Aaron and I, married less than 10 months, packed our bags and went, literally, half way around the world to the tiny archipelago of Vanuatu. We spent two years teaching in a vocational school, hosted by a small, wonderful community in one of the least developed areas in the world. We were offered the chance to stay for a third year to work with an NGO in the country's capital, which gave us extensive opportunity for travel within Vanuatu and its neighbors Australia, New Zealand and Fiji.
We left Vanuatu in December 2004 and spent 9 weeks traveling from Costa Rica to Mexico before settling in Chicago and into classrooms. I was always aware of how much I benefited from my travels, but was surprised by how well my students respond to them. To them, my pictures and stories are more interesting than anything out of National Geographic. I think this is largely because they feel that my stories, no matter how topical, are not actually educational. They aren't work, so they are fun. But more than that, I think that my travels make the world seem more real and travel more possible to them and they like to imagine the places they might go someday.
Although I have traveled enough to impress my students, I feel I have a huge gap in my resume. I have never been to Europe. I turn 30 at the end of the summer and feel strongly that I need to get to Europe before then, so in June I am heading for France.
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