Me a graduate student?
It was so farfetched that I didn’t dream it. But here I sit on the window seat of my
student accommodations drinking my morning coffee and listening to the Birds in
Salaya, Thailand the home of Mahidol University where I will be attending the
graduate program in Human rights.
What I think about how I got here one word comes to mind
“HOPE.”
I have struggled with hope most of my
life. Hope for a better life every day,
and hope for a better world for all of us.
Wikipedia says that
hope is an optimistic
attitude of mind that is based on an expectation of positive outcomes related
to events and circumstances in one's life or the world at large.
After a google search I started thinking what
is the difference between hope and faith because the google search on hope
brings up all kinds of religious and faith quotes.
This difference
between faith and hope is based on your acceptance of the outcome that you are
having hope on or faith in. Faith is
accepting the outcome as the best even if it’s not the outcome you wanted; Hope
is an action predicated on uncertainty with optimistic thoughts on the outcome.
One of my favorite quotes was by Taylor Swift
“To me, “FEARLESS” is not the absence of fear. It’s not being completely
unafraid. To me, FEARLESS is having fears. FEARLESS is having doubts. Lots of
them. To me, FEARLESS is living in spite of those things that scare you to
death… It’s FEARLESS to have faith that
someday things will change.” The faith
here for me is Hope. My sister has
called me fearless many times but I do have fear and I think I overcome that
fear with hope. I am not a religious person and have a lot more hope than
faith.
When I think about this next journey of my
life I am filled with hope. Hope that
there are so many people making this world a better place for everyone. I would like to share four Personal stories
of hope with you that happened on this journey called life.
I opened house to foster kids, teenage
girls. Shortly after a girl was placed
in my home I started knitting a Christmas stocking for them with their name on
it. I didn’t realize at the time but
that act of knitting gave hope to the girl that just arrived and to everyone in
the household that that girl would be with us and a part of our family when the
Christmas holiday came.
Before I left for the Peace Corps I was nervous. But I was consoled by my sister and my
daughter when they each wrote letters to me as goodbye presents. My sister, Zoe, gave me so much hope in her
goodbye letter and my daughter, Lani, confirmed this in her letter to me
writing, “I am so proud of you! You have grown and changed so much during my
life time and I am very lucky to have you for my mother.” Getting a vote of confidence like this from
my daughter means the world to me. In
Mali every time I read these it gave me hope in the work I was doing and I got
teary eyed.
In Mali my friend Koro always was
hopeful. Her and her husband live in a
space that in 10X15 divided into two rooms, they have not running water, no
electricity, and they struggled and work hard for their daily needs and have
very few daily wants. Koro always had a
uplifting thing to say to me as she did her laundry by hand in a plastic tub
just outside her front door. She always
greeted her neighbors made jokes and laughed.
She taught me hope has nothing to do with money, she taught me hope is
about community, hope is about caring and when you care about others that
caring comes back to you and fills you with hope.
The other day I was in the check-out line at
Costco there was a Muslim woman in front of me, she had forgotten money and
credit card. As she walked away with her
head down and Costco employees started rolling her cart away to put the food
back the woman behind me asked the cashier how much was the bill and then
offered to pay for it. The woman ran
after the woman walking away, caught up with her and after a short conversation
they both started walking back, the cashier stopped the person rolling the cart
away. I took a deep breath and said out
loud “I am start going to crying.” I
gave the women who was paying a big hug and told the other woman to have a good
day.
I held my tears back until I got outside and
put on my sun glasses, I cried all the way to my car and then some. I wasn’t sad I was so full of hope in that
moment. It’s moments like this that make
me think we can get over this national trend that has swept our country.
Think about hope
in your life, ask yourself where do you get hope how do you spread that hope in
your life, in your community and in the world.
Hope makes such a big difference in changing things for the better.
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