Sunday, June 9, 2013

Preparations




There is so much to do, and the shortening distance on my calendar between the current day and my day of departure is a constant source of panic. Many of these precious days are devoted to replacing the substantial amount of funds that I’ve invested in this experience, and shelving cartloads of books or wiping floors does little to settle this constricting feeling in my chest. I will say that describing these feelings has helped, if only a little. A journal my mom bought me a few years ago was supposed to be reserved for my departure date onward, but last night I couldn’t help but release some of my worries in a series of poorly written, but liberating, pages. I decided to open this blog for two reasons: first, the alliteration is just irresistible; second, more than writing in unread pages does the notion of a supportive readership provide much comfort. 


When preparing for this kind of expedition, I know that feelings of anxiety are supposed to be normal. It is difficult to admit, however, that this constricting feeling in my chest seems to be a lot more like fear than excitement. There are times when I doubt myself, and want to turn back. I know that my Global Stew cohorts have experienced these feelings before preparing for even longer, more isolated trips, and have ventured to and from the coasts of Africa and across the reaches of Southeast Asia. How many countries have we visited all together? It was definitely over seventy. Such comparatively short lives we’ve had, and yet it’s incredible how far a sense of adventure can get you. 


It’s a sense of adventure that’s getting me into trouble. All of these weeks of waiting and now I’ve realized that I really have no idea what I’m doing, nor what to expect. I suppose that’s the whole point: do not expect. In Lawrence Scanlan’s A Year of Living Generously, “do not assume” is described as central to his experience working as a volunteer in Canada with not-for-profit organizations aimed at supplementing low incomes and offering aid to those in need. He also quotes from Six Months in Sudan by Dr. James Maskalyk, who writes that “it’s not about trying to reconcile two different worlds, it’s about understanding that it’s one.” The need for education, for security, and sustainable livelihoods is a universal one, and so there should be no barriers to our compassion. But there are.

I have tried to prepare as well as I can. I could be wrong about a lot of things. I probably am. At least, I feel that I can only see things at face value without having witnessed them myself. My words seem despairingly superficial.
  
 I know I have shared with a few members of the Mount Seymour United congregation that I worry about how my preconceived ideas will affect my interactions with other people and that I have caught myself in shame at my own assumptions; but Jen-Beth Fulton graciously reminded me that it is normal to have some expectations. It is the mind’s way of preparing for what lies ahead. And quelling those ideas with new experiences is part of the journey.  I am grateful to the congregation for their prayers and support, particularly David and Bethel Lee for their blessings and the lighthearted warning of vivid Malarone-induced dreams; to Doug Querns for his outlandish accounts of “floating bridges” where monsoons had washed away the roads, and the camel cement carriers that aid Nepali construction; and to Jen-Beth, for her insights from living abroad and her constant warmth and compassion.