I’ve started to feel at home here in our training villages
and was surprised at how great it felt to come ‘home’ after our site
visit. I missed the place we’ve called
home for the past 8 weeks and it was great to come back to something familiar
(including host families that were anxious to hear about our visits and happy
to have us ‘home’). I distinctly
remember my first night with my host family….it’s amazing how helpless you can
feel when you can’t communicate verbally, despite the fact that there’s a
million things to say…it’s also amazing how much you can communicate with
someone without either one of you having a language in common. I’m getting sad to leave after spending only 8
weeks here in this village with these people. I’ve gotten into such a routine during
training and I think the site visit served as another realization of just what
I’m doing here – getting ready to live on my own in rural Thailand and try to
figure out something amazing to do to benefit a community and people that I
know next to nothing about.
Before I left for the Peace Corps I remember reading so much
about how the people that will be going through this with me are the people
that will become like family. In the
first few weeks of training I wondered how I was ever going to find my place in
this ‘family’, and also thinking that I can just do it on my own if all else
fails. Now we’re getting ready to go our
separate ways in just a few weeks, and I’m amazed that the people who traveled
here to Thailand with me about 2 months ago, that were all strangers, are now
the people I rely on to discuss the fear and excitement of leaving for our sites
and dealing with the dependable ups and downs of this whole experience. I couldn’t imagine making so many new friends
in such a short amount of time, and now I can’t imagine what I’ll do without
these people that I’ve seen almost everyday since we arrived in Thailand. I’ve also realized that without them I’m not
sure I could get through this whole experience on my own. It’s nice having family and friends back home
that I can talk to who know me better than anyone, but it’s also incredibly
comforting to have a new group of people that I can rely on that are going
through many of the same crazy experiences and emotional traumas that seem
inevitable. In the next two weeks I’ll
turn 29 years old and officially be sworn-in as a Peace Corps Volunteer. I don’t really care much about getting older
or the fact that I’ll soon be in the final countdown to being 30 (what!?), but
I can’t imagine a better way to spend the last year of my 20’s.
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