I have not changed out of my pajamas yet, its 1:45 pm, and
at this point it useless to try and go anywhere. My day has not been a complete
wash though. I should also mention it’s a Tuesday. Today my accomplishments
include not only breakfasting and lunching, but I made vegetable soup stock and
tomato sauce, of which I made with pasta for lunch. I finished reading a book
and made my bed. I haven’t had a day like this since I got back from Nicaragua,
and even in Nicaragua there was always something to do, because no one goes on
vacation to sit around in their jams doing nothing…. Maybe they do but that was
not our fate.
Firstly, I’d like to make note of the very short amount of
time we have left for service. 8 Months from now, I will not be in Costa Rica
but rather, hopefully, Colombia, with three very dear friends on our way, sort
of haphazardly through South America. Talking with my friends here (read
family) I realize how hard it will be to leave them, because just it coming up
in conversation I immediately want to change topic. Deña and her daughters and
adorable English speaking grandson; Kim, Amanda, her mom, dad and brother (who
strangely enough looks like Chappy) and all our cooking/ baking adventures; Miriam
and her husband Ivan and Ignacio, their perpetually adorable 13 year old son,
and their house with 100 fish and an instant feeling of comfort when you walk
in, and workouts with Miriam and her sister that make us laugh and cry in pain,
but always come back for more; both of my host families, so very wonderful to
me, that have accepted me and my weirdness, entirely and without question. I
hope I never have to know what its like to not have them around. Even my
roommate who puts washing machines in my “room” and without fail leaves me coffee
in a disheveled kitchen every morning, is my family here. I don’t just have
friends, I have people who have welcomed me into their homes and made me part
of their conversations and celebrations. I have a sinking feeling that these
next months will be full of days where I feel exceptionally proud to be here
followed by days of sadness when I face the coming end.
Six months ago, I wasn’t able to see why anyone would extend;
two years seemed like a reasonable amount of time for trial and error community
development. But then this year, I am part of things, not just as a helper but
an integral part in the execution of projects, my opinion is sought out and
considered. My counterparts are my friends, who have seen me, whether they knew
it or not, through some of the hardest days of my life and consequently a lot
of my growing up. Even if extending to the end of the year is a viable option,
it would just waylay the inevitable, this is not where all my family lives,
not where I’ll make money and be with a boyfriend who has waited patiently by
my side (figuratively) until I come home.
But what heartbreak to have two homes and know you can only
live in one.
I know this country like I know my own. I’ve been border to border
and coast to coast and spend many an hour listlessly staring off in awe of its beautiful
and extreme terrains. I know bus stops and farmers at farmers markets, as I
should since I’ve lived here, really lived here for almost 20 months. Shortly
after finally feeling like I’m not an outsider, like I have a place here, I
have to get ready to leave it.
Its not like I didn’t know this was coming, I have been
planning my departure and next steps for months now, down to considering what
I’m selling, giving away and to who and what I’ll be throwing out. I also know
I handle inevitable painful separations like pulling off a band-aid the wrong
way, slowly and feeling everything. And I knew this would happen the same way.
So I guessed surprised is at least one emotion I can say I don’t feel.
So today I stayed in my pajamas all day, mostly because I
have no real assignment today and I’ve been wanting to make tomato sauce before
all the tomatoes I had went bad. Change will happen, I will leave, and life
will go on without me here just like everywhere I’ve ever left. The sadness is
not necessarily in this fact but in the fear that I’ll loose the touch with the
connections I have made, knowing I won’t be next door for my host sister when
she has “girly questions”, forgetting what it’s like to stand on my host moms
front porch and watch the stars, or the sunset, or the neighbors blowing up
giant fireworks 40 feet away. I’m sad that time erases the little things that
hold your days together, the feeling of adventure living in another country,
learning new language and the look on
people’s faces that say “it’s ok I get
what you mean, stop struggling”. I’m even sad to part with my beloved silence
and time all to myself, to cook or clean or watch the same 30 movies over and
over again, or write or read without feeling like I’m just wasting time, but
rather purposefully spending it.
There are many things
to miss since I’ve nestled into my community probably more so than any other
place I’ve lived in, as a way to feel part of it so far away from what was
familiar. Maybe that’s what makes Peace Corps such the adventure. We land in
the middle of the unknown and grab onto as much as we can to ground us again.
Hardly is there such unknown in our culture and country that we are desperate
to bring or create meaning in our lives, so that when we leave, we leave part
of our soul there. But here we stand, holding onto meaning until it’s time to
move on as all things do.
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