It's amazing how much the little things can make a huge difference in one's sense of "settledness" in a place. I spent most of this weekend getting some items and setting up my apartment to make it feel more like home. I'm getting there. Still need to get a keyboard stand so I can set up my keyboard, but other than that, it's feeling like my space.
The first step of the process was realizing that I hadn't brought any face cloths or hand towels with me. So the day after I arrived, I went to the supermarket/department store that is very close to where I live (handy!), and got some. That made me happy. Next, I set up my toiletry hanging case that some girls in Mozambique had strongly suggested I get (thank you!) on the hook of the bathroom door. The bathroom is tiny, and there really is no shelving or storage space, so it's PERFECT.
Then I realized I wasn't feeling like I could wash my hands properly, and it was because all we had was this bar soap that I didn't like. I hadn't ever really thought about it till now, but I discovered that I MUCH prefer liquid soap, and that was also something I could get at the department store. So I got some, and that made me REALLY happy! I went twice, because first I only bought one for the bathroom, and then after awhile I realized I needed one in the kitchen, too. So back I went...glad it's not too far away. Setting up my bedroom, I realized that a bedside lamp would really help me, and so I found one - kind of a tacky one, but it does the job. And it made my bedroom SO much better. Finally, I got a mat to put outside the bathroom door. The shower area is not separate from the rest of the bathroom (that's the style in a lot of places), so the entire floor area gets wet. You keep a pair of flip flops outside the bathroom door to put on whenever you go in so your feet don't get wet. Anyways, I thought a mat would be nice so that getting out of the bathroom after a shower I could dry my feet.
Sorry if that's boring information...it's the little things that have helped to make this place feel like home. And it's the kind of thing you don't think about when everything is familiar to you and built and designed the way you're used to. So you have to think outside the box and figure out how to make something work for you. And I think I'm getting there.
Today was a beautiful, clear sunny day, and I got my first glimpse of the Himalayas, off in the distance, which was very exciting. Kathmandu is a big, busy, dirty, polluted city, and it's an interesting contrast to look off into the distance and see the mountains. They almost look fake...as if they've been Photoshopped into your view or something. But there they are. This is the view from my roof.
As I mentioned, today was warm and sunny (probably in the high teens or low 20s celcius) during the afternoon. But as evening hits, it gets chilly. I'm not sure how cold it actually is temperature-wise, but in my apartment I start bundling up as evening approaches, and usually by the time I'm ready for bed, I'm in thermals, a sweatshirt, my down jacket, a scarf, a hat, big warm booties, and I cuddle up to a hot water bottle and a little hand warmer thing. And it's going to get colder before it gets warmer...winter is still in early stages here. I don't think snow is a big thing, though. Here I am trying to stay warm:
Tomorrow is the beginning of a heavy week of orientation and my first few language lessons. I think I only have 3 one-hour lessons this week. Orientation will last about 10 days or so, and then after that it'll be 3-4 hours per day of language class (1-on-1 with a tutor), followed by an equivalent number of hours of self-study. So it'll be intense, but I'm glad I'm doing it. You can get by in Kathmandu without Nepali, but it's much easier if you speak it, and it'll be even more important once I get to Tansen. In June when I passed my surgical exams and said that I was done with studying, several of you told me that you very much doubted that I was really done with studying. Well, you were right, and it didn't take long! But it's all good.

