Some days ago I was walking down on my home street in the evening. It’s a muddy street full of holes and rubbish lying around and it’s dark. As I walked I looked down and saw a lumpy thing on the ground. I joked and said that it looks like a dead cat and was about to step on it when I realized that it was a dead cat. Welcome to Wandegeya, the place in
Still, I’m happy to be here. I stay at the same hostel as last time I was here and you just have to feel like home when you have people in the street yelling “oh, Pamela! You’re back!” the same evening you arrive. I’d like to move out from the hostel, and I will later on, but I think it was good to go back there now to start with. It made me feel less lost. I’m planning to look for a little place on my own and move out from the hostel sometime in December. Until then I stay in Wandegeya and let the people in office and the guards at Akamwesi (my hostel) laugh at me. I blame Isaac for that, a muzungo girl together with a black guy?? Oh dear, oh dear…
Last time I stayed at Akamwesi, the electricity was almost always gone. This has now changed, I have rarely problems with power but water in my room is scarce. Don’t know exactly what the problem is, but at least I can get water from the tap outside. I’m happy I live on the first floor and not on the top floor. Big buckets with water are heavy to carry.
My work at the National Union of Disabled Women of Uganda (NUWODU) is fine. I say fine, because sometimes it’s very good and I get to go to interesting places, see a lot of things and meet a lot of people but there are also times when there’s absolutely nothing to do. Like right now, I’m in the office but write on my blog instead of doing some work. I hope this will change at some point. But the people that work here are wonderful and I’ve already seen and learnt lots despite the lazy days.
