At
 almost every point in my life I have had at least one thing that I’m 
good at. That is, until Peace Corps. In Peace Corps, I started feeling 
completely incompetent. It seemed that I was failing at even the most 
basic
parts of my life. I no longer knew how to wash dishes, wash my clothes, 
kill bats (yes, that became a basic part of life), or sweep my house. 
When doing these basic skills, I was openly critiqued and laughed at. 
Frequently, while doing a task, I would be told
I was doing it incorrectly and it would be taken away from me so that I 
could see how it was really supposed to be done. I was usually not given
 back whatever I was doing until it was completely finished. This sounds
 like a nice way to get my laundry done by
someone else, but it's not a great way for a hands-on learner like 
myself to learn to do it myself. 
Additionally, there 
was only one to do EVERYTHING. There was only one way to wash a bowl, 
clean my socks, hang up my clothes, and even wear my clothes. If I were 
not doing it in this specific way (down to the way I
held my hands), I mine as well not be doing it at all. I even had 
someone strip off my pangi (wrap-around skirt, with very little on 
underneath!) to re-wrap it the right way. As an independent, strong, 
self-sufficient woman in her late 20s, this was difficult.
I was reduced to the status of a child, and often treated as one. 
And these were just 
the parts of my basic existence that I seemed to be incompetent at. I 
also seemed to be incompetent when it came to why I was supposed to be 
in Suriname. I was supposed to be in this tiny village
in the jungles of South America to DO something. The only problem was, 
what was that something supposed to be? Peace Corps Volunteers typically
 have a hard time when they realize that they will not be 
single-handedly building an orphanage, or solving village-wide
issues of malnutrition. Most volunteers believe that in 27 months we can
 move to a new country, learn a completely new language, become 
assimilated into a new culture and community, and then start and finish a
 meaningful and sustainable large-scale project.
Typically, that's just not going to happen. My expectations upon 
starting my service were a bit lower because my father was a volunteer 
and I knew a bit more about the realities of service than most. This 
didn't truly prepare me for the realities, however.
Trying to match up my own skills and interests with my village's 
interests and motivations was extremely difficult. My village had a very
 different idea of what my role was in the village. I think the first 14
 or so months in my village were just spent trying
to convince them that I would never be showing up with a truck full of 
gifts. I'm getting a bit off-track with the difficulties with finding a 
project.The point is that between being unable to perform the most basic
 tasks, to being lost as to my role in the
village, I was left feeling extremely inadequate and incompetent. This 
weighed very heavily on me. 
I'm amazed at how 
differently I feel about myself now that I am home. I'm back in school, 
and if I can brag a little, I'm totally rocking at it. It's so rewarding
 to be really good at something again. I've also recently
bought a road bike and started pushing myself with biking, and I'm 
finding that I'm kind of good at it! I think it's so important to have 
something in your life that makes you proud of yourself. To get 
completely off the subject, that's why I think the arts
and sports in the schools are so important. Many students do not excel 
in the traditional subjects. But many are completely sustained by their 
art or music class. To feel that they have something in their life that 
they truly excel at is so important. Anyway,
that's my rambling thoughts on my own abilities and lack-there-of. 

 
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