Our Service Year teams are off to a great start! Here’s an interim report from our Team and Alum Leaders.
Local service report: Here are the cumulative hours reported by each team so far:
Cambodia: 327 hrs.
Guatemala: 852 hrsKenya: 632 hr
Peru: 727 hrs
Thailand: 214 hrs (meeting this weekend, so hours will be up!)
Vietnam: 241 hrs (meeting this weekend, so hours will be up!)
Top
fundraisers for their trips! Good job! Hannah Bruns, Stephen Buma, Nathan Child,
Alyssa Clark, Dylan Drescher, Maicy Gardner, Alexandra Glass , Brooke
Burningham, Lauren Jackson, Hailey Liljenquist,
Whitney Madsen, Taylor Porges, Jenna Rule, Madison Taylor, Siri Vlasic.
Here are some comments from team and
alum leaders about local service, international service planning, funny and heartwarming
moments, and concerns expressed by team members about international travel.
Cambodia team:
·
Lots
of funny things happen when we play a game in our team meetings.
·
Most
heartwarming experience has been to see how eager the whole team is to help.
All of them are excited to go above and beyond to make a difference.
·
We've
had many go out of their way to make things work, but there are two that stand
out: Ashlyn Perrero organized a wonderful service project for us downtown
feeding the homeless, and when we found out we couldn't get downtown because of
the storm, we went to our back up plan: organizing file folder games for the
kids in Cambodia. Many brought supplies and helped with this but Cami Crump
really went the extra mile and made tons of copies and had a big chunk of it
organized.
·
All
seem excited about all the international projects, but I think the playground
is probably a favorite.
·
I
think the only concern right now is that they get the right shots.
·
We
love this team. They are truly an amazing group!
Guatemala:
- The
funniest thing that has happened thus far would be at the retreat when
Ruth handed out glow sticks to all of us, and as we were playing with them
and making them into bracelets, one of them broke and sprayed all over
Brynna's hair and onto the wall behind her. It was a surprise and everyone
laughed and joked around.
- It has
been great to see how already the members of this team have become good
friends! Everyone seems to get along really well and make an effort to get
to know everybody. This group will work extremely well together in Guatemala.
- One person
to spotlight who has gone out of his way to help out and make our team
even better would be Jake Cushing from Skyline High School. He has made
the effort to become friends with all of the other team members! He is
always willing to help and will often volunteer to help, and he is in the
top three for having completed the most service hours thus far.
- The
project that the team knows the most about would be the ecological friendly
benches. That will be neat to build but the team is up for anything!
- During General Orientation in November a spider descended from the projector on the ceiling and just about landed on Clayton's head. Just about everyone in the room cried out with surprise or disgust and I warned everyone that we would be encountering spiders and insects much larger than that in Guatemala!
· The
most concerning aspects of international travel for team members would be the
bugs (particularly spiders!) and the kind of food we will be eating. I'm sure
that in March we'll hear a lot concerning shots and pills and such, but so far
my team doesn't appear to be overly concerned.
- The
Guatemala 2013 Team is awesome! We are all such good friends already and
everything is going well! The students are brainstorming some great ideas
and we've completed some great service projects! The team is dedicated and
put their hearts into what we are doing in preparation for Guatemala!
- Angie
Nickerson shared a fun story about one of her service experiences. She was
helping at an event and was dressed up in a big mascot costume, so all of
the kids wanted to hug her and say hi. The head of the mascot was big
though and she couldn't see our very easily so she said she kept knocking
kids over when she would bend down to hug them. She said it was kind of a
mess but lots of fun and all the kids still loved her!
- The
getting to know you game at the retreat was pretty funny. We played the
game where you had to take 1-6 squares of toilet paper then tell that many
things about yourself. There we're lots of funny things we found out about
each other and everyone enjoyed Laci's explanation of her name.
- It was
really cool was when Heather Shipp shared an experience from her main
service site from last week. She was supposed to prepare a 3-5 minute
presentation about Backyard Broadcast to give at UVU before the main
speakers took the rest of the given hour. There were miscommunications and
Heather and another girl who had prepared 5 minutes we given the whole
time to present. She said she was nervous at first and worried they
wouldn't be able to take the whole time, and that it would be weird having
two high schoolers present to college students. She said it turned out
going really well, lots of kids had questions, and they were able to
explain a lot and take up the needed time. It is awesome to see when
people are put in situations unexpected, where they are unsure how it will
be, but then to just go for it and succeed. Plus Heather is a bit of a
quieter person anyway, which makes it even cooler that she is doing all
this stuff!
- Alane Gaspari
went out of her way to volunteer her home for our team retreat! We almost
had the whole team there. Throughout the whole night she was paying
attention to everything making sure everyone had what they needed, and
trying to make sure everyone was enjoying themselves.
- Everyone
seems excited about everything we are planning to do in Kenya. After the
slideshow Scott showed at the retreat everyone seems especially excited to
work in the schools and do stuff with the kids.
- During the
Cultural Committee's meeting during the retreat, they planned out their projects and
things they wanted to be doing. It was really impressive how they were
trying to consider all they people in Kenya that we would be working with.
They wanted to plan cool and fun projects for the schools and people, but
didn't want any group of the people there to feel left out. So they spent
a lot of time coming up with meaningful projects and ways to do something
for all the different groups we will be with.
- People are
slightly nervous about traveling healthy in Kenya, and also about the cold
showers. Nobody really knows what to anticipate or how it will really be
so everyone’s keeping an open mind!
- At our first meeting we wrote letters to children who have life threatening illnesses through an organization called Hugs & Hope. It brought tears to eyes as we saw what these children were going through. It sure made us glad for our health and blessings. We were happy to share a little bit of happiness with them. One of the children wrote back to Alyssa Sheehan. She was so excited to see that one of the kids took the time to write back to her.
·
Several
members of team Peru volunteer at Real Life in Salt Lake. We saw Lisa Schneider
and Lynette Duenas on Friday evening Ice Skating with the participants outside
in the freezing cold weather.
· We
have been really fortunate to be hosting the daughter of our in-country
coordinator, Carlos Acosta! Karla is having a great time, but since Iquitos,
Peru is always warm, Karla says are winters are too frio.
- The
Price-Huish family let us use of their cabin for our retreat. Cecilee (the
mom) transported us all up to the cabin in freezing cold temperatures. She
went above and beyond to make sure our stay was a memorable one. Rin
Price-Huish has also helped so much the past couple of months with the
retreat, her committee, and her service hours.
- Everyone seems to be really excited about the Mondo Art
Project and building bridges in the rainforest.
- Some folks are worried about shots and not having communication while we are in-country but we always reassure them and let their parents know that they will be okay.
·
Of
course all of our team members are most excited about their own committee.
However we are happy to complete the Medical Clinic in Yanamono 2. We are also excited to continue with the
livestock exchange program.
·
Someone
asked us how we were going to get the chickens to Peru.
·
Brooke
Burningham and Michelle Moynihan who made their Development intern goal this
year. Brooke was able to add 2,000 to Peru project funds and Michelle kindly
donated her earned project funds to help boost Guatemala funds.
·
Alex
Holt has contacted a few eye clinics about donating old or unwanted glasses. He
has also contacted the CEOs of Ogden Regional Center and McDee Hospital about
medical donations. He has also stepped up to take on mentor responsibilities
and encourage his teammates.
Thailand:
- Maybe the
funniest thing that has happened thus far was just the team building activity
we had at our second meeting. Everyone had a great time participating in
the activity. Matilda planned the activity, and brought a beach ball
covered in different, creative, and interesting questions. We tossed the
ball around and whoever caught it had to answer the question that was
beneath their right thumb. We had a lot of fun with it, and everyone
participated, even some parents who only dropped by to ask a question!
- Everyone
in the group realizes how cool it is to be working with the Moken people –
sea gypsies whose entire lifestyle was wiped out by the 2004 Tsunami. Similar
to the Native American population in the U.S., Mokens have been relegated
to ‘reservation’ like communities, where they experience extreme poverty:
lack of clean water, sanitation, health care.
- The
cultural committee is particularly excited. Although it took them some
time to figure out that the Moken people are totally different from the
Thai, I think they are extremely excited to learn about a completely
different culture.
- Our
educational committee is super excited to teach the Moken children on the
island, and love the challenge of developing lessons for children who have
such little formal education.
- Our team,
like most others, is most concerned with bugs, food, and staying healthy,
but we have a pretty laid back group of participants this year.
- It was great to have Miriam Kramer, the Youthlinc International Service Director, talk to our team about her recent site visit to Ranong and hear her information about all the projects we will be involved with in Thailand. She showed some photos, which were hard to look at, because Moken elders are in poor health. It was good though because it showed the medical committee what we will be working and dealing with once we are in Thailand this summer.
Vietnam:
- Students have interesting local service sites and are
all enthusiastic about service and willing to discuss their local service
stories at meetings.
- In our getting to know you activities, we found out all
kinds of unique and bizarre things about our team members. For example: one
student did the highest bungee jump in the world, we have a national
champion snowshoer, and many participants have had crazy broken bones!
- When everyone found out their committee assignment, the
room was buzzing with the excitement. To build relationships and teach a
lesson about working together, each committee was given a challenge: stack
cups in three different configurations without touching them or speaking.
It seemed impossible. The committees were given one tool to
work with - a rubber band with a string for each committee member to hold.
They could only touch one string at a time, use only one hand and
speak no words. It took every committee member to figure out how to
maneuver this tool in order to accomplish the task. What were the
take aways: we have to be creative problem solvers... we need to
communicate in different ways... we will be working outside of our comfort
zone but we need to stick with it... it will take each and every one of us
giving our all to accomplish what we are setting out to do... the power of
a small group centered on the same goal is infinite!
- Alyssa Clark is a real go getter. Right after our
December meeting she started assembling the school kits and the feminine
hygiene kits. She's already arranged with several different groups
she works with to undertake these projects. Her enthusiasm and
energy are inspiring and contagious! She was also one of the first
ones to go above and beyond and turn in her service site early and have
many hours!
- Our vocational committee has already set up their first
training and are learning to make soap in order to share that skill with
the people of Song Cau.
- The cultural committee is already talking about the
games and activities to do at the in-country carnival.
- Bugs, food, shots, language and bathrooms always seem
to be at the top of the ‘concern’ list. By the end of trips we are
sure everyone will want to install a squatter in their house in place of
the boring, old, sit-down style toilet. The Vietnam Service
Team is full of energy and excitement for the journey they are
undertaking. They are eager to prepare in order to make it a
successful trip. Team meetings are flying by and before we know it
we'll be on a plane to another piece of the world, trying to make a
difference in the lives of others while they in fact will make the
difference for us.
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