Note: I wrote this article over two months ago and never got around to posting it. I felt it was long overdue and necessary to post, even if just for myself. I'll have one more follow up to post in the coming days as well.
Days 213 – 244
It’s hard
to believe that 244 days have come and gone since I left for the Dominican
Republic in January. Even though I leave
Barahona tomorrow morning, I simply cannot find the time to finish packing my
bags. It seems to me that once I finish
packing my bags and collecting my belongings, it’s one step closer to moving
on. It’s hard to clearly state my
feelings – I do believe I am ready to return home and am eager to see my family
and friends but also have a pang of pain leaving the people here.
It’s funny
how quickly time passes, especially when you’re trying to utilize every passing
second. That’s the realization I felt
during my last couple weeks in Barahona.
As eager as I had been to get home and see my family and friends, it was
very hard to part from the life I had grown accustomed to for the past eight
months.
September
felt like an odd month then whole time, knowing it would be my last month. Times would pass when I would think of people
I had met here – and realize I may not get the chance to say goodbye or see
them ever again. Since it’s an unknown,
it’s hard to fathom the latter and wrap your mind around it. Not only that, but how am I supposed to say
goodbye to some people when I knew I still had time left in the country? I began to realize it was partly my
acceptance with the fact I was leaving as much as it was for my
acquaintances. What I mean to say is
that it was very difficult for me to pick up and leave so quickly.
As a
volunteer, work still went on around me, only I now had to decline a few
projects here and there because of time.
It was an odd feeling going from accepting every odd job to evaluating
the tasks to determine which I actually had time for. It didn’t feel right, but just as my thesis
adviser said, there comes a point when you have to stop taking on new work and
finish what you’ve started. That’s what
I knew I had to do – finish what I started.
The only problem was part of me didn’t want to finish. After all, this was different from leaving
home back in January. I knew I’d be back
at home at some point in the future and could pick up where I left off. Here, there was the doubt in my mind; the
fear that I might not see some of these people ever again. So I did the best I could with the time I had
left and tried to let people know what they meant to me. This was no easy task for me though as the
goodbyes were often emotional and left me drained afterward. In fact, during one of my last days I had
planned to visit the homes of a number of families to say goodbye and had to
stop after a few because I was emotionally drained after speaking with
them.
Sor Maria and I |
It didn’t
help that I was physically tired as well my last week in Barahona. It just so happened that, with only one week
left, I got very sick to the stomach and had to go to the hospital. I was very low on fluids and got two IVs in
the hospital, which helped immensely.
After I got back, I downed some pollo y yucca and went to bed for the
rest of the day and night. It felt good
to be able to hold some food down and rest for a while. It was in this miserable condition that I met
Sor Maria, who had worked in Austin, TX for a couple years. She had the “shoot first (or in this case,
help first), ask questions later” type mentality and wasted no time helping
when I was sick. It was a shame that our
time together was so short, but I still believe myself to be fortunate for
having had the chance to meet her.
With my
time winding down, I feel a complete mixture of feelings: joy to see my family
and sadness to have to say goodbye to so many wonderful people. Excitement to see my friends and a bit of
anxiety going back to the culture I grew up in with a fresh set of eyes.
Certain
questions bounce around in my head: Have I changed? (I believe I have, but for
the better? Has anything back home
changed? Will I find it hard to adjust
back to life in the US with all the amenities and commodities? What will I take with me from this trip? Will I be missed? How can I stay in contact with everyone
there? Will Barahona be the same when I
return? The questioning wears me out, I
need not find all the answers just yet and I know they will be revealed to me
in time.
In closing, I wish to thank everyone for my time
here – too many names to list, but each one has helped shape my story. This shared experience has opened my eyes and
helped me grow in so many different ways.
While this is the end of my mission in Barahona, I will always be there
because of the wonderful people who have given me so much joy and so many memories
to keep in my heart. Gracias por
todo.