letters and photos: these are just as good as the physically larger items (and cheaper to send!)
Books in Spanish for kids (ages 5-12ish): I'm trying to start a little collection
Coloring books, stickers, cheap art supplies
herbs and spices--we have the basics, why not send a home-made mix?
candy (chocolate doesn't send well, and hershey's is pretty much ubiquitous here so more on the gummy sour end of the spectrum)
magazines: pop culture, cooking, crafts, articles
digital love: CD's, DVD's, most computers in this day and age let you put whatever you want on a disc, get creative!
Books in English or Spanish for yours truly
DISCLAIMER
This blog solely represents my experiences and opinions about my own Peace Corps service. It does not in any way represent the opinions, ideas or goals of the U.S. Government or the Peace Corps.
small packages (padded envelopes), no valuables (monetarily...since anything sent with love is definitely of value to me), value of zero, write Materiales Religiosos on it, address it to Hermana Rachel Schell-Lambert (so people think I'm a nun/religious figure), tape religious pictures or affix stickers of like Mary and Jesus over the seam--if you feel comfortable doing so (people are adverse to cutting those), keep the packages neat and inconspicuous (no triple-reused envelopes that need to be taped up everywhere).
They frown upon external tape, so use self-sealed envelopes or boxes wrapped in brown paper that has been GLUED (not taped) together.
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