Mike's assignment with VSO working in Organisational Development (OD)

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Life at the home office and at home

Many people asked me about coping with the heat. I have responded that, when I'm working at home, in the shade, with iced water in the fridge-freezer, it's really very tolerable.

I take it all back!

It's getting very hot. Temperature statistics for nearby Bolga have indicated (at worst) a high of 46 C and a night-time low of 31 C. We've also had significant periods without electricity (which means no ceiling fans), and several days with no mains water; we still have water in the tank, but as this runs down it means it's better instead of having a shower to wash with a bucket of water and catch the water to use to flush the loo.

We've had virtually no rain since mid-October, though there was a rain-storm on Feb 16th which has taken the dust out of the air to some extent, and some rain in the night a few days earlier.

Here I am working on possible improvements to the Widows and Orphans Movement Governance Manual in support of the Organisational Development process there. Underneath the laptop is a laptop cooler, which is plugged in to the laptop USB port and blows cold air through a perforated metal stand underneath the laptop. I have made the further adaptation of standing the laptop on 2 bits of wood above the laptop cooler, to get a greater air-flow underneath. All in the hope of avoiding the laptop melting in use. If any would-be volunteers are reading this, then low-power machines like Charlotte's netbook have the advantage that they don't get anywhere near as hot.

The 'curtains' in this room are spare sheets fixed to the window with clothes pegs. We paid to have curtains for the main rooms, but this is a low-cost solution for this room. The sheet can be pegged up during the day to encourage some draught through the room.

The water regime involves freezing an 80% full bottle of water that's been through our filtering system. If you top that up with filtered water and take it out with you then you have a source of cold water for an hour or two if you're going out. This is a big bonus - we didn't expect to have a fridge-freezer when we first came out here.


The rented house next door is full of phone engineers laying cable along the main road up to Bolga. We hope that the reels of cable will be gone from next door before the rains start, so that they don't create water-traps that could be mosquito breeding-grounds.








Andrea brought her friend Maggie to see us - Anna Daniel and I met Maggie at Tamale Airport in December, and it turns out that Maggie works with Andrea on RAINS (Regional Advisory Information Network Systems) and also works with VSO volunteers Mar and Mark on the development newspaper "The Advocate".
Fati and Samira came to see us on Saturday.

And Charlotte has now filled a photo album with 300 photos of Ghana September-December 2009.

2 comments:

  1. I like the blog Mr Cashman. Hadn't heard of it until today.

    Blimey, this head sounds pretty bad. When do the rains start?

    ReplyDelete

The different paths to our VSO placements

THE PATH TO CHARLOTTES PLACEMENT

Jan 2009 - With 2 younger children still at university, Charlotte & I apply for short-term work with VSO. Both turned down - I think they aren't taking people short-term unless they have development experience.
(For more insights, see MORE INSIGHTS below).

Feb 2009 - Charlotte offers to go long-term and her application is reconsidered. I will be able to be more flexible (e.g. travel back to UK) if I am her Accompanying Partner (i.e. not volunteering).

April 2009 - Assessment Day, and Charlotte is accepted.

May 2009 - I start to wind down client work, because there is much to be done before we can go overseas.

June 2009 - Preparing to Volunteer course, for both of us.

Charlotte accepts placement in Northern Ghana. We have decided that I will go out with Charlotte to begin with before returning to UK after some weeks abroad.

July 2009 - Skills for Working in Development course for Charlotte.

August 2009 - Family holiday for 9 (Mike, Charlotte, Tom, Sarah, Peter, Abi, Anna, Daniel and Kate) in Normandy.

Sept 2009 - Anna's 21st party - we couldn't go abroad until after this.
The most common question in September is "Mike, how long are you going out for?" The answer is "I don't know - will decide that when we're out there". Final preparations and off to Ghana. Very busy getting ready to go, but when I'm out there I expect to have plenty of free time for a few weeks...
_______________________________

THE PATH TO MY PLACEMENT

Sept 2009 Day 2 of In-Country Training - I volunteer to assist VSO Ghana with Organisation Development. For more details, see blog over Oct-Nov 2009. I can't claim any expenses, but volunteers are very gracious at inviting me to stay overnight.

Dec 2009-Jan 2010 Back home, collect Anna and Daniel from university, back out to Ghana for 2 weeks over Christmas (see Charlotte's blog), take them back to university.

Jan 2010. Skills for Working in Development course for me.
Start official placement as Organisational Development Adviser.

So one irony is that I have ended up with exactly what I applied for - a short-term volunteer placement that doesn't clash with university holidays. (Business and Trustee commitments would also have prevented me coming out for 12 months).

The other irony is that I thought it unlikely that Charlotte & I would find work in the same place - she was likely to be in a remote deprived area like Northern Ghana, and I was likely to have a national role given my skills. But now I have a national role, based in the deprived North where most of the volunteers are, which is much better for supporting them than back in Accra, the capital city down South on the coast.
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MORE INSIGHTS - are available here (from our church website in Jan 2010)

What’s In, What’s Out.

The Shenley Christian Fellowship blog gives the opportunity for people in the fellowship to share what’s on their mind with a wider audience. This blog entry comes from Mike Cashman who is an SCF Trustee as Head of Finance.

I’ve just seen a burnt area of semi-forest in the Mole National Park in Ghana. The park ranger explained that fresh grass grows a few weeks later, strong and nutritious, and attracts the wild animals.

What does this have to do with the New Year, the call of Abraham, and being a husband, father, Christian, church member, and professional roles as well? Well, let’s see….

In September 2008 our Church Leader Chris Doig preached on Genesis 12:1, the call of Abraham which came when Abraham was comfortable and settled in Haran – Abraham heard God’s call and left his comfort zone. Later Abraham made a move to Egypt which appears to have been his own idea, and that didn’t work out too well. So - sometimes God calls us to move, and sometimes he calls us to stay, and it’s good to discern which way he is calling. In September 2009, after reflecting on this message, Charlotte (my wife) and I found ourselves in Ghana with Voluntary Service Overseas. Definitely out of the comfort zone.

We can apply this message about God’s call beyond physical movement. Sometimes we need to keep on doing what we’re doing – using the gifts he gave us in our various roles, e.g. Christian, husband, father, church member, professional roles, and indeed our roles in social, community and leisure activities (e.g. gardener, goal-keeper, unofficial agony aunt, devotee of our favourite TV series or soap opera). It may be a juggling act or a plate-spinning exercise, but we feel we are just about managing to fulfil each role. But sometimes there are things that just need to be removed from our lives – not to say they’re wrong, but they just need to go to make space for new growth. I’m not referring to temporary disciplines like giving up chocolate or TV for a while – I mean cutting something right out of your life. Sometimes a friendship is one that no longer benefits either party. (I hasten to add that I have no-one in mind personally as I write this!) Maybe that solo sporting hobby which dates from your unmarried life needs to make way for hobbies which involve the family more.

Our change was a little radical. We both removed many professional and community roles from our lives, trying to do this in an orderly fashion. For Charlotte this included teacher, parish councillor, magistrate, chair of Loughton Residents’ Association, school governor, school governor trainer. What Charlotte found hardest to give up was home and face-to-face contact with friends and family. What else had to go, at least for a while? TV, sweet things in general, newspapers, car-driving, on-tap hot water, to name a few. (Not as many as we feared – we’re glad that much of the time we have running water, internet, email and phone contact). But in working out how we would follow a call to Ghana, some things were the rocks of certainty – for example I would still be a Christian, still a husband, still a dad, still a Church member, but no longer do I swell the viewing figures for ‘Match of the Day’.

January – the month which for the Romans was the month that looked forwards and backwards – is not the only time we can assess this question, but it’s a good time to do it. What is in your life? What perhaps is worth taking right out, even if that is painful, to make space for fresh growth? What might God be calling you to do which is completely new? What fresh growth could occur when there is space for it? Or – as you look at how you are fulfilling the various roles God called you to, do you feel his pleasure and encouragement to continue on the same path?

Mike Cashman is an independent programme management consultant based in Milton Keynes, currently assisting with organizational development in Ghana on a short-term basis. He is married to Charlotte, who is the VSO (Voluntary Service Overseas) Teacher Support Officer in Walewale, Northern Ghana. Mike and Charlotte have four children and two daughters-in-law, aged between 19-26.