Sunday, December 17, 2006

I Heard I Was in Town (by Jimmy Buffett)

I’ve been asked a few questions many times since I’ve returned from the far side of the world. Questions like, “Are you going to keep updating your blog now that you’re back?” Or, “How was your time overseas?” And, “How is it being back?” These are surprisingly difficult questions for me to answer. There’s so much behind any short answer that I find it kinda frustrating to even attempt to respond. And then there’s the fact that most people, when they ask, tend to be asking out of common courtesy and with the desire for a quick, short answer like, “Great!” But that just doesn’t cut it for me. If I’m going to address what I experienced, what I’m dealing with now, or what my plans are for the future, I need to do so fully and completely. Thus the reason I’m finally back online and updating this way overdue blog posting.

Let’s start with the first question … the one about the blog. Well, the fact that I’m writing this right now kind of answers that question. But, to provide more depth to explain my absence over the past months and my intentions for the future, I need to answer the question about how it is to be back.
When I returned to Minnesota, I was expecting reverse culture-shock. Unfortunately, the expectation of it didn’t help to alleviate it. I was hit somewhat hard right away and it really hasn’t subsided, rather it has gone through stages. To begin with, I had to deal with the general discomfort with being back. For me, the more I travel outside the states and the longer periods of time in which I do such traveling, the less I feel like I fit in or belong when I return. The American culture begins to feel more and more foreign to me. It’s not easy when people who have known me within a given context for most of my life see me in the exact same context only to watch me struggle and feel like I don’t belong. It makes me feel guilty at times … I worry that they think it’s personal towards them.
The second stage I went through was trying to cope with the individualism and, subsequently, lack of community here in the states. In places like Asia, community is the core of society. To drop in on a friend unexpectedly is an honorable thing to do. Doors are not only left unlocked, they’re typically left open for people to come and go as they please. If you mistakenly wander into the home of someone you don’t know, instead of being chased out of the house you are greeted with hot tea and a welcoming smile. No one wears a watch … not because they don’t respect time, but because they respect people more. It’s more important who you’re with at the moment than when and where you’re supposed to be next. Whole islands will routinely stop everything they’re doing around 3pm every day to meet together to play and watch sports. Not because they have to, but because it’s a time for everyone to be together. There’s no daycare or babysitting, the children simply play together and the community cares for and disciplines them. If you haven’t experienced this kind of community, you can never understand the love, warmth, and sense of acceptance that comes from living in this type of environment. To face the sharp contrast of the American society just … well … it hurts! I can’t begin to explain the feelings of isolation and seeming abandonment that comes with the return.
Not that the first two stages are past, but now I’m facing a new stage. When I was on the far side of the world I experienced an amazing gift from the Lord: TIME. I can’t say I’ve ever had a time in my life where I have felt like I have done more to serve the Lord than while I was over there. My days were spent in prayer, getting to know God better, relationship building, directly sharing the words and love of Christ with non-believers, encouraging and building up missionaries, supporting short-term team members, and helping to lighten the load of the nationals. To be honest, at times it was exhausting work … and God still provided for me the time to take naps on a hammock, swim in the ocean, read books, have conversations with friends simply to pass the time, and even sit and enjoy the sunset … I mean REALLY enjoy the sunset … on an almost daily basis. Somehow, there was time in the days to take a step back and see, feel, hear, and experience God and his amazing creation. Sadly, all of that seems lost to me here … it always has. And now, I’m facing it full force …which brings me back to the question about the blog.
It’s been my desire to keep updating this site, and it still is my desire. I’ve wondered for a very long time whether or not anyone ever even reads any of this. The funny thing is, I’ve had all sorts of people who have come up to me over the past month or so, many of which I don’t even know, and tell me how much they’ve enjoyed reading my blogs and following along in my journeys. It’s been an amazing encouragement. So, with that said, my intention remains to keep updating my blogs. However, I need to be candid about how the busyness of life has left me tired and unmotivated. I’m attempting to make a few necessary changes to help turn things around, but I can’t say for sure whether or not I’ll be able to overcome the struggles I’m facing. For now, simply know that it is my desire to continue writing in here and I will do my best to do so.

Okay, so I haven’t addressed the question of “How was your time overseas?” Hopefully the details I’ve given regarding some of my struggles has provided some insight as to how my time away was. In a word, it was amazing! In a phrase, it was life-changing. It will forever be a milestone in my life to which I will always compare dates and experiences to (“I met her when I got back from living on the far side of the world.” … “I got that job several months after I returned.” … “I lived there a couple years before I traveled around the other side of the planet” … etc.). For now, this brief synopsis will have to suffice. It’s taken me this long to get this much of an update, and to get into the question of how my time overseas was will take quite a bit more time. So I shall save it for another blog, motivating me to write once again and leaving you wanting more.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey it's nice sailing on in to your blog. I'll keep reading now.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the link to your blog. I enjoyed the memories. Mike - your friend from the other side of the world!

Anonymous said...

Jeff, it's nice to read through your blog. I didn't know about it before. I was reading your most recent post and had some thoughts about what you said, since you stated that you "can't say for sure whether you'll be able to overcome the struggles you're facing." That's a heavy statement to make, if it's sincere.

So..dDespite the fact that some of what I say may sound critical, I intend to be encouraging, in fact. I know the feeling of 'reverse culture shock' and I know how struggling with the feelings you described can leave you unmotivated or inactive. Sometimes a cup of cold water to the face is what a person needs to overcome that kind of struggle...so here is my lovingly tossed glass of cold water...

This was just my gut reaction to what you wrote, so take it for what it is. You mentioned all the TIME you were blessed with during your travels. That point struck me as probably the most important difference between Jeff as traveler and Jeff as guy-back-home-in-MN. One reason for all the time you were blessed with is because you were also blessed with MONEY. If you had to also work 8 or more hours a day to make money to fund your travels, your experience of your time as a guest in a foreign country might have less of a romantic aftertaste. In short - and while I believe it's really a necessary process to go through for a time while you are working through the reverse culture shock - some of what you wrote sounds a bit too much like bohemian whining. (loving. these are loving statements).

It's beautiful to have the luxury of time to relax, to build relationships, to minister, to read, play sports, etc... But it's important to remember as you look back on your travels, that that lifestyle is an illusion. And even the people you met and stayed with and came to love, probably have less time on their hands than it appeared to you, or if they did, wished they had less time on their hands so they could be using it to make money. Like the cyclo drivers who lounge around the streets of Saigon, not because they're relaxing or are taking some time-off, but because they simply don't have work. One driver told me if he makes $2 in a day, he considers himself lucky. The people in Asia you referred to - I presume those you met in the small towns of Thailand, for example - probably do not view the luxury of time in the same way as you. It's important not to project moods onto a culture that only exist as mostly as an illusion, more of a reflection of who you are in that context than who those you meet are in their own context.

With that said, I also want to say that I know how frustrating returning to the US is after being away for a long time. The things that I don't like about home stand out like neon. I find myself griping about this or that thing that "Americans always do". Definitely - there is a LOT we, as Americans and Westerners, can learn from traveling. The lifestyle in places like Thailand and Vietnam and elsewhere IS different. The simplicity of it is attractive - even counting in some of the added hardships. There is a lot we can learn about they way they treat guests in their home or treat relationships. There's a lot we can learn about how they prepare and preserve food, or what behaviors they value as virtuous and noble. I resonate with your feeling of frustration that "America just doesn't get it". And it's sorta nice being up there... one of the people who get it... telling the others that they just don't understand, that they can't really relate... smiling compassionately while people try to put words in your mouth about what your experience must have been like abroad... I know those feelings. It's nice to feel like one of the elite.

What I mean to say, Jeff, is - your experience abroad was obviously so valid and so pivotal in your life. There is NO education like foreign travel. It opens life up to you that you had no idea was even possible. It challenges beliefs and ideas that you previously thought unshakable or even universal. It will shape your life from here on out, as well it should. But also, don't let it be an excuse to check-out from your responsibilities or relationships back home. Don't let over-romanticization of your travels cloud the fact that normal life must continue at some point. Even if you left the States and sought work overseas...you would feel a similar sense of "is this all that life is about?" Your experience of staying in a foreign culture and your subsequent memories of it would be much different if you were living and working there, earning money, working at a job, finding time to relax... Travelling is romantic, educational, and very, very important. But it IS travel... it IS leisure time. And perhaps what you lament as much as anything, is the descent back into everyday life, common life - no longer a foreign celebrity treated as a guest of honor where ever you go, but just another guy on the street in midwest America.

My gut reaction says, it's important to keep things in perspective and that perhaps, just a teeny bit, what you're imagining is a frustration with American culture in contrast to the specific cultures you visited, is somewhat also a frustration with what your life must be now as a responsible adult and what you had the blessing of allowing it to be for such wonderful extended pause in your life. I'm just throwing it out there, cuz I do the same thing when I return from travelling. I get frustrated with home, I don't wanna go to work because it seems trivial...blah blah blah.

I do not intend to minimize the depth, complexity, and beauty of your experience. Not. At. All. Really really really. My brief month-long stay in Vietnam over the summer affected me in a similar way and I still feel the effects of some of the changes it made in my way of thinking and in what I want out of life. Such kind of travels can be and usually are a critically (and rightly so) life-changing experience. Just keep it in perspective - only the wealthy have the luxury to be philosophical and we should remember that the luxury of such life-changing experiences is afforded us in many ways because of our status as Americans. And given the opportunity - many of those you met during your travels would gladly change places with you in America to have that luxury of your present philosophical struggle.

You'll be okay, buddy. Keep travel a priority in your life. You'll be a-ok.

Anonymous said...

Hey you. Thanks for sending me the link to your blog! It was hard for me to adjust after my sort time in Europe. I can't even imagine what it's like for you. Let's hang out soon.
-Ann

Anonymous said...

After living in New Jersey for so long it's hard for me to adjust going anywhere else!!!!! LOL
well, we are glad you are back and keep up the blog!!! love you lil bro!
jill and lil

Anonymous said...

Jeff,
so...i figured- why don't i check out your blog...and i have to say that i like what you have to say. i'm glad that you've gotten to experience what you have thus far!! There will be much more adventure coming your way for your life: ) it's all made you you...fun and spontaneous and open-minded...so..maybe i'll be seeing you one day soon!!
[IMG]http://i11.tinypic.com/2it4qhs.jpg[/IMG]

Anonymous said...

that was supposed to be a pic of my feet in the sand but it didn't work: ) sorry!!!

Anonymous said...

coming 'home' is such a a paradox when home is not a place but an illusive feeling that can only be desribed once it is felt.. and alas i await that feeling and for now i seek and i wait and sometimes i feel lost, but one day i know i will be found and at that time it will make so much sense... or at least that is my dream. I will keep searching for home, but in the end i think it is home that will find me. it will find you. who knows where or when... just appreciate the journey till you get there.


God bless and merry Christmas from California- I bet the cold winter is a harsh contrast to living at the equator. and the materialism of christmas isn't aiding in your desire to mesh with American culture- But good luck!

-krista