Wednesday, November 30, 2011

I've Had The Time of My Life..

"I've Had the Time of My Life," the re-make by the Black Eyed Peas..it pretty much sums up my time in South America.  I can't believe it's over.  It's been an experience I will never ever forget!  How could I with as many pictures as I've taken?!  I'll forever be grateful to the people who were kind enough to support my travels through scholarships. Without my scholarships, none of this would have been possible and this past semester would have been very different.

Yesterday was my last day with the 3rd Grade Class at the school where I have been volunteering.  I am going to miss them all so much!  I got permission to take pictures so we had a mini photo shoot which they all loved.  They also gave me a Peru artisan vase with the name of the school and all of their names on it...I love it!!  That, a letter that one of the little girls gave me, and a couple of pictures they drew me, made my time spent there more than worth it.  I am wishing I had more days to spend with them.  They all assured me that one day when they make it to the United States they are going to come visit me! :)

AREN'T THEY AWESOME?! 
From Left to Right: Francisco, Karelia, Kimberly, Dean, and Abigail
and Miss Maritza in the back with me.  I love this picture!!!

Last night, I went to TGIFridays for dinner with some Peruvian friends...I feel so cool saying "Peruvian friends."

And today, I finished packing and just enjoyed my last day with my Peruvian family.  Miraculously, everything fits into my suitcases..they must be magic because I am going home with a lot more than I came with!  The taxi will be here at 10 in the morning...but I'm not heading home just yet!  Costa Rica is next on the agenda!  Time to visit my Tica Family and pick up my mom from the airport for a week at the beach!  See you in CR...PURA VIDA!!!

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Dean

This week I have been volunteering at La Alegria de El Señor, a school for children with physical disabilities.  I think I have mentioned it before.  Anyways now that my classes are over with, I have had a lot more time to go.  Everyday that I am there I sit next to a little boy named Dean.  He is about 9 years old and I believe he has Muscular Atrophy, or something similar, where he does not have control over his muscles.  The first day I was there we didnt say much to one another, the second day we spoke some, and now I look forward to what he is going to say next!  For a little boy without much control over his muscles he can sure control his smile!  Which is always there, big, bright and full of life.  Unlike some of the other students, Dean can't wheel himself around, feed himself, or write for himself.  This is my job during my time there.  I write his notes, help feed him at lunch, and wheel him around the school grounds.  He is very particular and likes things just so so.  I am learning to write the notes JUST like the teacher does on the board.  If I don't, it may take him a minute, but he has no problem telling me I need to fix it!  For example, if the teacher writes in red chalk (red is his favorite color) then I should write in red pencil, if she underlines something, I should also underline it!  When the bell rings for lunch, I wheel him out of the class and like always he tells me right away "rápido! rápido!!" ("faster! faster!!") and he smiles and laughs as we run through the hallway to the cafeteria.  I'm not sure if that's against the rules or not..but it puts a smile on his face and no one has told me to stop yet!  Lunch is one of the best times to witness the helpfulness of these kids that are each dealing with their own unique challenge.  All ages eat lunch at the same time and the great majority of them are in wheelchairs.  Those that need help being pushed buddy up to another chair and hold on or are taken care of by another student that can walk or a volunteer.  Those that can't eat on their own, are fed by their friends and volunteers.  They all watch out for one another, take care of one another.  After lunch, I hear "rápido! rápido!!" again as we take off down the hall.  The other day Dean finished lunch early so we went on an spider hunting adventure outside...his idea.  He would point me in which direction to go and told me several times "ten cuidado" ("be careful").  I asked him if he liked spiders and he said a little bit.  The biggest surprise was one day when I had finished writing his notes and closed his notebook and he looked at me, hands clasped, with a look of concentration on his face, and slowly said "Thank You"...and then proceeded to giggle in my amazement that he had just spoken English.  Turns out his dad knows a little bit and since then I have heard such words as "hi, bye, right left, open, close" and they are all followed by a "Thank you" or "Thank you very much."  Now we help each other out and speak in Spanglish.  He asks me how to say certain words in English and he finishes my sentences in Spanish if I don't know the word I am trying to say.  I have not been at the school for very long but I can't imagine if I had missed having my volunteer time there a part of my experience in Peru.  It's been so rewarding and Dean and all of the others easily bring a smile to my face everytime I walk in the classroom.  I've not worked that much with children, let alone children with disabilities, but they can teach us all something about being happy and grateful for the life we have been given.  Despite their disabilities they meet each day with enthusiasm and a smile.

On this Thanksgiving, I am thankful for Dean, Francisco, César, Karelia, Abigail, Kimberly, & Miss Maritza at La Alegria de El Señor.

I am thankful for my most amazing family and friends at home that I miss so so so much!!!

I am thankful for my curly locks and how fast they grow :)

I am thankful for all the amazing opportunities I have been given...to travel and see the vast, beautiful world where we live.

I am thankful for my Costa Rican, Argentine, and Peruvian families!

I am thankful to God for all that he has blessed me with.

Happy Thanksgiving!!! xoxo

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Feeling so blessed.

Where does the time go?!  I cannot believe my program is already coming to an end.  I feel like just yesterday I was nervously (although I wouldn't want to admit it) boarding my flight to Buenos Aires.  And now I'm about to start my last week of classes here in Peru. 

What's funny is looking on the whole experience..which has been AMAZING..and seeing how the group's dynamics have changed.  From the first few weeks, through the end of Buenos Aires, to our time in Peru.  We (there are 16 in our program) have spent so much time with one another that we, to put it bluntly, are really quite sick of one another.  But, at the same time we love each other's company because we are all each other has and we have all been on this rollercoaster, that we refer to as "Fake Life"..because really how can this life I am living possibly be real? Somebody pinch me!..together for the past four months.  So while we may be looking forward to being home for the holidays, this last week is still hard because it really will never EVER be the same EVER again.  And no matter whether you are best friends with someone or not, this group collectively has made this trip what it has been, so the End, well.. it's sad.

But, regardless of how I'm feeling now, of how I will feel tomorrow or later this week, I know how incredibly blessed I am to have had this opportunity, to study here, to travel to the most amazing places, to have met so many unique and incredible individuals.  I have absolutely nothing to complain about.

Last Friday, we had our ISA Farewell Dinner at the Sheraton here in Lima and it included a Peruvian dance show.  It was awesome!  Great food (a full Peruvian Cuisine Buffet) and great entertainment!




But, even though my program is coming to a close, my time abroad is not!  This has been a once in a lifetime experience and now, it's time to pay it forward!  Last week, I went to my first meeting with a volunteer organization called Minkando to meet fellow volunteers that I will be working with on the weekend of the 19th and 20th in a town called Chincha about 3 hours away from Lima.  Talk about stepping out of my comfort zone.  I was one of five ISA students amongst about 25 Peruvians.  No big deal to just go and sit at a meeting right?  Wrong!  The meeting began with an icebreaker (rompehielo) to introduce ourselves!  We were instructed to write a question on a piece of paper, put it in the jar, stand in a circle, and go one by one introducing ourselves and selecting a random question from the bucket, reading it aloud, and then answering it.  A little bit intimidating to stand in front of that many native speakers and rely on your "almost fluent, but not quite yet, so let's hope you know how to say what you need to" Spanish.  Hannah, another ISA student goes right before me.  Her question is "What is your favorite color?" Super easy one word answer.  I go next.  My question is "Why do you want to be a volunteer with Minkando?"  Not quite as super easy and definitely not a one word answer.  Not sure what my exact words were in Spanish but the message I tried to convey was that because I am here because of a scholarship and someone else's generosity, I want to do something to give back.  To pay it forward.  The rest of the meeting went smoothly.  I am in the "Primaria" group and will be working with four other Peruvians as a team leader for a group of 7-10 year olds.  I have another meeting this Tuesday.  I have also started volunteering here in Lima at a school in La Molina, which is a neighborhood on the south side of Lima, about an hour by bus.  The school is a Catholic School for underpriveleged children (usually from the shanty towns) of all ages with physical disabilities.  I went a few weeks ago to meet with a lady named Veronica (a nun and the first one I have ever met!) to tour the school.  This past Thursday, I went back to actually volunteer for the first time and I spent a wonderful day with a class of six 3rd graders.  One of which actually surprised me and spoke some English!  He told me in Spanish that his grandma gives him ten cents every time he learns something new in English!  There are three boys in the class and three girls.  Of the six, five are in wheelchairs, and one can walk but she needs help doing so.  Also out of the six, three can write for themselves, and three can't.  My job for the day was to write their notes in their notebooks for them.  I also helped at breakfast and lunch with the ones that could not feed themselves.  The teacher was very friendly as was everyone in the school. At the end of the day all of the children in the class came up and gave me hugs! :)  It was a great day, rewarding, eye-opening, blessed.  One of those days that makes you realize how incredibly lucky we are; all of those children, despite their disabilities just seemed so happy.  Content with the world.  Our lives are so different from theirs and yet we let the little things from day to day sometimes get us down, we complain about the most insignificant things, rather than just being thankful for all that we have.  Those children don't have half of what most of the children in the United States have and on top of that they are physically handicapped and still thay are just so full of joy.  Why can't we all be like that? 


Friday, November 4, 2011

PaRaGLiDiNg Like A Professional...

NOT! But, I gave it my best shot, had fun doing it, and laughed along with everyone else after completing what everyone agreed was the "best crash landing."

Paragliding is really popular in Lima and on pretty much any given day you can walk along the cliff that borders the water and see several people jumping off the cliff to let the wind carry them away. Fortunately for us "professionals" we did not paraglide off the cliff. Instead, we went a little ways outside of Lima, to a place called Pachacamac, where there were plenty of sand dunes for a soft "crash" landing. And, since we were on the sand dunes instead of over the ocean, we got to fly on our own instead of with an instructor.

Welcome to the sand dunes!...I promise you that is a lot steeper than it looks!


FLIGHT #1
Trying my best to "look" ready for this...
Helmet ...check!
Almossstttt readyyy
Ready?!... GO!!!

I'm up for my first flight...that is sure to be short lived!

My fateful turn where I start to notice the sand becoming closer and closer...
AND CRASH!...first crash landing...the dust hasn't even settled yet.

For every flight we had a radio attached to the front of us so the instructors could..well..instruct us!  Obviously, instruction or no instruction, the first time was not alllllll that successful...

Flight #2 on the other hand was luckily a different story!

FLIGHT #2

And, I know there is not proof...but I had a perfect landing to go along with this perfect flight! :) It was fun!

Then there was Flight #3...and well...you'll see...

FLIGHT #3

Feeling quite confident after Flight #2...
And see where that gets me?!

OOPS!!!!

Feeling a little embarrassed..

Waiting to try again while looking super stylish in this "diaper-bottom" paragliding harness!

Last Chance!

The key is to keep running! Don't think that you've
made it up and sit down to enjoy the ride...
just keep running, just keep running, just keep running running running!

WOO HOO!!! :)
Enjoying the ride..thinking I am a lot higher up in the air than I actually am..ha!

Crash landing #2...BOOM!

and DRAG!...I still have a bruise on my arm from this crash landing!


Crash landings or no crash landings, it was a wonderful, windy, sandy day of paragliding here in Peru!