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Sunday, September 27, 2015

Request for Specific Funding

Saludos from Oaxaca,

NOTE:  Re Fran's health -- she found out, to our great relief that her health is covered until she graduates.  So no need for financial help there.

However, there are three things that have developed / presented themselves in Fran's life that I would love to see addressed if any of you would like to contribute.  I will put them in order of priority as I explain them.

1.  ENGLISH: Needs $17.50 PER MONTH FOR 2 YEARS
This needs no explaining.  It is a requirement of her school, and they do not provide classes.  Fran has tried Cambridge, which proved to be too expensive.  Then she tried Benito Juarez University classes, which proved to be unbelievably bad and inadequate (and cheap). And now a group of similarly frustrated students at her school have gotten together and found their own teacher to give them a group lesson.  It will cost 500 pesos per month (currently $29.46 dollars).  Her friend the dentist has agreed to pay $200 pesos per month, which leaves only $300 (currently $17.67 dollars).  She needs this monthly amount for 2 years.  If you can help with this, please let me know, and whether you prefer to pay via Paypal or bank check, how often.  It may be more convenient to pay every semester (4 months) unless you want to set up an automatic monthly payment. 

2. VIOLIN LESSONS: $17.50 PER MONTH ON TRIAL BASIS -- 3 to 6 months for starters?
OK, so this is not a NEED, unless you consider that to maintain one's mental/emotional/spiritual health in a high stress course of study that one benefits greatly from violin lessons...especially if it has been on your wish list since childhood!  :)  This pays for 4 hours per week, and includes the violin, though she cannot take it home.  But she find out how much she loves it from this trial run, and whether she wants to switch to guitar, another instrument she wants to learn.  If you would like to give her money for 3 to 6 months worth of lessons, that would be great.  At the end of that time, we will know a lot more.

3. THREE DAY WORKSHOP, OCTOBER 23, 24, 25  $2,000 PESOS ($117 dollars) --see explanation below



This is a class that compliments greatly, but is not offered at her school.  It focuses on native foods and ways to preserve and ferment them, knowledge and skills that she could use to start a business, as well as to teach to others.  It is a new interest in Oaxaca, one that is garnering a lot of attention, and I would love to see her on the cutting edge.  I am sure others will take the ball and run with it, and I want her to be able to run right alongside them.

THAT'S IT!
Thank you for considering these needs and wants.  Please be in touch by email (lcassady@gmail.com) if you have any questions or would like contribute.

With love and gratitude from Oaxaca,
Lorena (and Fran)

Photos of Fran taken Yesterday on a trip to the Pochote Organic Market




Friday, August 7, 2015

Fran is attending the opera and wants a violin...


I know I just posted, but I couldn't resist this new development!
Fran is going through a pretty profound change of life, a turning point born of disillusionment and several "aHA" moments piled on top of each other. You know how that goes, right?

By the time I confided in her my opinion (today) that college education provides no more than 30% of a total education, she already understood. Despairing of the limited horizons and interests of her younger college friends (she is almost 24, most of them are about 19), she has suddenly got up the courage / is desperate enough to foray out into the world solo to attend events that interest her. As I write this, she is at a live, 3-hour OPERA for the second evening in a row!

She also announced (not for the first time) that she wants a violin! She's mentioned a violin about 12 times, and a guitar about twice. It is a skill she wants to develop, and I think it would lead to good places in her life.  She is very disciplined, and goes a bit nuts when there is nothing to do...

So if you happen to have a used violin in the attic...

Sunday, August 2, 2015

No more Braces!

Fran's braces are gone!  Here is the beautiful result!


Dear Reader,

The marvelous changes in Fran's life continue to unfold! After a little after two years, her friend Luis, the dentist, finally said it was time to remove her braces and replace them with clear plastic molds to keep her teeth in place for about a year.  Otherwise, he says, they will migrate.

She is now wrapping up a summer school class in Micro Botanic biology, and after a 2-week break will begin her 3rd year!  Her term of study will take more than 4 years because, as you will remember, she changed her major from Computer Science to Agronomy at the beginning of last year.

She told me recently that she will have no health coverage when she reaches her 24th birthday (coming up!) and that concerned me.  For the short period of time that she was eligible, she has taken full advantage, getting up to date on her vaccinations, blood tests, and the limited physical examinations they provide here.  But if something should happen. an accident or serious illness, I have no reserves to pay for her hospital bills or medicine.

I wanted to consult with you about the best way to provide for Fran in this way -- possibly a separate health savings account, or an expression of willingness to help should such a situation arise.

Fran is young and changing! Because of the garrulity of her "boss," the dentist Luis, and the totality of her observations and experience, she is really blossoming into an enthusiastic, socially competent and engaging personality.  Some of you have already seen this, but it continues to develop.  For instance I have been sick with Montezuma's revenge for at least a week (I think the antibiotics finally knocked it out today) and so when our new roomer arrived from Japan, Fran completely stepped in as minister of information.  She gave her the tour, explaining every detail of what she (her name is Kyoko) needed to know to be comfortable here, took her to the market the next day, and continues to answer her questions.

You are not here to witness this continuing miracle, and I should do better to inform you.  I think I say that every blog entry!  I wish I had the power to give Fran everything she needs for her future, but the fact is I don't.  And that is why I am so grateful that you are out there, faithfully supporting this deserving young woman.

All my love and kind regards,
Lorena

Sunday, May 17, 2015

May 2015 Update

(See video below) Fran and I have both been so busy!  I feel I have neglected these blog posts, and have resolved to write more regularly.   I may have failed to notify all of you of my last post as well, so check out the one below this one…

I want to be better about informing you, and I want Fran to have a more complete record of her life in these important years.  Her birthday is September 13th, one day after my daughter.  She is 23 years old, still a few years older than most of her college mates who started right after high school.

As you may remember, she taught elementary school in remote pueblos for two years straight out of high school, then worked for about a year as a virtual slave here in Oaxaca.  I am not dramatizing! She made about 400 pesos, then $25 a week, and worked 6 or 7 days a week for 11 hours/day.  And then I met her, and all of you opened your hearts, and she started the life she was meant to live!  Thank you!

I got an interesting insight about a week ago, talking to a retired lawyer from Canada whose retirement income is far beyond mine.  He is spending 10,000 pesos a month (about $665) to send his "goddaughter" through medical school and paying all her expenses.  We are spending much, much less than that, about ¼.

But,

Fran must start English classes, and attend them for 2 years so that she can pass her English requirement. This class, unfortunately, is not offered at her school and must be taken separately. It costs 900 pesos per month, about $60.  For 2 years, that's $1,440.  If you can donate all or any portion of this per month, please let me know.  Maybe you know someone who would love to make a contribution to this young woman's future, in which case I encourage you to reach out.

Donations can be sent to:

http://franciscaeducationfund.weebly.com/donate.html

Now, a progress report.

Fran is in her second year of agronomy, and it has been an amazing transition from Computer Engineering! She is doing some heavy lifting of plants and animals, and seems much more absorbed in her work. As a computer engineering student, she sat at the dining room table with her computer for hour after hour tackling the challenge of math and programming, but it was more like a war than a vocation.  Now she spends equal time, but I can tell you that she is genuinely interested in what she is doing.  She definitely made a good decision to change her major!

I still worry about her, of course.  Not about her skills or commitment, but about the realities in Mexico. She is an indigenous woman. The economy sucks. That pretty much says it all.  She will sink or swim not only on the basis of the skills she will gain in school, but on her ability to network with her peers, to make a place for herself in the professional, competitive world of agriculture.  More and more women are going into agronomy, I hear, so hopefully my concerns are not as dire as I sometimes believe they are.

But then I look at the bright side!

The joy of all this is what she is learning! She is now aware of genetically modified foods and their effect on nutrition and the environment, how agronomy connects to feeding the world, plant and animal nutrition, care of animals (goats, chickens, turkeys, rabbits, etc) for food and byproducts, the anatomy of plants and animals, and things she hasn't told me about yet!

She is awaiting approval for her penultimate project, on granadas (pomegranates) which grow wild in her village.  She thought she was going to do chickens, but that topic had already been claimed by other students.

Fran is not only learning at school.  She now has a regular part time job with Luis Rene, El Dentista, as his dental assistant.  It is a job she is doing without a degree, but he finds her up to it, and very professional.  She has learned a lot about her capabilities, and enjoyed the challenge.  The job pays for her braces and a little cash on top of that for expenses. She comes home from school, takes a quick shower, dresses up very professionally and sweet smelling, and comes back between  9 and 10pm exhausted but satisfied.  This girl does not have a spare moment in her life.  Thank God for her youth and vitality!

In conclusion --
Fran continues to take full advantage of the opportunities we are providing her.  She just needs a little extra "umph" for the next 2 years.  Our joint financial situation could be characterized as "by the skin of  our teeth." We are making it, but just.  Our rent was recently raised by $2000 pesos a month, and all my efforts have gone into renting out our extra bedroom to cover that increase. Unfortunately, I can't extend one peso more for Fran's English class, so I am sending out this plea to our friends.  Thank you.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Fran's class trip to San Sebastian de las Grutas

Hi all,

Fran's school activities have certainly changed since she switched from computer science to agronomy! She didn't want to be stuck at a desk behind a computer, and she hasn't been!

Last Friday she went with 3 busloads of students and their teachers to a destination 3 hours southwest of Oaxaca to explore a very large cave.  One of the purposes was to discover what was underground -- the composition of the land.  There was a deep pool in this cave that could only be reached by lowering one person at a time through a black hole, and the teachers smartly decided to cross that off their list of things to explore.  Enjoy the photos!

We so thankful to those of you who are helping, and still a bit close to the edge financially.  We are looking for ways to widen our support circle a little as Fran's requirements for materials are getting a little pricier, and our living expenses in Oaxaca are rising.  

Specifically, she is attending Cambridge Academy for English classes.  The quality of this school is very much higher than any school she could attend, in terms of learning from native English speakers.  They offer the TOEFL exam at the end of her studies, which will be an extremely important key to her professional success in the future.  However, it costs $900 PESOS per month (about $60).  So I am looking for donors who could commit to blocks of 3, 6 or 12 months at a time to allow her to finish.  It will take 2 years.  Please consider if you can help, or know someone to approach for help.

I also wanted to announce that Fran will be pursuing her Master's degree in Agronomy.  Her financial outlook requires at least this much education.  And because she is an indigenous woman in a male dominated (and I hate to say it, but somewhat racist) culture, it's become clear that when she walks out the door of this protected environment, she is going to need CREDENTIALS.  Staying in school will give her this, plus a chance to reap the benefits of her networking skills -- people like and respect Fran because she is a no-nonsense, focused, bright, energetic person.

OK, here are the photos!










Thursday, February 5, 2015

Second Semester of her Sophomore Year!




Fran started back to to school only yesterday after her Christmas break…the educational system here in Mexico is rather desperately in need of many changes, but we work with what we can get.  I could go on about that, but in another blog, perhaps…

She is flourishing within her small network of supporters (THANK YOU!) and continues to grow and learn in so many ways despite the educational system here.  She is now committed to taking English class at the Cambridge School for the next two years to complete a requirement for graduation.  Becoming fluent in English, I'm sure, will be as important to her future as her degree.  She is beginning to talk to me in English, and seems to understand just about everything.

The third pillar of her education, is reading.  It is said (including by Mexicans themselves) that "Mexicans don't read," and while that is a generalization, it is generally true, unfortunately.  Sr. Luis Rene, (El Dentista) and I have been working on changing this situation in Fran, and it seems to have taken hold! He has told her repeatedly that all the things he knows and talks about, he learned from reading, and that his favorite thing to do at night is to get in bed with a good book. (He is happily unmarried, like me.) This made an impression on Fran, since she is constantly amazed at how much he knows!

A couple of months ago, I bought her a rather long book written by Malala about her life (translated into Spanish, of course).  I think she was a bit staggered by the task of reading it, and it took her about a month.  But then El Dentista -- who had been talking to her constantly about the power of reading in his life, and what it could do for her -- lent her a book and she read it in less than a week.  She's now read 3 books, in one month, and seems to be on her way, reading for pleasure.  I just borrowed four skinnier books from the Oaxaca Lending Library for her, in Spanish, at the YA (young adult level).  We are getting her started reading by making it as pleasurable as possible, not a chore.

El Dentista has also exposed her to art, some great films, intelligent and far-ranging conversation, and excellent advice on many subjects.  He gets mad at her on occasion when he thinks she has done something stupid, and she gets mad at him too, so it is a true family relationship!  I feel like I have a "surrogate parent partner" only a few blocks away.  Not to mention a great dentist!

Fran continues to be amazing.  She came that way, partly, but because she is open, enthusiastic, BRIGHT, adventurous, strong -- she always gets the most out of life.  People adore her.  Except for the many native Oaxacans who would use her and abuse her if they could, because she fits a certain niche on the color line, is young, is female, is "from the pueblos," is usable and useful, and comes at a rock bottom price  They will feed her bad food and have her sleep on the floor, a couch, a dirty mattress.  We all plan to protect her from that as long as possible, and partly by giving her the best advanced education we can possibly give her.  I still hope that by the time she finishes her Master's degree she can go to the States somehow -- take a few courses there, increase her skills, perfect her English, and become more broadly educated about the world.  I think she is a leader waiting to happen.

Fran looks around her and sees the rut many young women are in here, as objects for men to play with. She is older than her peers at school (23 to their 18) so she watches them spend most of their time and energy on their appearance to get boyfriends.  They don't understand why Fran seems totally uninterested.  Instead of socializing, she goes straight to the front of the class and sits as close to the teacher as possible so she won't miss anything.  In her village, she is an incredible anomaly, since all the girls there are married by about age 15, and start having babies. She should have three by now, and they keep reminding her of that every time she visits. Her father told her that it is better to learn how to be alone than to get married too young and start having babies.  He is an amazing exception in his village too.  He helps his wife with housework and taking care of the children, and the other villagers make fun of him for this.

Fran's mother is trying to learn Spanish (she, like 95 percent of the other villagers, speaks only Cuicateco, a dying language), another indication of how unique her family is.  Her oldest younger brother is hopefully on the same path as Fran; he has a lonely and difficult road ahead.  Her youngest brother is languishing in the village, getting a miserable education, more miserable than you can imagine.  The tendency in isolated villages like Fran's is to actually hold people back, to sustain the cycle of poverty and ignorance by making sure that everyone stays at the same level, doing the same thing, thinking the same way.  It pains me to think of his young brain being deadened by his surroundings, especially because I know he is energetic and precocious, like Fran.

It is worth mentioning again that pueblo life is not the ideal some people think it is, especially in remote areas where roads do not extend, where there are no health services, stores, internet connection, schools beyond primary.  The young girls who start having babies at fifteen find their hair and teeth falling out because of nutritional problems, a drain on calcium and protein.  Fran's mother, in her fifties, has only a few teeth left. The young men (and sometimes women) become serious alcoholics, abusing their wives and children, doing nothing to help them survive. The food they put in their mouth is gathered from plants, mostly beans and corn.  There are virtually no animals to eat -- because it is too expensive to feed them.  There is no plumbing, and very limited electricity.  It is a 7 hour walk to town, or a 3 hour collectivo ride, if you can catch the only one that leaves about 4 in the morning.  And if the road hasn't washed out from the rain.  There is one person in the village who has a car, the mayor.  There is one burro, and possibly one horse.

One step at a time.

Your continued support is much appreciated.  Fran now has to start buying more expensive supplies for her coursework, and her one working computer is limping along.  I can see the day coming when it will go the way we all inevitably go, which would be truly a disaster since she gets and fulfills class assignments on it regularly.  Of course, she can use mine, but mine is headed for the great toxic waste dump in the sky itself.  So we need to save, as well as pay the bills.

Another thing we are keeping an eye on is that the landlord's son is moving in upstairs, which may have large consequences, since he doesn't like us to rent our our rooms.  If it gets to that, we will have to move.

The best way, the only way to move forward is … one step at a time.  I'm learning not to worry.  Not there quite yet, but having Fran along makes it more fun!