January 28, 2009
Oh, what a trip it's been! The weeks just seemed to have whizzed on by, and yet I still feel like I've been here forever. Probably because every day was just so full and busy, I feel like I've absorbed a lot over this past month.
This trip to
Taxi rides, drinks with ice, and what we've grown to call the
One thing that I'm always pleased to find here in
The people we've met and gotten to known at Casa Telmex are as friendly as anyone I've ever met. They've been a great help with the program and we've become good friends with a lot of the facilitators--several have already offered to house us if any of us ever returned to Tuxtla. Casa Telmex itself has been an inspiration to me--it's a great program for the youth in Tuxtla, not only as an after school program but also to introduce them to computers and technology that they would normally not have the chance to use. Not to mention the cultural experience Casa Telmex provided this January with its "grino" and "chino" volunteers. Casa Telmex is really something I think any city could benefit from, including all those in the States.
Drawing out the potential of the youth--I see this as the common goal between the Leadership Training Institute and Casa Telmex. And man do these kids have potential--the students in our program have, on several occasions, completely blew me away. I remember being very nervous about leading the activity, "El bueno y el malo," a discussion about leadership and the difference between good and bad leaders, and while I was initially worried about how Kyle and I were going to lead a successful discussion in Spanish, during the discussion the students completely surprised me and eventually Kyle and I could propose a topic or a question and then the students would just take the discussion and run with it. Another activity the student really excelled at was "Human Knot," which we did again on the final day of the program. And while the facilitator group did succeed this time, the students were able to untangle two smaller groups and then formed one large and untangled that all in the time it took the facilitators to untangle themselves once. This was definitely a group of young people that learned quickly and could communicate with each other well--which was especially impressive since many of the students didn't join the program until part way through the program. Some great friendships have been form through the program. I still remember leading "Walk About, Talk About," and seeing Rocio and Angelica meeting each other for the first time and laughing together---since then, they've been practically inseparable.
There was a lot of things I wanted to do during IAP and going to
~Dave