Saturday, January 16, 2016

Reflection Word Vomit! Hooray!

I think today is the day I'll finally hit that bright orange "Publish" button that keeps staring me down.

It's not that I'm finally satisfied with what I've written. I'm far from it. It's more that I have been neglecting my need for reflection and I'm seeing the negative impact that has on me. Reflection time hasn't been high on my priority list because I feel like I should be working on something else, or when I do have spare time I feel so emotionally drained that I'd probably choose being put in a box with mosquitos and gnats before reflecting on my life at Amigos. Hell, sometimes it seems like I don't have any more skin for the bugs to bite anyways so being in that box couldn't be too bad, right?

But, like I said, the lack of reflection is catching up to me and contributing to my current state so here we go...

At the start of the year we were all warned about the "Culture Shock Curve" which I'd like to re-name the "Rollercoaster of Hell" (a good hint for what stage I'm currently in)...


Man, that good ol' honeymoon phase was awesome. I was on cloud-9. It was like "United States? Who? Huh?" I was all about staying here for another year and never saw myself wanting to leave. I felt at home.

Then the end of November hit. Right before Thanksgiving I got sick. I was in and out of bed (in more so than out) for a solid 3 weeks or so. Once I finally got partially back on my feet after taking some anti-parasite meds, I had no time to recover. It was December now, a crazy time at Amigos, so I hit the ground running. While other volunteers at the hogar all got some sort of vacation, the volunteer group I'm part of picked up the slack wherever needed. All of this thrown together created "Withdrawal Jill" which is a lot nicer word than I, or probably most people around me, would use. So, after almost 6 months in Honduras, I finally hit the dreaded "low-point" of my time here. Yessir, I'm in the low-point phase. Loud and proud! Okay, maybe not so much like that but, you get the point.

This is another reason I haven't wanted to blog. My thoughts are far from pretty and some days they are horrendously ugly. Most days my patience feels non-existent. On rare occasions I'll see a glimmer of hope, like a light at the end of this smelly, humid, obnoxious low-point tunnel. But then, something like this unfolds: one little girl decides to wrap my leg in-between her legs as she has a melt down for no apparent reason, while 2 adults try to talk to me about the dentist appointment tomorrow (ignoring the meltdown attached to my leg), and 4 other little kids run up screaming about god-knows-what-nonsense. Meanwhile all I wanted to do was make it back to the house to finally eat dinner with my volunteer community who will eventually give up waiting because the food is getting cold. So, what seemed like a light at the end of the tunnel actually ended up being a warning flash for the giant crash that was about to ensue. Sneaky, sneaky light...

Anyways, today I logged onto Blogger to re-read some posts that have been sitting in my draft folder since the beginning of November or earlier. I decided to continue reflecting on a topic that I began a while back. In order for these thoughts of mine to be somewhat understandable on paper (or screen?), they're broken up into 3 sections: family life vs. hogar life, attachment disorder, and compassion for the other side. Each of these could easily be their own posts but I guess now I'll make up for some lost time.



Family Life vs. Hogar Life

When you look back on your childhood it may be easy to see how you had it "rougher" or maybe how you had it "better" compared to your peers and their families. I know that I spent a great deal of time reflecting on that prior to this year, and I still continue to, but now with a different perspective. Regardless of what trials and tribulations I've faced, at the end of every day I'm so unbelievably privileged. I know that I am privileged in many ways, but there is one that especially stands out here: I grew up with parents.

I'm sure most of us can find ways in which we think our parents "fell short" or made mistakes but the fact that we can sit here and talk about our parents or our family is an incredible gift in itself that is often taken for granted. Don't get me wrong, it isn't like I'm now at 23 years old finally seeing how much my parents sacrificed for me. I hit that stage after my annoying, angsty preteen years. I thank them on a regular basis and attribute all that I've done so far to them. But now, when I say thank you, there is so much more to it.

There's a question that comes up fairly often in the volunteer community and at times with some of the kids:
Is it actually better for a child to be raised in an hogar setting rather than their home? 
There are endless perspectives to take when approaching this question. I have opinions but no legitimate answer and at times it is overwhelming. Here's some word vomit to attempt summarizing my thoughts...

In a family there are generally two parents to a handful of children. In an hogar there's a padrino and a madrina, which are essentially stand-in parents, for 12+ children. All of these children come from different backgrounds and have more struggles and demons they are battling than your average child. They all require a lot of attention but it's the ones who cry for help in one way or another that are tended to the most, for obvious reasons. This in itself can potentially negatively impact the other kids who aren't crying out but still need that attention. Ultimately, at the end of the day the need always outweighs the number of adults there to help. 

At Amigos they try to make life as "normal" as possible with their emphasis on family and they constantly look for ways to live out this part of the mission. For example, all 120+ kids used to eat every meal in the comedor, which is basically a cafeteria, and looks nothing like a typical sit-down family meal. However, they recognized that. This year they eat every meal from Sunday dinner through Friday breakfast (excluding lunch, which is at school) in their "hogar" or "dorm", where they live. Some hogares have really taken on this idea by sitting at a table together and praying before meals, while others, like the hogar I eat in, are still working on it. Another small, but impactful, attempt to "normalize" life for the kids included giving everyone backpacks and/or lunch boxes to take to school. Not that it is necessary since sometimes they don't even have anything in them, but now it isn't just the neighbor kids who come to school with a backpack, as yet another representation that they live with their parents/family. Also, this year, the kids from the hogar come to school with a packed snack like their neighborhood friends, rather than standing in line for snack during recess.

Still, eating in a smaller group and having a backpack and a packed snack will never come close to replacing the individualized attention that comes with a family. 

On the other hand, these children are blessed when compared to the numerous kids you see on the street begging for food and money. Some kids at Amigos even came from these streets. Now they never have to worry about how or when they'll get their next meal. They don't have to stress to the same degree about their future because now they are receiving an education, and it's one hell of a great education relative to other options in Honduras. They live in a safe home that provides more than just the basic needs. Even compared to other hogares in Honduras, Amigos is pretty incredible. Some of our children with special needs came from "homes" where they were simply locked in a room with other children who have special needs. Some homes allow corporal punishment. Many homes aren't financially backed by donors in the United States, which makes a world of difference. Amigos de Jesus is a blessing.

Another view, which we've heard from some of the kids during deeper conversations, is that regardless of the abuse they've endured they still rather be with their families. This is the view that hurts me the most. This is the view that is painful to really reflect on. This is the view that has kept other volunteers and myself up some nights. It is so difficult to understand it logically but when I listen more so to my heart, and my emotional thoughts, there really is still nothing that can replace a family. But then if you play that mind game, you might end up where I did--trying to figure out at what level of abuse do the pros outweigh the cons to make it worth taking a child from their family and placing them in an hogar. For me that was an ugly road of thought to go down, a road I'm embarrassed to admit I've even thought about. No amount of abuse should be tolerated. No amount of abuse is "okay". The impact of the neglect and abuse these children endured are seen daily through their actions. What would have happened to them had they never been taken from their family? But still, I keep coming back to the fact that there is no replacement for a family. 

But, at the end of the day, the reality is that these children are here at Amigos. That's partially why I assumed reflecting on these topics aren't important. Yet it is, because failure to reflect leaves you feeling empty and more lost, even though I still don't entirely understand why. Life, you are a crazy confusing thing, ya know that?




Reactive Attachment Disorder

"A condition found in children who have received grossly negligent care and do not form a healthy emotional attachment with their primary caregivers -- usually their mothers -- before age 5" (webmd).

"A rare but serious condition in which an infant or young child doesn't establish healthy attachments with parents or caregivers. Reactive attachment disorder may develop if the child's basic needs for comfort, affections and nurturing aren't met and loving, caring, stable attachments with others are not established" (mayoclinic).

Before June I'm not sure that I had ever heard this term before. Now it is thrown into conversations on a regular basis. Learning about this term at Amigos is like being handed a new pair of glasses that you put on to see more clearly and try to understand why some of the kids act the way they do.

He seems so sweet, charming and loving all the time but watch out because he's one of the ones that will steal from you.
It's the attachment disorder.

 We spent a lot of time together. I thought we were getting closer. But suddenly she started to ignore me and I have no clue why. She just keeps pushing me away. 
Ah, yeah, attachment disorder. 

Color time was over but when I tried to take the crayon from her she went into hysterics. It was more than a temper-tantrum. She was flailing on the ground and nothing could calm her down.
It's probably attachment disorder. 

This list is pretty endless. And very challenging.

In some ways it has been more difficult as time has gone on. At the beginning it was easier to have patience and take the time to understand these actions. After a while, it can start to really wear you down.

The bell rang for lunch and I only have 20 minutes to eat and get to the other side of the hogar to babysit. There isn't time for her to be in hysterics and refusing to leave the classroom, yet again. This time it's because I can't find her Spanish notebook. I don't even teach her Spanish! It took 15 minutes alone just to get her to tell me that's why she is freaking out. At this point I can't leave her alone in the classroom to go ask for help but when I pick her up she screams, goes dead-weight, and hits and kicks.

When this internal dialogue is going on and as it replays in my mind, over and over, I feel selfish. Nearly every sentence has "I" in it. I'm making it all about me. I know this. Still, I don't always stop it. Sometimes I feel so tired and burnt out that I become very selfish with my thoughts. Sometimes I feel like I am the only one looking out for myself here so I need to stay selfish and fight for myself. They even warned us during orientation that ultimately there is no volunteer coordinator, we are our own advocates. Sometimes I don't use this advice enough, and sometimes I might even use it too much. 

Anyways, when I take the time to pull my selfish, exhausted head out of my butt, even just a tiny bit, I see that's probably how the kids feel a lot of times. They feel like they need to fight for themselves because no one else will. Even if that isn't true, the feeling is so very real. Yet when you're busy always keeping your hands up to throw punches, you block yourself from seeing that no one is trying to throw punches back....
*BAM* 
Yeah, that's the sound of life hitting me in the face telling me to take my own advice sometimes. Clearly I don't take on this perspective every time, and honestly it is even more rare for me as I'm struggling through this low-point, but I guess that's why I should sit down and reflect every once in a while...

Still, wearing the "Attachment Disorder" perspective glasses can be exhausting. Sometimes it feels like giant cinderblocks are attached to them, weighing me down, and I get tired of wearing them. So there are days when I just rip them off and run away half screaming, half taunting, "haha!" Thinking that I'm better off without them seemingly slowing me down, but that doesn't seem to be helpful or accurate. I'm learning, slowly but surely, that without these glasses my patience ceases to exist. So, although it takes more time and energy to seek for understanding, my patience and energy goes from full to empty in 0.56 seconds without it...  Life, you're such a little trickster!

I don't have a happy ending with some grand realization for this one but I'm learning bit by bit so hopefully next time I'll be further along. As for now I'm trying to remind myself that being in this position of struggle is still a blessing. It is from struggle that I will grow and be better, not just for myself, but for others.


(I thought about linking this back to the topic before about whether kids should be with their family given that the abuse is the reason for this attachment disorder in the first place. But I'm going to leave that one open for now. However, if you have any thoughts I'd love to hear them!)



Compassion for the Other Side

"Here is what we seek: a compassion that can stand in awe at what the poor have to carry rather than stand in judgement in how they carry it"

This quote has stuck with me over the past months. It describes how I feel when I think about the parents of the children at Amigos.

Well, most of the time, but there are some moments where it is very difficult. Sometimes it challenging to have compassion for those who have hurt the kids surrounding you, the kids who you are growing to love more and more every day. Sometimes it is difficult to have compassion for the parents because I just played scapegoat for a kid's latest meltdown which likely stems from the pain caused by their parents hurting them because they're all just trying to heal.

So, yes, it's easy to curse the parents for the pain they've caused these kids. But when I sit down and really think about it, I can't hate them. Ultimately, my heart just hurts for them. My heart hurts for them time and time again throughout every day. My heart breaks for them as I realize that they'll never get to experience their child the way they should. They'll never know the joy that comes from raising their own kid. My heart breaks even at the seemingly ordinary moments throughout the day...

His parents would fall in love with his run if they could see it. It's not even really a run... it's more like a one of a kind shuffle/gallop/skip move. Regardless of what it is, it's awesome.

Her parents have no clue that she can destroy anyone, adults included, at the Memory card game. She doesn't even cheat... I already checked... and checked again. And again because that's how many times she has beat me. 

His parents don't know that he has one of the most contagious laughters around. Or even if they know, they don't get to enjoy it day in and day out.

Her parents don't see that face she makes that can nearly always get her out of trouble because it grabs at your heart strings and doesn't let go. No matter how much you hate it. It's like some magical power she possesses. 

They don't have the privilege of being part of some of the most private areas of their kids' lives. They'll never have mini water fights as they bathe her before a fiesta. They aren't here to do her hair and pick out her outfit.

His parents don't get to watch him grow up and mature, slowly but surely, into an extremely helpful and generous young man.

Her parents don't know how careful they'd need to be as she's getting older. Someone is going to need to start beating the boys off with a stick pretty soon. She's growing into a beautiful, young, strong woman.

They'll never be the one he begs to tell him bedtime stories. They'll never know how creative he is when it's his turn to tell one. 

They'll never know how hard it is to hold in laughter when you hear him talking to himself as he tries to fall asleep. 

His parents aren't there to give him the "talk" after he's caught looking up images and videos a tad too graphic for computer class... (this still cracks me up)

They'll never know how incredible this kid is when it comes to puzzles. It is mind-blowing. Or his one little hip thrust move that he always does after he finishes the puzzle. This move cracks him up, even if no one else is laughing.

They'll never know the joy and warmth that would fill their heart as they rub his back to ease his restlessness when he can't sleep. 

Yet I know these things, among others, about THEIR child. 
This is what breaks my heart for those parents.

I can take guesses at some of the reasons these parents can't be with their children. Sometimes I don't even need to guess, because we are told the ugly truths of their past. In many cases it is beyond clear that these parents aren't fit to care for their kids. It is usually less clear though as to how the parents got to that point in life. Some reasons I can guess because they are more universal, but others I imagine may be more specific to what it is like living in Honduras. This is when I wish I could spend more time outside of Amigos to better understand the realities of living in Honduras. As much as I'd like to say I've learned all about the culture here, the truth is that I haven't. Amigos is like a bubble of its own, planted in rural Honduras. We can walk to a local village when we have time or for kids' birthdays but that only tells you so much. Still, I hope to find other ways to learn more about the lifestyle that surrounds me outside of ADJ. I hope this will also bring more understanding to the struggles I see inside of the Amigos gate. 

Until then, I pray for these parents. For strength against whatever demons they are battling that is preventing them from enjoying one of, if not the most, beautiful things in life. I cannot imagine the pain of having your child taken from you to live somewhere deemed more fit of a home. 


--------------------------------------------------------


Well, that's all I have for this post. For those of you who made it through the rambling, bless your soul, patience, and curiosity...or maybe it was out of sheer boredom? Either way, thank you for reading. If you have any questions, words of wisdoms, criticisms, or musings, please send them my way! 


Amor y abrazos,

Jillian

Sunday, September 13, 2015

Jobs!...Better late than never, right?

Yes, I’ve finally completed a new blog post...


Me, Friday after school,
 clearly ready for my weekend off.
This wouldn't have been possible without my weekend off, which I am spending in Copan right now. So thank you, Amigos and Copan. I'd also like to give thanks to the beautiful cafe that is providing the wifi for this post, an incredible view (see below) and delicious cheese. 
Cafe San Rafael, bless you and the cows from which your cheese is made.


Yes, this blog post is a great accomplishment, especially considering the number of documents currently cluttering my desktop titled “sadkjfh,” “meeehrrrg” and “blehhskjdfh” or something of that sort, all of which are unfinished blog drafts. None of them feel right. This one won’t either and I’m trying to accept the fact that it's impossible to capture this place in words and pictures. Each time I begin to write, I try to describe everything with the hopes that anyone who cares to read my ramblings will get at least a small, but real, taste of this place. But, eventually, I begin to hate nearly every line I've written because none of it does this place justice. At that point I shut my computer screen and get back to medical work or lesson planning or attend to the cheerful screaming I hear outside of my window (option 3 is my favorite).

So, here it goes… prepare for ramblings, tangents, typos, poor grammar, and mixture of pictures that don't always make sense in …3…2…1… BLAST OFF (yes, teaching pre-school is getting the best of me)


Job Assignments

Job 1: Medical Program Coordinator or something…

Depending on who you ask, you might hear that I am the “enfermera”, “doctora” (even though I repeatedly explain that I am not actually a nurse or a doctor), “encargada de medico” or some of the chiquitos just yell “UNA CURA, UNA CURA!” (“Band-Aid, Band-Aid!”). This all translates to me being in charge of the health and medical... everything? I’m still figuring it all out--stay tuned. So far it has included spending a great deal of time completely reorganizing and ferociously scrubbing down the medical office (I can thank my slight OCD for that), learning about the medical program that was built up tremendously last year thanks to a past volunteer, finding ways to improve the system, going to doctor appointments with the kids, and being the point person for any illness or injury that occurs.

When anyone isn’t feeling well, they either: (1) come in during my “office hours” from 6:30-7:30 am and 4:30-5:30 pm or (2) come to me during all hours of the day (this one is more common). Even if I’m in the volunteer house, where the kids are not allowed, they wait at the gate and yell, “Miss Jillian!” until someone responds. At times, the constant flood of people coming to you about a "problem" that is actually nothing, can become slightly annoying. Still, I'm on cloud 9 with this job. I’m especially excited for the opportunity to learn so much more about medical care as I help the children and adults here.  
After his bone popping out of his skin and months in an itchy, uncomfortable cast, this guy finally got his arm back! This is us on our way back from the doctor office, when I got to scratch his arm for a 5 hour card ride :). He is 13 years old and one of the beautiful children living at ADJ who has special needs. He challenges me in wonderful ways and cracks me up constantly. On a regular basis he manages to sprint into the medical office before I get a chance to shut the door. He is also one of the reasons the legos are the hardest toys to get to in the medical office and why I don't always get work done as quickly as I should. It's always more than worth it, though.
I could write multiple blog posts solely about this little munchkin. His extreme abundance of energy brings an endless amount of happiness and a hint of exhaustion to my days. Any day I don't hear, "Jillian! Jillian! Una cura!" followed by a giant hug, is a tad less joyful. I have so much love for him and his relentless arguments for why he always needs a ninja turtle bandaid. 
Here is one of the jovenes who, again, I could write several posts about. Here he is helping me clean the medical office. He also helps me tremendously with improving my Spanish and we talk about anything ranging from music, to religion, to medicine. He's extremely bright. I've never seen an 18 year old so willing to help in any and every way possible. Every month he puts hours upon hours into the birthday bulletin board, so it is decked out in themes like the ocean, outer space, and minions. Most days he goes from mopping the comedor floor, to helping kids, followed by working in agro, picking up random tasks, and ends half the nights of each month with turno (sleeping in one of the dorms with the kids--obviously the sleep you get is minimal). I'm very grateful for him and all he does.

Thus far there has been a range of injuries from fake crying and no visible injury to the motorcycle accident that occurred a few Sundays ago... 

(medical tangent time)... 
(Caution: if you don't like bloody photos, I advice you scroll fast after you finish this story)

It was a tad ironic that just the day or two before, the volunteers and I played a question game revolving around the most challenging issues for us thus far. At one point we had to choose between “not feeling qualified for my jobs” and something I can’t even remember at this point. I did not choose “not feeling qualified” but that’s exactly how I was feeling this past Sunday morning. I was woken up by one of the boys yelling for me, exclaiming someone fell off a motorcycle and it was an emergency. I ran to the front gate of the hogar to find a man (probably in his later 20s) and woman (around 18-19 years old) on the ground, neither of which I recognized. They were both beaten up with cuts and such but the worst of the injuries (unfortunately, but also thankfully) was the man’s knee. It was completely busted open with large pieces of flesh hanging from the sides, blood oozing down his leg, and his patella clearly visible. I looked back up to find a few of the adults from the hogar asking what I thought and what I could do. (At this point I would have switched my mind to “not feeling qualified” during our question game). Obviously in the states we call 911 or rush them to the hospital immediately. Even more obviously, that isn’t an option when you’re sitting on a bumpy dirt road outside of an hogar in rural Honduras and the closest hospital to care for these things is over an hour away. Still, my immediate reaction was to say he needed to be rushed to a doctor. Then, my developing reaction which takes into consideration what is realistic when living in rural Honduras, was to run to the medical office for any supplies I thought might help. I ended up cleaning his knee the best I could with water, covering it with non-stick gauze, wrapping it, and applying pressure. Luckily, this hogar is filled with incredible and caring people who continued to help in any way they could. I cleaned up some of the other cuts while others held umbrellas above the man and woman, fanned them (especially after the woman fainted more than once), continued to bring water, etc. After about an hour, a truck with family and friends of the man and woman arrived and we got him in the bed of the truck as carefully and comfortably as we could. Initially, some said they would have to amputate. However, the last we heard, he went in for an operation so hopefully they will not need to amputate! Please cross your fingers and keep this man and his family in your thoughts and prayers!

Someone managed to take this picture before I got there. You still can't see all of the damage done beneath his jeans, but it gives some idea of what his knee looked like.

...(end medical tangent)


Job 2: Assistant Preschool Teacher


Acto Civico at school every Monday

Monday through Friday at around 9:30am I make this beautiful walk from the hogar side (offices, living spaces, comedor, etc) to the school. 

Once I arrive, I open the classroom door to be greeted by 8 perfectly crazy, messy chiquitos running wild and one screaming bloody murder (we are working on it...). The next two hours are some of the best, and at times the most tiring, hours of my day. Monday through Friday our kiddos have two hours of class with the Honduran teachers in Spanish followed by 10 minutes of recess and then another two hours with Rachael (a fellow volunteer and main preschool teacher) and I in English. As you can imagine, the facial expressions of 3-5 year olds are hilarious when they don’t understand a word of you’re saying. Still, we’ve come a lonnnnng way since our first class...

(preschool tangent time…)
Before classes started all of the teachers participated in “academy,” which is basically a 45-minute practice run of your classes for the year. When it was time for Rachael and I to begin, we had no clue what we were about to walk into. We had just observed the Honduran teachers with them for 45 minutes and they were complete angels. But, apparently in the 10-minute break before our class, they conspired against us and created plan, “Destroy The Gringas!” Here’s a small glimpse into those 45 minutes: one kiddo biting my knee, as another is hitting everyone nearby and trying to jump into my lap, while I’m simultaneously trying to grab a chair from a different kiddo who is about to nail another little guy in the head. Yep. When it came time to review our class at the end of the day, all the other teachers could only say something along the lines of, “wow, well, uh, you’re both very very patient.” That day we found out preschool is definitely a marathon, not a race.
(end preschool tangent…)

By day 2 we managed to get all of our students into the classroom and by day 4 we only have one regular crier! She’s getting better every day, though. At least a couple days of every week still begin with her on the ground screaming as if we are literally torturing her to death. Then about 10 minutes in (3 on a good day) she puts her arms up for me to carry her. The crying still continues, of course, but usually goes down to a dull whimper. At first it continued for the entire hour (she only comes for 2 hours instead of 4 because she is 2½) but recently we’ve been making huge leaps! She’s started to color and dance with me! Granted, we still have our slipups like our milk fiasco the other week. As she was doing her usual “repeatedly slam all four limbs against the ground” routine, she managed to break off the top of her milk cup, sending milk all over her hair, body, the surrounding area of the room, and my jeans. Apparently throwing milk all over the room is exhausting because after I cleaned her up she decided it was nap-time in my arms. The worst part is, I can’t even be upset—I’m incapable of it. Her cuteness beats out my annoyance or frustration every dang time.

So, that’s just a little insight to my job where I get to simply play with and love on a bunch of adorable kiddos for a couple hours every day. J
Here are our three youngest chiquitos who only come for the first hour. For that hour I'm usually chasing the middle guy around trying to reduce the havoc he wreaks, while getting the little cutie to stop crying (right). The kiddo on the left is a hilarious, precious little angel. When I spend time with him, it's like a bit of a break. Regardless, I'm usually always laughing with them, at them, or at myself. 

Movie Friday!
These are from Día del Niño, or Children's Day, which includes a big celebration of games, food, piñatas, and cake. Here I'm with one of my kiddos. She is amazing. She is arguably the smartest in the class and has an incredible, sneaky sense of humor. Getting to see her personality come out has been such a blessing and I can't wait to continue my journey with her this year.

It's impossible to get a "normal" photo of all the kids together.

Miss Rachael trying to get them to stop meowing so they can finish the book...

Job 3: Science Lab Teacher

The school here at Amigos is more complicated than those in the states. Here, there is BECA (Bilingual Education for Central America), Educatodos (a Honduran program), a few special education classes, and kinder (the name for preschool here). 

BECA runs from Kindergarten through 4th grade and each year an additional grade is added. It includes both kids from Amigos and the surrounding neighborhood. These students are taught by BECA volunteers, who are usually from the States, except for History and Spanish, which are taught by Honduran teachers. I was told that initially there was a stigma against the kids at Amigos. The neighbors refused to send their kids to school with those from an hogar. Now, after a few parents took a chance, there’s a waitlist for neighbors trying to get their kids into this school. From what I’ve gathered, it is an amazing school, especially when compared to what is typical in Honduras.

Educatodos, on the other hand, is composed solely of kids from Amigos. There are three levels (niveles): 1, 2, and 3, which are supposed to align with 1st and 2nd, 3rd and 4th, and 5th and 6thgrades. This isn’t always the case because it is much more complicated than that. In level 1, for instance, there are only 6 kids but the ages range from 8-14 and the abilities are equally, if not more, different. These kids are in Educatodos, rather than BECA, for a variety of reasons. Some because their behavior got them expelled from BECA, others because they came to Amigos at a later age without ever going to school, and/or parts of their past has inhibited their ability to learn at the pace of BECA, etc. These kids have a special place in my heart. These are the kids I prepare science labs for each week—one lab a week for each nivel.

There are definitely more difficulties that seem to come along with teaching Educatodos, rather than BECA. There are days when they are wonderful, and days when absolutely nothing seems to work.

I’m one of the many US citizens who has a mile long list of complaints about the United States’ education system. It’ll be very interesting to see if and how my views change after my time here. The volunteers and I come back from school everyday and share our moments of joy, laughter, and complete frustration. Inevitably, we run into similar struggles and together we try to distinguish between what “issues” are just from working with Educatodos students, versus cultural differences. For instance, the concept of critical thinking is so foreign to many of them. They know how to copy notes off a board and make them look nice (for the most part...some of level 1 is a different story). This combination gives us a classroom of kids who relentlessly question for you to give them the answer. I’m sure soon enough they are going to get tired of my “Yo no se. Usted es muy intelegente. Escribe que usted piensa.” The other week, one of my favorite moments was when one of my students in level 1 tried to grab my answer sheet. When I asked what he was doing, he replied very nonchalantly, “para copiar” as if I would totally understand and hand it over. It cracked me up.

Additionally, we’ve been warned that oftentimes teachers here in Honduras focus on the appearance of work rather than its accuracy. This was a challenge when we were setting up our interactive lab notebooks together. Multiple students were almost brought to tears when I told them they couldn't start over just because they didn't like the color crayons they used to decorate it. It was hard to not laugh at a 15 year old boy begging me for a new sheet to color. 

Amidst all the difficulties with Educatodos, I am extremely excited about these lab classes. Not only because it’s science and I’m a nerd, but because this is the first time they are offering a lab class like this. An awesome Honduran teacher gives the science lectures during the week, while I teach lab on Thursdays and Fridays (in Spanish.. yeah, it's entertaining). But the way I see it is I got lucky because I get to be the fun hands-on class and naturally, I get to push them to workout their critical thinking muscles. My creativity is also challenged as I create labs each week with few resources and little space to do them. Being a teacher here is a challenge, and one that I love.

Level 3 lab. Competition to see who can make an animal cell with the food provided and best explain the function of each part.


Making Interactive Lab Notebooks
One of my very lovable yet challenging level 1 students.





















Side Jobs:

Aside from medical and teaching, we all have random side jobs, which continue to pop-up along the way. Every Monday I attend a padrino/madrina meeting or I babysit the 15-20 children who come home from school early (preschool, kinder, and special ed). This is followed by tutoring a few middle/high school boys in English for 2.5 hours. We also fill in wherever we are needed such as “field trips” like the other weekend when I got to go with one of the boy dorms to the movie theater in San Pedro Sula.



And here's a few random photos... 


I was told early on that this place is a place of miracles. Each day I understand more and more what that means and how accurate that is.
This little man. He's a wild one and he'll steal your heart so fast.
The little guys love to draw car tracks in the dirt and play with their carritos
This little munchkin again. It's nance season so the kids are constantly running around gathering nances in any container they can find. 
When the rat infestation is getting to you, just call in the jovenes... they helped us kill a couple but we are now up to 7 dead!!
The calm before the storm of Monday afternoon babysitting :)
One of my other kinder kiddos. She's the oldest and we are trying to shake her hitting habit. I have to hand it to her though, she's really sneaky about it so all we usually end up seeing is the aftermath of someone crying. She's a wonderfully beautiful and unbelievably caring girl and I'm so happy I get to spend this year with her regardless of the high percentage chance that she'll give me gray hairs by the end. :)
The back of the volunteer (middle and top levels) and visitor's (bottom level) house. This used to be the chapel.. note the cross at the top 
Some of the piggies in agro. They are supposed to be our Christmas feast this year but I hope I can save one to keep as a pet... If you have good ideas for how to sneak a pig around for 6 months, hit me up.
Life's hard in the medical office when you're vertically challenged and want some water...