Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Full Circle

To start off I’ve gotta say sorry for the complete lack of blogging in the last 4 months, wow! Somehow, when being down here in S.A. crossed over from feeling like a “big trip” to feeling like my real life, the habit of blogging every week faded out.  But, for those of you who followed us along our journey all year and are now wondering where in the world we are, here’s what I am hoping is a better-late-than-never-update:

After a short, jam-packed 3 weeks at home in July, we boarded the plane back to Quito, this time accompanied by 16 other people, all members of my family’s church back home, University Lutheran. The 10 days we spent together working at For His Children were nothing short of amazing. Seeing everyone fall as in love with the kids as Renae and I had the year before was incredible, and we got to re-live the excitement of experiencing Ecuador for the first time all over again through them. We grew so much closer as a church community and the fact that my parents and sister Anna were a part of that was especially cool for me. It was sad to see them go after such a short time, but it felt beyond normal to send them off back to the states while staying down here ourselves. Back to the two scrubs working together, as usual without a plan as to what would come next…


Luckily for us, the volunteer coordinator at FHC Jen Schneider is beyond amazing, and welcomed us back to the orphanage once everyone left. We only planned on passing through, but got sucked in by those babies’ cute faces and a group of 4 awesome, college aged volunteers. Before we knew it 2 weeks had passed, even though our original question to Jen was, “Can we come stay for 1 night??” At the same time we found ourselves facing a surprisingly hard decision: to keep travelling or to use our flight back to the states that was coming up in a couple weeks? Both of us obviously wanted to continue the adventure, but what we were working with was a small lack of direction and a large lack of funds. We both felt called to go back to Cordoba, Argentina to continue where we left off, but maybe it would be smarter to head back to the states. We already had our 9 months to bop around, we didn’t really know how Cordoba round 2 would go, and maybe it was time to just get a little more serious. You know, grad school, a salaried job, boyfriends who spoke our same language, something like that?

Or not. Instead of dwelling on it for too long, we decided to trust our instincts, trust God, and were on a bus within a couple days. The second we walked into the city after 5 surprisingly fast days on the bus (new record for longest trip!), we knew we had made the right decision. I can’t quite explain my love for that city, but it’s real. We moved back into our foreign student house from before, met 6 more incredible, lifelong friends from all over the world, and were settled in before we knew it. We got the opportunity to teach an English class to a group of PhD biology students at the University, which was great (not to mention VERY different from teaching 20 1st graders), and best of all got to go back to the community center to see the kids. I’m not kidding when I say I have had many of my happiest moments on that basketball court, surrounded by some of the most fun, loving, affectionate kids in the world. Being able to fulfill our promise to them that we would come back some day, and show them that they ARE worth it and ARE important to us alone was worth all the money spent and all those days sitting on a bus. I have a feeling that that group of kids will always be on my heart, and may have a lot to do with what I decide to do with my life in the future.

The initial Cordoba plan was to find paying jobs so we could post up there for another year or two, but after seeing just how bad the economy is right now we soon realized that just wasn’t going to happen. Definitely disappointing, but it is something that is out of our control, and at least we tried instead of always having to wonder what might have been. So once we gave in to that we decided just to enjoy our 2 months there a.m.a.p. (as much as possible?), since it’s impossible to know when we’ll be able to go back. We soaked up time with friends and with the kids, went to see Argentinean films, cooked elaborate dinners with the roomies every night (new sushi experts right here!), and got our fill of Mendoza wine. As our landlord said when it was time for us to leave, “a lo menos nadie puede decir que no vivieron esta vida”. “At least no one can say you didn’t live this life.” How true.  In a sense we were heading home after a failure, without jobs, savings just about spent, but we both felt the opposite was true. The people we met and the lessons we learned, especially about taking a risk when you feel like it’s right, are priceless.



So here I am, back at FHC in Quito, about to hop on a plane to North Dakota later tonight. I always said by the end of the trip I would know what I wanted to do with my life, what was next. But guess what? I’m farther from that than ever, and it feels really good. The possibilities are endless, and while it can be the slightest bit stressful not having an answer if you think about it too hard, it is mostly just really exciting. Grad school is an option, so is finding a new group of underprivileged kids to love up on back in the states. Or maybe we’ll just book a ticket to the next country once we have enough money? I hear you can make good money teaching English to refugees in the Middle East…

All I know is I feel like thee luckiest girl in the world to have had this last year, and all the experiences it’s held. Like unexplainably lucky. And although I think it’s going to be a very hard transition from a year spent on the continent that has slowly become my home, I can’t wait to see what comes next.

All my love,

Jenna Flynn

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