The people I see every day are used to me. My neighbors, friends, students, the people who own shops and restaurants around me, and the people I work with know me as a person. To them, I'm Tina who teaches English and makes good American food. I'm probably a lot of other things to them too including a customer, friend, neighbor, co-worker, teacher etc. They call me by my name and say hi and ask me about things in my life and I ask them about things in their lives. We are all just people who cross paths in our daily lives.
Serving food at San Esteban after Mass |
Some of the students in my adult class |
With my 4th graders |
People who are used to me still can't get over some things though. People stare at my eyes all the time. Sometimes when I've been wearing sunglasses for awhile and I take them off, I am startled by the intensity with which people "study" my eyes. They are usually blue, but can change to green or grey with my clothes and with the weather, something that is very rare here. Just about everyone has brown eyes, even people with lighter skin. The little girls I know still want to play with my hair whenever possible and I get a lot of questions about if the color is natural or not. They also always laugh at me when they catch me enjoying the sun on my skin because here, they hide from the sun and tanning is a bad thing. I'm now used to crossing the road to walk in the shade, but I still like the sun on my face from time to time.
A friend of mine who lives in New York but has a house here and has been coming here for many, many years, told me that you can always tell the difference between American-Dominicans (people who are American but live here) and American tourists because of their clothes. If you are used to life here, you wear long pants or capris because woman are almost never seen in shorts in public, you wear plastic flip flops only around the house or to run quickly to the store, and if you're out to a restaurant or any other social place, you have jewelry, make-up, shoes, and clothes that all match and go together perfectly. I can spot an American tourist from a mile away with their tank tops and shorts, flip-flops, sneakers, tans, and especially if they have braids in their blond hair. I join my friends in saying, "look at the Americans" and sometimes forget that I am one of them too.
I'm obviously still American, but I like to think that some Dominican has rubbed off on me and I'm not quite as out of place as people who see me for the first time think.
Showing my Dominican spirit! |
Dios les bendiga,
Tina
1 comment:
Tina, you are amazing and it was nice reading that you seem to be truly loving the transformation as you are a chameleon in the DR and America!
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