The
curtain rises on Act II and as the spotlights brighten an ostinato piano motif
plays. Measures later the cast of Rent sings
what are Jonathan Larson’s most poignant words as they ask the audience how to
measure “five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred minutes”, a single year
in the life. After searching through seemingly mundane quantifiable indicators
(sunsets, midnights, cups of coffee, bridges burned, etc.) they settle on
measuring a year in the life via love.
With
less then 16 hours left in my Fulbright I am now asking myself a similar
question:
Four
hundred fifty-two thousand one hundred sixty minutes, how do you measure a
Fulbright?
This
isn’t a question that I have been briefly pondering, I have been thinking
about, writing and rewriting this last Vietnam-based blog post in my head for
over three weeks now. Like the cast I started with the easily quantifiable
measureable data points.
- 10 months
- 314 days
- 160 classes taught
- 480 hours spent teaching
- 2,055 pages of lesson plans, homework, handouts, presentations, tests, answer keys and other teaching materials written
- 2,580 pictures and videos taken
- 42 blog posts published
- 594.11 miles ran in moments of boredom, stress, anger, frustration, or training for the 10K
- 41 pounds (5.5" off the wasit) lost
- 39 books read – including Les Miserablés, Anna Karenina, Moby Dick, Little Women, and The Color Purple among many others
- 58,584 miles traveled – 2.36 times around the equator
While
those numbers are convenient I find that the light in which it casts my Fulbright to
be cold, hollow and frankly slightly irreverent. For, now at the finish line I
realize this journey, my journey in Nam has been about soul and service. Not
miles, pages and posts.
There
has been one quote (well it’s an excerpt really) that has stuck with me for
quite a while now growing in gravity as goodbyes crash against me more
frequently and my emotions become tangled, conflicting and often swell to the
surface.
“It may be that the gulfs
will wash us down;
It may be that we shall touch
the Happy Isles,
And though we are not now
that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven,
that which we are, we are –
Made weak by time and fate,
but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find
and not to yield.”
“Ulysses” - Alfred Lord Tennyson
That
quote has stuck with me because it hits so many of the touchstones of this
journey for me. To me it says that while it’s tempting to play it safe, the
more one’s willing to risk the more alive one is and the more one can grow. And
perhaps in the end what we regret most are the chances we never took out of
fear, inconvenience or discomfort.
Regretting
the feat not attempted was one of the major motivations for me accepting my Fulbright.
Let’s be honest, the thought of me leaving a comfy guaranteed full-time job
offer with benefits in this economy and taking a grant with the only promise
being you won’t be in a capital, major or large city doesn’t fit with my
personality, pragmatic logic – or life experiences. I’m a western urbanite to
the very core so provincial life in a middle-income communist developing
country was fraught with potential complications. The only detail I had was
singular: provincial life. Pushing past rational trepidation, I threw off the
bowlines and sailed away from that safe harbor to a continent, land, country,
culture, language, food and city unknown and alone.
There
have been trials, tantrums and tribulations here. That original optimism so
publicly effused by that Bentham quote in my first post was eroded very quickly
once I got to work and ran up against culture shock, seemingly endless miles of
bureaucratic red tape, intercultural conundrums and frustrations, the
loneliness and “spectacleism” of my constant ‘zoo animal’ daily existence as the
only foreigner in a rural backwater for months on end. For it was the first
time in my life that I have ever been a racial, physical, socioeconomic,
ergonomic and cultural minority – a new perspective and at times frustrating, but ultimately enlightening.
There
were moments that were so low that I just wanted to stop and yet I knew
somehow, someway this had to get better. I just needed to hold on to that
tightrope and crawl inch-by-inch if I had to because the wind had to stop at
some point.
And
it did.
When
I stopped fighting Vietnam, when I accepted provincial life and stopped
lamenting the things I was deprived of I could focus on what mattered, on what
I had. Students who loved me, a grateful college, a co-teacher from heaven and
fourteen brothers and sisters in a Fulbright family that I will treasure to the
end of my days. A new found and unexpected family of truly amazing and
astounding young people from varied walks of life all connected by a desire for
humanitarian service – all of whom are forces of nature.
I
started with students so imbued with the ‘teacher knows all’ mentality that
they were too timid to try and too scared to fail. At first I floundered and
midway through my teaching absenteeism was rampant, grades were cratering,
standard deviations were rising and my own confidence was slipping. Both my
students and me hit a wall – and I didn’t know what to do. So I stopped and Co
Dung and I reworked everything from the ground up. That took real courage and
gusto. After months of color-coded chalk and handouts, vocabulary files, games,
having them stand on the platform in front of their peers, us as teachers going
to them and kneeling next to their desks and being visibly lower than them
ceding control, it slowly paid off.
This sea change occurred
once I recognized that English, the technical language wasn’t going to be my
goal. Instead I was given the vehicle of English. Thus my goal changed from
providing English to giving my students a sense of pride in their learning,
with less of an emphasis on grammar rules and vocabulary. So I worked hard to
push them to develop a strong command of English that they would use in their
lives – English to describe themselves and their families, their hopes and
dreams and their homeland while also being able to ask questions of a foreigner
if they chanced to meet one. And slowly Co Dung and I saw them blossom and
open-up – tentatively at first and then a full-blown sprint at the end.
I saw final exams full of
spunk and personality. They worked the crowd, polled each other, had full
conversations, asked each other questions replying with thoughtful and largely
cogent answers and even corrected each other all in English. They gained self-confidence;
verve and pride in themselves and some recognized the power they hold to their
own success. They’re the living proof that education lifts one. It empowers the
soul and sets it free and if students are given everything their teachers got thier personal and academic growth as students and young men and women will repay all that effort, sweat and
occasional tears in kind until the cup runneth over.
I couldn’t be more proud
and utterly humbled to think that me – a newly minted scientist with a
bachelor’s degree – could have helped lead and inspired them along this journey
to the self-realization that they can be creators and deciders in their own future
should they work hard and diligently. They have sowed such joy inside my soul –
a joy I never expected and now I just smile from the heart. I hope that they
remember me as a teacher who inspired them to learn through self-empowerment
because Co Dung and I executed lessons that considered their needs as EFL
(English as a Foreign Language) learners, not standardized test takers.
This journey has also
brought other changes – ones not in my students but in me.
For the first time in my
life I was forced to face my privilege. Living in provincial Vietnam forced me
to confront all the access and opportunities I was afforded as an American, as
a man, as a Caucasian, as an only child of two highly educated and gainfully
employed, still-married and much-in-love parents and as a member of the
American upper-middle class. The willful ignorance or esoteric existential
acknowledgement that is so pervasive in the western world was no longer an
option.
That process of self-reckoning
solidified my decision to pursue medicine and public health by witnessing the themes I had
studied and wrote papers about in university and transforming into the
life I was seeing around me. Service was no longer a choice for
self-betterment; it was a requirement demanded of me by my station and my
privilege. I spent everyday being amazed by Vietnamese parents who contented
themselves with their lot while hoping and doing everything in their power to
propel their children forward. Not taking handouts or assistance, but quietly,
simply getting by and sacrificing while continuing to treasure family, filial
veneration and trust. Things we in the West are way too quick to dismiss or
pooh-pooh as we clamor over each other on the never-ending hedonic treadmill.
The refusal and inability
to return to willful ignorance and using the uncomfortable emotions wrought by
my privilege and wealth motivated me to give my students everything I could.
That was one of the greatest challenges of Vietnam - would I see? Really truly see?
Or would I just stay above the surface taking in the superficial? I believe I
saw.
Do you want to see? Or do
you want to just keep the blinders on and think it’s a world away happening to
people you don’t know and send in your tax-exempt donation? And more
importantly are you comfortable with that choice?
I can’t answer that for
you, and it wasn’t exactly an easy experience for me, or one I asked for. Honestly
grappling with the guilt, anger, frustration and defensive pride was (and still
is) a long ever evolving process in courage and self-awareness. I found a way
through teaching to give the best gifts I could – knowledge, pride and
self-reliance and start to pay back to the wider world for the blessings
bestowed upon me. This journey has awakened part of my soul and been a tangible
clarion call, a duty in fact, for me to keep service at the forefront of my
medical career.
I don’t ever intend to turn
my back upon my privilege – I can’t now. I am going to keep confronting my
privilege and use the resulting discomfort and obligation it demands to keep
propelling me to be better. So I can continue to do better for those whose
foundation and springboard isn’t or wasn’t as big as mine.
As I leave I feel pride in
myself that I made it through and kept my humor and most of the time managed to
keep a deft aplomb. But the biggest source of pride is in the change I see in
my students. I can’t measure the footprint or depth of that change. I didn’t
change the college or the educational system. Nevertheless in my little corner
of the world in a dusty, underequipped and oft-broiling classroom 5 days a week
for 3 hours at a time I changed, inch by inch and lesson by lesson the
attitudes and self-image of my students. So while I didn’t change the world I
did change some young people and watched them grow more as adults and
intellectuals. And all you need to start a wave is a ripple. I caused a ripple
for good, a positive ripple and I hope my students continue to ride this wave
long after I am gone.
As the plane wheels leave
the ground and I start the final 9,105 miles of a 58,500+ mile adventure I will
remember the journey. I will take pause and stock of those initial moments of
honeymoon bliss, the harsh adjustment, the nearly crushing loneliness, the
hysterical moments lost in translation, the quiet moments of pride and the
flicker of light in my students that through a constant, tireless pursuit Co
Dung and I chased down and ignited into an explosion.
I never let the moments of
darkness, loneliness or disillusion extinguish my hope or perspective – and I
am so proud that now I leave with an adjusted, balanced, grounded and mature
view and memory of this place. My will was tested and in the end it stayed strong.
I put myself very far past my comfort zone, sought the best in myself, found my
resolve for my students and never once did I yield in my mission, in
Fulbright’s mission of education and empowerment.
I think I was a good
steward of ambassadorship. I made myself proud and I hope I made my parents,
family, friends, Alma mater and my country proud.
Goodbye Vietnam. There
aren’t words to thank you or your people for all the gifts you gave me. To
close the physical journey (and perhaps this blog) better then I ever could,
Lord Byron:
"Fare
thee well and if for ever, still for ever, fare thee well”
Me and my host Mr. Hung. He's become one of my close friends in Cao Lanh and I will miss him terribly. |
My co-teacher, angel and colleague Co Dung. I loved every minute I spent teaching and planning with her. She taught me so much. |
Feeling the love! |