Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Reflections on 9 Months in Peru

Many people ask me after living in Peru for 9 months, “is it weird to be back?” My answer up to this point has been in the affirmative; yes, it is weird to be back. It feels strange to no longer have to avoid massive potholes in the street, it feels weird to be able to pet dogs without the fear of getting fleas, it feels weird to speak in ENGLISH again, but most of all it feels weird not to be able to visit the communities where I have worked and to say goodbye to a previously foreign place which I had begun to call my home. In retrospect, 9 months isn’t really that long. It is the same amount of time to finish a school year, have a baby or digest an In-and-Out Burger. If I live to be 80, which may happen if the world doesn’t end in 2012 and I stop drinking coffee with ample sugar and cream, this experience will only have been about 1/100 of the time I will have spent living. However, I feel that the time I spent as an international intern with ASCEND will mean 100 times more to me than the other experiences I will have had in my life. But how can I possibly say that this is my defining life experience if I still have so much life left to live?


It’s simple, interning with ASCEND helped me to identify what it is that I want to do with my life AND put the wheels in motion. We did SO many different things throughout my time in Peru, whether it was teaching basic disease prevention to parents and watching them writhe in disgust after viewing our video clip about intestinal worms, or organizing a group of children to pick up trash after a health campaign and then having them wash their hands before buying them all corn and cheese as a reward, or installing a banner publicizing a fledgling business of culinary geniuses, or putting the finishing touches on a new, beautiful school that would replace a 60-year old mud hut that was about to fall over, or…… (this list could go on for 100 pages). This is the stuff that memories are made of. These are the experiences that help you determine what you want to do with your life. These are the experiences that give your life purpose.


I’m not just walking away with an inkling or some vague, general outline of what I want to do (like what happens to most when they take that walk down the red carpet to pick up their rolled-up piece of paper). I have a plan for the next 10 years of my life, something that I don’t think that most of my friends my age can say that they enjoy. I have established relationships with people that can help me to achieve this plan. One thing I like a lot about ASCEND is our approach to setting goals. We know how to set them so that they are achievable, realistic and measurable while simultaneously worthy and ambitious. Working with the people of Peru, the REAL people, not the tour guide, not the wealthy businessman from Lima, I discovered that I want to work in international business entrepreneurism in Latin America as a career. That’s not a stretch considering my major is business entrepreneurism with a minor in Spanish. Nevertheless, I needed the practical experience of living and working in Peru to confirm what I had previously identified as a possible career path. I’m not going to go into specifics because I don’t want you to steal my ideas, but I promise you that there are good things in store.

More than anything else, ASCEND helped me learn to identify opportunities and have the personal motivation to act appropriately upon these opportunities. Looking for opportunities to work with Humanitarian projects is a lot like looking for business opportunities. We are in the business of identifying NEED. We identify a need, and we fulfill the need. Once that need is identified, we set goals and measure our progress on an ongoing basis. After that need has been met, we do follow-ups to make sure that the need continues to be met and how we can meet that need even better in the future. So I would like to send this message out to anyone who knows what they are studying but don’t know what they want to do with their lives. Become an intern with ASCEND, either at HQ in Salt Lake City or in South America. No matter what you are studying, there is an opportunity to put your skills to work with ASCEND. I promise you that your experience will be as rewarding as mine if you are willing to step outside of your comfort zone and embrace the unknown and unfamiliar; you will NOT be disappointed. Also, you will get to go to the coast, the jungle and the sierra HAHAHAHA! More to come…

2 comments:

  1. love it! keep the details coming. i'm planning to be an intern with Ascend, applying now for peru! CAN'T WAIT!

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  2. Sounds good Kylie! Look forward to meeting you. Add me on facebook - timothymarti

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