My experience in Venezuela and 5 days without electric light

in #venezuela6 years ago

This post I wrote 2 days ago, but I'm finished loading the pc

There are already more than 60 hours without electricity in Venezuela. And this was my day.

I decided not to go to the march towards victory. My cell phone and my camera had no charge, almost no water left for me to shower and I have no money or form of transport to get around.

I was able to charge the cell phone at the power plant of a community that kindly offered to do us the favor. That was yesterday at 11 AM and it is only at 4 a.m. the next day (today Sunday, March 10) that I receive enough signal to inform on Twitter and read their comments.

I have just a few pieces of bread with butter and a lot of water in my stomach. Decide to sleep voluntarily while waiting for the electrical energy to not concentrate on stomach pain, fatigue or anxious waiting for information. Of all, the wait to know what the hell is happening is harder to do ... and more when you find out that nothing is happening.

I went with my mother to a shopping center near the house to look for food. The giant is in the dark and all the vigilantes are concentrated in a single entrance, we ask them if Farmatodo was open and tells us that the only open place is the center of Madeira, but that there is no point and they are only cash and currencies . and euros in cash).

Discouraged I pretend that I am going because all I have is 11,000 in my bank account and my mother tells me no, that she has 5,000 Bs in cash, that she checks if we can buy something. Enter the premises and a young caretaker tells us the same as the others: "There is no point, we accept cash and foreign exchange."

My mother and I go between the corridors. She tells me once more 20 years. In total there are 1,200 bolivars, not even for an envelope juice. We separated and the minutes returns with a Bimbo bread that costs 4,710 Bs. We make the row in one of the two open boxes and the cashiers taking out accounts to know how many bolivars are in each dollar. I ask them how much they make the change: 3,300 Bs x dollar.

It's good to know, although I have no way of buying anything. A gentleman behind me carries batteries, candles and cookies.

We paid for the Bimbo bread, headed home and had 3 bread and butter tapas. I'm hungry but my stomach can not stand it anymore. I spend the rest of the day reading or checking my cell phone receives signal, sometimes I sleep, sometimes I wake up, I drink water and I keep sleeping, as much free time as there is nothing better. I do not know what happened in the march, I do not know anything about my loved ones, I do not know what happens in the country ... and the sad thing is that knowing nothing really happens.

It's 4 o'clock in the morning on Sunday, March 10 and I can connect to Twitter. Desperate messages, people who have been robbed, returned to use electricity in the country, the march ended without problems, electricity returns to certain areas. I'm tired, I'm hungry, I'm furious ...

A few hours before The mother of a friend tells us that the Eurobuilding is in a review of people who stay there because they have food, electricity and water. Most are Chavistas.

What a manguangua, huh?

(He finishes writing this at 5:27 AM with hunger, fatigue and deep anger, the day he tells me that socialism works by throwing a lemon)

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Your post was featured in an entry into @pifc's Curation Contest:Week 49. Posts are selected because the entrant felt you are producing great content and deserve more attention (& rewards) on your post. As such your post has been upvoted and will be visited by other members of the PIFC Community.

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Its a terrible thing what you and you countrymen are going through.
I came to your post because it was featured in an entry to @pifc's Curation Contest:Week 49
Posts that have been selected by the entrant will be visited by other members of the PIFC Community and given support.
You are welcome to submit other author’s post in future contests. The PIFC community has a support Discord Channel that you are invited to join. For more information about the PIFC family along with a great way to meet new people. We are a group of like minded people that focuses on assisting one another.

It's just terrible what you are going through! I hope everything gets better sooner than later! My country went through a similar crisis when communism fell down. People were starving, lost their jobs and money over a night... Things will get better at some point. Better days will come.

P.S. I stopped by thanks to @shari-loveurlife who featured you in this week's PIFC contest.

I'm so sorry for what your country is struggling with, and the helplessness you must be is so frustrating I'm sure! I have to believe that things will eventually get better, but it's been going on for so long and only getting worse it seems. Not sure what the answer is, but my heart is with you and your friends and family.

I found your post because @shari-loveurlife featured you in her Pay it Forward Curation contest entry! Feel free to join us any week with an entry of your own :)

It's hard to imagine what the people of Venezuela is going through right now. I've lived without electricity before, but what you describe is far worse. I hope something changes for the better soon.

I came by because @shari-loveurlife featured you in the pay-it-forward curation contest. Keep up the great work!

Saludos, es terrible todo lo que hemos tenido que pasar.

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