After more than two years, in two weeks I’m going back home,
but in many ways I am starting over, leaving my home. My life back in the U.S. is such an extreme
contrast to my life here, it’s difficult to imagine them blending at all, being
able to retain any aspect of my life here.
I’m leaving my thatched hut that has been my home for the past two
years, leaving my host family, friends and neighbors, my community, to jump
back into a world that they can’t even imagine.
Where KFC is no longer the finest dining option and every meal (actually
no meal) includes papa. Rationing water,
carrying buckets from the river will no longer effect my every decision regarding
washing, cooking and drinking. Communication
will no longer be a daily struggle, but neither will there be the same rewards
of connecting with someone. Farm animals
will no longer be a topic in most of my conversations. And gone will be the childrens' voices that I
have gotten to know so well, calling my name.
And no longer will everyone I pass greet me, asking me where I am going
and where I am from. I will go back to anonymity. Back to a place where there is no real
community. I’m very sad, and yet
excited. To see my family and friends
that I grew up with again after so long away.
To eat the food I’ve been craving but denied for the past two years.
But it’s odd to think of me as being back in the U.S. I’ve changed, been stretched and shaped to
fit this new culture and way of life, my new home. And the changed me probably won’t fit easily
back into my old life. But the U.S. is
home and no matter how much I adapt or integrate, it will always be where I
come from, haeso ke kae.
I am so lucky, going back to a great program at Cornell and
a place that I love. And supportive
friends who kind of know what I’ve gone through and help me readjust. But what if I have changed too much? I’m worried about being resentful for all the
Americans that are blind to the rest of the world and don’t realize the
benefits they have. The mindless wastefulness and the sense of selfish
entitlement that bothered me even before I had experienced this way of life. The life of just getting by, that is about
the community rather than the individual.
I’ve heard that when a Peace Corps volunteer goes back, it almost
feels like you’ve never left. The past
two years seem to disappear, so far removed and so far away, almost like it
never happened at all. Except that you
no longer fit in. You see a side of
things that is invisible to others, that keeps you apart from your friends and
family, who love you but won’t want to hear about Lesotho in every
conversation. All of this makes me pretty
nervous about my return. And thinking of
saying goodbye to my host family, who have been such an integral part of my
daily life for the past two years, gets me all choked up. And without any resources there isn’t much
chance of them being able to keep in touch at all. This really is goodbye.
But mostly I’m excited, to once again be on the move and
start a new chapter of my life.