Yeni and Edel (in school uniforms) - two students working on the computers |
Potential students checking out the screens |
Yesterday, another group of potential students came to
visit. There are a group of poor women who sweep the streets in Santa Cruz. The
Mayor told them about our program and they came to see if they could study with
us. We will have to organize a way for them to study. These are, for the most
part, single mothers who make enough for subsistence living keeping the streets
clean. Of course, from my perspective, this is what we are all about. It will
be so exciting to get them studying.
A diabetic lady has been coming to buy Moringa leaf
powder this week. It is nice to have it available and to know that it is
actually making a difference in her health. Even though it costs me money to
produce, I hate to charge for it. But ... it needs to be worth something. We
will try and find a scale this week so that we can measure out the powder more
accurately. A new dryer system will
hopefully increase the amount of powder we have available.
I noticed the staff looking at a bookkeeping program
Wednesday afternoon. We talked about accounting and I mentioned that all
accounting is simply "In", "Out" and Balance. Everything
else is just an extension of that principle. We talked about how, for the most
part, people who have money know where it is going and those who are poor
generally don't. So, I gave them some exercises to do. Surprisingly, three of
the staff went home and wrote down a simple journal of their expenses for the
day and brought it to show me the next morning. Last night, another staff
member was in a store buying tiny notebooks for his two sisters so that they
would begin writing stuff down. So ... maybe the little notebook that I carry in
my shirt pocket to record my spending is having an effect. (Do not expect to
see family pictures of me and my family all sporting pens and notebooks in
their shirt pockets any time soon.)
Each of my staff have people who look to them to provide
some money. So, they are all vulnerable to having their salary get eaten before
they know what has happened. By keeping track of their spending, they have an
opportunity to see who and how their money disappears. In addition, having
access to computers here at the school means that they can design spreadsheets
with multiple columns to show their own particular types of expenditures over
time.
Wednesday evening I found that a young mother who does
some work for me had been stung by a scorpion the night before. Her foot was
quite swollen and she was in obvious discomfort. We took her to the clinic and
she got some help. Obviously the effects of scorpion stings here is different
from those in Africa. As my friend in Kenya put it, "A scorpion sting is
24 hours of pain. But only 18 hours of that is agony." This sting was
lasting much longer and with more problems. She is okay now though.
Well ... that is about it.
TTYLBB
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