As I set out on this journey I’m only just beginning to
catch my breath. I spent the majority of my summer working a job that a few
years ago I would never have believed I was capable of. I got to work at the language
camp that originally inspired my love for Japan, languages and culture in
general. Just like all the summers before as a camper, it was challenging, but
it was also extremely fun! I worked to overcome doubts in my own language
ability and began taking on the role of not only a teacher but also a caring
and at times almost parent like figure to the campers. I found myself invested
in each of the students, especially the girls that lived with me, much more
than I had expected. I also found myself working side by side with people who
had been my teachers as a camper, which made for some interesting first
interactions. I was originally afraid that working at the place that had
inspired me years ago would ruin the image I had preserved of it, but it did the
exact opposite, it became something even better than what I had remembered it
as.
However,
only two days after returning from this great experience I nearly lost
consciousness for no apparent reason and continued to feel strange for days
afterwards. I received an alarming suggestion from the first doctor I saw who
thought that it may have been a partial seizure, which as you can probably
imagine sent me into a bit of a panic. Not only was that a serious diagnosis
with life long implications I had no way of fully understanding at the time,
but I also plain didn't have time for this. I was leaving for Japan in a month;
I had no time for a serious diagnosis. But during the ride from that first
doctor’s office to the emergency room, the following five hours I spent getting
tested there (with no food mind you), and the ride back home I realized that as
much as I wanted to go to Japan, if there was something serious wrong, I would
be staying. I had a month to figure this out. For those next few weeks I felt like
I was lying whenever people asked me if I was excited and ready to go to Japan
because I answered that of course I was excited and my preparation were almost
done! I didn't want to explain what was wrong because I didn’t really know what
to say, so I did my best to keep preparing and keep myself busy. In between the
MRI’s, blood tests, eco-cardio grams and doctor’s appointments I went to the
embassy to get my visa, kept track of emails from Kansai, had various goodbye
parties with relatives and unpacked my things from camp that had been briefly
forgotten in the confusion.
Waiting at the doctor. |
In the end
it turned out that the cause had been nothing dangerous and nothing that would
stop me from going to Japan. So now I can say, without feeling like a liar,
that as I set out on this journey I am very excited because a week ago I wasn’t
even sure this was going to be possible. In the past few weeks I’ve come to
understand that not only are MRI’s some of the most terrifying and strange
medical tests ever, but also just how much of a privilege being able to do this
study abroad program really is. For seven years I have desperately wanted to go
to Japan, and in those seven years my interest in the language and culture has
matured a lot. In the end, my interest led me to applying for study abroad. But
I don’t think even in this past year as I applied for study abroad that I fully
understood how amazing the opportunity I was signing up for was. That is until
this last month where it was no longer guaranteed that I could go.
Some time during the middle of the flight when we crossed the date line and I celebrated my 20th birthday thousands of feet above the earth. |
So as I go
to Japan I enter into it with a different frame of mind than I had when I
originally signed up. This entire summer has been about challenging myself,
growing and seeing things in a new light and I expect that to continue in all
kinds of ways over the next year. I expect for things I assume to be
universally understood to be misinterpreted and misunderstood, I expect that
there will be misunderstandings and differences between me and my host family,
and I hope for things I take for granted to be challenged and re-understood
from a different perspective. As a result, I hope through these experiences,
and many more that I can’t even imagine yet, that everyday I will learn
numerous things, whether I realize them at the time or not. But lastly, and
perhaps most importantly, I hope it is a whole lot of fun!
2 comments:
Hi Sarah, thanks for sharing your journey! I hope your year will be all you've dreamed of!!
All the best,
Kathy Landon and the OIE Staff
Thank you! It hasn't been very long, but it has already been a pretty great experience!
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