A blog describing the life and inner monologue of a guy who has realized he is in way over his head (not a height reference).
Friday, December 31, 2010
A Christmas Vlog.
What Money Can Buy.
It’s crazy how far money goes here. When I go out for food I feel like I am living way above my means...
...then the bill comes and I realize that everything together costs $3-4. Here are some examples of how far Canadian currency goes here as well as some figures that have made me think:
75 cents – amazing pad thai (essential)
80 cents – the price for an entire bag of cabbage. I’m talking like 16+ cabbages.
$1.25 – large bottle of beer (also essential)
$8 – the price you can expect to pay for one night at a beautiful guesthouse here.
$12 – the average monthly allowance for most students. Imagine living on $12 a month.
$13 – the price of a brand new soccer ball. Also the price of a pair of Asian soccer cleats.
$20 – the price of my Burmese guitar...it’s no Larrivee but for my skills it’s perfect.
$200 – the price to feed 60 students for a week. My school is in need of some extra funding because we are currently supporting about 60 students on a budget for 46. So if you have some extra Christmas money left over and you want a great cause check: http://burmaeducationfund.com/ . All the money goes directly to where it’s needed. If you choose to help out let me know!
Monday, December 20, 2010
Congratulations
I can’t believe it but it has already been a month. Insanity.
Over the last 4 weeks I have gotten to know some of the students well and some of them have shared their story with me. Time and time again, with each conversation, each class and each experience I have had my perspective and worldview shattered only to be rebuilt more humbly than before. More and more I am realizing that we have all won the lottery. We live lives and have opportunities available to so so few. I have lived a life of enormous privilege, rich blessings and the gift to be able pursue my own dreams.
It is a gift.
I have taken for granted the fact that as soon as highschool was done the obvious next steps are more education: whether university, college or training in the trades. These are the choices we get to make.
Our choices are not limited.
Our future is not limited.
We live in a country where parents can tell their children that “they can be anything if they work hard” and, for the majority, it is true. This is not true of all countries and all people. In fact, I inputed the average income for an “unattached individual” Canadian (which is $28,500) on http://www.globalrichlist.com/, and found that if you have that income you are in the top 9.7% of the entire world.
The world.
Everyone.
The more insane stat is that if you have a family income of $74,600 you are in the top 0.87% of the world. That means that 99.13% of the world has less.
The students I teach do not have choices I take for granted. They can work harder, longer and with more tenacity and never see the opportunities and options I have come to expect. Other than the school and the dorm there is virtually nowhere they can go safely. To travel to a football match we had to take the backroads to avoid suspicion. These kids, most of them my peers, have so few options. Some can’t go home, others don’t have a home anymore.
The part that blows my mind is that the students continue to hold on and hope.
Hope for a free Burma.
Hope for the small chance of a university education.
Hope for a future where they can travel freely.
I don’t write this to elicit feelings of guilt for the abundance we have, but rather to spark a fire in all of us to act. To give to those around us in our world who have less.
On Saturday night I had a movie night with some of the students and we watched one of my favourite movies of all time: Kingdom of Heaven. The movie starts and ends with the quote:
"What man is a man who does not make the world better?"
Although there is no snow, or shopping mall Santa’s or consumer culture telling me what to buy to make me and my family "happy", I strangely feel more blessed than I have ever felt during any other Christmas.
I won the lottery. I was born in Canada. I am healthy, have a family and friends I love and who love me and I have the privilege to dream big dreams.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Movin' on up.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Lightning Never Strikes Twice...
A Video Blog
Monday, December 6, 2010
Proud to be Canadian.
Canadian Friends of Burma – Ottawa, Dec. 3, 2010
Burmese democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi sent a message to the government and the people of Canada through her sister-in-law, Mrs. Lucinda Phillips, yesterday at a meeting on Parliament Hill hosted by Parliamentary Friends of Burma (PFOB) and Canadian Friends of Burma (CFOB).
Her message is as followed:
“I deeply appreciate the award of Honorary Canadian Citizenship, both for myself and because it symbolizes the help that Canada has given my people. Canada has never faltered in its support for the democracy movement in Burma for which I am very grateful. I would particularly like to thank the generosity of the government for taking in so many Burmese refugees and the help that they have received when they arrived. A good example of Canadian generosity is the recent donation to the victims of Cyclone Giri in Western Burma which has scarcely impinged on the consciousness of the outside world.”
“I have always felt a particular closeness to Canada because of my French-Canadian mother-in-law, Josette Vaillancourt who was always proud to be Canadian and always kept her Canadian passport through living in England for over 60 years. I am also aware of the history of the Vailancourt family’s efforts to foster good relations between the peoples of Canada, something that I have always advocated for Burma. Lucinda [sister-in-law] will no doubt explain that part of the family history. Finally I look forward very much to the day that conditions in Burma will allow me to be free to visit Canada myself and thank the Canadian people in person. Thank you very much.”
Accompanied by Hon. Larry Bagnell, chair of PFOB and representatives of CFOB, Mrs. Lucinda Phillips also met Hon. Lawrence Cannon, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Hon. Beverley Oda, Minister of Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and delivered the message.
Hon. Jack Layton, an opposition leader and the leader of New Democratic Party (NDP), also raised a question about an invitation of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi to Canada in the House of Commons yesterday. Hon. John Baid, the leader of the Government in the House of Commons, answered, “the government is certainly be pleased to continue to work with him on this important issue.”
NDP and PFOB that consists of more than 40 MPs and Senators from all political parties recommended Prime Minister Stephen Harper to invite her to Canada. Mr. Harper issued a statement calling her “an unwavering champion of peace, democracy and respect for human rights in Burma” after her release from the under house arrest last month.
After meeting with parliamentarians and political staffers from political parties in the morning yesterday, Mrs. Phillips also held a discussion in the afternoon with a group of long-time Burma supporters and founders of CFOB in the boardroom of Inter Pares, a major relief and social justice organization in charge of channeling Canadian humanitarian aid to Burma.