Thursday, April 10, 2014

H is for Honduras

The problem with the first place you ever live abroad is the fact that you will forever be comparing everywhere else to it. Now, if your experience wasn’t particularly satisfying, this is not a problem. It’s easy to surpass unsatisfying. But if it happens to be the type of place that you fall madly in love with and which keeps getting bigger and better and more magical in your head as your time away from it grows longer, this is a problem.

That’s what happened to me in Honduras, and I will never know if things had been different if it might have been my Chile. But it was not, it was my second foreign country to live in after Chile. After Chile, enough said, I feel like.

I moved to Comayagua, Hondurasone year after I had moved back to the states from Chile. It was a year of confusion and longing and wondering and I was determined to be abroad again as soon as possible.  I just had to get this pesky master’s degree out of the way. 

The day I was meant to sign my contract renewal at the alternative school I had just completed my first year of teaching at, I received notice that a school in Hondo had invited me to come teach with them.  My decision was hasty, but easy to make.  I wanted back out. I left two months later.

This was not my first rodeo, and I am sure I let all the other teachers for whom it was their first rodeo, know this.  There was simply no way I couldn’t acknowledge their naiveté, or innocence.  One girl, from Canada, had never left her country before. Seriously?

And yet, I think, a bit of the reason I called out their inexperience was because I envied it.  I envied that ability not to compare, the ability to see everything as new and fresh. I would never have that again. And I dearly missed it.

So instead, Honduraslived in constant comparison to Chileand always, always paled in it. The food wasn’t as good, the city was dirtier, my friendships in Chilewere closer.  My time in Hondurasleft me leery of ever living abroad again. Would I ever experience something new without comparing it now to two different experiences? Would any other place I might move live up to the expectations that have been building and building in my head? Could any place ever be better than the ChileI created in my mind?

The truth is, I don’t even think Chilecould live up to the Chilein my head. You can’t go home again, they say. You can simply return and hope that a little bit of what you remember remains, and a lot is even better than you dreamed.

1 comment:

  1. I agree -- no new place will ever live up to the first place you live abroad. And the memory of that big adventure grows more magical as the years go by. We might get a rude awakening if we ever recalled all the bad parts...there must have been bad parts. :D

    ReplyDelete