The following is taken from a Peace Corps Volunteer's blog who is currently serving in Cambodia. For those without a map (or who were educated in the US and thus have no concept of geography [me]), Ethiopia and Cambodia are thousands of kilometers apart. In reality, they may as well be a world apart because they are so different in just about every aspect: culture, food, religion, people, etc.Yet when I read this, I instantly felt jealous that I did not write it. The following blog entry is not only beautiful, but it is probably the most accurate description of PC service I have ever read. It was too good to not share. Hope you enjoy it half as much as I did.
"Dear Person Contemplating Joining Peace Corps,
I imagine that you’re at a transition point in your life.
Perhaps you’ve just graduated, perhaps you’re going through a career
change, perhaps you have an itch for something more that can’t be
scratched. Whatever the reason, here you are: contemplating joining
Peace Corps.
But should you? Is it right for you?
Honestly, you might not know that until you’ve arrived. You can
research by reading books and official publications or by talking with
current/returned volunteers, but everything you read and hear will
probably tell you the same thing: every person’s experience is
different. Your Peace Corps life will be uniquely shaped by your
country, program, and site.
I’d like to think, though, that there are a few things that are
universal throughout the Peace Corps world, and those things tend all
to revolve around how you yourself will change - for the better and for
the worse - because of your time in Peace Corps.
‘Sanitary’ will become an obsolete concept. You will eat on mats that you know are
saturated in urine. You will prepare food on counters that also serve
as chicken roosts. You will not have consistent/frequent access to soap.
You will eat street food that is undoubtedly questionable. You will be
dirty, dusty, and sweaty at all times. You will have mind over body
battles to force yourself to bucket shower in the winter. Bugs, lizards,
chickens, ducks, and mice will crap on everything. These things will be
ok. You’ll adjust. The sterile environment of the States will become a
distant odd memory or a constant fantasy.
Your body, though, might not adjust as quickly. You will have
parasites and infections and illnesses that you had never heard of
before training. You will be constantly constipated. Or go the opposite
extreme. I hate to say it, but you will probably poop in your pants at
least once. You will learn to vomit over a squat toilet and into a
plastic bag during a bus ride. You will discuss your bodily functions
openly and enthusiastically with other volunteers. No topic will be
taboo.
The way you communicate will completely transform. Learning a
language from scratch through immersion is a powerful experience. You
will learn to have complex communications though expressions, gestures,
and basic vocabulary. You will learn to bond with another human being
through silence. You will answer the same basic questions over and over
and over again. You may never achieve the ability to discuss ideas and
concepts. You will develop a new English language which consists of
pared down vocabulary and grammatical structures. You will actively
think of each word before you speak. Your speech patterns will slow. You
will have to define words whose meanings you had always taken for
granted. You will learn to listen.
Your concept of money will entirely alter. Paying more than $1
for anything will cause you to pause and question your purchase. You
will understand value in the context of a different economic system. You
will learn to barter, even on cheaper items. You will consistently feel
as though you have been cheated on the price. You will be enraged by
all prices upon returning to the States.
You will embrace the thrilling dichotomies of thrift versus
splurge and ration versus binge. No one knows how to budget like a Peace
Corps volunteer. And no one can binge like one.
You will be discontented with your work. You will wonder – and
scream to the heavens – about the benefit of your presence. You will
feel lost in unstructured expectations and crushed by promising ideas
fallen to the side. Your expectations will fade into an unexpected
reality. You will learn to celebrate small victories. You will look at
mountains and see mole hills. You will try to tackle the impossible.
Maybe you’ll succeed. Maybe you’ll just pick yourself up and take aim at
another impossibility.
You will learn to do all of this through pure self-motivation.
You will be the one to drag yourself out of bed and out the door. You
won’t have anyone holding your hand or pushing your forward. Just you.
You will become a stronger person for yourself, by yourself.
You will be a celebrity in your community. That status comes
will hardships and benefits that will ineradicably change you. You will
be the exception to the societal rules. You will be the foreigner, the
one set apart. You will receive privileges and have special
attention/status because of your nationality. You will always have eyes
on you. You will have joined as an agent of culture exchange and
understanding, but you will still find yourself falling into an ‘us
versus them’ mentality. Use it. Consider it. Contemplate the value we
place on people because of arbitrary characteristics. You will come away
from your experience more attune to your own merits, to those that are
deserved and to those that are given.
Your culture of personal space, one that maybe you have always
taken for granted, will be challenged. You will wonder why you need an
entire room to yourself while no one else even has a bed to himself. You
still won’t want to give your room up. Privacy will be a privilege or a
rarity, not a right.
You will lose all control of your emotions and be on an
unpredictable roller coaster of extreme ups and downs. You will go from
happy and confident to sullen and tearful by things as simple as ants in
your candy or yet another child saying ‘Hello!’ Your highs will be
high, but they will be fragile. Your lows will feel inescapable. Your
family and friends in the States probably won’t understand this. Your
isolation will force you to become your own support system. You will
become aware of yourself in the context of solely being yourself.
Your government-issued friends will be your reprieve. The love
and closeness you share with people back in the States won’t change, but
it will be your fellow volunteers who understand. They will be
friendships forged from necessity, and they will be deep and fervent.
You will witness a whole new way of life, and you will question
your notion of necessity. You will consider your personal wealth, and
people will constantly remind you of it. You will discover what your
‘needs’ are to live a productive, satisfied life. I hope you will
remember that when you return to a culture of plenty.
You will be the biggest product of your Peace Corps work. You will change. And you will bring that change back with you."
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