It’s the rainy season in Papua. which means that instead of
raining once or twice a week it rains nearly every day, starting usually in the
late afternoon or evening and continuing into (or resuming in) the night. The
downpours can be spectacular, sheets of rain pouring down alongside thunder and
lightning, roaring so loudly you can’t hear the tv even with the volume turned
up high. The upside is it’s cooler now than it was in October, particularly in
the evenings; the downside it it’s way more humid, and the other downside is
that it’s hard to record my Wamesa speakers when it’s raining hard on a
corrugated tin roof, which sometimes cuts the elicitation sessions short. A
glorious sunny morning can turn ominously cloudy in the space of half an hour,
though usually if I’m home by four I can stay dry. And a deluge often means a
power outage too, though that seems to happen roughly weekly regardless of the
weather, usually for no obvious reason. I keep my headlamp and reading light
well-charged.
And rainy season is also flu season, and everybody in the
house got it, from baby Rifky to Ibu Min, my landlady, to me. The whole house
rang with coughs, and I spent a week in bed with a fever, a splitting headache,
joint pain, and barely enough energy to get up. In the first four days I
managed to read the last three Harry Potter books, if that says anything. The
only thing worse than being sick with the flu is being sick with the flu
abroad, and the only thing worse than that is waking up at 2am, in the middle
of a power outage, with the rain pouring down outside, realizing you’re going
to throw up, and stumbling to the bathroom with a clip-on booklight clutched in
your hand to find the toilet in the dark, then not being able to turn on the
air conditioning even though you’re sweating half to death because the power’s
still out. Yeah, that sucked.
In any case it seems pretty certain it was just flu – it
would take one awfully lucky and prolific mosquito to give the whole family
dengue, and when I Wikipediaed various tropical diseases and their symptoms
that’s what fit the best by far. (Fun fact: pretty much every tropical disease
on earth has exactly the same set of symptoms: fever + headache + cough + body
aches + possible petichial rash + occasional digestive distress equally
describes malaria, dengue, chikungunya, yellow fever, typhoid, flu, and mild
food poisoning. As far as I can tell the only difference is the relative timing
of all that, and how likely it is to kill you.) But now I’m (finally) back on my feet, though still
coughing along with everybody else and as a result getting an inside look at
Indonesian home cough remedies. I don’t recommend the lime juice with kecap
manis (sweet soy sauce).
On Saturday night Virgine decided she wanted to make
spaghetti (and was very disappointed to discover she’d bought linguine instead),
so we headed out back to the kitchen with the pasta and a jar of sauce. We set
the spaghetti to boiling, then started chopping some garlic, shallots, and
chiles to pep up the sauce. I had to convince her that beef broth, soy sauce,
and lime juice were maybe not the best additions, and that no, we really
shouldn’t add Worcestershire sauce instead, even if it is European. The
compromise was bakso (Indonesian meatballs) and peas. Once everything was
chopped I went inside to put on bug spray, and when I came back in Virgine was frying
the shallots, garlic, and chile on high heat, and as I approached to pour in
the sauce before the garlic scorched I got a lungful of what felt like mustard
gas, which sent me hacking and gasping outside for fresh air. No gentle
sautéing here. But if you ate around the bakso, the end result was pretty
delicious. And then I spent the night puking it back up.
Nope, not food poisoning. On Sunday I was fully sick again,
feverish, achy, malaisical. I finally dragged myself out of bed and caught an
ojek downtown, and on the third try found an apotek whose lab was open on a Sunday (for the record: Felicia’s,
just past Café Lee on the road towards the Polres). For 20,000 rupiah ($2) they
pricked my finger, smeared some blood on a slide, and 15 minutes later had the
verdict: Malaria.
Me, George Clooney (he caught it in Darfur,
way nobler than me), and probably everyone else who’s set foot on coastal New
Guinea for any length of time. I wasn’t
expecting the test to come back positive, given that I take anti-malarial pills
every day specifically to avoid it, but I hit the jackpot and found a
malarone-resistant strain. In all fairness I always knew that was a
possibility; my NSF grant application even came back with a note suggesting as
much. So I talked to the in-house doctor, who took my blood pressure and asked
me about my symptoms and gave me a few prescriptions along with a lot of
instructions in high-speed Indonesian, the upshot being that I have no idea
what strain of malaria I have (other than not falciparum, which is the more
dangerous one) or even what meds I’m taking (the baggies have dosages on them
but not names), just that they sounded familiar at the time and they seem to be
working. I was one of a few people there for the malaria test at the time. The
whole thing seems pretty routine: feel crappy, get your finger stuck, take some
pills, feel better, catch it again next year. Kind of a Papuan version of strep
throat – it sucks for a while and you don’t want to leave it untreated, but
you’re gonna be fine. (Not to belittle things – some people do get falciparum,
don’t get medicine, have bad luck, and get awfully sick. But at least here in
the city, if you can afford the $13 for the test and pills, that doesn’t seem
to be the norm.) When I got home and told my host family they nodded, asked if
I’d gotten medicine, told me to eat something (which is their response to
pretty much everything, including ‘good morning’), and invited me to a party
next door. I declined and watched X-Men: First Class on tv instead. And now
here I am lying in bed, reading the December 3rd annual food issue
of the New Yorker on my Kindle, and exquisite torture given that not only am I
thousands of miles from all the wondrous things described therein, but also too
queasy to enjoy them even were that not the case. Thanks anyway, Calvin
Trillin, but let’s save the molé
for later.
Two weeks since the flu first hit me, I am so sick and tired
of being sick. It’s not even the sick itself that sucks, it’s the endless,
soul-crushing boredom bore of mild fever and achy limbs, coupled with a vague
dread of those godawful doubled-over-in-the-bathroom-retching moments when it
really does get bad. I wake up, read, play Pocket Frogs on my ipod, read some
more, have a little rice for lunch, nap, maybe read on the front porch for a
change of venue til the hard bench gets too uncomfortable, play solitaire on my
laptop, some dinner, watch bad tv, go to bed, repeat for, well, two weeks now.
It’s killing time between pills and naps and waiting to feel normal again.
There’s good moments, those times after a stretch of nausea or headache when
just not feeling awful feels wonderful, but mostly it’s neither, just endless
dragging blah. I’m so ready for it to be over.
On a more fun note, just before I got sick I finally walked
the other direction down my road, away from town and the university, and
discovered the forest. (Not ‘discovered’ really, I’d been told it was there,
but I’d never seen it before.) First of all, about two houses down from mine is
a building with a sign out front advertising the International
Potato Center.
What that is or why it’s here I have no idea; the lights were off and a sign on
the door said ‘close’. (I do so
love bad Papuan English.) Five minutes farther down the road is the entrance to
the forest, ‘Hutan Konservasi Taman Wisata Gunung Meja Manokwari’ (Conservation
Forest Leisure Park Table Mountain Manokwari), which the sign rather aptly
declared to be the lungs of the city, with hydrological functions (funksi
hidrologi dan pari-pari Manokwari). The paved road turned into a wide dirt
path, with smaller paths branching out into the trees. The road was far enough
away that the only sounds were the birds, the cicadas, and the gnats swarming
around my head. (Note to self: next time, don’t forget the DEET.) At one point
I heard loud flapping above me and looked up to see a pair of hornbills flying
low into a tree beside the path. Salamanders darted back into the trees from
their sunny patches on the path as I approached. After about half an hour’s
walk I made it to the Tugu Jepang after which my street is named – a memorial
for Japanese soldiers who died in Papua during WW2, not something you often see
in the western hemisphere. The memorial itself was kind of run down, with
missing tiles, graffiti, and discarded candy wrappers strewn around the base,
but the view of the city was good. I took a few photos, decided it was way too
hot to be out, and hiked back home.
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