10/16/11

I made a friend today!

I was coming back home after a very long and arduous ordeal of crashing on campus for the night and waking up at 6:30AM to help volunteer for the Food for All: Food Security and Poverty Conference. The conference itself was informative, fun, and an overall great experience. It just left me insanely tired by the time it was done.

So here I am, finally on the skytrain ride home when I meet Deng.

I have a seat to myself, and he sits in the seat in front of mine. Barefoot, tall, and lanky, he smiles at me and greets me. So of course I smile back. I guess I was still in a social mood from the conference because I start telling him how exhausted I am. He says he’s tired too, and he’d love a massage – but he can’t afford one. So we start talking. His english is somewhat hard to understand but with patience, I get the general gist of what he says to me.

Deng is Sudanese. He came to Canada alone, leaving his mother, sister, and girlfriend behind in Sudan. When I ask him how long he’s been in Canada, he replies ‘a very long time’. I can gather from the brief snippets of his story that he came to Canada to find work to most likely send money back home in order to support his family. Maybe a refugee. I had learned about African men coming to more developed nations in my studies, but actually meeting Deng and hearing his story was an entirely different experience.

I ask him if he is lonely, being all by himself in Canada. He tells me he is. When I ask him where he is off to right now, he tells me he is just riding the skytrain back and forth because he doesn’t want to go home where he would be by himself. He tells me he often gets drunk to fall asleep quicker. I listen with an open ear. Here is a fellow human being, going through his own hardships like everyone else. Although I can’t ever imagine what he’s been through – I can empathize with (if only maybe a little of the extent of) the loneliness he feels. No one wants to feel alone in the world.

So I do what the people in my life do for me. I talk with him. This simple human interaction is the only thing I can offer Deng, just like I would offer any other person who welcomes my company. Even though we have only just met, it’s incredible how friendly and warm he is as we talk. Not at all like strangers.

He greeted me pleasantly, and I greeted him back. This isn’t an act of charity or good will. This is the start of a friendship.

I keep asking him questions from what kind of music he likes to what he spends his spare time doing. He tells me stories with an animated expression. He tells me the vision he has for wanting to start a family and how he would raise his kids (a boy and a girl). I listen and then tell him about my studies at UBC and then listen some more.

Eventually, I reach my stop and we have to part ways. I’m actually a little sad that the skytrain ride is so short – he was so interesting to listen to. He says I’m interesting too.

He offers to give me his email address, and I figure it won’t hurt to keep in touch to chat. When I reach my stop, we shake hands as friends, not strangers.

We hope we meet again one day.

10/2/11

A quote for self-inspiration~

I thought up a great little quote to keep in mind for myself. 😀 Here it is!

“Don’t look back on the past to regret the steps you’ve taken. Look back to see how far you’ve come.”

This quote will remind me not to compare my life with others. What experiences I have are just as valuable as anyone else’s. Must not forget that!

09/22/11

We can imagine better.

I’m just going to leave this here….

The Fringe Benefits of Failure, and the Importance of Imagination

The above video recording of J.K. Rowling’s Harvard 2008 Commencement Address is what I turn to whenever I feel lost in my direction in life. It’s well worth a watch and the transcript of her memorable speech can also be found online to read. Definitely worth checking out!

04/12/11

What Will Await Me?

"Six Months in Sudan" by Dr. James Maskalyk

The image I have below is the cover of a book titled “Six Months in Sudan” by Dr. James Maskalyk, a Canadian doctor that worked in the field through MSF (Médecins Sans Frontières – Doctors Without Borders) in 2007. I first heard of this book through a seminar held by UBC’s STAND about a week ago, and have been looking for a place to either borrow it from or buy it for my own. Luckily, I found it in the bookshelves of my local public library back in Coquitlam.

“Six Months in Sudan” recounts the day-to-day events experienced by Dr. James Maskalyk in the war-torn village of Abyei, Sudan as he acted as the designated attending physician in the village. Even his experience as a doctor in Canadian hospital emergency wards could not have prepared him for the crisis that awaited him in Abyei. This is a story about foreign aid and the struggles experienced by one man as he observed the situation in Sudan from a neutral standpoint – a témoignage.

Although I’ve only just started reading this book, I already have a couple of deep thoughts about it. Maskalyk starts his story at the ‘end’ of his journey – a month after he had returned from Sudan. He recounts the distance he feels from his family and friends as he reminisces back to his time back in the field. He then rewinds to the beginning of his journey, when he was working through the logistics of his departure. Maskalyk’s reasoning for heading to Sudan really stuck with me as I flipped through the pages of his book:

“I wanted to see who I was when everything was taken from me, when there was no insulation between me and the rest of the world.”

This made me think about what kind of human being I would be when everything that I had was taken from me. I mean, how much does what I possess define who I am? How would I act if I lived in a war-torn country, if I had barely anything to eat, if I had nearly nothing at all? Would I still be the person that I am here in a country like Canada?

I’ll have similar thoughts racing through my head until I finish this book. Reading about Dr. Maskalyk’s experiences in foreign aid makes me question the reasons in which I’m going into Global Health for and if I’m really just being idealistic about the world in which I live in. There’s so many places I have yet to see, so many people that I have yet to meet. I’m so insulated in this comfortable bubble called my life that I feel very ignorant about what’s going on around the rest of the world. I want to know more. I want to see more and experience it. But I’m also terrified of what awaits me out there. I fear that I won’t be able to handle the horrors calmly enough to work towards what is beautiful.

But I can’t stand being so ignorant about everything either.