And boom – just like that we have two days left of teaching, two days left of exams and a final farewell to the kids on Friday. What we thought was another week and a half of teaching has now become two days, and what we thought was two weeks left with the children has now become one.
My head has not yet stopped spinning from when we heard the news this morning, and I can’t stand thinking about the fact that this is my last week with the kids. I’m not ready to leave them, I want more time with them…but then again, I know that next Friday I’d be saying the same exact thing. There is absolutely nothing that can prepare me for how sad it will be to leave these children and this school – whether it’s in two weeks or in five days.
Among the hundreds of lessons I have learned this summer, one of them has been to make the best of every situation, because as much as you can try to plan and control things, you never know what will happen. Life is what happens, and you go along with it, taking it as it comes with patience, courage, a positive attitude, and a whole lot of faith. If anything, this news just further reinforces the fact that we must cherish every moment and enjoy our last few days here to the absolute fullest.
So what are we going to do this week? Everything we can. We teach today, we teach tomorrow. We administer exams on Wednesday and Thursday. We say goodbye on Friday. Next week, Evan, Jackie and I will return to school on Monday and Tuesday to be with the teachers all day and score the exams and write final grades and reports for the children. Then, plans for us are still in the making, but we will most likely spend our last four days in Uganda doing a little more traveling with our supervisor, Enoch, because according to him there is still so much left for us to see and learn about his country. And finally, next Sunday, we depart for our long journey home. As if these last two weeks weren’t going to go by fast enough already…
While this week will be filled with final lessons and exams, it will also be filled with something else --- kickball. Evan and I taught the children how to play and it was a smashing success. For as terribly as we explained the directions, the kids picked up on the game right away and absolutely loved it. We stayed out on the field for over an hour, and by the final inning the kickball game had everything a good old YMCA-league American kickball game would have…kids trying to steal bases, high fives for homeruns, even kids in the outfield who had become bored and decided to sit and pick grass. It was beautiful.
Ready to kick it out of the park...and into the mountains...
Teacher Whitney's All-Stars up to bat...
Why did the zebra cross the road?
Baboon family portrait
Chasing a warthog with Afin, a good friend of ours we have made in Kasese who accompanied us on our trip.
Well, it's time to head home and get to my final day of lesson planning. Keep the kids in your thoughts and prayers as they take their big exams this week. They have worked so hard and grown so much this summer, and regardless of how they score on their exams I am really, really proud of them, and the world should be too! Saying goodbye to them doesn't seem possible, but all good things must come to an end. Actually, I take that back. This isn't an end for these kids. We may be leaving them, but they are well on their way to a thousand new beginnings, hopefully with new knowledge, self-confidence, the ability to ask questions and wonder, and the desire to continue discovering, learning, and thinking for the rest of their lives.
Peace, Love and four more days...