Things I miss the most about the USA: Wellington’s
and crew, family, Kansas bball, Thai Siam, friends I’ve had since Deerfield,
downtown Lawrence, throwing an American football, Free State beer, having a
car, being able to wear shorts around town when it’s 90 degrees, not having to
think so hard to have a conversation, sleeping in past 6:30 am, staying up past
10 pm, carelessless of living in a city with little to no serious crime.
Things I love about El Salvador: Hammocks
everywhere, living on a few dollars a day, hitchhiking rides in the back of
pickup trucks, double meanings and dirty jokes, dumping cold buckets of water
over my head in the middle of the afternoon to shower, chambre in the campo,
the comfortable predictability of buenos dias, buenas tardes or buenas noches
everytime I walk by someone, kids yelling Key-Lay and hugging my leg when I get
home every day, watching cheesy telenovelas with my family at night and asking
them a million questions during commercials.
After six weeks here, my skin is bronze and my hair
is sun bleached, I’ve spent a few nights and days sick in the latrines, I’ve
been harassed a few times by drunks, eaten more tortillas than I care to count,
learned a lot of Spanish and realized how much farther I have to go, made a lot
of good friends and met a few people people I’d rather not know, smiled and
nodded my way through quite a few conversations, and confirmed the fact that
this is where I belong for the next two years.
I’ve heard a few people in the training group say
that these first few months are going to be the hardest as we’re adjusting, but
I don’t quite agree. Other than getting sick, the language has been the only
truly difficult adjustment for me. Training isn’t hard; it’s just boring and
monotonous. We’re receiving our official site assignments on Thursday, and
through some investigative work I already have a good idea of where I’m going.
My site is where I’ll be living and working for the two years after training is
over. I’m going to be the third and final volunteer in my village, which means
I’m assuming a lot of responsibility in terms of tying things together and
completing projects that have been in the works for a few years. I’m ready to
be done with training and get started for real, but I’m going to miss my host
family and community in San Isidro, and especially the other volunteers living
here with me in this village.
The real test will be handling the isolation of being the only
volunteer, the only American, the only English speaker, and a lot of other only’s
in my village. Instead of sitting in a plastic chair all day feeling a mix of
boredom and anxiousness, surrounded by 35 other Americans with a lot in common,
I’ll be the tall whiteboy sticking out head and shoulders above everyone else,
trying to organize a water accessibility project and English language classes,
teaching about AIDS and condoms, all the while trying to master a new language
and make friends with people without fully understanding who they are or what
they’re saying a lot of times. I've done a lot of learning and adjusting the
past six weeks, but in actuality I haven’t even really gotten started yet.
Kyle- loving these updates, man. It sounds like you're having quite the experience and I'm confident that you're going to be incredibly successful down there. We think of you often up here; keep doing amazing things, brother
ReplyDelete-KLaw
Hey Kyle, Your blog is so interesting. I signed up as a follower, and invited Mom to follow it also (although I don't know if she's going to be able to figure it out).
ReplyDeleteSo cool you are doing this - envious in some ways.