{"id":59,"date":"2001-02-22T16:48:11","date_gmt":"2001-02-22T14:48:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.multiplicity.dk\/?p=59"},"modified":"2001-02-22T16:48:11","modified_gmt":"2001-02-22T14:48:11","slug":"close-to-4-weeks-on-the-ground-and-i-still-dont-speak-twi","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/krag.be\/index.php\/2001\/02\/22\/close-to-4-weeks-on-the-ground-and-i-still-dont-speak-twi\/","title":{"rendered":"Close to 4 weeks on the ground, and I still don\u2019t speak Twi."},"content":{"rendered":"
Close to 4 weeks on the ground, and I still don’t speak Twi…… Not a word of it. Well maybe a word, but that’s really it.<\/p>\n
To compensate for my obvious failings in that direction, I have decided not to learn how to drum either. Or cook Ghanaian style. Or weave Kente cloth. <\/p>\n
I’m just not cut out for it. I try. Well at least I try to convince myself I should try. At least.<\/p>\n
The fact is, I don’t really have the excess energy.<\/p>\n
Here I am, in a foreign country. A foreign business environment. Trying to make a positive impact to a company that does things in a different way, with different technology, and different goals. with different hopes, and different beliefs. Especially different beliefs.<\/p>\n
I get up at 6 in the morning. Do some basic excercises to try and keep my circulation going. Have a well-prepared breakfast of oatmeal and egg sandwiches (Thanks to Rose and Richard), before being picked up for a 40 minute drive through the chaos that is Accra rush-hour. At work, when i’m not trying to figure out the mysteries of linux firewalling, IP masquerading or Wireless microwave links, i’m probably on the road. The sweltering mid-day drive to find the radio-link and do some reconfiguring. 25km. Windows down to make the heat bearable, the dusty roads ensure that I am soon feeling the grains of sand between my teeth. <\/p>\n
And then there are the quiet periods. When I get time to send an e-mail to my girlfriend, my friends, my family, or to post another post on geekhalla. The time when I get a chance to really enjoy the, for Ghana, incredible 64Kbps connectivity that I work to keep up and running.<\/p>\n