What can I say? These last eight weeks have been marvelous. I’ve had my ups and downs, both physically and emotionally, but as all things go, everything will work out in its own time. I’ve been inundated with a whole host of reflection activities: we had to compile a bunch of workshops that effectively drew on our eight weeks experience here, reviewing what we had learned as astute observers to our eager-to-learn asesoras, we have a bunch of surveys to complete (which reminds me that I have a particularly lengthy one to complete from Duke after this blog post) and everyone, from asesoras to my home stay family, has been asking me when I’m leaving and whether they’ll see me again. To which I respond, pessimistically but realistically, that no, I will probably never see them again. I was never good at goodbyes - both at giving them but also at walking away from people knowing that this will be the last time I’ll see them.
The national conference today went swimmingly well. We had some hiccups; for example, I waited on a street corner for close to an hour to pick up any asesoras getting off buses, and seeing not a single green shirt (the standard uniform of our asesoras), walked back to find out that every single one of them had managed to sneak past our defenses and get to the Palacio Mundial by themselves. One lady insisted on painting her nails during workshops and fell asleep a few times. But by and large, I was happy with the level of engagement all the attending asesoras demonstrated. Then again, only the most dedicated ones would have come to the conference, which is unfortunate because some of our weaker asesoras could have really used the help. I presented a bit on the technical information of how to use the luz solar, a spiel which I’ve delivered a hundred times over and was able to lengthen and present without much difficulty. Our spanish was on target, the energy level was there: I only hope that the content was truly helpful for the asesoras. The entire purpose of the (first-ever!) national conference was to get everyone in the same place so that they could share experiences, see that they were part of something bigger than just the two or three asesoras they worked with, and generally improve due to the interchange of information. On that front, I think that we succeeded.
A few of us then headed out to Kathy’s, which is a waffle-breakfast all day kind of joint, a misleading tag because it was NOT open all day. In fact, it closed at 2 PM, which is approximately the time that we arrived at the restaurant. Heartbroken (because Kathy’s was on my bucket list here in Granada) we headed over to Garden Cafe, where after ingesting an avocado BLT, I felt almost happy that Kathy’s had been closed due to the astronomical level of deliciousness that was Garden Cafe. For less than four dollars, I inhaled a sandwich and potato salad that was probably better than the vast majority of sandwich and soup places that I’ve ever been to. Tomorrow it’s brunch again at the chocolate museum (I may not go, because I’ve been there twice), some swimming and then a straight out marathon until 4 AM when Tim and Tess and Santa come to pick us up for the last time.
We had to eat quickly, which was not a problem because the food was absolutely delicious, because at 3 we had a despedida, which was absolutely beautiful even though my home stay family couldn’t make it. I later found out that they had a perfectly legitimate excuse, because family they hadn’t seen in a really long time suddenly called, out of the blue, and they had to go have lunch with them until four, longer than they had expected. Edgard apparently kept tugging on his mother’s sleeve to remind her that it was three; I can just picture his wide-eyed look of innocence and concern. The boy’s so sweet - he hasn’t been corrupted by the world yet. Kidding.
Anyways, at the despedida, Tim, Santa and Tess all said some very kind words about all of us and gave us a personal story, a certificate from our Spanish school, and a framed picture of us in action. Tim chose to tell the story of how I threw up at a campaign in front of a startled crowd of customers interested in a stove and then ran back inside to resume the campaign. In other words, a story that I wanted as few people to know is now known by everyone. Great. However, Tim redeemed himself by showing us an absolutely beautiful video of a collection of photographs we had all sent in of our eight weeks here, both at work and at play. It was amazing to see each photo, each of which brought back a flood of memories of every activity we had done here. Although these eight weeks flew by, I can remember each and every one of the places we stayed at, and I hope I’ll be able to have these memories forever, or perhaps add new ones in the future should I ever return to Nicaragua. It is definitely in my plans to travel Central America at some point in the future.
This may be my last blog post; if so, it was an honor to see so many people reading my blog everyday. Thanks for caring guys! I can’t wait to see all of you (ambiguous pronouns, yay!) in less than three days. I hope that you’ll find me much the same person that I was two months ago, but I also hope, at the same time, that I’ve changed significantly in immensely positive ways as well. As the Nicaraguans say, ba pues!