.

Me: How interesting. I do not share this cultural belief. Please tell me more… Have you always believed this?

D: Oh yes, it is quite commonly known to be true.

Me: I am respectfully intrigued by this information… Perhaps someday we can have a coffee together and I will tell you about my grandmother Julianna’s cure for the common cold.

D: Lovely.

Unfortunately, no, no, this is not what happened. Instead, a shameful combination of a nursing education that had been lying dormant for seven months, a slow-onset ire at the Costa Rican need to tell me, against all common and empirical sense, that cold water can kill, and the irritation of being hot and sweaty led to the following:

D: What a hot day. Did you bike from Matapalo?

Me: Yes, it’s so hot. But I just stopped by the river to stick my feet in, so I feel refreshed.

D (with concerned look): Oh, you shouldn’t do that, it’s very dangerous.

Me: What? Why?

D: Because if you are very hot and then you cool down too quickly with very cold water you will get sick.

Me (annoyed): No. No, that is not true.

D: But everyone knows this.

M: No, I don’t believe you. That’s just not true. (Barely stifled derisive laughter) Listen, I went to nursing school, and they never taught us anything about this. I just don’t believe in what you’re saying. I’m telling you, it’s not true.

D: …

Me: And what’s more, where I’m from the water in rivers is really cold, not like this water here. You call this cold? (Unstifled derisive laughter) I’m talking about Colorado, where the river water is from melted snow. That is cold water. This water here, this 3 inches of water I stepped in for 10 seconds, that doesn’t count. It isn’t even cold and it certainly can’t get me sick. It just can’t be so.

D: (uncomfortably looking at feet)

Me: I’m telling you there is no evidence for this to be the case. No, no sir, nope, I don’t buy it. It just can’t be. I know about these things and I’m telling you this theory of yours is not true. Let me tell you about a little something called evidence-based medicine….

D (stunned, but polite): Well, ok … see you later.


Alright, so maybe I didn’t go on quite that long, but I’m pretty sure that D is now convinced I am either an egomaniac or touched in the head (tocado). But, really, why I couldn’t just forge a middle path and thank D for the information and politely return to discussing the weather, I will never know. Either way, I’m thinking of bringing D some cookies tomorrow and, by way of apologizing, asking her how her mother is doing after that bout of empacho she had last week.