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Two Years in
Mongolia
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Alyssa
Vorhies ('09)
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Alyssa
Vorhies (’09)
gives an
insider’s view
of her Peace
Corps experience
living in one of
the most
sparsely
populated
countries in the
world.
For many people
across the
United States, a
kitchen without
a microwave; a
town without
Internet or
cellphone
service; a state
without roads;
and a home
without a
shower, hot
water or even
running water
seem
unimaginable;
but for me it
was just another
day in a place I
called home.
This
unfathomable
world, this
place, this
country, was my
home in Mongolia
during my two
years as a
volunteer in the
United States
Peace Corps.
I could write
for days about
the interesting
culture, the
temperatures
that (not
uncommonly) hit
averages of -40
degrees
Fahrenheit in
the winter, the
struggles that
come with a
language
barrier, the
travel snafus
and painfully
long rides over
open unpaved
land . . . but
today I will
write instead
about something
as simple as a
shower.
In Mongolia
there are
primarily three
types of
housing:
apartments,
wooden houses
and gers (also
commonly
referred to in
Western nations
as yurts—sturdy
round tents
serving as a
home for nomadic
cultures).
Wooden houses
and gers
virtually never
have running
water; typically
apartments have
running water,
but no shower or
water heater.
I spent my first
three months in
Mongolia living
in a ger during
training. I, of
course, did not
have running
water and would
take water from
the well in a
large barrel and
then wheel it to
my ger. After
the first three
months, I moved
into an
apartment for
the remainder of
my service.
There I had
ice-cold running
water, a sink
and a toilet,
but no tub or
shower. The town
in which I
trained did not
have a shower
house, and the
town where I
spent the
remainder of my
service had a
shower house,
but it was often
closed or not
working, so I
spent the first
six months of my
service boiling
water over a
fire or stove,
pouring it into
a round
bucket/basin
called a tumpon
and sponge
bathing.
I can only
compare the
feeling of
tumpon bathing
to swimming on a
cool summer
night, meaning
that while the
water may be
warm, as soon as
you are no
longer submerged
and your wet
skin is exposed
to the air, you
are freezing.
This is how the
entirety of a
tumpon bath
feels: wet skin,
warm water, cold
air.
Halfway through
my first winter,
the shower house
in my province
began working,
and I decided to
forego the
misery of the
tumpon bath. I
turned to the
shower house for
my weekly
shower. Yes, you
read that
correctly,
weekly shower.
Volunteers
without showers
commonly turn to
showering once
per week (or
sometimes less)
due to its
difficulty. Do
not mistake me,
we maintain
hygiene, we
freshen up
between, we wash
our hair, but as
for a full-on
shower, it is
common for a
volunteer to
trek to the
shower house
only about three
to four times a
month.
While a trip to
the shower house
is a full
shower, it is
still the
furthest thing
from an
enjoyable
experience.
Imagine bundling
up in all of the
layers you own.
After all, it is
-40 degrees
outside, and you
are about to
take a walk
across town. So,
you put on your
obligatory three
pairs of pants,
three shirts,
jacket, winter
coat, ear muffs
and hat, gloves,
scarf and boots
and head out the
door on a
15-minute walk.
Upon arriving at
the shower
house, located
in a dark,
deteriorating
basement of a
store, you join
20 other
Mongolians on a
bench to wait
your turn. This
can take hours.
Finally, it is
your turn; you
pay your money
and are taken to
your room. You
are then locked
in from the
outside and
become concerned
that one of two
things will
happen: either
someone will
open the door
prematurely to
your room while
you are
mid-scrub or you
will knock when
you are finished
and no one will
hear you. The
entire room is
small and wet
and dimly lit by
a lone
light-bulb
swinging from a
splitting wire.
Now you must
perform your
first set of
‘shower
acrobatics’ and
attempt to
remove your
clothing without
letting any part
of your clothes
touch the floor
or
walls—balancing
on one foot at a
time, you tug at
layer after
layer of
clothing. Then,
the shower
begins. The
water might be
hot, but likely
it is lukewarm
or even more
likely room
temperature. The
water might have
decent pressure,
but likely it is
a trickle, and
it is definitely
not going to be
high-pressured.
The floor is
made of slippery
tile so you
constantly
battle to keep
your footing.
Finally, you are
finished with
your shower, and
the time has
come for you to
redress, but the
entire room is
wet. You have to
put your clothes
back on, while
never letting
your pant legs
touch the
floor—and, you
are not doing
this for one
layer of
clothing, but
rather for
three. Once
dressed, you
stand at the
door and pound,
and pound, and
pound until a
worker comes and
lets you out.
Then with cold,
wet hair, you
head back out
into the -40
degree weather
to walk the
15-minute trek
home.
Through my time
in the Peace
Corps, I learned
many lessons of
appreciation,
patience,
cultural
understanding
and more; and I
feel confident
that the lesson
to appreciate a
warm shower will
continue to stay
with me during
my stateside
life.
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