Thursday, August 28, 2014

All Work and No Play… Does it Truly Make You Dull??

This post that you are about to read diverges a little from my previous posts in that I’d like to move momentarily away from the subjects of language, culture and religion to illustrate what life is like as a Peace Corps volunteer.

Someone close to me asked me on the phone the other day, “You seem to be really loving it there - do you just feel like you are always on vacation?”

I had to subdue my initial guttural reaction which was to burst out with a high and mighty, “HA!”, the product of my feeling something between amusement and insulted at such an insinuation.

I do not feel like I am on vacation every day.

I feel like I am at work every day.

All day.

Every day.

Some of this, I know, is self-birthed, self-nurtured, self-inflicted pressure. I do not have an office, set hours or a direct supervisor who hands me a finite list of tasks to complete and as such, the line between work time-place and living time-space is blurred, left to be interpreted by Peace Corps volunteers like myself in our own unique situations.  For me personally, when I am without a person or structure that tells me when I should work and when I should play, when I am given the choice, I go to work.  I hold myself to high standards. There are so many things I want to accomplish and so I need to do lots and lots of to-do lists.

Side Note: Not all Peace Corps volunteers share this particular disposition. Many, in fact, do not know how to push themselves when they are not pushed and thus they go coasting along, never faster than allowed by the subtle slope of time. But contrary to an apocryphal understanding of what Peace Corps volunteers do stemming from stories of 1960s-70s Peace Corps volunteers who more or less got dropped off in the bush somewhere to hang out and sing Kumbaya for two years, Peace Corps has evolved significantly as an organization along with the role and work of the volunteers.  Today (and probably to some extent through the 1960s-1970s as well – I don’t mean to entirely discredit the service of these generations of pioneering volunteers) there are a lot of go-getters who are doing a lot of really difficult, important and fascinating work.

What is true for all Peace Corps volunteers though, regardless of their natural disposition towards a work-play balance, is the nature of the job itself.

Every day you wake up and go to bed on-duty. You must dress appropriately, greet appropriately, act appropriately and eat appropriately.  If you go to your place of work that day, you likely spend the day dreaming and scheming and planning and (inshahallah) doing whatever your community needs and wants you to do – like you would at home except with a cap for cultural awareness and flexibility for navigating unreliable logistics.  But as soon as you get off, you are not off-duty.  You may still have dreaming and scheming and planning and doing of your own to do for future projects or current projects with different work partners.  When you tire of that you have cultural integration to work on. You may get nights and weekends and really hot or rainy afternoons off formal work but informal work is never complete.  There are people you must go sit and visit with from time to time – important people like the village chief, neighborhood chiefs, religious leaders, various old men, and institutional administrators as well as family, extended family, extra-extended family, friends and neighbors.  There are festivities at which you must make an appearance - funerals, weddings, baptisms, holidays, etc.  And don’t forget language (or languages in my case).  Maybe you make a point of turning language study into work by sitting down with a book or making flash cards.  However, even when you don’t study so ceremoniously you will find that everything you try to do in village that involves other people constitutes a (sometimes exhausting) lesson in language comprehension and utilization; communicating with people and practicing language are one in the same.

Top all this off with 100-plus degree heat, 80-100% humidity, spotty cell phone reception, unreliable electricity, mosquitoes galore, spiders bigger than my fist, chronic GI issues, reoccurring skin infections, sweat on sweat on sweat, (often) tasteless and nutrient-lacking food, having to do laundry in a bucket and wiping your butt with your hand in lieu of toilet paper and the workload get seemingly a little heavier still.

It is only at our Peace Corps regional house, a 1-acre oasis of bare knees, Mexican food, luke-warm beer, a real-ish shower (cold water only and it is outdoors) and English language, that we find ourselves truly off-duty.

But it is very far away.  Travel between my hut and the Peace Corps house in my regional capital takes a minimum of 1-hour of travel time (if you are blessed to be free of mechanical issues) plus 1 to 3 hours spent waiting for a car to arrive and fill up with enough passengers to leave.  And many volunteers’ sites are even further from their respective regional houses than I am.

Plus, volunteers like myself cannot afford to go there often, both because of our meager monthly Peace Corps stipend and because we have so many other things to do in village.

And so, I work A LOT.

Fortunately, and perhaps necessarily for purposes of sustainability, I love my job.

Recently I co-authored an article for an internal Peace Corps publication to introduce the new stage (aka the newest cohort of volunteers to enter the country including myself) to the rest of the Peace Corps Senegal community.  In said article I described the Peace Corps experience as a:

…preposterously paramount, fantastically fool-hearted, wontedly formidable but (inshahallah) never indomitable, grueling, gratifying, marvelous fortuity...

And while my primary aim in writing such an alliteration-happy list of oxymoronical hyperboles was to capture the reader’s attention, I do truly believe the statement to be true.

Every day is an undertaking for the “fantastically foolhearted”, every day an adventure.

I love that the most reliable way to get to a meeting on time is to hitch-hike with Malian truck drivers who (for my benefit?) play Phil Collins’ In The Air Tonight and go bananas when I break out the air-drums for the big steel drum solo.

I love that because my work is not defined for me I get the opportunity to define my own work. I get to choose the projects that interest me – malaria, HIV, typhoid...

I love that in the process of hammering out details of a visit by cervical cancer researchers to my district hospital I get to hear (in French) about the midwife’s life-altering trip to the US, her all-consuming adoration of Little Rock, Arkansas (huh?), and how she serendipitously found herself sitting in Bill Clinton’s chair on her birthday.

I love that working in a resource-poor environment demands a certain resourcefulness, a certain scrappiness, and a certain creativity in devising solutions to problems.  We can’t just buy our way out of things; we have to find back-doors and forge new paths.

I love that on my walk to work I run into 10-foot-long poisonous snakes with fangs like daggers (is love maybe not the right word here?).

I love that there is an utter lack of limpidity.  While at times the labyrinth-like obscurity in effecting every-day tasks may be harrowing, boredom is never a worry.

So when I get in bed each night, succumbing to the languor settling in after a long day hard at work, I know I am in the right place. I know that this is truly a “marvelous fortuity” and that later in life I will realize how “preposterously paramount” this experience has been, even if I end up spending two whole years in a row at work.


And maybe someday I’ll write a blog post where I actually tell you about what I actually do for work (lol)…

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.