False Perceptions

We’re told “bring shoes you don’t really care about, pack clothes you don’t mind getting dirty and ladies don’t even bother bringing makeup…” etc. We all started off in an outdoor store like REI or something similar, nervously filling carts with bug spray, hand sanitizer, mosquito nets and so forth. We had that terrifying travel Read More …

English in Ghana

Almost all people in Ghana speak English well. It is due to its colony history. Hundreds of years ago, Europeans came to this land and started their predatory and ruthless consumption. With the development of globalization, English-speaking ability is definitely a plus for communication and cooperation with the developed world, but wouldn’t it remind Ghanaians Read More …

Visiting a School in Nima

About a week a go we visited a school in a township area of Ghana. I noticed a stark contrast while visiting the school. While we watched the students preform poems, dances and songs for us, other children, literally a foot away from us watched through a chain-linked fence. The ones behind the fence were Read More …

Starting at Ghana Football Association

Walking into the GFA offices was initially underwhelming. It took professor Chris Chavez and me about 15 minutes to find the office, after asking three people we found the office, a room the size of my dining room with 5 people working in it. I was asked what I studied, and I told them advertising Read More …

A Less Heavy Heart

Each day is a gift that should be appreciated. Not everybody has the same lifestyle, the same culture, but everyone has the gift of free will and the gift of life. As I walked home last night, my heart was heavy and it felt like the weight of the world was pulling me down. I Read More …

A day off, well-spent

On this particular Thursday, due to a funeral taking place next door, nobody in the office went to work. With the loud noise that would take place and high flow of traffic, calling off work for the day was in everyone’s best interest. Although nobody went to work, one person from the office was asked Read More …

Grooving to the beat

According to Google, and the 2012 population census records, 75% of the population is Christian. Before the trip, I learned that Ghanaians are very religious. The people are strong believers, religious stickers and posters will be everywhere. It is common to see some people preaching on the road or on the trotro about their faith. Read More …

Shared Curiosity

I’ve been in Ghana almost four weeks, traveling through Accra by Trotro, practicing the use of “Me Pacho” regularly in conversations, and trying to escape this unbearable heat Ghanian’s call “winter.” I’m an American. The youngest of three daughters. A traveler, with a story of my own. I am many things, but to Ghana, I’m Read More …

Where I belong

Today at the beach, we were rushed with vendors as usual, but the conversations they have with me are always different. Two guys who went by Raj, and Rainbow asked me where I was from. I told them that I was from Ohio in the United States, like Cleveland and Lebron. They understood, but then Read More …