Today I
wrote on a sheet of paper the time I walked into the building, expecting at one
point for it to matter. It has been 11 months almost to the day that I have
been an RPCV. It has been 9.5 since I’ve been home, sleeping regularly in a bed
I didn’t have to fold out in order to share with Maggie. It has been almost 4
months since I danced into my graduation and felt the weight of a mountain
slide off as I was handed my degree. And it has been 3 weeks since someone
called me in for an interview for a job I would eventually happily take.
I know it
has been even longer since I have written anything and truth be told, I haven’t
had much to say. Coming back to the US has been both familiar and scary. One
way to look at it is that I’ve shut myself in, shut the world out, spent time
with people with the people who make me feel loved. Who would blame someone who
spent two straight years putting all of themselves into a kind of work that
rarely provided feedback. When I say all of myself I don’t mean the usual blood,
sweat, and tears bit. I mean all of me; my opinions of myself, my understanding of
reality, my ideas, my energy, my language, my humility, my courage, all of it
was given away on a daily basis, just so that I could say I left nothing untried, unfinished, no regrets, no coulda shoulda woulda’s. Luckily my plan worked and
I can safely say I did my very best.
And then I came back to a world that’s very
used to things. Everyone is used to shitty drivers and news of death and atrocities
every day. Everyone is used to washing machines, kitchen utensils, 1-day Amazon
deliveries and choosing from isles of cereal options. Everyone is used to their
life and protecting it and not used to me being around. I thought for a while
it was that I just didn’t fit into certain lives, they have evolved beyond me.
Dreams of coming home for the holidays would get me through some of my not-so-good
days in Peace Corps but everyone was so used to it and each other it wasn’t a
big deal by the time it rolled around and I was there for it. So after the new year, I
buried myself for months researching, writing, analyzing, threading theory with
practice then finally editing ‘til my eyes crossed in their red outlines. I
survived the thesis writing process and moved on to the job hunt, yet another
soul crushing endeavor. Turns out not many want to hire someone with so little "traditional" experience...
I should mention that through all of this, I was lucky enough to have the unconditional love of family and friends and one special someone who’s name I hope always makes me smile. Eventually I sought out words of wisdom and encouragement from
friends near and far to help keep my head above water. I asked google what else I
should be doing while temporarily jobless, to which it replied: work on cover
letters, find a mentor, start a business, take supplementary classes, etc. Diligently
applying to jobs and writing cover letters seemed like it would never end.
Now, as time
marches relentlessly forward, I have also found a sort of peace with the idea of
staying in Florida, because lets face it, something about everywhere sucks. Moving just to avoid the suck of Florida just to find a different suck
somewhere else is not all together wise. I made a lot of spontaneous and adventurous
decisions in my 20’s. I think 30 is not a bad time to sit still for a minute
and collect my thoughts and maybe some money.
So in almost one years time I have:
Caught up on
all the DC comics Netflix will allow,
Written a 50 page paper on non-formal education and how one of my greatest accomplishments as a Peace Corps volunteer had anything to do with it...then graduated,
Attended 4 graduations, 3 weddings, 1 family reunion, and multiple 5, 30, and 50 year old birthday celebrations
Written a 50 page paper on non-formal education and how one of my greatest accomplishments as a Peace Corps volunteer had anything to do with it...then graduated,
Attended 4 graduations, 3 weddings, 1 family reunion, and multiple 5, 30, and 50 year old birthday celebrations
Gained weight
Seen a great
wonder of the world
Became a
dog-sitter
Visited 2
new cities: Breckenridge and Detroit
Lost my shit
in traffic too many times and almost enough to miss the 12 hour bus rides
Caught up
with friends from around the country in settings that almost always had great
90s music or iconic foods
Put my dog in headband-antlers for a Christmas photo
Gone camping, fishing, kayaking, biking and rollerblading (yup)
And landed a
big girl job (with benefits whaaaaat?)
Granted this
list is not exhaustive, and maybe 11 months of insights and wisdoms are forever
lost under a pile of Orange is the New Black and the Flash, but I hope it fills
in some gaps for those of you on the edge of your seat.