Ohhhhhhh. So this is why I'm weeks away from a flight I never planned to take in my life:
I didn’t get it before but I get it now.
I think I finally get it.
Yesterday, at the hostel after debriefing, I was talking with Elizabeth and Hazel about how hard it was going to be to tell people what we’ve been through. We didn’t want to solidify the stereotypes people had in their minds about Africa by reverting to careless descriptions. There are mud huts, goats, bride price, a tiny savannah land, political corruption, tattered clothing and lack of access to a lot of things in Uganda. But none of this is what Uganda is. We didn’t want people to think we were so great for being here. What practicum taught me about development and poverty is: I don’t know anything. Not a single thing about it. I thought I did but I don’t. I thought I was capable but I’m not. I’m not.
I’m not here because I’m this college student with fresh idealism and a will to travel in order to decrease the suffering in the world. That’s what I thought I was here for. But idealism dies quickly when ones motivation is to make a difference and see results. Because sometimes? These things don’t happen the way you want them to. And most times? It’s slow, suicidal monotony. A difference is a lifetime. In those years, people will have long since ceased to praise my efforts. Frustration with the process and bureaucracy of pro-social action will hurl a person to cynicism, depression, or both. Idealism has to be packed away if that’s all I’ve got.
I’m not here because I’m a visionary.
I’m not here because I’m a saint.
Africa, Poverty, Social Change does not matter to me because I’m a bleeding heart.
I’m not a visionary, saint, or bleeding heart.
I’ve realized I’m here because this is only my service and thank you. Poverty matters to me because I want God to show up in impossible places, not because I think I can do the impossible. Poverty is impossible. Poverty matters to me because dignity is something shared with humanity, not because I have something to give to the “less fortunate.” I’d never say that out loud but previously I believed that subconsciously. I want to thank Her for what She’s done and show Him that I trust He will complete what He said he would. I want to thank God for her compassion by asking her to give me some. I don’t think development is truly effective without that. You’ll burn out if a joy from somewhere else is not bestowed upon you. You’ll never see an end in sight and die in futilism. And that’s it.
I cannot alleviate poverty. That’s not my job. I can be of assistance.
Development is not something we put on people; it’s something we participate in.
I didn’t get it before but I get it now.
Due to needed sobriety, I want to go out more than ever. Anywhere.
To say thanks.
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I signed it "Muyeti" (Lugisu for "the one who helps")
And I still mean every word.
