Monday, April 11, 2005

Counting Down

Well I'm inside of two months left in the U.S., and only a month and a half before I leave Boston. As the days count down, I'm starting to deal with leaving in a very real and concrete way. It's a subtle change, and it happens mostly when talking with friends. My friend and former roommate Jeff started talking the other day about how high ticket prices are at Fenway and how he would really like to get to a game before he graduates. He turned to me and jokingly said, "I guess it's a bit more urgent for you, huh?" Sure, it's on my mind, but then again, the last time I was in Fenway Park was Game 2 of the World Series. You know, The Bloody Sock and all that other stuff. I'm okay with that being my final baseball memory as I leave the country.

I will sorely miss baseball. It has become so engrained in my life in such a short time while living in Boston. There's nothing like living within a mile of Fenway for three and a half years, and the connection that I made with the Sox has been intense and I'm sure it will be long-lasting. This is a team that I've vomited over (2003 ALCS Game 7), followed to Spring Training (2004), given up on (2004 ALCS Game 3), rioted over (2003 ALDS and 2004 ALCS), camped out for 20 hours outside Fenway (2004 World Series), and crowded Boylston St. to watch them parade by on duck boats. Call me a bandwagon fan if you want, but I never got on the Pats bandwagon, and I came to Boston already liking the idea of an underdog who could possibly win someday—in Chicago, the Cubs only give you the underdog part. I wonder if there's even an expression in Moldova for "This is the year."

Amy, my boss at the middle school where I work, asked me Friday in a one-on-one meeting what my goals were for my last five weeks of our after-school program. It was almost an instant tearjerker for me, but I restrained myself. I've spent just over two months working with these kids and building up relationships with them that are finally starting to show. And suddenly I'm being told that the end is near. Amy asking me that question very quickly turned around my way of thinking at work. Although the academic support we give is important, I can't lie and say that that's my biggest priority now. Now is the time to take stock of the relationships I have with the kids at work—and expanding on that, with everyone I know in Boston and the States—and do everything I can to strengthen those so that they can last over the course of 2 years. I'm not kidding myself into expecting a deluge of mail from my middle school kids, but I would hope that two or three of them keep in touch with me for at least some stretch of my time in Moldova.

Speaking of my middle school kids, I've once again blasted through the weekend without preparing for work on Monday, so I'm going to cut this entry perhaps a little shorter than I had planned on making it. There will be plenty of longer entries over the years, so if you're a reader who needs long posts in order to survive, you'll be in luck another day.

Friday, April 01, 2005

Why the hell would you want to do that?

A lot of people have asked me over the course of the past year, "Why join the Peace Corps?" It's the reason why I am sometimes hesitant to bring it up in conversation. Whenever I mention the Peace Corps, I feel like it eats up 15 minutes of conversation in which I'll learn very little new knowledge, and I'll be bombarded with, "I've been within two time zones of a third-world country," or "My third cousin was in the Peace Corps a few years ago. She thought the food was weird."

Every once in a while, though, I do get some interesting reactions. Adriana, a friend of mine from Boston University, has for two years now called me a pansy for joining the Peace Corps. "If you want to do something good for the country," she says, "join the Army."

If you hadn't guessed yet, the type of people who are inclined to joining the Peace Corps have very little overlap with the people who are inclined to join the military. In my mind, the basic difference is how you want American power to be projected around the world. We have a president who gives a country with no capability of attacking us 48 hours to turn over all the weapons that they don't have before he invades, but takes his time ordering substantial relief efforts for a tsunami. Well I've protested the war and I've auctioned myself off for tsunami relief—I didn't go for much money, but my intentions were good—and I think that those instincts are what drive me most to be a Peace Corps volunteer.

The legendary comedian Bill Hicks was musing more than a decade ago about the spectacular missile technology of Operation Desert Storm. "Couldn't we feasibly use that same technology to shoot food at hungry people? Know what I mean? Fly over Ethiopia. 'There's a guy who needs a banana!' The Stealth Banana. Smart Fruit!"

If that doesn't make sense to you, maybe you should consider joining the military.

Lest I be accused of not supporting the troops, which as of last week was punishable by death in 15 states, I don't want to bash the military. That's not what I'm about. Hell, I partied with my buddy Pat and all of his ROTC friends on St. Patrick's Day, and they all seemed to be good folks. But this probably won't be the last time that I criticize the way America is using our military these days, and I guess these early blog entries have to set the tone.

So that's why I didn't join the Army. But why did I join the Peace Corps? Well it started with a heart attack.

My dad had a heart attack back in the fall of 1999, in Silver Spring, MD (the rest of the family was living in Los Gatos, CA). A co-worker of his, Stephen Keese, drove him to the hospital and saved his life. A year later, as I was preparing to interview for colleges, my dad—who made a full recovery—arranged a mock interview for me with Stephen, who interviews for Harvard. At the end of our interview, Stephen, a returned Peace Corps volunteer (RPCV) who had served in Brazil, made me promise to at least consider the Peace Corps.

I went to Boston University with my conversation with Stephen lodged in the back of my mind. Over the next couple years, it became more and more clear that this was an opportunity to do something that very few people get a chance to do, and that I would only have a certain window in my life in which to do it. And of course, as you can infer from my description of the current government, I'm desperate to represent the U.S. abroad in a more positive light than what people see in the news every day.

This leads me to an interesting quandry. How can I so often say that I'm disappointed with the government when it's the government that is paying my way for the next two years, training me in a new language, and covering the cost of my housing? The analogy I make is if a person whom you've never thought much of wishes you a happy birthday or gives you a thoughtful gift. It makes you second-guess your opinion of that person, but chances are, given a few more months, you'll start to see that person's flaws again, and that one warm memory will fade. So my living on a government program for two years will quickly be forgotten in the sea of WMDs, underfunded city schools, privatized Social Security benefits and institutionalized right-wing religious bigotry.

But in the mean time, it's good to just concentrate on one of the few things that I think the government is doing properly, and just say Thank You.