
On that note, I can definately notice my gradual assimalation into Paraguayan culture...
- I wore a wool shirt and jeans today and did not drown in my own sweat.
- I no longer have a tendency to look like someone with a severe case of Down Syndrome in class.
- I can generally participate in conversation in social situations (or in the very least understand the topic).
- My bowels do not turn over after I indulge in a couple of empanadas or most other questionable local delicacies.
- I have found that wearing a seatbelt is not fashionable, ever.
- I ignore vendors when they makes this obnoxious sound that can best b
e described as: ¨chih-chih-chih¨
- People´s conception of time is not universal.
- Paraguayan sleeping patterns: It does not necessarily happen when you want it to, it happens when it is convienient for everyone else.
- Similarly: You are important, but the collective good is more important.

Today, I just returned from San Bernardino (A vacation suburb just north of Asunción) where I and the other AFS-Paraguay students attended Adjustment Camp for the weekend. It consisted mainly of learning about Paraguayan history, Hanging out, and talking about our feelings... (Yeah, just great). We stayed in a hotel, but we basically had the whole place to ourselves. It had a beautiful pool, which we took full advantage of by playing a large game of Marco Polo.
It was interesting to talk to the other exchange students: How well they are getting along with their host family, how proficient they were in Spanish in relation to my ability and finding out more about the country which they are from. There were students from the U.S

Well thats all for this time.
Buenas Noches,
Leif