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Sunday work-out

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I had been eyeing the gym down in the basement but its loud thumping music has scared me away. I did feel like I had to do some exercise with all those buffet dinners and breakfasts. After a few hours of work, that opportunity offered itself. But I was reminded in rather painful ways that I have gotten quite a bit older since I was first here – both in mind and in body.

I had hired a driver to come and pick me up at 9:30 to help me escape from the hotel. He suggested a trip to Morija and Thaba Bosiu. My ears perked up – those were just the two places I had been reading about and I was anxious to see for myself what they were like.

First we drove to Morija. It is the place where the first French missionaries settled around the 1820s. They became very close to the Basutho Chief. Casalis, the first of them, played a role of spiritual and later also political guidance counselor and stood by the Basutho Chief through a lot of turmoil during most of his career. There is a little museum in Morija with faded pictures of those days, the first chief and his descendants (up to now) and stuffed animals, artifacts and pieces of the meteor (and pictures of those who found them) that fell in this area some 9 years ago.

My driver suggested I go up the mountain and see the dinosaur foot. An 11 years old guide, Popi, offered to take me up for about 4 dollars. The driver stayed behind saying ‘been there, done that.’ Innocently and full of youthful arrogance I followed the young boy straight up the steep slope of the mountain for about 45 minutes exactly at the hottest part of the day. Older doesn’t always mean wiser!

Living in hotels had been easy on my joints and so I thought I was good to go. The boy was cool, walking slowly, drinking my water and asking me a thousand questions in his 4th grade English. After the questions about family came the questions about cars (yes, he knew what a Subaru was), about church (who did I go to see there) and places I had been. He spelled the Sesotho names of some magnificent birds we saw, apologizing for not knowing the English names.

The destination of the climb turned out to be a variant on Old Man in the Mountains – a rock formation that, with some imagination, could be a giant footprint of some pre-historical animal. When I asked him which animal he said yes to all my suggestions: lion, puma, tiger, elephant. He didn’t seem to understand dinosaur which was the reason I had climbed all the way up there. I felt a bit misled.

Walking down was another ordeal and severely tested my ankle and knee joints. By the time I came back to the tiny guesthouse from where tours are arranged I had the color of a boiled lobster.

While I was waiting for my driver and replenishing liquids I fell in with a small French/South African party. As it turned out they had grown up in Lesotho and one woman was the great-great-grandchild of one of these first missionaries.
I don’t think these missionaries could, in their wildest dreams, have imagined the success of bringing the gospel to Lesotho. All during the day we saw throngs of women and men, dressed in capes with colorful ribbons and sashes that, I presumed, showed which church they belonged to. They did fail to convert the first Chief, who died one day before his baptism. That must have been a big disappointment.

The second stop of my sightseeing tour was the mountain (Mountain of the Night). According to the biography I read it was given that name because the first Basuthos to arrive there under Moshoehoe’s leadership climbed the mountain at night, fleeing from marauding tribes. But my driver told me otherwise. “You see,” he said, “the old Bashutos seem to think that mountains grew overnight.” I imagined something much older than these first Basuthos, when the earth was boiling and volcanoes popped up everywhere like basty pimples. The landscape does look a little pimply.

Moshoeshoe (Moshoesh for short) spent most of his adult life on this flat mountain top, keeping maurauders and attackers down. All the while some of his own people did the marauding in the flats where the Boers were whenever they ran out of meat and grains (and later weapons). It was an endless and lethal game of tit-for-tat.

As we walked up the steep path to the top of the mountain, more insult and injury to the already worn joints, snippets of vague memories started to come into my conscious. When we turned a corner I realized I had done this trip before, 21 years ago. It was as if a light in a dark corner of my brain suddenly was turned on, like the clothes closet in my hotel room – when you open the door the light goes on. Of course I had been here and explored the mountain top, with Michael, when I was young and supple and probably raced up and down without any effort.

Lesotho must be the only place in the world where you have to walk up a mountain to see the grave of the nation’s founder – an unassuming pile of rocks that stand in sharp contrast to the marbled mausoleum of the current king’s father who died in 1995. All that stuff was brought in my helicopter no doubt.

At the base of the mountain a giant re-creation of the mountain top ‘kraals’ is nearly finished but not open yet. For now the few tourists are cramped in a few open rondavels with braai pits. The Seventh Day Adventists were on an outing, travelling in buses with HIV/AIDS messages all over them (we pray for, no against, HIV/AIDS). Although praying is not an approved public health measure, in this country with its staggering numbers of infected people, anything is welcome.

There is not that much to see at the top, except for the giant agave plants that used to delineate kraals, and a few roughhewn structures – the chief’s house among others – built by and Irish builder who has escaped from the war on the flatlands. On the request of the chief, dictated by one of the missionaries, he excused for his AWOL by the Brits and so he continued building. If there had been water lapping at the edges of the plateau, you could have imagined being in Ireland.

The final descent was a killer – my painful joints and feet complained as I carefully positioned my feet on the millions of small and larger rocks that had been thrown throughout the 1800s from the top to keep the attackers down. It made for a very bumpy road up at the time and now it makes for a very bumpy road both ways, but especially down.

Distractions

T’s mom was the Planned Parenthood volunteer coordinator who hired and trained me, some 25 years ago as a counselor in Cambridge with the Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts. He is now a peace corps volunteer in Lesotho. He traveled 5 hours to come and see this friend of his mom.

He called me when he arrived in town and told me he was going to be a little late as he had to take advantage of being in the big city and stock up on things not easily available where he lives. I asked what that was: canned tuna fish! The things we take for granted.

We compared notes on working with the public sector, he in agriculture now – setting up a fisheries scheme at the local hospital, but child welfare in the future; me, for now, with child welfare. He is getting a good grounding in dynamics that some people never quite get, such as, ‘people don’t change just because you tell them to.’ It’s basic but will save you from major heartache and disillusion later.

He has decided he will continue in international development, in one direction or another. He is about nine months into a Peace Corps assignment and loves it. I told him that if I have two candidates who have equal credentials for a job, I’d hire the Peace Corps volunteer any time. I think it is a great preparation for the kind of career he is choosing for himself, or, for that matter, for life, anywhere.

Today an early morning massage at the iron hands of diminuative Patience and my lunch with T provided some distraction from an intense relationship with my computer. To break the monotony of hotel life, which revolves essentially around meals, I have decided to arrange a short sightseeing trip tomorrow to Thaba Bosiu, the ‘Hill of Destiny,’ where the founder of this country, Moshoeshoe, spent most of his adult life. From atop that hill, during a good part of the 1800s, he resisted countless attempts by neighboring tribes, including the Zulu, the Matabele, the Boers and the British, to subdue him. Having finished reading his biography I would like to see this historical place. I am told it is close by and worth a visit. The nice gentleman from Perfect Taxi, with the unpronounceable name, promised to call me back early morning with a quote and a plan.

Rest time

It is weekend now and the slot machines are running at full tilt. One of the machines is like a telephone booth with glass on all four sides. A man stands inside while a powerful blower whirls 200 Rand notes around him. He has to try to grab as many as he can. It sounds easier than it is. He has to stuff the caught notes in a slot on the front of the booth, the stuffing takes some effort and makes for lost time. He doesn’t get as many notes as I thought he would. And then the blower stops and he has to get out. I assume he had to pay for the privilege of money blown at him. Weird.

The casino will be open till 5 AM tomorrow (Sunday) morning, nonstop. Luckily my room is far removed from that excitement; it is quiet on the fourth floor.

Buffet dinner was half price tonight, I am not sure why, but it was clear Maseru knew about this as there was a long line of people wanting to get in.

I went back to the hotel early; my colleagues were busy running other parts of the program and there was no point in staying in the office. Here too Friday is quiet day. We received the self-assessment from the chief and I have started to comb my files for specific materials, while waiting for cross validation from people on her team.

Workshops in the districts are being organized, not an easy thing here. This means some travel and another 12 days in Lesotho to accommodate all this.

Weekend is not entirely restful as it is the time to pay attention to other stuff I promised to complete by this weekend. But tomorrow at 9 AM I will present myself at the spa for a full body massage.

For dinner I ordered a Greek salad, guess my surprise when I got this:

Berne-trump stew

I spent most of yesterday pulling together observations from my own experience, looking at executive competencies, reading my file about ‘the specialness of the public sector’ to come up with a profile for a self-assessment by the chief. She asked for it and today we delivered it. It will form the foundation on which to develop a customized executive leadership program. She promised to fill it in before the weekend and asked the UNICEF consultant who we consider part of our team, to give it to a cross-section of her staff – to validate (or contradict) her own assessment.

In the meantime she has asked to already put together a package of materials for her to work on while she travels out of the country. There appears no time to spare. I love the challenge and will spend tomorrow combing through my ‘Eng Materials’ file to put something together.

The teambuilding retreat with her team will have to happen after I have left but I will be able to interview various staff and help with the design. That too is exciting. And then there are some short workshops with various district level coordination teams that we will pilot – an attempt to help put some wheels under the coordination that these teams have to do. We received the green light for all of these.

The MSH project I am consulting to is run by an Indian doctor whose style is thoughtful and collaborative in a way I have not seen in years. He took me over to one of our partners today. It was refreshing to see how much effort he puts into aligning agendas and approaches. It effectively doubles his manpower and leaves me feeling good about carrying through what is being started. This is how things should be in the usually much more competitive world of technical assisters and developers.

Back at the hotel I watched part II of one of Donald Trumps apprentice schemes. This one is where a group of male and a group of female superstars (film, music, acting, sports, etc.) must accomplish some challenging assignments (raise money selling 10.000 pizza slices and writing, publishing and performing a children’s story all in one day). We can then watch them, as in a fishbowl, and see how they handle (or don’t handle) the stress that gets generated when you put eight prima donnas in a pressure cooker. Trump, and what I believe are two of his sons, act like A.K. Rice consultants, asking the kind of questions that bring out our survival reflexes.

It is hard to understand what compelled these famous people to engage in such an activity that leads to complete emotional undress. It can’t be money, as these stars belong to the super rich. May be it is some perverse sense of serving society (the proceeds from their assignment go to a charity of their choice).

I had just finished re-reading Eric Berne’s Games People Play. And so I was able to test my knowledge of the games. The show is full of them. There is NIGYSOB (Now I Got You Son of a Bitch), or SWYMD (See What You Made me Do), or IOTBH (I Am Only Trying To Help You). The bonus feature of having individuals speak privately (if on camera can be considered private) and candidly about what they think of some of their team mates just added to the drama – one Child wanting to talk as an Adult but speaking like a Parent to another Child who also pretends to be an Adult. In fact I saw very few Adults, and mostly stern Parents and hurt Children. I highly recommend the combination of Berne and Trump, it is a delicious stew.

Ground work

At the breakfast buffet you get a glimpse of the kind of people who stay here. It is not as diverse and fancy as at the Meridien in Dubai (and about one-sixth of the cost) but it does serve a variety of tastes: the Philippinos who like to put a pat of butter on their cold steamed mussels on the half shell, the Dutch who like chocolate sprinkles on their bread, and me, who likes whipped cream any time of the day. There’s stuff for the lean breakfasters (fruit and yogurt and muesli) and the heavy-on-protein breakfasters who scoop their plates full of eggs, sausage, bacon and home fries.

I have filled an entire notebook since I landed a little over two weeks ago, and went through my one and only mechanical pencil – both critical tools of my trade. The driver-cum- receptionist took me to the stationary store that reminded me of such stores in my childhood – only the dusters were missing on the staff behind the glass counters.

I now also have a Lesotho cell phone number so people don’t have to call South Africa every time they want to talk with me. I am told this will also allow me to use the wifi in the hotel on my phone – a move the South Africa phone company has blocked, presumably to avoid any chance of losing income.

I had my first interview with the next level down from the two senior people we already talked with. The lady is herself a team-builder and management and leadership facilitator which made for a wonderful conversation as we spoke the same language. It is nice to hear how a team-building exercise in her former employ in South Africa changed the way people interacted. Not surprising she is excited about the idea and effort to bring people together.

Sometimes team-building gets a bad rap – probably deserved as I have sat myself through some terrible team-building sessions that make me shudder when I think about them. It is an unlicensed profession, team-builder, and not every team-builder heeds the ‘Do Not Harm’ principle. But it can also be the beginning of a turn around a corner. If there will be some sort of a team-building exercise next week (a miracle if it can be pulled off on such a short notice, before the chief departs for two weeks), I hope people will later talk about it as a ‘corner-turning’ event.

My capacity building advisor colleague is busy trying to set up visits to at least one district but this turns out to be a bit more complicated. There is some district activity focused on ‘validating’ a new policy that is taking everyone’s time and attention.

In the meantime I am trying to set up a time with a Peace Corps Volunteer – the son of my friend Martha – who lives far away from the capital. He will get on a van that leaves at some ungodly hour to come and see a friend of his mom – amazing. I better treat him to a really fancy lunch. It’s a kind of Giving Forward, as I remember fondly dinners way beyond my pocket book that were offered to me by my parents’ friends. I have till Saturday to finish the biography of the country’s revered leader, so I can give it to him for the long trip back.

Axel called me at a time that most of the East coast is still asleep – jetlagged and lonely in the house without me and the prospect of another 26 days or so. I kept the conversation short because I am under deadline pressure to produce the rudiments of a very customized executive leadership development program to the PS tomorrow. I have tinkered together a self-assessment from official MSH assessments and my many years working with senior public sector officials. I need some point of departure for the design and content of this very unique program. It is being tested by some of my colleagues at this very moment.

greens, orange and reds

The MSH Lesotho office is the only MSH office I know of that color-coordinated its interior with the MSH brand colors (two types of green and orange). These folks know about congruence!

We visited the director of the department we have been asked to assist. She and I have a thing or two in common: we are both veterans with the agency we currently work for and we are both from related professional fields: social work and family therapy. On top of that she was dressed in our (Dutch) national color: orange (I was not).

My colleague took me along to the weekly Rotary Club lunch where I found myself in the company of an interesting group of people, including the US ambassador, a representiative from Kick4Live, a youth empowerment group that uses sports as the medium for growth and a variety of nationalities, private and public sector folks from all over (southern) Africa and beyond. I talked about my dad who was a devoted Rotarian, my friend DJ in Rockport, Razia jan in Kabul. It’s a powerful network that has spread itself into every nook and cranny of the world.

We met with a UNICEF consultant who is like an executive coach for the most senior manager. We talked about alignment of our work, much like last week we aligned ourselves in Namibia with another agency that works on management and leadership strengthening. It is refreshing to see this kind of cooperation and collaboration here. It isn’t always like that.

The assignments for my two weeks here are slowly beginning to develop an outline – one is about developing an executive leadership development program for the permanent secretary, the other requires a trip to at least two districts, to follow up on work done some 9 months ago on leadership develop. I am like the midwife coming to see whether the baby has arrived…and if not, to do some gentle massages.

One of my colleagues is actually about to have a baby, or rather his wife has. The baby is due any time but they hope it is not tomorrow, on February 29. It does tend to complicate the birthday celebration.

While I was learning and we were exploring the work to be done a parliamentary crisis was happening outside. I was glad this is a peaceful place because things like political parties breaking in two, transforming the governing party into the opposition just like that, could be nerve wrecking and a call to militant action in many other places I know.

While we were having an after-action pint of draught we watched red-clad women chanting and shouting on their way to some political gathering. I was happy to spot few young men in the crowd and no guns. The complication of the break-up is that the name of the new party has the same words as the old party, just re-arranged in a different order, and the same party color (red) – even the new party’s platform is the same I was told. While we finished our glasses cars with blue blinking lights went this way and that, all with high level politicians in it on their way to sort out the mess.

Next job Lesotho

It was 7 years ago I was here last, and 21 years ago I was here first, with Michael, then HR chief at MSH. I don’t think Michael knew what an important mentoring role he played in my life. I was never able to thank him and he died much too young. He was a tormented soul but at the time I didn’t know that and eagerly listened to his wise words. I still have his handwritten notes which he left me to ponder, Michael’s Maxims – a piece of paper I treasure and have used ever since. There were ten maxims in all, “don’t swim upstream” has been one of the most used in my 25 years at MSH.

On the way from Maseru airport to town we drove in back of a small passenger bus that had hand-lettered on its rear window: Taliban II. I saw other buses with words like ‘Terminator,’ you see these all over Africa, but Taliban II was new. What’s up with these Basotho? The sequel to Taliban I cannot be good. And yet this must be the most peaceful place on earth.

Someone in the plane was talking about the good old days but I happen to know that in this place the good old days were pretty bad. I am reading a biography of Moshoeshoe, the founder of the Basotho. It was the time of the difaqane wars which were tribal wars aiming at nothing less than total annihilation of each other, transforming thousands of survivors into cannibals, sometimes wearing aprons and loins cloths made from human skins, reeking of putrefied human flesh, according to the author of the book (Peter Becker – Hill of Destiny). To my surprise one of the fearsome warriors was a woman and she was just as cruel as everyone else – there goes that theory.

I left very early this morning from my lovely guesthouse in a leafy and high-gated suburb of Pretoria, where the only pedestrians are the household staff of the owners of the fancy houses. It’s beautiful and yet, the high gates, eletric fences and countless advertisements for security firms, tell a different story: of inequities, wins and losses and much fear.

The flight from Jo’burg to Maseru is only 45 minutes, which turned out to be a very small part of the journey. Most of the time was spent waiting: for the bus to the plane, for the plane, for immigration in Lesotho and for a room that wasn’t ready. It wasn’t until 2 PM that I was ready to start work and meet my colleagues and counterparts.

I was shown around the MSH/Lesotho office and met colleagues from two different projects. Because I had the drug management unit in my portfolio in Afghanistan I can now converse easily with my druggie colleagues about pharmaceutical management. I know their language now.

We went to visit the Permanent Secretary who is one of my clients this week; an energetic lady who brings much management experience from the private (nonprofit) sector to the job and has big plans. She wants us to help her improve her leadership skills so that she can leave the legacy she has in mind, only three years away when her appointment ends.

She shared the legacy with us and we told her we are entirely at her service. How we can assist her is part of what I am supposed to find out. She has made time available for us. This feels very luxurious – usually a short courtesy call is all I can get with people at this level. It says something about commitment. But, she admitted, it is also an election year and so her time is not entirely her own. We will be grateful for whatever we get.

The hotel is part of a casino complex with slot machines and ‘tables.’ All this is right next to the restaurant – noisy, and tense with the hopes of wins and the expectations of losses. It is of no interest to me, luckily. I can think of better ways to spend money.

There are many Chinese here, filling about a quarter of the plane from Pretoria and then lots of them in the hotel. They have small stores along the roads, selling stuff cheaper than anyone else – it’s the same story everywhere in Africa. The small folks hacking away at the bottom and the big guys (having meals with government officials in our Namibian hotel) buying up the ground that Africa sits on without people seeming to notice that one day Africa, and everything below its surface, won’t belong to Africa anymore.

Enjoy or change

Every day the staff in our guesthouse puts a small piece of paper with a quote on my bed. Today E.B. White tells me “I arise in the morning torn between a desire to improve the world and a desire to enjoy the world. This makes it hard to plan the day.”

The desire to improve the world is embedded in the professional life I have chosen – but when I read Meghann’s report on her work in Afghanistan with the midwives I am reminded that we can do that in difficult or easy ways, at least in terms of personal comfort. While she is experiencing the worst Afghan winter in 15 years, angry protestors that tie Kabul traffic into knots, I am strolling in end-of-august kind of warm weather to a small Greek restaurant that serves me a crisp white wine and a lovely salad. Life is not fair.

And then I read another few pages of Laurie Garrett’s Betrayal of Trust about the horrors of post USSR environmental policy and the demise of public health. How to get all that entangled is a mystery to me. I admire the folks who jumped into that mess.

Yesterday was the first time in 10 days I could sleep in but after a restless night I was wide awake at 6 AM. I had two more interviews with project staff, both had been out of the office two weeks ago when I interviewed their colleagues, to complete my exploration of what ought to be on the teambuilding program for the project staff that is schedule for the end of March. The chief took me out for dinner and we discussed what this teambuilding intervention might look like, his hopes and wishes while adding context to what I was learning.

I completed the version 2.0 of the facilitator notes for the team that will conduct the second workshop in Namibia on their own. It is just as well to hand it over to them – I am sure they will do fine. And eventually the public management institute will do fine, but not next time – that will take a little longer.

I found out that I am leaving for Lesotho very early in the morning, somehow that did not get communicated to me or I missed it. I had some idea to get to the office first but I am off south just after sunrise. And so the brief touchdown is over and I am packing my suitcase for the fourth time in two weeks.

I had a nice Skype call with Axel who is coming to the end of his consultancy in dusty and hot Abuja. He is generally pleased with the work although not everything happened on schedule. He will be heading home on Monday evening just when I start my Lesotho assignment.

Uber-meat and biltong

I have left the land of the über-meat-eaters and am now back in the land of the biltong. I ate too much of it and am now lessening my thirst with port wine; a small carafe was happily waiting next to my bed in the Bohemian guesthouse.

About noontime we completed our workshop with a management simulation during which the top directors played lowly workers and the regional folks playing top team. At the end they said they had a new appreciation for the pressures their bosses are under. It was quite an engaging exercise during which much real stuff was acted out.

We ended the workshop on a high note with a slide show of action pictures, professionally taken by my colleague A. with his fancy camera. After lunch everyone went his or her way, all with many good intentions.

We had our final team meeting in the MSH office and met our druggie colleagues as we call them affectionately. There are nine nationalities working in that office, a jolly group of managers, pharmacists and logisticians.

On the short flight back to Jo’burg I read the New York Times and learned to my relief that the slow downgrading of the Y-chromosome appears to have halted or at least slowed down. This is good news now that we have a new Y-chromosome arriving soon in the family.

Nobodies

Oryx steak was for dinner, juicy and red, with a sprig of thyme on top of it like a mast on a sailboat. We sat around the table with another USAID-funded project that has overlapping aims but has been local for five years. So they know a thing or two about the group we are working in, all embeds.

They are doing a workshop with exactly the same group we were with but without the regional folks. And after that it is our turn again, possibly with more of the same. It is all very mysterious.

The restaurant where we had gathered is perched on the top of a hill and overlooks the Windhoek plain, providing a spectacular view of the sun setting in between rainstorms left and right (but not over us), enormous electrical jolts and a red/orange/purple sun sinking through white and grey clouds. Like a calendar picture.

We had one vegan in our party. It is tough to be a vegan here. The waitress, being a true Namibian, explained to us that only red meat counts as meat. Consequently, chicken and fish are considered vegetables. And vegetables are nobodies. Our vegan colleague ordered nobodies.

We are half a day away from the end of the workshop. There has been much talk about behavior change and the behavioral and attitudinal shifts everyone thinks are needed. The talk is sincere but the constraints they are up against are enormous. We tried to turn them from despair and cynicism into hope and possibility but I know it is not a switch. Yet this country gets things done and has money (Namibia is an upper middle income country I learned today). The entire week we have been eaten lunch with the compliments of the Namibian government. I can’t think of any country (except for Japan) where the government took care of us.


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