-->
10 July 2013
Greetings,
I am now officially one week from the conclusion of my stay
here in Managua, which I can earnestly say I am not looking forward to. The
past two weeks have been full of more than a fair share of successes,
challenges, decisions and learning experiences, which I hope to briefly recap
and reflect upon.
Last week, close to 75 percent of the scholars were able to
complete the videos they are making for their sponsors. I spent three days with
the scholars from Camilo Ortega and Demitrov, and traveled with Jass up to
Tipitapa one day to work with the scholars who live there. The remaining few
scholars will complete their videos this week. The scholars were thoughtful,
sincere, and genuinely excited to share messages with their “Godparents” in the
United States, and I look forward to publishing them and being able to share
them with you in the coming weeks. Belen, Aura, Kevin and Manuel expressed
interest in learning more English, and together we were able to work through
flash cards and other phonetic exercises that were graciously donated by
individuals at my church back home. The kids loved the activity, and showed
great commitment and focus.
Unfortunately, Nicaragua has won the war on scheduling, and
I have not been able to spend nearly as much time with the scholars as I would
have hoped. Many of the scholars have busy schedules that do not allow them the
time to commit to more than a half hour at any given point, which has been
quite frustrating. Despite the frustrations, I find it to be a large testament
to the relationship Visedal has facilitated between sponsors and scholars that
the kids always found a way to make a video amongst their many other
activities.
This weekend, I traveled through Leon and spent some time on
a tranquil island on the pacific coast. The island has one hostel, thirty
residents, no roads, and is only accessible by boating across the bay. For much
of my stay I was the only American at the hostel of 20 guests, but was able to
meet new friends from Canada, Austria, Brazil, Denmark, England, Bolivia, Australia,
Nicaragua, Israel, Germany, Switzerland, Ireland, New Zealand, and at least a
few more locales I am certainly forgetting. It was incredible having the
opportunity to talk to individuals who come from all corners of the globe, with
many languages, customs, histories and perspectives; yet, who all remarkably
share the singular goal of finding happiness. Whether discussing what we were currently
reading, the paths through life we seem to be on, and what we hoped to
accomplish in the future, I can honestly say it was a truly life-changing
experience. Sitting around a fire on a beach in Nicaragua, staring up at a sky
so bright and clear you could see the Milky Way, and listening to a guy from an
urban hub in Brazil lead songs with a girl from a small farm in Austria on
their guitars, you realize that there is much more to life than the priorities
we place on our lives at home.
The realization of this goal, finding happiness, is not
uniform. A few examples I can think of; however, include a 27-year old man from
Baltimore who essentially works two jobs to ensure 23 kids are no longer on the
streets in Managua, Nicaragua; families and individuals across the United
States who not only help provide tuition, clothing and meals, but also develop
loving and supportive relationships with children they have never, and may
never, meet; a great student at Bard college who traveled several hours by air
to ensure a new friend would be able to live in a foreign city; dozens of
members of a church who sacrificed a little of what they had for others; and so
many more that are too numerous for a blog entry that is already entirely too
long.
My personal journey has been complicated, and has involved
many missteps and learning experiences. Regardless, at the end of the day, I
can write without regret for my time in Nicaragua, my time with Visedal, and my
time with all the strangers from each and every corner of the world who are now
friends has forever changed my way of thinking for the better. I thank each of
you for the overwhelming support, encouragement and love. While I am dreading
leaving the country I am currently in, I am blessed to know there are so many
of you waiting to welcome me back home.
Until next time,
Taylor