I don’t know if I have ever paid attention to time as much
as I have since being in South Africa. Maybe it is because no one else cares
about time so I’m trying to keep track of it for an entire nation or maybe it
is just being away from what I was used to in the States. Either way, I have
watched clocks and calendars a lot this past year. I counted the days until the first retreat in
November, I counted down until Christmas, until my trip to Cape Town, until the
second retreat, until my parents came--I seemed to be counting down days all
the time which is something that I had never real done before.
It started out when I spent the majority of my first month
sitting in the office at the Kwaz. There
is only so much that I was able to do at that point so I spent a lot of time
reading while waiting for the phone to ring.
Time seemed to move so slowly on those days. I am sure part of it was my expectations of
what I would be doing at my site and part of it was just learning the slow pace
of life compared to the United States. I
am still challenged by the pace of life and the phrase “just now.” Coming from
a culture were now actually means right away it is hard to adjust to nothing
starting on time.
If the feelings about time have taught me anything it is
patience. I have come to realize that it
doesn’t help if I worry about church not starting on time or if I’m waiting for
hours for someone to pick me up. Things will happen when they happen and I just
have to go with it. It doesn’t do me any
good to get frustrated so I might as well relax and enjoy the day.
The final countdown I have is the one until I will be back
in the US and it is at exactly two months from today. I have often thought
about what that first day back will be like and am both excited and scared. I am so excited to see my family and friends
again but, at the same time, it will mean the end of my time in South Africa. It means leaving people who have become my
family and leaving a place that has taught me more than I ever could have
learned in a textbook.
During the first few months, when there were still over 300
days left, I honestly didn’t know if I would make it this far. But now, with only two months separating me
from Lincoln, I am embracing every day that I have left in South Africa. I have been given an incredible opportunity here
and will continue to have amazing experiences for the last 50+ days at my site. I know that July 10th will come
and I will have to say goodbye to the Kwaz but for now I am looking at each
moment as a blessing. I’m using every
day as a chance to love these people, this place and the life that I am
living. Each activity, day of work, and
conversation continues to become more and more precious. I challenge you to do the same—Embrace the
moment, love the people around you, and look at each day, person, and conversation
as a gift. Because that’s what they are.
"Nothing lasts forever so live it up, drink it down, laugh it off, avoid the bull, take chances and never have regrets. Because at one point everything you did was exactly what you wanted."