Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Homesick...

Not sure which country, though. My countdown for coming home is getting less and less. I'm excited, sad, anxious, patient, and other polar feelings. I look back at the "Al-Manar days" where orientation at the beginning of the program was held and it was so long ago, but this semester has gone by so fast. Riding on camels, dining with Bedouins, exploring the pyramids, trekking the deserts, being offered tea at mosques...to say the least. I can't wait to get on that plane bound for home, but I realize the life I made in Amman, Jordan: the route I walk to get to the bus and back, the same people I pass on that route, the call to prayer I hear everywhere a few times a day, the security guards in front of campus who recognize me so they just let me through, saying fun Arabic phrases that really don't make sense in its literal English translation, and yes...taxi drivers that just say something awkward.

I've been going to bed and waking up in the same room and I'll miss the little humble abode I made. My host mom and sister are tight-knit so I fit right in. I'll miss having movie nights with my sister and I'll miss her doing my hair, linking arms downtown, cheering her on at basketball games, and taking crazy pictures together, etc. Yay, for homestays!
Even though I've had it up to my neck with schoolwork and cultural struggles, especially as my time here is ending, I'll miss the little quirks I've seen and developed. Amman is a pretty big city in a country made mostly of desert, so it's seems small and suffocating at times, but most of the people are very hospitable, which is rare to find in America. There's no such thing as personal space here, so it'll be weird going back home where everyone is kept at an arm's length unless you're real good friends with them, but even that takes a while. Social experiment: stand real close to someone and see how they react.

Well, before I keep rambling, I'll include pictures about some of my highlights while I was in Jordan:


Finding internet comes down to a science.

Christmas time!

Celebrating Thanksgiving is always a must.

Gotta love the camel jokes: "Jordanian limousine."

What I hear everyday, 5 times a day.

3 comments:

  1. JoJo! Thank you so much for sharing your insights into Jordan and its culture! I've loved reading your blog!! You are wonderful and I can't wait to hug you in a month and share stories! <3
    Savor your last precious days!

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  2. Merry Christmas Joleen! It is wonderful that you celebrated Thanksgiving in Jordan. The Christmas tree is beautiful with you and Lara standing next to it. You have a wonderful host family! Now that you know your way around Amman. You may just go back there again sometime in the distant future. We are counting down the days for you to come back home too. You are always in our thoughts and in our prayers.

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