Hugging the children goodbye leaves me with the most
contradicting emotions I have ever experienced. Since October, I have been
looking forward to meeting these students and have known the past two weeks
would change my life. Before this trip my life felt whole and I felt complete. After
coming to Bhaktapur and meeting these kids, I’ve realized that I could not have
possibly been whole before all of this. I was missing so many bonds and not
giving or receiving near enough love. Every waking second of this trip has been
spent thinking about or executing different, new ways to make the lives of
these children a little bit better. My life has been entirely devoted to this
class of 19 students whom I have grown to love. I have taught them about the
importance of Women’s Rights, the negative impacts of pollution, and the ways
we can work to prevent diseases. I have learned about their beautiful religion,
their unique manners, and their rice planting season. I care so deeply about
every individual and want their futures to be better than right now. I’m here
to show them that they are important and loved and that education will give
them a chance to make that brighter future a possibility. We have developed
this bond that will never disappear and it makes me feel so full, but at the
same time I feel like there is something missing. Now that I have left the
school completely and parted ways with all of the students, it’s harder to
breathe, and think, and walk, knowing that I will probably never see their wonderful
faces again. The pain of leaving is only made bearable by the reality that I am
so lucky to have created connections with these people that are so difficult to
leave. I feel very grateful to have people in Nepal to miss.
I can only hope I taught my class a percentage of what they helped
me learn. Not only did they teach me so much about this world, they taught me
about myself as well. They pushed me to leave my comfort zone and try entirely
new methods of teaching. They helped me understand the power and effectiveness of
student-led learning. These children made me feel worthy of all the love they
were giving me and reminded me that curiosity is essential to those that truly
want to learn.
The country of Nepal and the students of Lisha School will
forever have my heart.
It is clear that you have a gift, Zoe!! Take the connections that you built with those kids and they will motivate you to build more in the future. :)
ReplyDeleteps- not sure why I show up as 'unknown'- when I reply it says I'm replying as devin.dupree@eagleschools.net. Anyhow, that's who I am!
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