Join with me as I live and learn in this beautiful country. I would love to share my experience with you :)
Friday, 22 November 2013
The Great Trek
The Final Hooray
The week and a half between safari and when we left Pietermaritzburg was such a weird time. All of the other students were at service sites all day (community service), and the nurses either had no class or just half days sometimes. This lead to a weird mix of no-homework-at-all days and homework-all-day days. In class, we had many different presentations about all sorts of different ethically debatable topics, had to plan and execute a community health project, and were assigned the task of picking and writing our senior seminar papers. While these things were time consuming, our time was not filled with these things and so we found other ways to spend our time. Very fun ways to spend our time. The first thing we did (as nurses) was encourage the other students. We set up a slip-n-slide for them one day when they got home from service sites, set up "service site olympics" (which actually went MUCH better than expected and everyone had so much fun), made welcome home signs for them on their last day of service and cheered them home, and made a final video of different pictures from the trip (as well as an extra bit of "what the nurses really do when everyone is gone all day"). It was so much fun to be able to encourage our brothers and sisters during this time when they were so emotionally involved and try to celebrate their time there.
One thing that continually surprises me about South Africans are their hospitality. I have been so blessed by the way that people are so open to welcoming us into their homes. I went with a group of us to a braai that we had been invited to where we just hung out and watched their beloved rugby and got a sense of what it would be like to be 20 something and living in PMB. We also were invited to the home of one of the doctors that we had worked with. Her and her husband were the sweetest and cutest couple ever and were more than generous to us during our time.
We did many more fun things this week and a half. I went to the airport to pick up the president of APU who blessed us so much by coming to South Africa to spend about a week with us just to hang out. He is loved by all of APU and it was such a treat to have him with us. We were also joined by many other APU faculty and staff who wanted to check out our campus and life in South Africa. It was nice to have a little bit of home so far away. We also filled our time with bonfires, trips to the tattoo parlor (don't worry - I didn't get any tattoos), cliff jumping, sushi and night hikes. Because we all knew that we were leaving so soon, it was like a mad rush to do anything and everything we could so we would not miss out on anything in PMB!
If there is anything that I will remember from this week and a half, it will be how much I bonded with so many people. Out of any of my time here, this week was the time when I built the closes relationships with people. I think it was a mixture of having more time because we weren't in class all day and realizing that I will never be in this same circumstance with these same people and therefore I need to make all I can of my present circumstance. That has hit hard and I think that it has impacted the way that I am living. So many serendipitous encounters and deep conversations that lead to deeper friendships and new bonds. My last few weeks in Pietermaritzburg were fantastic and I am looking forward to Cape Town!!
(I didn't take any pictures this week - sorry!! I was too busy having fun :) There will be some on the next blog, though!!)
One thing that continually surprises me about South Africans are their hospitality. I have been so blessed by the way that people are so open to welcoming us into their homes. I went with a group of us to a braai that we had been invited to where we just hung out and watched their beloved rugby and got a sense of what it would be like to be 20 something and living in PMB. We also were invited to the home of one of the doctors that we had worked with. Her and her husband were the sweetest and cutest couple ever and were more than generous to us during our time.
We did many more fun things this week and a half. I went to the airport to pick up the president of APU who blessed us so much by coming to South Africa to spend about a week with us just to hang out. He is loved by all of APU and it was such a treat to have him with us. We were also joined by many other APU faculty and staff who wanted to check out our campus and life in South Africa. It was nice to have a little bit of home so far away. We also filled our time with bonfires, trips to the tattoo parlor (don't worry - I didn't get any tattoos), cliff jumping, sushi and night hikes. Because we all knew that we were leaving so soon, it was like a mad rush to do anything and everything we could so we would not miss out on anything in PMB!
If there is anything that I will remember from this week and a half, it will be how much I bonded with so many people. Out of any of my time here, this week was the time when I built the closes relationships with people. I think it was a mixture of having more time because we weren't in class all day and realizing that I will never be in this same circumstance with these same people and therefore I need to make all I can of my present circumstance. That has hit hard and I think that it has impacted the way that I am living. So many serendipitous encounters and deep conversations that lead to deeper friendships and new bonds. My last few weeks in Pietermaritzburg were fantastic and I am looking forward to Cape Town!!
(I didn't take any pictures this week - sorry!! I was too busy having fun :) There will be some on the next blog, though!!)
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