Weeks One-Hundred-and-Eight through One-Hundred-and-Eleven, My Last Post

Weeks One-Hundred-and-Eight through One-Hundred-and-Eleven, My Last Post

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Weeks One-Hundred and Eight through One to Hundred and Eleven/ June-July 2018

My Last Post

Summer

As my husband and I prepare to move for school, and as I close the chapter on my Peace Corps service, I will not longer be posting regularly on this blog. I created this blog for my Peace Corps service, from prior to departure, to my service, to adjustment. Therefore, while I plan to continue writing about my Peace Corps service, I will be posting in my (relatively) new blog mashafrommilwaukee.com. Although the blog is geared towards health and travel, it is relatively general. I hope you enjoy it!

Part of the reason it’s taken me so long to post this last post is because I haven’t been quite sure of what to write. So, excuse the word vomit…I’m excited for the next journey my husband and I are about to undertake, I love having our dogs back and living near family, but some days I just want to get on a plane and fly back to Uganda, not as a Peace Corps Volunteer, but just as me and my husband.

Thank you everyone who has read my posts and seen just a few snap-shots of the journey.

Week One-Hundred-and-Four, 760 Days Ago

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week One-Hundred and Four/ May 2018

760 Days Ago

Spring

760 days ago, we boarded a plane for Staging in Philadelphia, and I wrote:

“The black pleather airport seats are uncomfortable. I look to my left and maybe 20 feet away a pale woman sits slouched and yawns repeatedly, is she tired or trying to fill the silence? The terminal is nearly full, and no one is speaking. My husband is sitting next to me looking at the one small Uganda guide book we bought. The button on my purse says, “Peace Corps, Redefine Your Future” Well this is definitely redefinition…

            Eventually we board the small plane bound for Philadelphia. We first met with a recruiter and began our Peace Corps application in June of 2015, now, a year later, we’re finally leaving. Step one: Get to Philly, step two: complete staging, step three: get on a bus at 2am for New York, step four: catch and 11am, 15-hour flight to South Africa, step five: occupy ourselves for six hours, step six: get on another four-hour flight to Uganda, step seven: get on another bus to our staging site.

            As the plane ascends over the Midwest, the farms look like they’re stitched together like a patchwork quilt.  As we fly over Appalachia the small mountains look like green waves. Eventually, the Philly skyline comes into view and we land. Step one complete.”

A lot can change in two years. Uganda, for my husband and myself, went from the name of a country we had to look up on a map to home. Living in Uganda went from being strange and new to just being life, normal, and not less than life in the states, as so many Americans have tried to argue whenever I mention that we lived in Uganda. I’ve found that for many Americans, they cannot disconnect U.S. consumerism from their conceptions of what it means to live a high-quality life.

In returning to the US, there is distance between how I think I am supposed to feel and how I actually feel. I think I am supposed to feel elated to be back in Wisconsin, as if living in Uganda were some extended vacation. And while I am happy to be back in Wisconsin, I desperately miss Uganda, because Uganda was home. In some ways, how I actually feel is as though I’m going through the stages of grief. There is the denial (I’m not really back in Wisconsin, this is just some extended holiday before we go back to Uganda), the anger (I felt grounded and loved my job in the Peace Corps, I loved our home and I loved our routine, and while I am so grateful for the support we’ve had from family for the last six months I still feel very up-in-the-air), the bargaining (what should we have done differently, how can we get back to Uganda), the depression, and slowly, the acceptance. And, all of this, how I’m feeling, is okay, and I think many Returned Volunteers, and others who have lived abroad for extended periods of time can relate. I’m also sure I felt the exact same way after I returned from living in China, maybe even more so because I had never experienced grief for a place before living in China, because up until that point I’d spent my entire life living in southern Wisconsin.

Returning home is harder than leaving, yet the entire process is important. I don’t think I feel completely “returned”, I feel somewhere in between Uganda and the U.S., although moving ever closer to being “returned”, and by that I mean feeling like I am permanently in the U.S., not about to return to Uganda.

Week Ninety-Eight, Finalizing Future Plans

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Ninety-Eight/ April 2018

Finalizing Future Plans

Spring

At the Close of Service Conference (COS Conference) volunteers mingle with other volunteers from their cohort and work on planning for the future. My husband and I are vicariously living out our COS Conference this week, but we did have the privilege of finalizing our future plans this week. My husband and I were fortunate to receive funding for both of our graduate programs, hence I will be pursuing a PhD in Public Health with a focus on Community and Behavioral Health Promotion at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Zilber School of Public Health, and my husband will be pursuing an MBA at Marquette University. We will start our studies in the fall of 2018.

In addition to finalizing our future plans, we also had the opportunity to speak as panelists at a Sustainability Summit held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin this past week. It was a regional Sustainability Summit that included the major Milwaukee area universities and colleges (UWM, Marquette, and MATC) as well as regional employees and local government, who gathered together to talk about how to improve sustainability efforts. My husband and I represented Peace Corps Uganda and spoke about projects geared toward sustainability we did while in Uganda and how we had applied the knowledge back in the US, and how our experience shaped our future career paths. The panel also included a Fulbright Scholar, two Rotarians, another RPCV (Returned Peace Corps Volunteer) who served in Cambodia, and a representative from the Trinity Fellows program at Marquette University. I enjoyed both being able to reflect on our service in Uganda and examine how it shaped our future plans.

Week Ninety-Seven, My Favorite Ugandan Dishes

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Ninety-Seven/ April 2018

My Favorite Ugandan Dishes

Spring

My favorite Uganda dish is a northern Ugandan dish called Calo (obwita in Lusoga) with pasted g-nut sauce (similar to a peanut sauce) with vegetables and beans. Here are a few videos of how it is made!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwAlkRg7zx0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VsIN7ULy_QI

Week Ninety-Six, Local Solutions

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Ninety-Six/ March 2018

Local Solutions

Spring

Please take ten minutes and watch the following video:

Week Ninety-Five, Future Plans

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Ninety-Five/ March 2018

Future Plans

Spring

My husband and I knew our future plans before we started the Peace Corps: Grad School. In fact, we went on a graduate school road trip just a few weeks before departure to visit schools.

Then, during our second year of service we applied to graduate school. Following our Peace Corps Service we began hearing back from schools. Much to my own surprise, I was admitted to every program I applied to, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, Boston University School of Public Health, the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, the University of Chicago Harris School, and the University of Chicago School of Social Service Administration, and finally the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Zilber School of Public Health. I was accepted to Master of Public Health programs (MPH), a Master of Social Work program (MSW-with a health focus), a Master of Public Policy program (MPP-with a health focus), and a PhD program in Public Health.

I would not have had the same focused research topic without the Peace Corps. For that reason, I particularly owe my admission into a PhD program to Peace Corps Uganda. Yet, serving as a Community Health Educator in Uganda changed me and will change my future education because my education will be through the adjusted lens I gained through living in Uganda. Before I began my year long exchange to China in high school, AFS (the American Field Service) talked about purple lenses, an oversimplified but helpful way of talking about how we change through our experiences. Before the exchange you have blue lenses, during the exchange you wear red lenses, and after the exchange you wear purple lenses. You don’t ever go back to just wearing blue lenses.

Week Ninety, On the Road: Uganda

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Ninety/ February 2018

On the Road: Uganda

Winter

Check out my post on MFM about Uganda! https://mashafrommilwaukee.com/2018/02/17/check-out-on-the-road-uganda/

Week Eighty-Six, Peace Corps Uganda: Volunteer Stories

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Eighty-Six/ January 2018

Peace Corps Uganda: Volunteer Stories

Winter

Peace Corps Uganda Volunteers do a range of work, and it’s hard to highlight it all. However, Peace Corps Uganda has a great resource on their website, linking you to volunteer’s projects and success stories.

Here it is: https://www.peacecorps.gov/uganda/stories/

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Stephen teaching a permagardening class!

Week Eighty-Five, Did You Know?

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and I am not affiliated with any governmental or non-governmental organization. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Five: Twasula, Twasoma, Twalamusa

Week Eighty-Five/ January 2018

Did You Know?

Winter

Did you know that over 800,000 tourists visit Uganda each year?

http://thefactfile.org/uganda-facts/

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Week Eighty, Photo Highlights from our Service

Week Eighty, Photo Highlights from our Service

Disclaimer: The content of this blog is mine alone and represents my own views and opinions and does not necessarily reflect the views of the US Government, the Peace Corps, or the Ugandan Government. Furthermore, the intention of this blog is not to malign, injure, or libel, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, or individual. Photos and videos in this blog may not be reproduced without this bloggers expressed written permission.

Part Four: Pole Pole Ndio Mwendo

Week Eighty/ December 2017

Photo Highlights: Some of my Favorite Photos from Service

Winter

These are some of my favorite photos from the past 18 months. ❤

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Laundry day.
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My husband drawing with our host sister.

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Our language group.

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It looked like it was a storm was brewing during our visit.

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Our fantastic language trainer, Dan, doing yoga.

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Kampala from the top of the National Mosque

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Stephen’s photo
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Stephen’s photo

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Kimironko Market

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