This is to document my time in AmeriCorps NCCC along with other travels and adventures in my life
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Friday, December 11, 2009
Reflection on Disaster
Today was my last full day of work. Monday I will be working a half day with Nikki in the warehouse and then as a team we will be cleaning the house, and getting ready for the drive back to Denver. We will be leaving on Tuesday about 8 am. I have really enjoyed my time here in New Orleans and working for Rebuilding Together. I am sad to leave the area but am also glade to be going home for winter break. I am ready to see my friends and family.
This week my team and I watched Spike Lee’s documentary When the Levees Broke as part of our service learning. I recommend that if you haven’t watched it yet you should. When Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans 4 years ago I watched footage on the news and read about what was going on in the newspaper but it was different watching it now. Before I watched the movie I felt I had a good understanding of the events surrounding the storm but I found out that I really didn’t know very much. Something that was strange watching the movie now that I have been here for a month is realizing that I have driven through and seen the places that are shown in the movie. I have driven over the overpasses that people were stranded on for days. I have driven by the superdome everyday on the way to work. One photo in the movie that stood out to me was a dead body floating close to the Circle Food Store. Not only was it sad to see that someone had died but we pass by the Circle Food Store when we get on the 10 west bound from our house. Looking at that photo and others it has given me a new perspective because I know what the area looks like now with no water. It is weird to think that when the water was at its highest it reached the second story of some of the houses we have been working on. Seeing the damage after the storm on the news is one thing but seeing it with your own eyes is another.
It has been four years since the levees broke and I was expecting to see the city more rebuilt than it is. In the neighborhoods where we are working, many houses still sit in the same condition that the storm left them in. One common occurrence is when a fixed up house sits right next to a house that has not been touched and is falling apart. The street we live on is the same way. Right across the street from us is a house that nothing has been done to it and it still has the spray painted X on the front from when the house was searched. It makes one wonder why the houses haven’t been rebuilt. Did the homeowners not want to come back, did they not have the money, why?
Something else that I noticed right away are all the schools that sit empty. The school about 5 minutes from our house still has a sign for registration for 2005 on the side, making me think that they tried to reopen but not enough students came back to make it worth it. This is not the only closed school I have seen either. Just from driving around the city to get to work I have seen five closed schools. Last Saturday three people on my team including myself helped the Crocker Elementary school pack up the classrooms and move boxes because the building was condemned. The school found out on Thursday night that they had 48 hours to be out of the building. From talking to the teachers we were helping move it sounded like this wasn’t their first time moving in the middle of the school year to a building that wasn’t going to be permanent. The school was moving into another building until winter break and then they were moving into their permanent home for the next couple of years until their new school is done in 2011 or 2012. I am not sure why the building they were in was condemned or if the damage was related to Katrina. What I don’t understand is why it is taking so long for a new school to be built. Shouldn’t education be at the top of the city’s list for rebuilding? All I can say is that I have a deeper understanding of what Katrina did to the area and that the city has a long way to go before it can be considered recovered. I have added some photos of the school and of my team and I doing PT to the photo album so you all can take a look.
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Only About a Week Left in the Big Easy
Friday, November 20, 2009
The Green and Purple House
The house has two bathrooms with tubs and showers which is a major plus with so many people living under one roof. In the kitchen there is a microwave, coffee maker, fridge, and stove. Not all of the burners work that great but the oven does and on Wednesday Ellen made corn bread to go with Chile, mum good! The one thing I wish we had is a toaster. I have only had toast twice since i have been here and that was in both hotels on the way to New Orleans. I miss not being able to eat it in the morning. Shopping and cooking for eleven people has been very interesting and is defiantly a learning curve that we will have to work on as a team. For example we went shopping for food on Monday night and bought food that is to last us through the week until we go shopping again next Monday, but we are out of milk and almost out of cereal. Cooking is very different than what I am used to. It was my turn to cook last night and because my cooking mate was sick Ellen and Mel helped me. I made veges, rice, chicken, and tofu. It was good and people said they liked, but I thought the rice was a bit over cooked. It will also take a while for me to get the timing of cooking down. I forgot to take the chicken out of the freezer in the morning so we had to thaw it out enough so Ellen could cut it in order to fry it up. But over time I will get better and will come home and be able to cook decent food on a tight budget.
As I said in an earlier post Rebuilding Together (RT) renovates homes for the elderly, disabled and low income families. Right now our team is split in two different groups with each group working on a different house. I am working with four other of my team mates on a house for a older woman and her granddaughter, who is in a wheel chair. RT is outfitting her house to be wheel chair accessible. The five of us have been painting the outside of the house for the last three days. the color of the house is a sea green with white trim and dark green accents around the windows and doors. We have been using extremely tall ladders and scaffolding to get the top of the house. At the training we had on Tuesday, I learned how to use extension ladders and put up scaffolding. After the first time of going up on the scaffolding I was more comfortable and it was even fun to be up off the ground. I like painting but am very messy and get it all over me. Today I came home with paint all over my legs, hands and arms.
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Second Day of Driving, All Day Through TX
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Leaving in Two Days, Where Has the Time Gone?
Well I leave for New Orleans in two days on Saturday. We had our first of several room inspections this afternoon. The TL’s were looking for signs of packing along with general cleanliness. Needless to say Mel and I didn’t quite pass because we didn’t show any signs of packing but in our defense we didn’t know that was one of the things they would be looking for. We have to be all packed by tomorrow night because we will be loading the cargo van then. I found out that we can take a small bag in addition to our red bag. It should be interesting trying to pack tonight. Tomorrow we have a class picture and the induction ceremony which should be interesting. I have to wear my dress uniform which consists of black battle dress pants (BDU), a white polo shirt and steel toed boots. I am not really sure what is going to happen at the ceremony but we will be saying the AmeriCorps pledge as a corps.
It will take us three days to get to New Orleans because we can only drive for eight hours a day. We can also stop at various famous places along the way if we want to, one of them being the Cadillac Ranch. We will be driving through Texas and some of New Mexico. Both states I have never been to and am excited to drive through them. Working with rebuilding together we will be doing a lot of finish work including putting up cabinets, flooring, indoor and outdoor painting, siding, among other things. I am looking forward to adding construction skills to my knowledge. I am now off to start packing, it should be interesting!
Friday, November 6, 2009
New Orleans Here I Come!!
That clue lead me to the lookout hill on campus where Daniel another team leader was sitting on the ground. By this time we were very skeptical about what was going on and weren’t sure if this was going to our final team. It also didn’t help that while we were asking Daniel if this was our final team he had a smirk on his face. In the end, it turned out to be our final team which I was happy about because I was tired of the anticipation leading up to it all. There are eleven people not including Daniel on my team, three guys and eight girls. My roommate and I are on the same team, which was a surprise. I am happy with the different people on my team and think we are going to have a fun first spike round. Speaking of the first round project, I am going to New Orleans. We will be working with Rebuilding Together New Orleans. Rebuilding Together restores and revitalizes houses affected by Hurricane Katrina and preserving the historic neighborhoods in the area. While we are there for the next month my team will be living in our own three bedroom, two bathroom house. Daniel will have his own room and the other eleven of us will be sharing two rooms. Hopefully the rooms are decent size, but either way it will be an adventure. I am excited about the fact that we get to cook our own meals! I can make veges that aren’t over cooked. I am also excited about the prospect of getting fresh seafood and going to some local restaurants in the area. If anyone knows of a place I should visit while I am down there just let me know.
In other news, we had a fire drill at 5:35 am on Tuesday. When we first got here we were told that the alarm was loud, annoying and they were not kidding! The screeching sound of a fire alarm is not on my top ten list of ways I want to be woken up. By the time we were allowed to go back in it was five of six and on a normal morning my alarm would be going off in another half hour at 6:30. So I lost almost an hour of sleep which I was not happy about. Tuesday for training the Water Unit did Adult CPR and First Aid training, so now I am certified by the Red Cross to save people. Wednesday night a group of us went and had Thai food at a local restaurant, which was a nice break from the cafeteria food. I enjoyed myself and the food was really good. Thursday before we found out our teams the Water Unit went bowling in the morning. I bowled a 76 and a 67 so not my best, but I had a blast anyway. In the afternoon, we all went to Washington Park and stayed for the afternoon playing games and relaxing. Pat had his slack line out and I got up and stayed up for about a second without holding onto anyone. Friday we had meetings for the different team positions. I am the ISP coordinator with Shannon. We will find places to do ISP for our team. I am also a food shopper with Pat. Over all it has been a enjoyable last couple of days.
Sunday, November 1, 2009
Hicking, Halloween, and Rock Climbing
Saturday was Halloween and I got to sleep in! Sleeping in felt great and was greatly needed. My roomy was making a run to Wal-Mart and goodwill to get something for her costume, so I tagged along. I tried to buy some fresh veges and fruit at Wal-Mart but it wasn’t a super store so I wasn’t able to. I did however pick up some yogurt, bagels, and cream cheese to supplement the food in the cafeteria. At Goodwill I bought a gray sweat shirt to go with my costume to wear to the Children’s Museum. All I had was a short sleeve shirt for my costume and I figured it would get colder outside as the night went on and wearing a coat would ruin the look. I went with a group of about 13 other people from both the Water and Fire Units to do ISP at the Denver Children’s Museum Trick or Treat Street festival. I worked the stroller parking and the art room. For stroller parking I sat with two guys from AmeriCorps NCC and watched the strollers that were left with us. In the art room, I cleaned up after the kids painted and helped them find things to draw with. After the event was over we helped take down the festival. Over all I had a really fun time and we got really good food for dinner which is a major plus! When we got back to the dorms a few of us watched Hocus Pocus, great movie, to end the night.
Today I went hiking with about 50 other corps members at Chautauqua. Chautauqua is right outside of bolder. A small group of us hiked about 1 ½ miles up or so. The views from where we finally stopped were amazing. You could see for miles and miles in every direction. We hiked for about 2 ½ hours and had an interesting time. Parts of the trail were very snow covered and at one point we bush wacked through the woods because we lost the trail. Tomorrow training starts up again, another 8am wake up call. Thursday we get assigned our permanent teams and find out our first project sometime around then which should be interesting.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
SNOW DAY!!!!!!
This weekend was really busy for me. On Saturday my team and I raked leaves at five different houses working with Volunteers for America. It was nice to get out of the classroom and work in the community. The five different people we worked for were really nice. One man even gave each of us a small bag of Halloween candy which we all enjoyed thoroughly. On Sunday Amanda, Ellen, Molly and I went and worked at the Denver Children’s Museum for seven hours of ISP. They had us doing all sorts of things including cleaning up the different sections of the museum, folding flyers, cutting pipe cleaners and paper eyes for Halloween, Amanda and I helped with a science project and we all helped clean up. The science project that Amanda and I worked on dealt with germs. The kids had to make a germ using a shaving cream and glue mixture. One little girl, she must have been about four; decided that it would be fun to get the glop all over her face. What made it even cuter was the fact that it contained blue dye that stayed on her face even after the glop was washed off. The Museum is very nice and the people were great to work with.
Monday the Water Unit had the day off because we worked on Saturday. Because of this a group of about eight of us went and did more ISP. We worked with a group called Ground Work Denver (GWD). GWD has obtained a grant to work with the Denver health department to get more people exercising. One way they want to do this is to get people to ride their bikes or walk instead of driving their cars. What we did was something called Community Mapping. In groups of three, we walked a section of a neighborhood and marked what areas need sidewalk repairs, more street lighting, places that had no sidewalks, ect. We then went back to their office and entered the data into the computer. Once they have collected all the data they will decided what area to focus on for their project. Katie, the women we worked with at GWD, was great and bought us pizza for lunch. I would defiantly work with the organization again. Yesterday was more training. We had to be ready to go at 8:45 which is late for us. We spent the morning doing Unit time which consisted of going up in the Bell Tower on campus to look at the view. It was amazing! You could see for miles around including downtown Denver. We then did the base line. I did 32 sit-ups and 35 full push-ups in a min. and I ran the 1.5 miles in 17:38 min. In the afternoon, we had training about healthy life styles. It wasn’t too bad just a bit long.
So that’s what I have been up to the last few days. This morning we did safety training that lasted almost four hours. If you ask me this is a little long even though I know they have to cover what they did so we all know the safety procedures on a project sit. I just think it could have been a little shorter. Since I have tomorrow off I might be going into downtown to walk around and go into some stores or I might go to Bolder, who knows. It will all depend on how the weather is tomorrow.
Friday, October 23, 2009
First Day of Service
Tomorrow the Water Unit is going to rake leaves for people around Denver for the morning and doing team building in the afternoon. On Sunday four of us are going to do ISP hours at the Children's Museum in Denver. On Halloween a group of us are going back to the Museum to do ISP's for their Halloween Party. I put some photos of the campus so take a look!
Monday, October 19, 2009
Sunday, the One Day Off
Saturday I went with my neighbors and some girls down the hall to downtown Denver. We walked around and saw the movie Where the Wild Things Are. The movie wasn’t bad, but I thought it would be different. Parts of the movie were too drawn out and long. We took the bus home from downtown because the bus from the light rail to campus stops after 7:30pm. The bus ride was interesting; you defiantly see all walks of life when you ride public transportation. I will say this for Denver; it has a fantastic public transportation system. The city is also pretty clean for the size of the city.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
I'm Here!
When I got back my room mate had arrived! Her name is Melanie and she is from Erie PA. I like her and she has a good personality. We spent the next hour or so unpacking and getting our room set up. Then a bunch or us went to dinner and hung out up on this hill that looks out over the mountains before we went to our first unit meeting. I am in the Water Unit. There is also Fire, Earth and Sun. The views here are amazing and I'm meeting a lot of great people. So fare things are going good, but i let you know if i still feel that way in a few days haha. I'm off to bed soon because it's been a long day and I have to get up early to be at our first meeting at 8am, uhg!
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
The Woos of Packing
-1 generic skirt to dress up or down
-1 set bedding (sheets, pillow, and comforter)
-2 shorts, and 1-2 pairs of pants to work out in/comfy clothes
-2 sets of PJs
-5 work out T-shirts --fewer if you'll wear them out too but they might get dirty
-5-10 t-shirts and tank tops (combined)
-4 nice tops-2 jeans (pants),
-1 nice pair of pants
-2 pairs of shorts
-sneaker socks and boot socks
-at least 1 set (top and bottom) of long underwear--No Cotton
-*Wool socks and glove liners
-*lip flops
-*Sandals for water (not always necessary--ready to mail maybe)
-1-2 pairs of sneakers (running and everyday) 1 pair of shoes for a nice outfit
-1 bath towel
-*1 beach towel -or plan to buy one
-*one comfort knick knacks --photos, movies, minimal books
-*minimal makeup and jewelry and hair stuff
-laundry bag
-multipurpose bag
-Sports bras and work underwear --some nice undies too!
-*Journal and address book
-*CDs and discman
-Items that layer well in Black, white and grey, especially if they are not cotton
-1 sweatshirt/hoodie
-1 fleece type jacket
-*sunglasses-
3-4 sweaters
-*camera!-
*A sleeping bag if you have a nice one
-*Laptop
-*Headlamp
-*Water bottle
-*Bug spray
-*Sunblock
-*work gloves
-*winter glove liners
Bathroom Supplies:-Soap-Shampoo-Conditioner-Q-Tips-Hairbrushes-Hair Ties-Toothbrush-Toothpaste-Deodorant-"Monthly Female Supplies"-*Headband-*Shower shoes-Bath Robe
They say to back light and as my mom pointed out yesterday I will be able to do laundry. To help me pack less she suggested that I should treat this like I’m going on vacation for two weeks and not ten months. Just bring enough clothes for those two weeks, which is what I am trying really hard to do. But for those of you have gone off to college know its hard to try and only think about what you use on a daily bases because when you live at home its all right there and you really don't think about how often you use it.
Even though I am excited to leave and start this next adventure, I am going to miss certain things especially because the holidays are coming up. Like thanksgiving and getting ready for Christmas, but I guess its a part of growing up and moving out of the house. But I will be home for Christmas so that part of the holidays i'm not going to miss. The next post will be written from Denver!
Thursday, October 8, 2009
The Start of Something New
For the next ten months I will be living with 8 to 10 other members age 18 to 24 doing various projects in the different states. The projects last six to eight weeks and could include responding to disaster, working with the Red Cross and Habitat for Humanity, working in schools, and working in state and national parks. I won't know who my team mates are or what projects I will be doing until I finish the first month of training. Along these same lines, I won't know where I will be living either, after the first month, which is part of why you are told you have to be flexible. Projects that are far enough away from base that you can't drive to them every day are called Spikes. On Spikes you live off campus in different types of housing. They say that we should be ready for any type of living situation, such as camping, living in cabins or hotels. Don't get me wrong I love to camp, but I am not sure how much I will love it after living that way for 6 weeks, but I'll let you know.
So I leave for AmeriCorps NCCC in six days, the 14th of this month! I am flying out at 7am. I have to ask why it has to be so early. I know other people who are leaving at more respectable times, like 12:30 and I ask why I couldn't be leaving at that time too. But alas I have no control over it. Lets just hope nothing goes wrong and I make my connecting fight on time with only a half hour in between the flights. I am really excited but also a bit nervous about starting something new. But I also know that I will have a blast and can't wait to get started!