The time
has finally come for me to start my blog. A week from this moment I’ll be in DC
wading through last minute paperwork, immunizations, expectations, and meeting
a slew of prospective volunteers I’ll be sharing this experience with. My last footing stateside will be Tuesday
Feb. 28th at 5:40pm, when I’ll commence the journey that will take
me from DC to Dakar, Dakar to Johannesburg, and from Johannesburg finally,
after nearly 24 hours of travel, to Antananarivo, the capital of
Madagascar.
For the
most part I’ve been telling everyone that I am a Peace Corps Volunteer working
within the Small Enterprise Development profile, meaning I will be working with
small businesses and NGO’s (non-governmental organizations). Which is partly true. But to be entirely honest I still hold the
status of ‘peace corps trainee’ and am about to embark on an intensive on the
job interview/training beginning March 1st and culminating May 4th. At which point I’ll be speaking Malagasy with
intermediate-high proficiency as defined by the Peace Corps and be
comparatively well-equipped with the technical skills and cultural awareness to
hack it as a full-fledged volunteer for the following two years. I’m expected to hit those marks before being
sworn in or else, as I understand it, Peace Corps will be generous enough to
pay for my plane ticket home. Slightly
daunting yes, but I wouldn’t be doing this if I wasn’t looking for a challenge. To be frank, I’m proud that Peace Corps holds
volunteers to a rigorous language standard and emphasizes cultural immersion to
the extent that they do. No doubt it
will be strenuous at times but infinitely rewarding if I want to be an
effective volunteer.
Here’s a
brief overview of my daily schedule for Pre-Service Training, to give some idea
of what it will look like:
Sample Daily Schedule
Weeks 1-4:
Community Based Training with Home stay (Mantasoa Village)
8:00
- 12:00 Class (Malagasy language,
technical sessions)
12:00
- 2:00 Lunch Break
2:00
- 5:00 Class (language, technical
sessions)
5:00
Return to Home
Stay/Individual study
Weeks 5-9:
Center-Based Training (at our PC Training Center in Mantasoa)
07h00-07h45 Breakfast
8:00
- 12:00 Class (Malagasy language,
technical sessions)
12:30
- 2:00 Lunch Break
2:00
– 5:00 Class (language, technical
sessions)
18h00-18h45 Dinner at PC Training Center
19h00-19h45:
Occasional evening sessions (Technical, X-Cultural, Medical, and Safety)
I could
go on ad nauseam spelling out all the idiosyncrasies the I’ve been told in umpteen
Peace Corps Staging emails will encompass the life of a soon-to-be SED
volunteer during pre-service training but rather, I’ll remain brief and provide
updates on life as I live it.
One last
note:
I spent
some time this afternoon ruminating on a blog title. A much more painstaking process than I
expected as I wanted something that would truly capture how I felt going into
this experience, what I expected to put in, and what I hoped to take away. After some very helpful suggestions on
Facebook, highlights of which included, ‘Havin’ a Blastar in Madagascar,’ and a
link to the Gilligan’s Island theme, I finally settled on what’s listed
above. It’s fairly simple, nothing too
clever or poetic but I felt it spoke to what I’m aiming for. Crossroads refers to the old Robert Johnson
tune by that name, and though the meaning of the song is slightly obscured,
blues legend suggests that the crossroads of U.S. Routes 61 and 49 in
Clarksdale, Mississippi served as the hallowed ground where Robert Johnson made
a Faustian bargain with the devil in exchange for his blues prowess. So here’s the tie in: For me, Peace Corps has always appeared as a
critical juncture. A necessarily
transformative moment in my life. Those
familiar with my career aspirations are aware of my fixation with international
affairs and diplomacy, but also my desire to give back and lift up those less
fortunate than myself. So I enter into
this particular intersection in my life unencumbered and with the hope of
developing insight, codifying my skills, and trying my best to better the
station in life of the Malagasy people I’ll be working with. After spending some time with it, I realized
that I’d always viewed Peace Corps, especially in light of my life’s goals,
through a lens that suggested the moment as a crossroads. So with that I’ll conclude. Next time entry will be from beautiful
Madagascar, thank you to everyone for following along.