2 Week Summer Special - India: Alumni Advice

We have a record number of volunteers heading to India for our 2 week summer special programs for high school students. While the farthest I went on my high school summer vacation was to Chicago it is surely a sign of the times as well as my age that younger and younger volunteers are going further and further afield in the world for volunteering and community service and this is a great thing! Zanique went to India with us last year on a 2 week summer special program and wrote in with some really helpful advice and some things to expect. Do any other alumni have some advice for the new volunteers in India this year? - Will


Volunteers with some children

By Zanique Albert

My experience with Projects Abroad in India was one of the best in my life.
I learned more than I ever thought I would, saw some amazing places and
things, enjoyed some wonderful food and returned home with new friends. I
was lucky to have such a terrific experience, and there are some things I
would recommend to anyone traveling there now.

I have seen many impoverished places and come face to face with incredibly
hard-to-stomach situations, that said, India was still shocking and
difficult to adjust to. I would recommend that any volunteer keep an open
mind and embrace the experience. Most likely you will be with other
volunteers adjusting to the shock as well- so you aren’t alone!


Zanique with a patient

I felt incredibly safe the whole time, though the program does a wonderful
job of transporting volunteers and giving them instructions on proper
behavior for Indian culture, I found that one of the more proactive ways of
feeling safe was wearing traditional clothing. Wearing the conservative
clothing was comfortable in the heat, respectful everywhere I went and a
good conversation starter. I have blonde hair and blue eyes, so it helped me
fit in too! One item I couldn’t have gotten by with out was a shawl/scarf. I
also ended up letting my roommate borrow one a lot. It was great for
covering your mouth on a dusty rickshaw ride, for covering yourself in
temples and in public, and for shielding spontaneous monsoons.

The doctors gain a respect for you if you express interest in their lives
and their profession, and in turn let you in on more experiences. Many
people I worked with invited me and other volunteers into their homes to
meet their children and have chai or dinner. So make sure to be friendly
because that is a wonderful opportunity!


Volunteers on a weekend excursion

In conclusion, my experience was wonderful, after 9 weeks in India ( 4 with
projects abroad) I was ready to return home to my family. Being away from
the usual comforts gets tedious, and though I was ready to return, I would
go back in a heartbeat. Best wishes in your travels!

The Peruvian Jungle On Film

Frank Seidel, the Director of our French Recruitment Office, recently returned from Peru and put together a fantastic video featuring our Conservation Program in Peru. Even if you don’t speak French the amazing images of the Amazonian jungle and of our many different projects speak for themselves. Anyone else think Frank should submit this to the Cannes Film Festival?

Gap Year: The arguments for taking a Gap Year are on your side

Although summer isn’t even in full swing yet, I know a lot of students are already in the process of contemplating taking a gap year. I know I wish I had the opportunity to take one when I was younger and Dr. Peter Slowe who has been organizing them for over 15 years is going to tell you why you should take advantage of a gap year when you can. For people who have already been on a gap year, how was your experience? - Will

By Dr. Peter Slowe

The Gap Year opportunity comes once in a lifetime. When else will you have a whole year with almost no pressure?

What about when you’ve graduated and urgently need a job? Not a great time to take a long break.

When you get bored with your job and want a career break? There’ll be the mortgage, the missed promotion, your partner, both kids.

When you retire? OK, if you live that long and you don’t have a heart condition – and you don’t have to work till you’re 82 because there are no pensions.

Just take a Gap Year now! Start dreaming and planning. The year is yours. No parent, teacher or bank manager has the right to take it away from you. The opportunity simply won’t come round again. Miss it and that’s that.

There are quite a number of arguments you might have to face down when you decide to have a gap year.

“It’s just a middle-class rite of passage”. So what? Most people are middle-class – and besides, what’s wrong with a rite of passage?

“You’ll forget how to study”. Why should you? Are you going to forget how to go to the pub or forget your name? We’re talking about a year, not three decades.

Then there are the tedious arguments – but they are all on your side too. Most university departments now think a Gap Year is a good thing because it reduces drop-out rates. UCAS, most vice-chancellors and a whole spread of the great and good have all issued statements at one time or another saying a Gap Year is a Good Thing because of the extra experience and maturity it brings.

These are all important arguments, but there is something else, something more difficult to argue in public but no less valid than any other part of the debate. It is the intrinsic value of the gap year. Even if it couldn’t be justified as a career-move or a CV-builder (though it will probably be both of these anyway), it has worth as and of itself. It’s like justifying the study of history or the classics, which have their own real value. They enhance life. So does a Gap Year. It is the right thing to do and you don’t have to justify it any more. Go for it!

LANDS END TO JOHN O’GROATS

Rich and his bike
Rich and his trusty stead

By Richard Clowes

Starting on Sunday 1st June I’ll be cycling 1,000 miles from Lands End to John O’Groats (the southern tip to the northern tip of Great Britain) to raise money for Addis Ababa Safe House.

Every £150 Pounds I raise pays for an Ethiopian child to be brought in off the streets and given basic housing, food and education for a year.

You can read more about the project and see daily updates and photos of the trip at: http://richardclowes.blogspot.com/

Any sponsorship you can give will be matched by Projects Abroad so all will be greatly appreciated. Thanks to Peter for Projects Abroad’s support.

Rich in Ethiopia
Rich in Ethiopia

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