Thursday, September 20, 2012

Thoughts and happenings


**Warning: This post is going to be profound and wise due to the fact that I have gone from 23 years old to 24 years old since the last post. Oh and it's long.** Turning 24 was so fun! It started with a friend from my Peace Corps group surprising me at school on the 23rd. He lives all the way up in Bocas del Toro, which is 12 hours away by bus so it was sweet of him to come down (and he brought me a huge bunch of like 50 bananas from his house!). We had a lot of fun building a shower at my house, doing crosswords, and talking with my neighbors. Then Saturday, my friend Kim came and the three of us, after teaching an energetic English class in my community in the morning (including acting out a story), went to Panama City to pick up three of my best friends who came in from the States to celebrate. What a big gift! Sarah came in Saturday night and so Austin, Kim, another friend Andrew, Sarah and I celebrated in the hostel. Kim and Andrew even made a cake! Sunday morning, my actual birthday, we went to a creperie for breakfast and I had a crepe with spinach in it, which I miss soooooo much. Then we had a Panama miracle: I told my other two friends, Ali and Lauren, who were flying in from the States to meet us at the bus terminal, which I realized after telling them was a terrible idea. The terminal is huge and literally has thousands of people walking around it in (think Grand Central Station or something). But, by the time I realized what a bad idea this was, it was too late because they were on their way and had no phone or anything. So, we roll up in the bus and just as we are stopping, I see them. I tell Sarah and we take off running. It was a Panama miracle for real! Then, we went to my friend Catherine’s house. I go to her house a lot because she’s my closest volunteer, so her community knows me too. She organized a whole birthday party for me and the community showed up! They made food (including really spicy peppers which they enjoyed watching me eat), we danced, they set off fireworks, and they absolutely loved my gringa friends I brought (I mean who wouldn’t? What entertainment!). The next few days were crazy because I had class every morning and I had to sneak around my tiny house getting ready while my friends slept. It was also English week at school which meant lots of extra fun activities so I was really busy at school! In the afternoons, we went on adventures including a natural hot springs where we covered ourselves with mud (two of my Panamanian coworkers went too, which was so funny!), ziplining, a hike to a waterfall, and the beach. Then, Thursday, because they decided to cancel school (per usual) we went on a long trip to the beach at Las Lajas. Side note: we had another Panama miracle getting a direct bus to Las Lajas in less than a minute; it usually takes me at least a half hour! Anyway, this is an absolutely beautiful beach and even though it’s 4 to 5 hours by bus, I go there whenever possible! We stayed there from Thursday to Saturday when I said a tearful good-bye (oh how the Panamanians stared) to my friends as they headed back to Panama City to leave. I stayed with a group of about 10 Peace Corps friends at the beach until Sunday to celebrate my birthday and had a great time! This past week, I also had my second week off of school, so I was able to go visit a few of my friends’ at their new houses. We had a lot of fun just catching up and I got to help build fogรณnes (mud stoves), pasear, and help with a fundraiser. Then, on Wednesday I had a meeting with other volunteers in Panama, and Austin came down from Bocas for the rest of the week. We just paseared, did crosswords, cooked, and went to the beach; a very relaxing break. So now, I’m reenergized and ready to start on the home stretch of school (which ends in December and doesn’t start again until end of February).
With a new trimester, I’m also starting a new chapter in teaching. My co-teacher who I work with every other week and also is one of my best friends in the community, is leaving for 5 weeks to do her practica (student teaching) to be licensed to teach 7-9th grade. So, every other week, I will be teaching alone until she comes back. She said I don’t have to, but I feel that I am here and am willing and able to do it. Why should these kids be punished because their teacher can’t come for 5 weeks? Also, if you’re saying “Why don’t they have a substitute teacher come?” Well, if Panama had substitute teachers that would work really well wouldn’t it? But, they don’t. Anyway, I’m looking forward to another challenge and if I don’t run out crying every day, I will call it a success and celebrate. I’ll let you know… Another thing, my latest excitement in teaching has been reading stories to the class. First I pre-teach the necessary vocab., then I read the story in English while acting it out, asks critical thinking/tracking questions, and then we summarize it. The kids absolutely LOVE it and get really excited when we finish and I remind them that they just understood a whole book in English! So, if any of you have very basic English kids picture books and you have been just waiting for me to ask you to send them, this is your chance :) I would love to have any and all books you have. I am currently applying for a grant through Peace Corps to get books shipped here, but that will take a while. So if you would like to, please mail books to:
Sydney Morgan
Cuerpo de Paz, Clayton
Ciudad del Saber
Calle Victor Iglesias, Edificio 240, 4to Piso
Panama City, Panama

Ok now is the part where I’m gonna transition from what I’ve been doing to what I’ve been thinking about a lot recently, so feel free to stop here if you don’t wanna enter the crazy world of Sydney’s head.

I’ve been reading a few books lately that have really made me think. One of them is called Serve God, Save the Planet by J. Matthew Sleeth, MD. My bestie, Sarah, brought it when she came down last month. Although it’s a Christian book, it’s basically a call to all people no matter what religion, to care for and about our planet and the environment. Every time I read this book, it gets me pamped (pumped and amped) and inspired to do more to help our Mother Earth, but then a little dishearted. Yes, I am doing my part in terms of walking everywhere in my town, not using much electricity and water (especially when either or both go out for days on end), and trying not to create a lot of trash. But, is it enough? No matter what I do, I always still have trash. And all trash gets burned here. Even though I don’t burn it myself, any trash I put in other trashcans will be burnt eventually. And recycle? If I meet a Panamanian who can tell me what that means and how to do it, I will let you know. And how can I justify traveling up to 12 hours in bus to visit my Peace Corps friends? That’s a ton of gas! This book had one line that really struck me “what do a hundred, or a million compassionate thoughts accomplish?” This is so true. I find myself so often thinking of how much I would love to do to save our environment, but what do I end up doing? Not too much. But therein lies the dilemma. I can’t save all my trash and recycling for the next year and a half and carry it back to the U.S. to be dealt with in a better way (which is still not always the best). So despite all my lofty thoughts and ideas, I feel rather helpless down here trying to figure out what to do. Am I supposed to try to change the whole country, start a trash collection system, recycling plants, etc.? Unless I change the whole system, I feel like I am just another cog in the gas guzzling and ozone killing machine that is Panama. Any suggestions or thoughts about this would be much appreciated.
Another book I have been reading talks a lot about serving others. This makes me think about what it looks like to serve one another, and what is the line between serving others and being walked all over? As a volunteer, my goal is to give all that I have and am to the people here. To love them, share my life, culture and material things with them, and serve them in whatever ways I can and they need. As a teacher, my goal is to give everything as well but in a different way. To share my love, knowledge, English skills with students, teaching skills with teachers, and help the students and teachers in any other ways. But where does it end? I don’t want the people to feel they can take advantage of my generosity, but I also don’t want to be unapproachable. So what does this look like? I honestly have no idea. I wish I did. Am I really here to serve others at all or just for a glorified adventurous vacation in a beautiful country? Hmm. To get a little religious-y on you, I want to be like Jesus and give myself freely to those around me. Obviously, He sacrificed the biggest thing possible, His life, but I want to be able to give of myself in whatever ways I can. Every time I say no to something or someone here, I feel like I’m not serving others and being selfish. But at the same time, I justify it by saying that I need time for myself. Is this legitimate? I don’t know. In the book I’m reading it says, “Service is less a task or series of tasks than an attitude of obedience.” I also feel that sometimes I do something like teach or help my neighbor with building his house in order to get praise or be recognized, which becomes less about serving and more about an ego boost. I love what St. Teresa of Avila once wrote about the way we should live. “God has no body now on earth but yours, no hands but yours, no feet but yours. Yours are the eyes through which he looks with compassion on the world. Yours are the feet with which he is to go about doing good. And yours are the hands with which he is to bless us now.” I just hope that I can actually do and be this way. I guess I have a year and a half to figure it out.
Until next time, thanks for all your love and positivity! I miss and love all of you! Also, if you have facebook, you can check out some of my recent pictures from my friends’ trip here. So much fun!
Sydney

No comments:

Post a Comment