Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Lessons Learned: A PG Narrative

I was recently asked to describe how my experience abroad has impacted my self-understanding, maturity and appreciation of cultural differences, I quite literally do not know where to start. My exposure to other cultures and customs as been a part of my history for as long as I can remember. In high school  I lived and worked in Malawi, Africa; Córdoba, Argentina; and Agua Prieta Mexico, and as a little girl I spent time living with my family on Native American reservations in the United States. However, it was markedly later that I first took ownership of these experiences as an individual. When I moved away from home, my experiences suddenly became entirely self-directed. Each connection I made, each language barrier I overcame was completely dependent on the decisions I myself made.

This began with a Birthright trip to Israel. It was a disaster. Not that one can really complain about a government funded trip, but the ten days I spent on the trip was nowhere near as enlightening or enjoyable as I expected. I realized that travelling with a horde of other students from the United States was about as far away from cultural immersion as possible, and it was virtually impossible to learn anything of cultural substance in their company. With this in mind, I moved my return trip back several weeks, determined to gain more from the opportunity granted to me. I left the group at the airport. While my fellow students scrambled to their gaits, excited to fly home with stories full of drunken escapades and hook-ups, I stood alone in the airport. I had no idea where to go or what to do. I just knew I needed to do something. It was, I would imagine, much like being dropped in the middle of the ocean, treading water and knowing, deep down, that the only answer was to choose a direction and start to swim.

Alone, suitcase in hand, I made my way to an internet cafe and tracked down a backpackers hostel in Tel Aviv. I met incredible people there, from all over the world, who had fascinating travel stories and phenomenally different ideas about the world. It made me crave my own stories, my own connections with places and people from all over. It made me want to transform all the spaces on the map into reality—smells, tastes, noises, smiles…and thus started my transformation. I realized that, as enjoyable as it was to share beers with backpackers from all over the world, it was, in reality, little better than a tour with my American companions. Granted, these were still people with drastically different cultures and backgrounds, but the more time I spent with them, the more I felt like I was missing out on the culture of the actual place I was in. I began to notice that locals are the very last people likely to stay in a hostel. So I made friends with the Israeli workers. They told me places to explore, their favourite restaurants and cafés, and took me on walks to their favourite places in the city. By night I did my best to learn from the other hostel guests, but by day I carved out my own time to try my absolute best to explore the area through the eyes of an Israeli. I sat and tried to soak up not just the beautiful sights, but the sweat and dirt, I tried to sync my footsteps with the city’s pulse.

Eventually I tracked down long lost family members who lived near Haifa and stayed with them for a few days. They brought me yet another glimpse of the reality of daily life, something which, despite my best efforts, was always just out of reach. I learned about how they lived—always on edge, always waiting for the next bombing or friend returned home from duty in a casket. They taught me about patriotism and sacrifice, about what it means to have a citizen army, where each and ever member of the population has a vested interest in national affairs…affairs which made me realize I knew nothing of the other side. So, a few checkpoints later, I wound up deep in the West Bank. It was a gesture more than anything, but I was quickly overwhelmed by the hospitality and kindness of the Palestinians, I began to learn about their insatiable desire to share their side of the story.

I realized I knew nothing.

I remember sitting under the desert stars in Jordan, the place I trekked to next, my head aching from the sheer beauty as I tried to make sense of all the ideas in my heart. It was a culmination of the history feeding the conflict from both Israeli and Palestinian sides, the kindness and cruelty of people, regardless of where they or their parents were from. I felt so small and so lost, but somehow, puzzling through everything simultaneously made me feel far larger and stronger than circumstance. Larger and stronger than I have ever felt before.

When I came back to school, I had a much clearer direction in life and in my education. I knew coming in that I wanted to study something international, and had begun work on an independent major focusing on a constructivist approach to international relations my freshman year, however my time in the Middle East gave me more focus. I specified my desire to examine cultures without a state and ethno-nationalism. All of my research projects and essays began to revolve around this topic whenever applicable (and a few times when it was not). During this process, I began research on one of the most famous examples of ethno-nationalism in the world today: The Basque and Catalan independence movements in northern Spain. This was the major driving factor behind my decision to study abroad there sophomore year.

Characteristic of my luck, two of my flights were delayed on the way, and I arrived to my apartment in the Eixample district of Barcelona exhausted, sick and late. I was disappointed that all of my housemates were from the US and none of them spoke or had any desire to speak Spanish. They were clearly there on a nightlife tour, with no interest in learning anything about the local culture. To each their own. I chose to distance myself from the study abroad program as much as possible, so as to avoid another Birthright. This decision was fundamental to my experience in countless ways. I learned that, in contrast to a transient visit, staying in hostels or studying at a university, it is actually quite difficult to establish real relationships with people. For the first month or so, I had few contacts in the city. After experiencing a sharp pain in my side, I went to a walk in clinic and, after a battery of tests, was diagnosed with Kidney Failure. Unable to get in contact with my parents, and without contacts in the city, I spent two of the loneliest weeks of my life in the hospital. I learned exactly how vulnerable I was, and the importance of self-awareness and health. I thought my Spanish was decent until that moment, when I realized the gaping holes in my vocabulary. There was never a reason to learn medical vocabulary. Slowly, I improved my heath and Spanish. I had nothing but time. By the end, I was chatting and joking with the nurses. One of my most vivid memories was two days before I was released. One of the nurses brought me my daily broth—I was only allowed one meal a day, and was on an all-liquid diet. I thanked her and reached my spoon in, only to find, hidden at the bottom of the bowl…NOODLES! I instantly broke down in tears. It’s the little things.

When I was finally released, I was determined to do more to meet people. I got involved with MeetUp and couchsurfing, and began attending regular language and culture exchanges. I learned that the best way to meet people is to get involved in the things you care about. I got to know the receptionist at the building where I lived, the workers at my favourite coffee shop, and through them met many others who became close friends. I had daily language exchanges, where I would speak Spanish and my local friends would speak English, or otherwise trading off every twenty minutes. International friends and I would have meal exchanges, where each person would make a dish typical of their country and we would all share foods and traditions. I was even invited to traditional celebrations such as calçotadas and correfocs. This self-determination and independent involvement in the community was far and away one of the most impactful lessons I have ever learned, and have no doubt it will continue to serve me time and time again in the future.

At the end of April, and on my twentieth birthday, I found myself alone again. It was the day I was meant to move out of my apartment after the conclusion of the program. I, of course, had no plan whatsoever. I had [intentionally] neglected to purchase a return plane ticket, and all I had to do was choose a direction to go. Easier said than done, as it turns out.

After a few days, I decided to stay with a local friend until I decided where to go. Then, one day, the opportunity arose to take an all-expenses-paid road trip to Slovenia and Croatia. A Frenchman I had met was an avid rock-climber, determined to use his vacation time from work to scale the world-renowned rock faces in Slovenia. He offered to cover costs if I went and belayed him on the mountain. Needless to say, I jumped at the opportunity. We drove across the southern portion of the continent, climbed in Slovenia, and explored northern Croatia. I was so intrigued by the place, which I had known painfully little about beforehand, that I decided to stay. I swapped between hostels and local couchsurfing hosts, until I eventually found a help-wanted notice at horse ranch, looking for someone to help train ad care for horses that were used by international guests on treks through the Croatian countryside. It seemed like a dream come true. I lived on the ranch, working with locals on daily upkeep and care of the horses, and then assisted them in making camp when guests arrived and began their trips.

During this time, I began to learn more and more about the history of the region. One of my co-workers, a Bosnian, lied about his name each time we stayed with a different host along the trail, telling me it was unsafe to reveal his obviously Bosnian name to people who could be Serbian. The wars may have ended, but the violence and hatred felt throughout the region is still a very real part of daily life. I saw hidden shrines to Tito at some of our hosts’ homes. I heard strong sentiments of communist nostalgia, and hateful words hurled at all sides. More than ever, I wanted to understand what drives that hatred. How do people who were taught that they were all Yugoslav brothers for decades, suddenly have such strong distrust of one another? I continued to travel and ask questions of everyone I met along the way. I learned how the identities that divide the region are not only historical, but economic and political as well. Because many of the topics were never discussed, the wounds each side afforded the others remain unhealed.

And still, no matter how many people I talked to, I found no answers, but instead just endless questions.

I came back to school again, more determined than ever to increase my knowledge and understanding of cultural identity and ethno-nationalism. I read voraciously, and continued to talk discuss the issues with my international friends, and pick the minds of my professors.

My final summer before graduation, I had no intention of spending time abroad. It happened purely on accident. Nevertheless, I woke up in San Jose, Costa Rica one morning in June, again without the faintest idea of what to do or where to go. I explored the city for a day, meeting up with Costa Rican  friends, before beginning to search for work. Luckily, I found a backpacker’s hostel in desperate need of immediate help. A bus ride later, I arrived in the tiny coastal village of Sámara.

For two months, I worked as a receptionist, helping travellers of all ages and backgrounds. I switched back and forth between Spanish and English, reveling in the ease at which I rediscovered my linguistic abilities. Working at a hostel provided very different opportunities than staying in them did. I was able to balance a more permanent and integrated with locals and time spent talking to international guests. I was fascinated to augment my knowledge of different cultures, and was fascinated to hear different stories of ethno-nationalism repeated by people from across the globe. Cultures without a state, as it turns out, exist in varying capacities, in almost every country in the world. Somewhat less surprising was the fact that each and every person had differing opinions about them. Guanacaste itself is a prime example. Although I had never heard of it before I began working there, they are very much culturally distinct from the rest of the country, historically trapped between Nicaragua and Costa Rica, but not really a part of either one.

When my more permanent replacement arrived at the hostel, my plan was to spend my remaining two weeks travelling in Nicaragua and Costa Rica before catching my return flight from San Jose. But I have never been good with plans. Instead, I ended up engrossed in the rich history of Nicaragua, captivated by the way each Central American country’s history and culture bled into those of their neighbors. Instead of returning south to San Jose, I went north. Again conducting interviews with anyone that would talk to me, I slowly learned more and more about the many dynamics of the area, and how it fit on a broader level to my own topic of study. Eventually, I ended up in northern Mexico. My trip had spanned six very different Spanish speaking countries and had been not only a perfect opportunity to further my ethno-nationalistic questions, but to begin a foray into the rich topic of cultural anthropology as well.

Eventually, I stopped for breath in a region of Mexico called Querétero. The people there emphasized again how very different cultures can go unrecognized under the umbrella of a single state. I was exposed to a variety of indigenous groups and languages, struggling to coexist in a model that made no room for them.

The end of this particular trip was special. It was one of those not-so-rare instances where reality is even better than imagination. I at the last minute invited to a wedding of a Mexican girl to an English man, a friend of a friend from my trip. Symbolically, the ceremony was a beautiful answer to many of the questions that had arisen from the previous couple months. The couple had found a way to integrate their two cultural traditions in a way that embraced and respected both sides of their families. Although this compromise is difficult on a large scale, it was a symbolic beacon of hope—that a happy ending, or a happy beginning, is possible.

I don't know if this answered the question. Maybe it isn't supposed to. I do hope that it provided a glimpse into the depth of the experience and the lessons I learned. 


1.     Your mind is never as open as think it is
2.     The people that touch your heart and change your life are never the ones you expect
3.     It is easy to learn how to navigate public transportation and how to slip between checkpoints. You learn because you have to. It is difficult to learn what is inside a person’s heart
4.     The only way to learn the answers to your burning questions is to ask. Ask everything and ask everyone
5.     The best way to learn is the hardest: there is no greater beauty or vulnerability than handing your heart over to another person and immersing yourself in their world
6.     Bite your tongue, swallow your words and listen. You know knowing and the sooner you accept your ignorance, the easier it becomes to learn
7.     There is a difference between living and being alive, and you are the only one who can decide between them
8.     Patriotism is not waiving a flag over your head, looking down on the traditions and cultures of others. It is something you tuck into your back pocket, to carry with quiet ease. You are a human first, a nationality second

9.     Once you learn to see the world through the eyes of someone else, the world grows infinitely and there is no going back