Saturday, February 12, 2011
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
prayers needed.
I want to take a minute to thank all of you friends and family for keeping up with my blog this long, especially since I have been home from South Africa for almost two months now. It was very hard to leave, and even taking the effort to choose a photo to post each day is almost heartbreaking. But one of the best things about the Augustinian Volunteer program is its sustainability, and I took a lot of comfort in the fact that after Meg, Mary-Kate, Becca, and I left South Africa to come home, another group of volunteers would be taking over for us as the new year began.
Though I have only met Erika and Damien, they, along with Jenny and Tyler, are incredible young people with a passion for service that will do them well in their year ahead. But unfortunately, this group of people has already encountered more hardship than I think I faced all year.
Your prayers are needed.
One of this year's volunteers, Jenny, who replaced me at St. Leo, is in the hospital and about to undergo very serious and risky open-chest surgery.
And in addition, Tyler, another community member, has a brother named Kyle who is currently in hospital in Johannesburg with a brain infection.
During my year in South Africa, I learned a lot about the unexpected turns that life can take, but I have to say that since being home, these tragic surprises have been much more numerous and much more unexpected. We just have to keep trusting that we will be taken care of.
Please keep this AV community and their families in your thoughts for the next few days, and, most especially, in the next few hours. Having a strong network of good people sending positive thoughts their way may just be the magic touch. Thanks.
.
Though I have only met Erika and Damien, they, along with Jenny and Tyler, are incredible young people with a passion for service that will do them well in their year ahead. But unfortunately, this group of people has already encountered more hardship than I think I faced all year.
Your prayers are needed.
One of this year's volunteers, Jenny, who replaced me at St. Leo, is in the hospital and about to undergo very serious and risky open-chest surgery.
And in addition, Tyler, another community member, has a brother named Kyle who is currently in hospital in Johannesburg with a brain infection.
During my year in South Africa, I learned a lot about the unexpected turns that life can take, but I have to say that since being home, these tragic surprises have been much more numerous and much more unexpected. We just have to keep trusting that we will be taken care of.
Please keep this AV community and their families in your thoughts for the next few days, and, most especially, in the next few hours. Having a strong network of good people sending positive thoughts their way may just be the magic touch. Thanks.
.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Friday, February 4, 2011
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Monday, January 31, 2011
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Friday, January 28, 2011
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Thursday, January 13, 2011
a good year.
When I think about 2010, I feel quite short on words. I've been asked, "So how was your year?" or "How does it feel to be home?" and of course, my year was life-changing and it feels really good to be back at home, surrounded by familiar faces and simple wonders that I will never again take for granted.
But I still feel that I haven't done any justice to the year I spent in South Africa. I don't know how to go about telling my story, so I've decided to share some photos, maybe an accompanying story, and piece together my year this way.
The next community leaves for South Africa's sunny shores in just a few days. I'll spend a few hours with the four of them on Saturday evening, and I feel so excited for the adventures they're about to experience, yet a part of me yearns to be stowing away and tagging along for the ride. Now that the holidays are over and I've been reunited with the people and the country I left behind one year ago, I feel as though I should be going back-- back to school, back to St. Theresa's homework time, back to karaoke on Wednesday nights at The Highlander and Durban's beachfront and rugby matches on the weekends and Robson's delicious microbrewed beer. Thinking about it all makes my heart hurt a bit.
As for the here and now, I'm frantically applying for jobs whenever I can in education, housing, and academic non-profits in New York and Philadelphia, and recently applied to a few graduate programs as alternatives, in case the whole employment thing remains out of reach. I'll find something, I know-- and for now, I'm content to enjoy the snow while reminiscing about the Durban summer.
Enjoy the photos, but I'm pretty sure that there's as much for me as they are for you. And thank you, ngiyabonga kakhulu, for keeping up with me.
P.S. I'm also back on my old blog. Though life is not as "different" as it was this time last year, I still like to think there are things worth noting.
.
But I still feel that I haven't done any justice to the year I spent in South Africa. I don't know how to go about telling my story, so I've decided to share some photos, maybe an accompanying story, and piece together my year this way.
The next community leaves for South Africa's sunny shores in just a few days. I'll spend a few hours with the four of them on Saturday evening, and I feel so excited for the adventures they're about to experience, yet a part of me yearns to be stowing away and tagging along for the ride. Now that the holidays are over and I've been reunited with the people and the country I left behind one year ago, I feel as though I should be going back-- back to school, back to St. Theresa's homework time, back to karaoke on Wednesday nights at The Highlander and Durban's beachfront and rugby matches on the weekends and Robson's delicious microbrewed beer. Thinking about it all makes my heart hurt a bit.
As for the here and now, I'm frantically applying for jobs whenever I can in education, housing, and academic non-profits in New York and Philadelphia, and recently applied to a few graduate programs as alternatives, in case the whole employment thing remains out of reach. I'll find something, I know-- and for now, I'm content to enjoy the snow while reminiscing about the Durban summer.
Enjoy the photos, but I'm pretty sure that there's as much for me as they are for you. And thank you, ngiyabonga kakhulu, for keeping up with me.
P.S. I'm also back on my old blog. Though life is not as "different" as it was this time last year, I still like to think there are things worth noting.
.
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