Unexpected Lessons of a Gap Year

By Carpe Diem Education Alumni Breezy Zins

On my first night back in America after a three-month-long journey through East Africa, I opened up my closet doors, looked at all the clothes I had – so many they all wouldnā€™t fit on hangers and had to be folded on shelves – and I cried.

Iā€™d seen such incredible poverty it seemed so unfair, so confusing, to have so many beautiful things hanging in my closet when just one day prior I had been living in a developing country. Within two hours, I had filled three trash bags with clothes ready to be given away or donated.

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I hadnā€™t expected to react in such a way. My gap year group leaders had, of course, tried to prepare me and my group for the reverse culture shock that can sometimes affect travelers. Iā€™ve always been able to adapt to new surroundings and situations easily, however, and hadnā€™t paid much attention.

I hadnā€™t realized just how much my time in East Africa had impacted me.

My first night home brought back three months of images of hardship and poverty: children wearing their fathersā€™ dirtied shirts – still much too big for their tiny bodies – as dresses, my own Tanzanian host family and the two – two outfits each family member owned, rotated every three or four days.

When you travel abroad, youā€™re told that youā€™ll never see the world in quite the same way again.

I heard it countless times as I prepared for my Carpe Diem gap semester but was never able to figure out exactly what would change. As I traveled through Uganda, then Rwanda, and, finally, Tanzania, I was unaware of the changes happening within me. I wasnā€™t cognizant of the subtle ways the things I was experiencing were impacting not only how I thought about myself, but about the world as a whole.

It wasnā€™t until I was home, back in a culture so, so different from the cultures that surrounded me in Africa, that I was able to realize just how powerful my Carpe Diem gap year had been.

There were the small things I learned, like how to make enough chapati for fourteen-plus people on a single burner. (It involves a lot of oil, a lot of patience, and a lot of dedication – the waking up four hours before breakfast kind of dedication.)

I learned how to take a bucket shower, how to plant trees (and ignore the spiders crawling across the grass towards me), how to tie a kitenge (still not mastered), and how to scuba dive (dramamine is a beautiful thing.) These things are important, if only because they are small pieces of what make me me, and they are what I expected to learn during my gap year.

What I didnā€™t expect to learn, however, were the deeper, less obvious lessons. The ones that led to me crying over a closet full of clothes.

These lessons were the culmination of three months of cultural immersion; there was not any single incident that led me to them, and they happened so subtly I didnā€™t even notice learning them until my semester was over. Still, it is impossible to deny that I did learn them.

They are what makes me so grateful for my possessions and so aware of the difference between ā€œwantā€ and ā€œneed.ā€

They are why I now refuse to spend more than $25 on any single item of clothing, why I make sure to learn both sides of every story, why I continue to remind people that Africa is a continent rather than a country, and why that distinction really does matter. They are why I corrected a friend when she claimed a trip to South Africa would give her Ebola, why I care about Europeā€™s treatment of the African refugees sailing into its waters, and why I am so passionate about access to education for all.

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Without my Carpe Diem experience, I never would have learned these lessons.

They cannot be taught in a classroom; no matter how many pictures of poverty I was shown, I never would have understood it without witnessing it for myself. In three months I learned more about the world and my place within it than many people ever have the opportunity to do. I was able to experience a new culture, fall in love with it, and realize that I want to spend my life connected to it, that my life is forever connected to it.

A year and a half after my gap year with Carpe Diem I’m entering my junior year of college. I am working with two friends from school on a documentary about HIV/ AIDs in rural Zambia and I have plans to enter the Peace Corps and work in East Africa as soon as I graduate.

In many ways, I am the person I am today because of my time with Carpe Diem. The experiences and lessons I learned while abroad have shaped me into a more empathetic, more culturally sensitive and understanding person. I may not have understood the amazing impact my gap year semester would have on me while I was still abroad, but I have no doubt of its power today. I will never forget – and cherish- the things I learned while in East Africa, nor would I ever want to.

Breezy Profile Breezy Zins traveled to East Africa with Carpe Diem Education on her gap year in the Spring of 2014. She is currently a creative writing student at Emerson College in Boston. She enjoys kayaking through the Delaware Water Gap, singing (loudly) in the car, laughing at terrible puns, and telling people that ā€œSlaughter House Fiveā€ changed her life, man. She works for Jumpstart and thinks you should, too. Itā€™s a wonderful organization. If you have questions, comments, or bad jokes (especially bad jokes), email her at breezyzins@gmail.com