Thursday, April 30, 2009

AYP/BPYI - Day 10 Travel Home


















Health Recap:
1. Blisters on my heels and cuts on tops of feet (new Keens)
2. Large bruise right arm with strange looking cuts (Bat night)
3. Sunburn on top of shoulders (Masai village)
4. Large bruises on shins from kneeling on cement (at Teacher Training)
5. Stye in right eye (at Teacher Training)
6. Left leg numb from knee down from foot sting 24 hours (bee? owner says small scorpion)
7. Severe stomach cramping and burping (2nd to last night of Teacher Training - Giardia?)
8. Near Breakdown (Mombasa ticket booked for May 29th vs April 29th)
9. Giardia Treatment (cxl'd in Sheboygan due to clinic busy with Flu - 2 Swine Flu cases)

Canceled teaching in Denver for weekend to rest.

I would go back to Africa in a heartbeat! It was amazing and I feel so blessed to be a part of the Africa Yoga Project. Look out! Midwest Power Yoga - Kenya. Moses, one of the participants from BPYI Teacher Training 1 and Bootcamp was a facilitator with Baron at the Africa training and found a studio location in Nairobi. His rent is $100 a month and would like to offer free classes and bus fair.

Back to the regular teaching schedule next week!
Glad to be home.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

AYP/BPYI - Last Day Diani Beach













My last morning was spent lounging in an infinity pool at one of Paige's friend's home. This is the 8 bedroom house down the road from Shaanti where the girls stayed during Teacher Training.

I road Mario the camel down the beach and after lunch, jumped into a van with Lisa and Siddiqi and headed to Mombasa to begin the journey home.

The ride to Mombasa was scary at times. The streets were dirty and crowded and the ferry was full of people and cars. Mombasa is an island of haze from all of the exhaust. At one point on the highway we were pulled over at a Kenya Police checkpoint. We weren't sure what would happen and the Police are not always safest people to run into. When the officer approached our car, he noticed our "Be The Change" shirts and immediately smiled waving us on yelling "Obama, Kenya's son!"

AYP/BPYI - Day 9 Leaving Shaanti












Shaanti was another beautiful resort. The food was most challenging. Meals consisted of mostly rice, potatoes and bread and rarely fruits or vegetables. I ate peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for the 5 days and we had a few treats like fish, beans, and ice cream.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

AYP/BPYI - Day 4-8 Teacher Training 1


























The 5 Day Teacher Training was amazing! The group was very young, with the average age around 18. I realized that people are people and the program was run exactly the same as any other Level 1 Teacher Training. It was a condensed version, but just as powerful and transformational.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

AYP/BPYI - Day 3 Heading to Coast






Paige has spent 3 years working side by side with the Masai to develop and empower this community. Not only has she given this community a school, they are planting bio-diesel trees.

Later in the afternoon we boarded 2 planes and took a short flight to Ukunda, Kenya. We will be staying at the Shaanti Holistic Center where the Baptiste Teacher Training with take place.

AYP/BPYI - Day 3







We began with and early morning game drive, breakfast at the base of Kilimanjaro, and then the Masai village where Jacob (our resident Masai for the trip) lives.

At Jacob's village we were greeted with a beautiful dance, signing and ceremony. We saw them play games, start a fire, and toured the inside of their dung huts.

I had another opportunity to pee in a hole. Success! I pulled my pants up and squatted with my feet wide. Not the end of bathroom troubles. The Masai are known for their jumping. One of the girls grabbed my hand to start jumping, prior to locating the bathroom and I almost wet my pants.


Later in the afternoon we gathered together for the opening of a brand new AYP built school. The ceremony was beautiful with school children lined up in sweaters? During the ceremony, Wade played a whaling kirtan and Baron was given a spear.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

AYP/BPYI - Day 2 (Night)









We stayed at Ol Tukai Lodge at the base of Kilimanjaro, where zebra, buffalo, monkeys, and elephant are within a 100 feet of your dinner table.

At night, I roomed with Dina. She asked me if she could read with the light on, but I wondered why she wanted to sleep with the light on. I could sleep through anything and it didn't bother me. At about 4am the generator kicked off and I awoke when I heard something in our room. I couldn't see and my flashlight was in my backpack. I kept hearing this rustling. Dina was asleep with her sheet and pillow over her head and I could tell her flashlight was on. I assumed she fell asleep reading.

At around 5am, the generator kicked on, the lights went on and something black, round and heavy landed on my belly. I brushed it off the bed and took up sleeping (hardly) under my covers like Dina. When we got up in the morning, Dina asked me if I saw any bats? That's why she slept with the light on and under the sheet. She said they were flying all over the room.

Neighboring the Lodge is a closed down resort overcome with blue balled monkeys. There were hundreds of them, always coming out to the roadway to check out the cars. Their balls are literally bright sky blue!

Cell phone reception was amazing! I had a signal everywhere, including in the Masai villages. Most of the men had a beaded belt to carry their walking stick, billy (club), knife, and cell phone.

AYP/BPYI - Day 2 continued
























After leaving the Masai village, Wade was yelling out different animals, that he didn't really see. But, then all of sudden there was a giraffe, a mother and baby! We saw so many animals: giraffe, hyena, wildebeest, ostrich, baboons, hippo, elephants, dik dik, gazelle, zebra, etc. The only animal we didn't see were lions.

In Masai culture, to become a warrior, males had to kill a lion. With the lion population depleted, males now marry to become warriors. Lions are still a threat to the Masai, but right now the drought is doing more damage.