Early this afternoon me and three medical students were returning to my little, mountain pueblo in the Dominican Republic from our trip to a rural region of Haiti. I leaned back in the car and asked them what they thought about what we had just seen.
One of them said that returning here made him feel both angry and guilty because of the extreme poverty and hopelessness he saw in Haiti.
I made it a point to say, "You do realize that we are in a poor part of a 3rd world country <b>right now</b>, right?"
It's important to keep some perspective.
We took a health survey of houses near my pueblo yesterday.
One of the houses was about 2 kilometers from the nearest road. We
had to hike to get there. It was a one room house with 12 people living
in it. One of the kids had obvious signs of malnutricion (for instance,
his hair had begun to lose color).
There was no kitchen or bathroom (or even a latrine). No electricity
or running water. And worst of all, no floor in the house. Only dirt.
Almost everyone there had been born and raised in that house. Most of
whom were less than 12 years old. Their normal diets didn't include
fruits, vegetables, or meat, just rice and yucca.
And yet this wasn't unusual. We visit several more houses that day
without floors, bathrooms or running water. Where the adults in the
house couldn't even remember the names of all the people living there,
much less their ages. Where no one had incomes of any kind.
And still you need to put this into perspective. Because even this
situation looked relatively wealthy compared to what we just saw in
Haiti.
In Haiti, kids spent much of their time waiting alongside the dirt
road for a car to come by to beg from. One woman offered to sell her
baby to us as we drove by. Malnutricion is the rule, not the exception.
Even the landscape was depressing. It was dry and without shade from
the tropical sun. Most of the trees had been cut down, and it seemed
like its been months since the last rain. It's amazing how much things
can change in just a couple kilometers.
None of the houses had floors, electricity, running water, or much of anything other than a zinc roof.
I know its going to take me several days to get over this visit
emotionally (it did last time too). So I totally understand why the
medical student said what he did.
When I call my family in The States I try to explain what I saw,
but I know that there is no way that they could ever understand.
During my last visit to The States in November I had several instances of reverse culture-shock.
One example is how everyone is so damn scared of everything in
America. The TV tells them to be afraid of something, and, guess what?
They are! Everyone is afraid of losing what little they have.
In my community there is none of that fear. You see, the worst has
already happened. You don't have anything to lose, so why be afraid of
losing stuff now? It's a very liberating feeling, actually.
Another example is how people in America get all uptight over stupid shit that isn't important.
So the f*ck what if someone cut you off in traffic? So the f*ck what
if you couldn't buy some stupid piece of sh*t that you don't really
need? So the f*ck what if your favorite sports team lost? So the f*ck
what if your favorite politician got made a fool of?
Does any of that really f*cking matter?
Please allow me to give you a free clue: I see more smiles here in my poor pueblo than The States.
People are nicer here than in The States.
People are more willing to share what little they have here than in The States.
The reason is because once you scrape away all the bullsh*t and get down to what really matters, you discover that stuff just gets in the way of happiness.
What really matters is people. Your friends. Your loved-ones. Your family. Everything else is just a distraction.
It sounds like a cliche, but it is more true than many people realize.
Maybe I'm a little bit emotional right now (probably am), and my
english is probably piss-poor because I've been speaking spanish all
week, but I think most Americans could use a reality check.
I should emphasize: don't be afraid of reality.
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1 comment:
un pocitito. :) I just read this, out of the blue. What a powerful experience. I'm sorry, words don't really work here. I have not lived next to poverty quite that abject, but I did live in Mexico and recognize the part about real smiles and how amazing some of the people who live with lack truly are. We have so much to learn from them if only we'd listen. Thank you. Ellen
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