Friday, January 13, 2012
Update
Just wanted to update everyone about the current situation. I am in Tegus (the capital city) with all the other volunteers from all around Honduras. We are all participating in a conference and we are having a lot of our questions answered. I have found out that I will be getting in late Monday night, real late! Can't wait to see everyone!
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Happy Bday!
Just wanted to take the time to wish my sister, Megan (better known as the first half of Merl) a very happy bday and I also wanted to let here know that my present is that I will be coming home on the 16th! BEST PRESENT EVER, from the best brother ever!
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Star of Bethleham
January 10th , 2012
Today
has begun my rounds of goodbyes here in Dulce Nombre, and suddenly this leaving
Honduras thing has become a lot more real. The past few weeks I have known that
I was going to be leaving Honduras but instead of being sad that I was leaving
my adopted home I was excited to be seeing my family and friends again, not to
mention the ability to flush toilet paper again (I am not sure why this is such
a running thread in my blogs…). I would lay awake at night thinking about all
the old joys that I would again be able to experience while I was back in the
states and those that I was going to spend time with during these said
experiences. While I am still really excited to be going back home with my
family and friends, the bittersweet feelings are definitely starting to take ahold
of me. While we will not know for around another month or so whether or not
Honduras will be deemed safe enough for us to return the overall feeling that
I, along with most other volunteers I have talked to, is that PCH’s future does
not look bright at least not for the current volunteers.
With so
much up in the air right now my mind is constantly changing and swirling about
the different possibilities for my life/new adventure. While it is enjoyable to
have such a blank slate open to me right now with the whole world at my feet
and literally every path open, this same wide openness can also drive me crazy.
We Americans like to have plans and this not having a plan thing is strangely
difficult to deal with, it remind me of how I was feeling when I first got into
my site and had absolutely nothing to do and no projects on the horizon. While
now, after almost four months in site, I have done so much work and started to
lay the foundation of so many projects. Much of this work was simply spending
time with people and letting them get to know me and earning their trust so
that I would have them behind me throughout the rest of my service. I know that
all of this work has not gone to waste because in every conversation I had with
the people I was learning as were they, however it does feel like the work will
not be able to reach its full potential and wasted potential is one of the
things that I hate most in this world. A great unknown has presented itself to
me in the forms of many things. It has presented itself to me in the form of
the potential projects that could be done here in the future, it has presented
itself to me in the form of the potential lives that I could touch, and it has
presented itself to me in the form of the potential improvements that I could
help to make in my community. The common wisdom in PC is that the second year
in site is the most fun because you finally know exactly what you are doing and
your projects are finally starting to be accomplished. I am starting to fear
that I may never get to experience these things.
As
stated in one of my previous blogs, if PCH is not reopened back up to the
volunteer population, my likely next path would be to try to find a job near or
in Chicago teaching at an elementary school with a high Spanish speaking and
low income population. While I am really excited about that possibility, I am
also saddened that I may not be able to complete my 2 years of PC service. In
PC there is this attitude of how much can I handle before I call it quits/look
how tough I am, though it may be a secret attitude that not many volunteers
will admit to I do think it is present. We as volunteers like to experience
hardships, whether we think it is part of the job or whether we have a
misplaced feeling of the white man’s burden I do not know but there is no doubt
in my mind that a certain pride factor places an important role in all of our
service here in Peace Corps. So what might just happen with this current
situation is that I will not be able to finish my 2 years here, sure I could
always transfer to another country and begin my two years over again but just
being honest I do not really want to do the waiting, the training, and the mixing
in to my community all over again. So it seems like I may be “quitting” PC
though it sure does not feel like it, it feel like we were all just given a
fairly bad deal and we have to make the best of it and so that is what I am
intending to do.
I will
readily admit that this secret pride factor will make an impact on my decisions
in the future because I want to finish up my PC service. It seems dumb but I
want that R before the PCV (aka RPCV, Returned Peace Corps Volunteer). Thinking
about this issue and realizing exactly how I felt about this over the last
couple of weeks has let me learn more about my real motives for joining the PC.
I think that I have joined the PC for all of the usual responses, I want to help
people, I want to gain a better perspective on my life and what I have, I want
to learn a new culture and a new language. However I realize now that I also
joined because I wanted to do something that not many other people in this
world have accomplished, and I wanted to do it for my own pride. I wanted to do
it for my own glory, while I am not extremely proud of this fact it is true and
I am glad that I have realized it. Even though most of my motives are well
intentioned there is also that small portion that is for my own glory and I do
not like that. One of the reasons I think getting a teaching job in Chicago is
so appealing to me right now is because I know that I help people without
necessarily having a motive of doing these good deeds for my own glory (By the
way, I am pretty sure that the previous paragraph is an example of the odd
state that my mind is currently in but I do think that what I wrote has some
truth to it).
This
past Sunday, Fr. Henry gave a nice sermon about stars in relation to the story
of the three wise men and how they followed the star to find baby Jesus. He
preached that we need to realize when God puts stars in our own lives and that
we need to have the faith to follow them, no matter where they lead (He also
preached that many of us are ourselves stars and have people following us
however we do not realize it, but we must realize it and therefore be the best
star that we can be for the sake of those following us). I know that God has
put my star out there and all I need to do is to follow that star. However that
is a lot easier said than done, when I look up into my figurative night sky I
see millions of stars and I can follow any of them. The only problem is that
only one of them is God’s star, the star that I need to follow. So which star
do I follow, the one that leads me back to Honduras, the one that leads me to
Chicago, or the one that leads me to another whole country altogether? At this
moment I do not know but with my faith in God, that night sky full of stars
will become one single star and all I have to do is follow it.
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