10 Suggestions for Helping your Young Adult in Global Mission (YAGM) Return Home
by Andrea Roske-Metcalfe
1. Don’t ask the question, “So how was it?” Your YAGM cannot function in one-word answers right now, especially ones intended to sum up their entire year’s experience, and being asked to do so may cause them to start laughing or crying uncontrollably. Ask more specific questions, like “Who was your closest friend?” or “What did you do in your free time?” or “What was the food like?” or “Tell me about your typical day.”
2. If you wish to spend time with your YAGM, let them take the lead on where to go and what to do. Recognize that seemingly mundane rituals, like grocery shopping or going to the movies, may be extremely difficult for someone who has just spent a year living without a wide array of material goods. One former YAGM, for example, faced with the daunting task of choosing a tube of toothpaste from the 70-odd kinds available, simply threw up in the middle of the drugstore.
3. Expect some feelings of jealousy and resentment, especially if your YAGM lived with a host family. Relationships that form during periods of uncertainty and vulnerability (the first few months in a foreign country, for example) form quickly and deeply. The fact that your YAGM talks non-stop about their friends and family from their country of service doesn’t mean that they don’t love you, too. It simply means that they’re mourning the loss (at least in part) of the deep, meaningful, important relationships that helped them to survive and to thrive during this last year. In this regard, treat them as you would anyone else mourning a loss.
4. You may be horrified by the way your YAGM dresses; both because their clothes are old and raggedy and because they insist on wearing the same outfit three days in a row. Upon encountering their closet at home, returning YAGMs tend to experience two different emotions: (1) jubilation at the fact that they can stop rotating the same 2 pairs of jeans and 4 shirts, and (2) dismay at the amount of clothing they own, and yet clearly lived without for an entire year. Some YAGMs may deal with this by giving away entire car loads of clothing and other items to people in need. Do not “save them from themselves” by offering to drive the items to the donation center, only to hide them away in your garage. Let your YAGM do what they need to do. Once they realize, after the fact, that you do indeed need more than 2 pairs of jeans and 4 shirts to function in professional American society, offer to take them shopping. Start with the Goodwill and the Salvation Army; your YAGM may never be able to handle Macys again.
5. Asking to see photos of your YAGM’s year in service is highly recommended, providing you have an entire day off from work. Multiply the number of photos you take during a week’s vacation, multiply that by 52, and you understand the predicament. If you have an entire day, fine. If not, take a cue from number 1 above, and ask to see specific things, like photos of your YAGM’s host family, or photos from holiday celebrations. Better yet, set up a number of “photo dates,” and delve into a different section each time. Given the high percentage of people whose eyes glaze over after the first page of someone else’s photos, and the frustration that can cause for someone bursting with stories to tell, this would be an incredible gift.
6. At least half the things that come out of your YAGM’s mouth for the first few months will begin with, “In Mexico/Slovakia/South Africa/etc…” This will undoubtedly begin to annoy the crap out of you after the first few weeks. Actually saying so, however, will prove far less effective than listening and asking interested questions. Besides, you can bet that someone else will let slip exactly what you’re thinking, letting you off the hook.
7. That said, speak up when you need to! Returning YAGMs commonly assume that almost nothing has changed in your lives since they left. (This happens, in part, because you let them, figuring that their experiences are so much more exciting than yours, and therefore not sharing your own.) Be assertive enough to create the space to share what has happened in your life during the last year.
8. Recognize that living in a very simple environment with very few material belongings changes people. Don’t take it personally if your YAGM seems horrified by certain aspects of the way you live – that you shower every day, for example, or that you buy a new radio instead of duct-taping the broken one back together. Recognize that there probably are certain things you could or should change (you don’t really need to leave the water running while you brush your teeth, do you?), but also that adjusting to what may now feel incredibly extravagant will simply take awhile. Most YAGMs make permanent changes toward a simpler lifestyle. Recognize this as a good thing.
9. Perhaps you had hopes, dreams, and aspirations for your YAGM that were interrupted by their year of service. If so, you may as well throw them out the window. A large percentage of returning YAGMs make significant changes to their long-term goals and plans. Some of them have spent a year doing something they never thought they’d enjoy, only to find themselves drawn to it as a career. Others have spent a year doing exactly what they envisioned doing for the rest of their lives, only to find that they hate it. Regardless of the direction your YAGM takes when they return…rejoice! This year hasn’t changed who they are; it has simply made them better at discerning God’s call on their lives. (Note: Some YAGMs spend their year of service teaching English, some are involved in human rights advocacy, others work with the elderly or disabled, and at least one spent his year teaching British youth to shoot with bows and arrows. The results of this phenomenon, therefore, can vary widely.)
10. Go easy on yourself, and go easy on your YAGM. Understand that reverse culture shock is not an exact science, and manifests itself differently in each person. Expect good days and bad days. Don’t be afraid to ask for help if necessary. Pray. Laugh. Cry. This too shall pass, and in the end, you’ll both be the richer for it.
As you might've gathered from recent posts and newsletters, our time here in Mexico is winding down. We, as a YAGM community, have been doing our best to prepare for this transition, knowing that there's no true way to prepare for it. We've had to find new ways to do that, in light of the three volunteers who were sent home early. We've also been quick to remember that it is not only our transition; this time of receiving YAGMs will be equally difficult for those who never left home. I thought I would start to be a little more pro-active in sharing some of the things I'm reading and thinking about with y'all. Beginning with this list, written by our country coordinator, Andrea.
In some ways, it would make more sense to share this list with you right before I get on the plane. It might make sense to carry around copies of it and hand them to people before we begin the first conversations we will have face-to-face in over a year. But that only makes sense if my sole concern is my experience of coming back. If we are to get through this time together, I think we need to be honest that we're coming from different places. So, here's a starting point. Here are some suggestions from Andrea--some requests from me. I hope it will give you an idea of where I'm starting from so that we can start this conversation, and some context for other clips, quotes, and ideas from other sources I'll be sharing in the next month.
Now it's your turn. Where are you with this transition? Are you going to be camped outside the airport on the 15th so you can be the first to see me? Are you living on the other side of the world yourself, and realizing that my being in the Carolinas doesn't mean that much difference in our ability to talk to each other? What are you looking forward to learning about once I'm back, that you haven't been able to ask me about while I've been gone? What are you nervous about?
[My answers might be a little more complicated, since there's only one of me, and there's a lot of you, but I'll be sharing those thoughts, too, in the coming weeks.]
Now it's your turn. Where are you with this transition? Are you going to be camped outside the airport on the 15th so you can be the first to see me? Are you living on the other side of the world yourself, and realizing that my being in the Carolinas doesn't mean that much difference in our ability to talk to each other? What are you looking forward to learning about once I'm back, that you haven't been able to ask me about while I've been gone? What are you nervous about?
[My answers might be a little more complicated, since there's only one of me, and there's a lot of you, but I'll be sharing those thoughts, too, in the coming weeks.]
1 comment:
Thank you for the is starter list. I know that it will be very helpful as we re-adjust. I think making copies to hand out is a good idea - should I run off a couple hundred?
Thank you for #7 - realizing that things have changed for us, too. Some of that change has come as a result of the stories you have shared with us and the ways in which your year in Mexico has challenged us. For that we are thankful. But we have made that change as a result of conversation within our own hearts and minds. Some of the change we have made (in response to you and your words) may not be the change you would have anticipated.
Other change is as a result of what has happened here, while you were gone. Some of that change may not be easily seen by you, when you return. Some of that change may not have come as a result of a dramatic event. But change is has been.
All of our lives are richer because of the year you have had. And we look forward to discovering together who we are, now.
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