Peace Corps Address

Joe's cell #
602-663-4353

Ashley's cell #
602-717-7071

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Christmas in Sedona

We are in the middle of our Christmas week with Debbie and family in Sedona. It was about 70 degrees the day we arrived, we have spent our time hiking, eating and the Martin women have done their fair share of shopping. Over the last two days it has snowed 8-10 inches, which makes for beautiful pictures against the red rock of Sedona.

Baby Trace!
Picture from the top of Doe Mountain
Snow in the desert!
Picture from Bear Mountain
A frozen little cactus
Adam's model pose
Hiking Bear Mountain
Adam, Ashley & Clint relaxing
Ashley, Debbie & Aaron on a hike of Doe Mountain
Joe, Adam & Clint in the hot tub enjoying the snowy scenery

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Baby, Friends, Africa, Christmas...

I am not even sure where to start, it has been so long since we posted last. We moved to Phoenix and time has gotten away from us. We have been so blessed since being back in the states, we settled into Phoenix nicely. We feel that this transition has been one of the easier ones out of all the places we have moved. We are feeling plugged in and it has only been about 5 months. I have to keep Joe's ideas at bay for our next great adventure, and reassure him that I am not going anywhere anytime soon. :) Here are ten highlights.

1. WE ARE HAVING A BABY! She is due April 4th and we are super excited. I am just over 6 months and feeling great.

2. We bought a house, it is a 3 bedroom, 2 bath and it has a pool!!!! Joe is excited about hosting a Polar Plunge Party every year. (Yes we do realize it won't be as cold as in the mid-west, but that is the best part)

3. Joe got into school at ASU. He will be starting in January, getting his MBA.

4. I got to meet my best friend's baby, Thijs, for the first time about a month ago. It couldn't have been sweeter!


5. We have gotten to see a lot of friends and family members since being in Arizona. This is Amy with her old roommate Lou who came to visit in Phoenix, she was also in Mali the same time we were, she was pivotal in our survival overseas.


6. We went home to Wisconsin for Thanksgiving, Joe's sisters are both pregnant too, so we got to all be pregnant together, sooooo fun. Minus the Wisconsin cold.



7. We hosted our first annual cookie exchange with another couple. It was a success.

8. We do not miss a White Christmas, we are loving the weather here in AZ in December and do not regret our move here at all.


9. We have talked to our friends back in Mali, we can still converse in the local language, although it feels weird speaking an African dialect in your living room. We miss them.

10. We are gearing up for a Christmas in Sedona. My mom and all of the Martin siblings are flying out in just a few days. It is going to be a holiday full of memories! 7 days, 11 family members, one house...

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Still in Phoenix...

It has been way too long since our last posting, sorry for the delay. Here are some highlights of the last few months:
  • Move to Arizona - We are in our tiny apartment and loving it.
  • New Job - I am teaching 6th grade, literacy and social studies.
  • Road Trip - My cousin got married in Colorado and we took a road trip with Aaron and Becky (our new sister-in-law).
  • Dad's Visit and Amy's Move - Dad drove Amy out to Phoenix for her big move, she started grad school and I ABSOLUTELY love having her near!!!
  • Aaron's Wedding - Aaron and Becky had a beautiful wedding, we enjoyed family, friends, great food, laughing and of course at a Martin wedding DANCING!!!
  • Labor Day Camping: We drove about 2 hours out of town and enjoyed a beautiful scene on the edge of a canyon. I love America!


Amy and I setting up camp.



Taking in the great view.



Amy and I at the wedding after the ceremony.



Joe and I, trying to capture the sunset.



Mom and I enjoying the botanical gardens together, it was only 115 degrees, no big deal.



Trace and I before the ceremony, gotta love him.



And the NEWLY WEDS!!!!



Tuesday, July 27, 2010

We have been in Phoenix three weeks.

So, we live in Phoenix! Ashley started a new job yesterday! And the temperature was above 100 for the last week! But our condo complex has a pool. Our house has air conditioning. And I just ate a bowl of ice cream.

Also yesterday Ashley and I celebrated seven years of marriage. Lets just say she is a keeper!!

These are a few pics I have taken in the last few weeks.

Ashley with our friends Andy and Lexi's little baby.


Breakfast with my mom and dad on fathers day.


My dad and I grilling out.


Ashley and her dad hangin out on the boat listening to Margaritaville.


Ashley and I at Indies wedding in Colorado Springs.



Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Haven't had time to stop...

So...
We really haven't had time to stop, think, or process. Is that good? I am not really sure.

After our time in Wisconsin, we headed to Iowa. I was so blessed that 3 out of 4 of my siblings were there to meet us (Aaron couldn't come but we saw him when we got to Arizona, and everyday after!!!!!) It was an awesome time, we got to swim, hold our new nephew for the first time, get to know little Trinity as a toddler, I got some sister time (which I missed a ton), had some shopping time with Mom (which also I missed a ton), and lots of yummy food.

We keep telling everyone who asks that being away from our family for two years was the hardest part about Peace Corps. We can live without running water, electricity, and good food but it is not easy living without our close family and friends. We love them soooo much.

Here are a few highlights of our time in Iowa. (Sorry the pics are so small, I don't know what happened)

Trace and I, I swear I didn't ever put him down!!!



Joe and Amy, always ready to make each other laugh.



Amy, Trinity, and I walking to go meet Grandma and Grandpa for dinner.



On our way to go swimming....believe me Trinity is FEARLESS! (She for sure takes after her dad on that one.)



My cousin Stacia with her gift from Mali, a Obama pillow case. She loved it!



Me, Tio Itchy, Aunt Pam and Joe, we are doing cheers with Jerry's Pizza, because Tio and Aunt Pam held out eating Jerry's Pizza till we got home! Troopers. (Well, not the whole two years, but for long enough, still troopers)



Mom and Trace, this must have been the one time I set him down.



Trinity and I in Tio's pool, it is not a complete trip to Iowa without a day in Tio's pool.



Me and Aubrey, headed to swim, with sunglasses and diet cokes in hand. Always.





Saturday, June 19, 2010

It is nice to be home

Ok, so we have been in the USA for about a week. It has been wonderful hanging out with the Wollersheim family in Wisconsin. Ashley has had a complete makeover since arriving home. She has had a haircut, eyebrows waxed, facial, french manicure, she has bought new cloths, make-up...etc...etc. To prove it we did a before and after. The first photo is our first day back and the second photo was after a few days of shopping and spa treatments. Ashley said she feels like a whole new person.







This is one of the last photos I was able to take in Mali. It is a giant storm rolling in along the Niger river near the center of Bamako.

When I arrived home I had got to meet my niece for the first time as she was born a month after I left. She is awesome!

My mom got me an ice cream cake to welcome us home.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

The Time Has Come

We can't believe it. The time has come to go home. We will be leaving in about 7 hours. We will take our last cab ride to the airport, saran-wrap our baggage, check-in, and wait....

We land in New York, spend the night and then arrive in Appleton on the 14th.

We are excited, nervous, sad, grateful, humbled, pensive, and shocked. Our two years are up, we never thought this time would come and now that it has we don't know what to think.

We attended a "Close of Service" conference last week, so we were able to hang out with all of our friends one last time. Again, saying good-bye was heart breaking. We have become like family and have experienced something together that no one else will quite understand. We are a family of friends that has been change and a family of friends that will go home different. We will always have the bond of Mali in our hearts. I love the friends I have made, the support they have given me and the laughs with them that have brought me through. Thanks guys.

Here are a few pics of our Malian/American family:


Mopti Girls: We are different as can be but love each other all the same.
From left to right- Iowa teacher, Miami dance girl, Boston Proper, Colorado rock climbing genius, and LA party girl Oh and I must not forget the Pakistani Princess (pictured below-when we took this picture she was busy straightened her hair and perfecting her make-up).
Couldn't have done it without them!



Pakistani Princess and I, her fashion sense alone gave me the will to go on.



Joelle was always ready for a game to pass the time!




And my beautiful ladies, Cassie and Jennifer

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Lonely Road

Ashley's perspective:

Yesterday (May 28th) may have been the hardest day in Mali thus far, possibly the hardest day of my life. We said good-bye to Kalibombo.

It wasn't the good-bye that you say to your parents when you are going off to college, or the good-bye you say to friends when you are moving to a different city, cause you know all along it isn't really good-bye but see you soon. But yesterday was truly a good-bye. We don't know when or if we will ever see the people of Kalibombo again. People we have grown to love as family, the culture we have lived as our own, a community that excepted strangers as one of them, an experience you can never put into words. It was a heart-wrenching day.

As we walked around village to give our Dogon blessings (this is very cultural, you never leave without giving multiple blessings, such as, let God have us meet again, let God have us remember each other, may God bless you and me both, may God bless your travels...), we were greeted with many left-handed hand shakes. Which may not mean a lot to westerners but here you would NEVER shake with your left hand but in ONE case... If you want the person who you are shaking hands with to return. You see in Mali the left-hand is considered "unclean", so you never use it for anything. But if you shake hands with someone with your left-hand, then it means they NEED to return one day in order to correct the wrong of the left-hand shake. And when they return you then greet them with your right-hand so that the wrong of the left hand shake has been erased. It was truly a blessing to shake with our left hand yesterday.

As we biked out of village, it was a lonely road to Bandiagara. A road that always seemed to be so full of life suddenly seemed so dead. We biked in not saying much to each other, Joe a few bike lengths ahead of me, both trying to contain our tears and reflect on our departure.

When biking into town we would sometimes use that time to pray together. A few days back Joe had prayed that God always keep us connected with Mali, in some capacity or another. At the time I was thinking, no, I can't do Mali anymore, the heat, the food, the transport....but God knows better than I, and as we departed village yesterday, I knew God wasn't asking me live in Mali for a lifetime, or work in Mali again, but to always be in prayer for the people of Kalibombo, to pray for the rains, a plentiful harvest, health, and for opportunity to come their way.

The hardest part about our departure, was not being able to show our complete gratitude and thankfulness to our friends and family in village, you just couldn't put it into words. We were humbled by their generosity, acceptance and love that they so graciously showed us EVERYDAY of our two years.We were truly blessed to be apart of such an amazing culture and community, we will never forget our friends in Kalibombo.


Joe's perspective:

Leaving our village and Malian friends in Bandiagara was an experience that brought a heavy feeling of humility. How do you express your gratitude to a people that have so little (at least from an American perspective) and yet have given us so much. Generosity has a very different definition in American culture and Malian culture.

My friend Moriba is a great example of Malian generosity. I showed up almost two years ago at the Traditional Medicine Center (where I worked at during my service). Moriba invited me to eat lunch with his family the first day I arrived. I ate lunch with his family for the next two years. No questions asked and nothing asked for in return. If that situation had been reversed and Moriba showed up at my work place in the United States, would I have showed him the same generosity?

When we left village my friend Oumar and his family gave us a traditional sword (that will be intersting explaining to the TSA officers at the New York airport), two statues, two bogolan (mud cloth) blankets, and four traditional bowls. I am not sure how much they paid or where they got all these gifts but to put it in perspective all the gifts would roughly cost around $40 usd, which would take 20 days of hard labor to pay for. Would I have been willing to spend a months salary on them if the situation was reversed?

As we said our good-byes I wondered if I would ever see these friends again. I wondered if I would ever have a chance to show them the generosity that I was shown.

Pictures of our last days:


Joe and Seydou (our neighbor), saying good-bye.



Had to get some last minute loving with all the babies!



Popcorn party at our house, with our host sisters, only appropriate for the Wollersheims to say good-bye with popcorn.



The village had a dance for us to say good-bye, we fixed 25 kilos of rice (approx. 60 pounds) with onion sauce to help us all celebrate a bit more.



Where's Waldo? or better yet Where's the Toubab (name for white person)? After the dance we marched around village singing and dancing to then end up at our house to eat rice, pass out loads of candy, and have a good-bye meeting with the village elders.



The Elders enjoying the dance from a distance.



The day we said good-bye to village we biked into town and had a last meal with Joe's co-workers. We made Chegge, a traditional dish that is ground up sweet root paired with onions and fish. This is a picture of Joe and the guys eating traditionally with their hands out of a communal bowl.



Mangoes for dessert! We will be sad to leave mango-land.



Joe and co-workers at the Traditional Medicine Center. They absolutely loved Ambobou (Joe).



Joe and his counterpart at the Traditional Medicine Center, Moriba, and his son Musa. This is the family that took Joe in for lunch everyday.