I jumped off an
Ecuadorian bridge into a 50 meter free fall high above the river below, biked
37 miles along the highway, observed the many wonders of the Amazon rain
forest, hiked volcanoes and cloud forests, experienced the evolutionary
diversity of the Galápagos Islands, and climbed the Incan ruins of Machu
Picchu. And those were just the weekend and spring break excursions.
“It was stunning.” That’s been my
go-to response when people ask me about my semester in Quito , Ecuador ,
studying at la Universidad San Francisco de Quito and completing an internship
in the south part of the city. I lived with my host mother in a three bedroom
apartment 9,000 feet above sea level, with her daughter and two-year-old
grandson. I took the bus 20 minutes to the university each day, dropping into
the valley of Cumbayá, where I took four classes, all in Spanish. Just riding a
public bus in Ecuador proved to be an invaluable window into a wonderful
culture.
Perhaps
the most rewarding part of my experience was my internship. Three days a week I
traveled 90 minutes one-way by bus to get to the southern part of Quito, where
I volunteered at el Centro de la Niña Trabajadora (the Center for the Working
Girl), a nonprofit alternative school and workshop dedicated to helping working
children of the market and their families to attain an education and have
access to health, social, and psychological services.
I primarily worked in the
administrative and volunteer offices, helping to search for grant opportunities
and to update our presence on international volunteer sites and fundraising
platforms, though I also spent some time helping disadvantaged students with
their homework and volunteering on special projects to earn funds for the
street outreach program. When I first told my host mom where I’d be interning,
she strongly discouraged me from going to such a dangerous part of the city.
However, I steeled myself to be vigilant but unafraid (though my walking pace
betrayed my fear still), and was overwhelmingly rewarded with amazing life
changing experiences and a host of new international, life long friendships.
I saw a
part of the country that many citizens and most tourists don’t want to see. I
had the unique opportunity to juxtapose the economically privileged students of
the private liberal arts university with the marginalized members of society
whose economic needs forced their children into labor often before elementary
education could be completed.
I met
incredible people from Ecuador
and from all over the world who showed me the value of experiencing life
outside one's comfort zone. Whether having to speak a new language, navigating
to avoid being robbed at blade-point, eating lemon ants from a stick, dealing
with the military near the Colombian border, jumping off a bridge, or hiking in
the hail with new friends, I learned to trust myself and to be self-reliant. My
semester abroad proved the value of an experiential education as I found
opportunities to learn beyond the classroom.