7 Tower Brings Laughing Showers!

Drive down the wide road on the sloping hill along Manhasset’s Community Drive, into the circular opening of North Shore University Hospital, and her manager claims you can hear her laugh all the way from the 7 Tower Orthopedic Surgery Unit on the seventh floor to the first.

“C’mon!”, Marbelly Acevedo says jovially, “How can she hear me from there! I know I’m loud but that is impossible!”

A wife and mother, Marbelly, age 36, has been employed by North Shore Hospital, now turned Northwell Health, for over 16 years. Besides filling the carpeted halls of 7 Tower with her loud laughs, her mornings consist of receiving reports and checking up on her patients. “We go first thing to see our patients and to make sure that they are alive and breathing” she said. After that, she was usually on her feet for for the rest of the 12-hour work day. “Not only is she funny,” her old coworker and long since friend, Mini Mammen, said, “she is caring, compassionate, and hard working. She works three jobs!”

Aside from her three days a week/12 hour per day nursing shifts, Marbelly does also work two other jobs. As a Home Health Aid Instructor, she teaches those who take care of the elderly in their homes. “I do orientations with them,” she explained in her Hispanic accent. “I brush them up on what they are supposed to do for the patients. I train them about how to use their body mechanics.” In addition to her teaching role, she sometimes works for the Northwell Flex Staff, for which she does small side jobs that offer “a little bit of everything” when needed. “Today,” she said, offering an example, “I worked for endoscopy. I helped out with the patients and recovered them with anesthesia.”

One of the only Latina nurses on her floor, Marbelly was not always a Registered Nurse.

At the age of 15, Marbelly, known by friends as “Marbel”, moved with her younger sister from an impoverished Nicaragua to the United States to be with her father and step mother in Queens. Without her mother, and little to no English by her side, America was a foreign place to her.

But her connection to North Shore Hospital was established quickly. “I started working in the hospital as a cashier in 1995 through my dad. My dad used to be a house keeper in North Shore Hospital, so that’s how I ended up working there.”

“I was part-time”, Marbelly recalled, “and was looking for full time. I started being an SCA, which is a little lower than an aid. I had that job for seven years.”

In 2004, Marbelly started studying to be nurse in intervals. After receiving her Associate’s Degree, she started working as a Registered Nurse at North Shore University Hospital, a job which she has now had for 10 years. Currently she is taking a break from her studies, but plans on finishing her Bachelor’s Degree.

When she’s not gifting elderly patients with what they call her “beautiful smile”, Marbelly is in her quiet suburban home in Huntington either tending to her plants as “therapy” or cooking up something in the kitchen to help support her church. “I usually help with the cooking if they need me to. I help them out by selling food to raise money because we are trying to buy a church. They’re happy if I tell them I am going to cook.”

Her family, consisting of a loving husband who works as a driver, and their 18 year-old daughter, is very religious. “I like going to church a lot,” Marbelly said happily, “I feel like I can find peace. When I go to church and pray to the LORD, it’s like everything is taken away from me, all the burdens I have…it’s like everything is taken away from me.”

But at the end of the day, when she comes back to the hospitals floors, Marbelly Acevedo is ready to greet her patients and liven up the day with her unique throaty laugh. Marbelly even hopes that one day her daughter might follow in her footsteps. “I’ve been wanting her to become a nurse because there’s so many opportunities!” she confessed. “But she wants to do teaching. I say you can be a nurse and teach. There are a lot more chances. I’m a nurse and I do a little bit of everything!”

“My favorite part”, Marbelly admitted, “is helping out people who are really needy. Just them saying “Thank you for your help” makes me realize “Okay, I am helping someone”. It makes me feel good.”

 

The Particulars

Name Marbelly Acevedo, known by friends as “Marbel”

Age 36

What She Is Registered Nurse

Christell Martillo’s Interview as told to Sabrina Mammen

At the age of 12, Christell Martillo was comfortable in her family neighborhood in Guayaquil, Ecuador. But when her mother decided to bring her and her older brother over to the United States, she would have to leave her home and grandparents behind and welcome a brand new lifestyle. This began the journey that molded her into the independent, goal oriented woman she is today.

Growing up in Ecuador

“I was born in Guayaquil; that is the coast of Ecuador. I was born in a really poor area. It was good, even though it was poor, because the people there were really nice and really humble. It was nice. I loved being with family. Family is very important there. In America, everybody has work and has things to do, like everybody goes to college or everybody has their own family. If you have a brother, he has a wife and he has his kids and everything. Everyone does their own thing, while in Ecuador everybody is always together. Houses are full of people. Always. That’s the main difference.”

Aspirations Growing Up

“I aspired to be like my mother. She was a role model because even though she didn’t have a husband she knew what she had to do in order to raise us. Even though she left us, it was for a good reason because she wanted us to have everything. She knew that if she stayed there [in Ecuador], she would not be able to this.”

What We Thought America Was Going to be Like

“I thought it was going to be only “Americans”. I thought it was going to be cleaner, I thought it was going to be cuter. When I came, I got disappointed because it was like, “Oh my God, am I still in my country or what?” You see a lot of different people here. You expect only to see American people like you see in the movies and then when you come its like, “What happened?” This is not what I was expecting.”

“When you are in Ecuador everybody thinks that because you live in America you have money. They are like, “Oh! She’s in America, she has money.” And when I came, I wanted to see what do they do to have money? I started to realize that they have to work really hard. I mean, you’re working harder here than you do in Ecuador.”

Upon Arrival (First Impressions!)

“The first thing that impressed me was that when we got off the airplane- I was with my brother- and we saw Jews! Jewish people. And you know, they have the curly hair- I was like “What the hell?” I had never seen Jewish people, never in my life. I was like “Oh! Why do they have to wear a hat like that!”

 Our Struggles During the Transition to America

“When I got to school it was really hard because I didn’t know the language- and I still have trouble with it. It was really hard because I didn’t know any Spanish people there. In Bayside, there is not a lot of Spanish people…there’s a lot of Asians, and I was like the only Ecuadorian. It was really difficult because even in my country when you go to school, it’s hard to study and everything, so imagine in another language! That was the most difficult thing. But then I learned, it got easier.”

“My brother faced different things because he came here when he was 18. He had to work since the day he came. It was harder for him because he didn’t have friends. I went to high school here, but he didn’t because he graduated in my country. So it was a little harder for him. He only had me to talk to. I’m younger than him and I’m a girl, so he didn’t feel comfortable talking to me.”

Job Transitions

My first job was at a catering company and that was hard. I was 15 years old and my mom didn’t want me to work. She said, “No, you’re not going to work, you’re too little”. I have always been independent and I like to have my own money. I don’t like to ask my mom for money. I hate that. She said “No you’re not going to do it, because I know your grades are going to go low! You’re not going to study!”  But I said, “Oh please let me work!”. So she let me work for Fridays and Saturdays. It was only nights. If you work for a catering company, you have to do events and those are at nights. I worked for 6 months. It was very tiring; I didn’t like it. But the money was good.”

After that job I worked at a clothing shop right here on 82nd street. The pay was really bad, but it was a good environment because there were a lot of other girls working there. We used to go out all the time, we used to go to parties, and this and that… so that was really nice but I had to leave the job because the pay was not good. Then I moved to Guyaco’s, where I am a waitress.”

How America Has Altered Our Family Dynamic Life

“Coming to America brought be and my brother a lot closer. In America, he was like a father figure to me. In Ecuador we were not really close. He was 6 years older than me. I didn’t even see him when we were in Ecuador. He was partying all the time and was with his girlfriend all the time. When we got here, we got a lot closer.”

“When he got married I realized how much I cared about him because he was more focused on his relationship and I felt jealous. When we came here, he was the one working, and he was the one always protecting me, always asking, “Do you need anything for school? Do you need shoes? Did you eat?”

How Does Being Ecuadorian Influence Me?

Ecuadorian people are really humble. They like to help others. With the earthquake, its amazing how everybody has helped with donations and everything. Even people that I thought were so cheap, they have sent money there. It’s really good! I never expected something like that. People are helping a lot. I think every Ecuadorian here has sent something.”

My family is all good, thank God. But my father doesn’t have a job because of the earthquake. He lived close to it. He lives in a small town called Pedro Carbo. He worked in the bus company and the buses aren’t working because the roads are destroyed. He’s not working right now, so my brother and I have to help him with money because he has three other daughters.”

The Positive and Negative Aspects of America

“In America, everybody focuses on their own thing. In Ecuador you can see: In my case I used to live in a house with my grandmother. My neighbors were my uncles and aunts and we all lived in the same street. I didn’t have friends, I had cousins. But in America, my mother lives in Whitestone, my brother lives in Flushing, and I live in Elmhurst. You don’t get to see everyone so often. I think all Americans are like that. I do think America lacks a lot of unity in its families.”

“One thing that I like about Americans is that they build their own future. I mean, they save money for the future, even to die! Because, you know, if you die, it’s really expensive. They save money for their kids to go to college. I had to pay for college. My mom would never save for that. She will help me but she will not pay for it. Americans are really good at that, while Ecuadorians, they are really lazy. They live for the present, they only live for the future. They live for the day. They wake up, they go to work and that’s it. The majority of them don’t have any big goals. I think that’s why Ecuador is a poor country.”

“America is a good country for people that want to grow up. If you are lazy and you don’t like to work, you’re not going to get any opportunities. But for people that are smart, like hard working people, they get a lot of opportunities here that they might not get in their [home] countries. So I think it’s a good country.”

 

 

Wailing Wall Moment

Snow falls a an ultra-orthodox Jewish man prays at the Western Wall in Jerusalem's Old City, Thursday, Jan. 10, 2013. Stormy weather conditions continued on Thursday with snow, torrential rains and strong winds across the region. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)

This is a photo of a man praying at the Western Wall, a portion of an ancient temple in Jerusalem. Known as the Wailing Wall, it is often a large tourist attraction; one can see letters/papers stuffed into to the left most crack in the wall because many people come and write prayers and requests to God and put them into the wall. The photo caught my eye because it captured a very intimate, private moment as this man was praying at the wall, but it also looked really beautiful because of the clarity of the white snow falling around him. The name of the photographer is unknown (from a blog).

The Role of the Big City in Their Stories

“Indiranda kunderanda binderanda shinderantha”. Yes, that is most certainly gibberish. But that is what my mother thought Spanish sounded like when she first heard it after immigrating to America. After returning from a grocery store checkout line, she said to my father, “Chachen, I learned Spanish today!” and then repeated that strange combination of syllables that my father would never forget.

This is one of the memories my father nostalgically likes to refer to when he talks about life right after getting married. My mother, Mini Mammen, came here at age 22, after marrying my father, Shibu Mammen in India. While my father had been in America since he was 17 with much of his entire family, my mother never stepped foot outside of India until then. So Spanish was just one of the many surprises that came her way as an immigrant. While the “Spanish Encounter” is one of the funnier memories of my mother’s transition to America, she had her share of struggles.

Born and raised in a home with five older sisters in the town of Kumbanad, in Kerala, South India, my mother was never alone. Although her mother died when she was four, she was practically raised by her eldest. She always had someone to talk to, to borrow clothes from, to fight with. But flash forward another 18 years later, she finds herself in that situation which she never thought possible while with her sisters… Alone.

My mother in a normal salwar outfit prior to moving to America.

My mother in a normal salwar outfit prior to moving to America.

At age 21, my mother married my father, age 27. Another year later, she found herself pregnant and in the great country that is “America”, and not only that, but in that bustling state which is New York. And yet, amidst the bustling nature of the famed state, she was alone. She was thousands of miles away from all of family back home, and needed to get accustomed to a new family. The only person she truly knew when she immigrated to America was my father. She moved to a new land, into a new home. This home included my father, his parents, his brother, his sister and her husband and child. A new family that she had to try adopt as her own, because she had no one else.

My mother in more western clothing when she immigrated

My mother in more western clothing when she immigrated

I can’t help but imagine how daunting immigrating to America must have been for her. I was born here, and while I was exposed to my Indian culture (the food, the language, the entertainment), I also adapted well to American culture. I knew English, I could communicate well, I could fit in at most times. Looking back, compared to my mother, I had a much easier time socializing and making friends.

My father on the other hand had much more time to adapt to life in America than my mother. Born in Kerala as well, he grew up with two younger siblings (a sister and brother) and his parents. After going to boarding school and visiting his family in Kuwait, he, his siblings, and his parents all moved to America. His uncle and their family were already situated in America. Soon after, my grandfather’s three other brothers moved to America with their families. Combined with all of the uncles, aunts, and first cousins, one could say my father had a decent support group to lean on in America.

My father and his family in Kuwait in 1964; a year before moving to America.

My father and his family in Kuwait in 1964; a year before moving to America.

While he was only 17 years old, America instilled a big fear in him. His brother and sister would be able to attend high school here and had time to adjust, but he… he had to go straight to college. As a matter of fact, he attended City College in the City University of New York. My father, as he likes to say, only knew a very formal, “fresh off the boat” sort of English. As a result, it was very difficult to understand the slang being used. While his immigrant status was a source of anxiety as he tried to assimilate as a teenager, it was also the source of motivation and hilarious memories. My father had told me about something his professor told him to motivate him to continue taking a Calculus course. He was taking his first Calculus course in CUNY. Having not been able to understand the professor’s English, after class my father walked up to the professor ready to request dropping the course. “Sir”, my father said, “I could not understand a word of what you said. I think I should drop this course.” Looking at my father, the professor asked for his name. “Shibu”, my father then replied. He then went on to ask his ethnicity. “Indian,” he replied again. “Shibu”, the professor began, “I recommend you stick this course out. All of my Indian students do well.” To me, its funny to think that even back then, people held the stereotype that Indians were good at math- even a professor. Needless to say, my father ended up getting an A in the course, and this helped foster a skill for math. Attending a CUNY college myself, I see how daunting facing college can be to someone like an immigrant. I was born in the United States, and yet college was still a source of anxiety for me. The large campuses, the vast number of people- it is overwhelming, especially in the CUNYs. From the eyes of an immigrant it must feel so foreign and intimidating to see all new and different types of peoples who live and speak differently than him/herself.

While my mother and father are much more adapted to life in America since then, many of their values from India have been instilled in me. For example, the role of family and what it means is something that has been passed down to me from both of my parents. My mother, as said before, has a total of five sisters, and as a result I have a total of 10 first cousins on her side of the family, many of which I am close to. She stresses remaining close with her sisters, and as a result, extended family is important to me. And for my dad? Well that “support group” he had with all of his uncles and cousins has trickled down back to me as well. To me, my “uncles and aunts” are not just his siblings, and neither are my “cousins” solely my first cousins. Ever since I was a child, my life has revolved around family and close ties. My definition of family was very different from those around me. It included “immediate family”, extended family, and even church members. When someone in America is asked who their immediate family is, normally he or she would list their parents and siblings. Growing up, my “immediate family” had a total of at least 12 people. I considered my parents, brother, two first cousins, my father’s sister and her husband, my father’s brother and his wife, and my grandparents all as my immediate family… because in actuality, I grew up in an environment in which we all depended upon each other more often than not. At one point we even all lived together. Whether it was staying at each others homes everyday after school, getting together every Sunday, or having sleepovers- I saw everyone else almost as much as those who lived in my own house.  My second and third cousins were and are just as important to me. While my parents did immigrate, their core values like those concerning familial bonds were not diluted in the face of assimilation.

I, while admittedly am “Americanized”, still watch Bollywood movies unashamedly. I can understand my language generally well. I keep the Christian faith that I grew up learning. These are only some of the facets of myself which are derived from my parents’ past and roots from where they came in India. The food I normally eat is usually traditional Indian meals such as Biriyani, curry, nan, but also includes normal American food. My parents have done a wonderful job at exposing me to both types of cultures so that I am not ignorant of either. While I was born here in the United States, my parents’ history and experiences as immigrants influence me. As I still grow and formulate my own opinions, the experiences and knowledge they brought with them and developed during their transition provides the foundation upon which I build my new beliefs. Their immigration is not only vital to where my family ended up today, but it is vital to who I am and become as a person.

 

 

Maya Glyph Block

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By: The Mayan Civilization

This artifact is a Maya Glyph Block made out of stucco. Its origins go back to A.D. 650 Bellote, Mexico in the Mayan Civilization. At first glance, it looks like the face or head of a chameleon attached to that of a human. The eye of the left portion resembles the unique one of a chameleon, darting at a large angle, as does the very head shape. The right portion shares human qualities, such as those of an eye, ear, lips, and nose, as well as accessories such as earrings and a headpiece. In actuality, this artifact is likely a portion of a longer inscription on a building. It is a hieroglyph of the ancient Maya’s intricate written language. It is one of the many written symbols in which Native Americans used to express their ideas and write ancient texts. This writing was expressed on paper in this Native culture, as well as on buildings, monuments, and ceramics.

This one artifact has much to tell about lives of these specific Native Americans. Much of the paper and “written” evidence of Mayan writing was destroyed because 1500s’ Spaniards either banned the reading of the ancient paper texts, or religious zealots burned them. As a result, much of the only remaining evidence was the monuments, buildings, and ceramics upon which the Mayan writing was inscribed. This shows that writing was embedded into this Native American culture. By combining art and architecture with their writing, these Native Americans revealed how intricate and detailed their culture was. The artifact shows that the written word, although seemingly non-existent to foreigners, played a large role in the daily life of Mayan communities. It was present everywhere in their community whether on paper, or on public structures. While it is yet to be translated, the writing likely yielded great importance in relaying rules, stories, and other important ideas in the society for all to see.

This artifact helps to broaden the Narrative about New York City (NYC)/American history in that it revealed the “story” of the people not usually focused when discussing the development of NYC or America. It reveals the ignorance of the very immigrants who later populated the country: they viewed the Native Americans as barbaric. Written language was a key sign of a civilized people to migrating foreigners, but for lack of understanding, foreigners did not realize that the Natives had this. Part of the defense for Manifest Destiny in parts of America was that Natives were not “civilized” people like imposing immigrants themselves. Imposing immigrants did not see the civilized attributes of the Native people and as a result, this view encouraged actions such as the burning of their ancient texts and destruction of livelihood.