
The Finale!
We have finally arrived to the last day of driving an hour each day through windy roads dodging people, dogs, and other cars to arrive safely each time to Sibilia. The doctor picked us all up at the same location in front of the great smelling panaderia.
Today was market day in Sibilia filled with all of the animals for sale. People were walking their little piglets by ropes swatting their bottoms if they fell behind. Others had cows crowded on the back of their truck with turkeys tied to a basket on top. It was amazing to see.
Usually there is an exam where we test each individual. If they pass they get antibiotics, and if they don´t then they spend more time practicing with the doctor in the clinic. But, people became so nervous in the past that not many would pass. So we opted on doing more practice exams.
But the clinic was filled with kids. So we had each one act as though they were in their own communities and had to see each kid one on one. I would sit behind them and tell them to pretend I was not there, but that only meant them looking at me after each answer they provided to see if they were doing ok or not. They would even ask if they were doing ok or not...and I would look out the window ¨with a smile saying no estoy aqui!
I ended up with at 50% pass rate...3 people did perfect, 3 people failed miserably. I thought, well this probably isn´t good, until I heard that the other groups had only a 25% pass rate (1 out of 4 people) which made me feel slightly better.
We ended the day with a graduation ceremony and provided all certificates. They were all so grateful. One lady decided to hand out prayer cards and then do an overextended prayer inviting the evangelists to stand up and pray. Another lady stood up to say that she was catholic but felt it was ok for all of her religion to stand up as well. We went on for 10 minutes praying and I couldn´t tell who was winning in prayer since each seemed to be doing their own saying out loud. Augustine and I laughed quietly and I was sure one lady was going to fall over like they do in the tv.
At the end, everyone wanted photos of everyone. My group couldn´t stop giving the hugs asking me to come back. One lady cried which of course made me have to look another direction for a small bit.
I had Gloria, my 18 year old star student talk with the doctor about medical school. I was so excited for her and proud hoping that she could achieve what she wanted until Doctor Tomedi brought down the mood with...¨that´s not what we are trying to achieve- you send her to medical school and then there is no prometora in that village- we want the best to stay in their village and help out their communities.¨I found that a very odd way of looking at things. I always want to better people and help them to do what they want. And for this girl to go to medical school would be an amazing thing. The hope is that she could help her community out even more by doing that. But to keep her in her village because she has talent...it just seems odd.
She ended the day by giving me a homemade card very beautifully designed with roses and sayings. I definitely could not help the tears and couldn´t stop hugging her. I don´t care what anyone else says, I want her to fulfill all her dreams and not be held back by who or where she is! Hopefully we will stay in touch and I can hear how she is doing!
I am now back in Xela for one last bang. The stomach has held through the many foods even though others have been infected by the ¨worm¨ otherwise known as Jorge. We have finally diagnosed it as Ascaris Lumbricodes since it has appeared in forms such as linguine...and have quickly gotten them on medicines. Others have had the enjoyment of fleas, but I am still holding strong. But who knows what tonight and tomorrow will bring!
Now I am on the search for a guatemalan bike jersey and a beer!
Until tomorrow!


