Before I start my day, I will first answer all the details Mom wants to know - so anyone who doesn't care can skip to the next paragraph. Mom, you might very well might be the only one who reads this part. I have attached pictures of all that you requested! Today was camera day. I don't take my camera very often because the kids chase me saying "picha mimi!!" and it gets annoying. They also like the touch the lens - not good! For food - breakfast usually consists of eggs, a little square piece of pound cake, porridge, if we're lucky some banana pancakes, and mango juice. Lunch is different every time ranging from rice and beans to chicken or curry with ugali (like really thick mashed potatoes). Dinner is the smallest meal usually and is kind of the same as lunch just with not as many selections. A lot of lunches and dinners are served with spinach and almost all meals have fruit as a selection, mostly bought from neighbors. I've probably eaten more fruit on this trip than I have in my entire life - and much more variety. Papaya, mango, pineapple, watermelon, and sometimes fruits I don't know how to pronounce. I have a shower that I share with my roommate, so I take one every night before I go to bed. I wake up at 7:45am every morning so I don't want to have to wake up any earlier to take a shower. The bathroom is separate from the shower so if my roommate's showering that's still an option. I actually don't really know what the bathroom question was getting at....we do have one though. I always have to drink bottled water, but we have water dispensers with the big jugs at the top to fill our water bottles with every morning. Any more questions you have I can answer tomorrow over the phone! I hope those were good enough answers for you.
Yesterday was relatively uneventful. It was a rough day of teaching because the kids were really out of control and the teacher isolated me a lot so it was hard to keep them focused, especially when yelling at them doesn't work. B & C classes were again combined, so keeping 75 four year olds quiet for a lesson they don't understand the language in is a challenge. I swear, teaching 30 English speaking kids feels like a breeze at this point. After school the girls and I went into town and I finished my shopping for everyone. You'll like your present!! Then we went home, ate dinner, and I prepared for my final day of teaching and packed.
Today I walked to and from school so that I could really take in my surroundings for the last time. It was an extremely pleasant walk - about 20 minutes worth - and I met a lot of people on the way! A social worker who works with the local orphanage, two teenage girls who practiced their English on me, a couple little kids who saw my camera and yelled "mzungu picha!!" One this I was proud of was that the guards of the prison knew me well enough and let me right in. You know it's a good day when the guards of an African prison compound know who you are and let you in right away. One of my students met up with me right as I walked in and we chatted and sang the whole way there. Singing is an amazing way of communication I've learned. Music is such a universal language, something I never realized before. At the start of class time, I was with another teacher (one who speaks even less English than the other one) and right away she handed the kids their number books to practice writing. I was hoping to have a fun day with them so I was a little disappointed by her insistence for a real lesson. Then, after the kids started working, she walks up to the board and points to it saying "teacha, teacha" and points to herself. I walk over and realize the primary school exercises are on the board again with the past, active, and future tenses. She wanted me to teach her. So for about 15 minutes I taught the teacher key words in tenses, sentence structure, and "fill in the blank" activities with her, complimenting her on her every success. Not the same teacher, a different one from last time. This must be difficult for these adult women to learn. It was still highly entertaining though.
After I finished that, I was able to take over and I handed out coloring sheets and crayons. Just a simple coloring the picture activity. Something they rarely get to do. They were so focused on this and little angels! Some even stayed into recess to finish their picture. They all gave them to me to keep, so I will be taking them home :) I took some pictures, they had lunch, and after lunch all the kids from classes A, B, and C combined into one classroom for me because it was my last day. Then they did a kind of heart-wrenching performance for me, basically singing all the songs they knew in unison, including ones I taught them. 100 little African voices all singing words I had taught them was so special for me to hear. It made me think that maybe I made a small dent in their progression educationally, or even if it was just in their English proficiency. Even if the most I could do was give them the love that they are deprived of at home, it was worth it. Often times I would come home so frustrated thinking I was making no difference in their lives in a any way. All I was was a teacher they didn't understand who they couldn't learn from. While they were singing all those songs, though, I saw a glimpse of hope that maybe I did do something to help them in some small way. It brought tears to my eyes, and it took everything for me not to let them fall. The kids wouldn't understand & I didn't want to worry them. After that, we handed out a piece of candy to each child (I had gotten candy at the store yesterday in town). They were thrilled, and all had to stand up and chant "Thank you teacha!" and then could eat it. Then the teachers bring out this amazing "kitenge," which is basically a long piece of thick cloth worn by African women. They brought up two children, a boy and a girl, each holding one end and wrapped it around me. The teachers made a knot somewhere, wrapped it around something else, and somehow created this amazing skirt/dress. It is so beautiful with vibrant blue and an amazing pattern. These women are not well-off either, so I can't believe they had gotten it for me. It was such a meaningful gesture, giving me something special from their culture as a gift. It definitely did not make it any easier to hold back the tears. I thanked them profusely, giving each a kiss on each cheek. Following the kitenge, we had all the kids go outside to get a group photo. School was over by then, so some of them started walking home. I stayed behind to thank the teachers again and again for allowing me to teach at their school, etc. and they were so loving and so wonderful to me. I said my goodbyes and walked with all the kids (most were waiting at the gate for me) all the way home.
It was hard for me to say goodbye to the kids. To just let them run off to their homes where most of them don't have enough food, sleep on the ground, being taught by teachers who barely have an education themselves. At least when I was in the bulk of my teaching experience I could look forward to the next day where I could do something else to effect their lives in some positive way. There are no more "next days" for me to try again for, like utter defeat. I did what I can, but I'll always wonder if it was enough. 3 weeks is not a very long time to make a lasting impression and I'll probably never know if I really did do something that helped them in their lives. I gave love and compassion and anything else that I could but is it just cancelled out when they go home that afternoon to a home where their dad beats their mother, or the parents are never home, or they simply never get any kind of positive attention? There's nothing I can do about that. I've accepted that. I can't change their situations or governmental corruption or parents' amount of income or how their dad treats their mother. The only thing I did have control over was how well I did at my job and how hard I tried at it. I wish I had more time to prove to myself that I did my best, because that's a hard reality to come by. I'll always think that I could have done better, I could have been less frustrated when they were acting up, I could have I could have I could have... but I know that's getting me nowhere, so it's illogical to continue that thought process. I guess emotion is just going to have to win that battle though because logic definitely isn't. I'll probably always think I could have done better, but one thing I do know is that I tried. Maybe the only thing I can agree upon, but I'll take it. I didn't change lives, but there's a possibility I aided in the progression towards it.
Mom & Dad - Thank you so much for giving me this amazing opportunity. If I didn't do it now, I really doubt I ever would have done it in my lifetime. Up until June 15th, this will have been the best experience of my life so far. It opened me up to a completely new way to view the ideas behind happiness, the effort behind hard work, the bliss that comes from simplicity, how a little bit can go really far, and so many other things. I hate when people say how things like this "changed their lives" because we all know they're going to go back home and live relatively the same way they were before they had gone. That will probably be me, so I'm not going to attempt that statement. What I can say, though, is it changed the way that I view life - it gave me a new perspective to go off of. That's something I've never had before. I've had a pretty sheltered life because of you and I thank you for that, but this was really good for me. Like, really good for me. I needed to see this other perspective because honestly, sometimes the only one I had before was suffocating me. You gave me the adventure of a lifetime and it's made me a better person. So thank you so so much for letting me do this. You are amazing parents and should give yourself all the credit for this trip and any improvements it made in me. I love you so much.


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| Where lunch is cooked |
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| The teachers looked through my photobook (of me from baby to now) for about 20 minutes this morning, pointing out my Baba, Mama, Dada (sister), & Kakas (brothers). It became somewhat of a game. They loved all of you! |
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| Head teacher over class A |
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| Teacher over class B on left |
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| Wash hands before lunch |
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| Clean dishes after lunch (Andrea & I usually do them) |
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| I know she looks depressed, but I thought this was such a good picture with the lighting , etc. |
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| They loooove bubbles! |
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| My little Amani |
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| Chanting "Thank you teacha!" |
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| Getting the kitenge |
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| All the kids and me! |
For anyone that needs to know, my flight leaves tomorrow at 8:40pm from Kilimanjaro. Then it gets into Amsterdam at 7:05am on Sunday, flies into Atlanta at 12:40pm, and finally into SLC at 4:13pm. I'm saving a lot of hours of my life flying West :) I will definitely call those who expect it (you know who you are) in my Atlanta layover, but beware I only have a 2 hour layover and have to go through customs. Also beware Caleb will be the first person I call because I love him. I will talk to you all soon!! I love you! |