But this weekend I got to see firsthand that while kids are kids, not every one of them sees the world the same way. Or lives in the same world for that matter.
After holding trials at the school a couple weeks ago, we took the fastest boy and girl from each grade to compete in the Kilimanjaro Marathon 5k Fun Run in Moshi - a 4 hour drive from Mto wa Mbu. The students and a couple teachers were leaving at 3am Sunday in a full car, so my roommates and I headed up a day early on a bus to stay the night in Moshi. This story is full of a lot of ups and downs, but I think the downs of the weekend made the ups even more amazing.
We had a fun adventure there with our colleague, a local teacher named Edward, who was going to visit his mom and accompanied us on the bus. It was great to have him there to lead the way and help us find the best bus (one in which we each got our own seat!), rather than just the first bus, as I'm sure we would have done without him. However, when we arrived, the adorable hostel we'd booked did not have our reservation and so the manager moved us against our will to their awful budget hotel down the road. It was clean, but that was the only thing going for it. Where was the charming patio restaurant surrounded in trees? Where was the on-site bar packed with runners and Kili climbers? Where were the house cats waiting for me to scoop them up into my pet-deprived arms?
I was overheated and frustrated that my plans to meet some other travelers had been thwarted, but a walk about town culminated in a delicious coffee milkshake and a wonderful one-hour massage - something I've been seeking out since I arrived. Things were indeed looking up... until they weren't. Come dinnertime, Faye and I were standing outside a restaurant, on an unfortunately dark street, when a motorcyclist almost rammed right into me. At first I thought he was drunk so I jumped out of the way, at which time his passenger snatched Faye's purse from her shoulder. Aside from losing her phone and a fair amount of money, as well as her sense of calm and security, our hotel key was taken.
Turns out I was right to fret about this shithole of a place because we came to find out they don't keep spare keys. Our friend Jane was staying in another room and the front desk attendant told us in broken English that we could share her key. Wait, WHAT? The keys work on all the rooms? Are you kidding me? And now the purse thief has one of the hotel keys (labeled with the hotel name no less), which will open any room in that hotel? Let's just set that absurdity aside for a minute.
Flash forward to the next morning. An expensive cab ride later (from which we had to jump out and walk anyway because the roads were blocked for the marathon), a quick change of clothes at the car and a pre-run run to make it to the start in time to race with the kids and my weekend finally started looking up for real.
There were hundreds of people crowding around waiting for some sign that the race would begin. At some point, with no warning or signal, we all just started running. I stuck with the girls while the boys raced ahead. Turns out the two slowest girls were running at just my ten-minute-mile pace so we had a really nice time together, running through charming neighborhoods and passing more people than passed us. We took selfies as we ran, threw water over our heads at the 2k station and rejoiced together at the finish line. After the race, the kids stood around for at least an hour watching the half marathon and then the marathon racers finish. They were entranced by the drones flying overhead and couldn't believe that the Kenyan winner would take home 4 million t shillings, or 2,000 USD.
We made our way to the car and packed the whole gang in -16 of us in all - for a crowded and sleepy ride to Arusha. Just like last year, the organization took the racers to a hotel to go swimming and eat lunch. Many of them had never been swimming and even those who had were still scared of the water. I gave them underwater piggy back rides and they howled with laughter when I oinked at them. Glory even gave me a ride back once she conquered her fear of leaving the edge of the pool. I held up the scared ones under their bellies so they could practice kicking their feet and then I let them go so they could learn to tread water. Sarah had tears in her eyes when she realized she could keep herself floating by simply kicking her feet in place and moving her arms. I told her to just imagine she was running the 5k underwater and she would stay afloat. I instantly got tears in my own eyes as I watched her confidence soar.
The most magical part of the trip was after lunch. Last year the kids had discovered the elevator, or "lifty" as they call it, and they had been talking about it all day. Ashley went up with the girls first and then I joined the boys afterward. We stepped into the elevator and pushed floor 9. As we began to rise, Yohana shrieked in fear and turned his back away from the glass walls overlooking the city. He laughed at himself and trembled at the same time. The other boys were glued to the windows with eyes wide. When we reached the top we stepped out and looked across the city from the 9th floor. Losotu, a Form I Massai boy who'd never left Mto wa Mbu, was in utter shock at the view from up high. My heart melted as I watched them all experiencing something new and amazing for the first time. Something so mundane and utilitarian to a Westerner was a thrill to these kids. And it was a thrill to me to watch their brains expanding before my eyes.



<3 <3 <3 so sweet
ReplyDelete