Reality hurts
"Why should there be rich people that have more than they need and poor who don’t have anything? God didn’t plan it that way. He planned for us to be equals. That’s why we have to build a society where everyone has the right to live a decent life.... Maybe it sounds like I have my head in the clouds. But I’ve heard about these astronauts in the United States who’ve gone into outer space. And I figure, hell, if these astronauts can get to the moon, then why can’t ordinary folks like us learn to share the earth?"
- Elvia Alvarado
from Don’t Be Afraid Gringo: A Honduran Woman Speaks from the Heart
I wish I was ambidextrous. To be ambidextrous would be an amazing blessing right now. I have just been in Prof. Belcher's "Social Welfare and Social Policy" class and afterwards my right hand is always aching from writing so many notes so fast. Now, I really love this class and love getting to learn about government policies and how they affect poverty in America and around the world. From reading the news and hearing from fellow students who work in these different social services, I find out what is really going on in the social services and communities right around me. But, it is immensely painful as well. First, because of the hand cramps, but also because of the harsh realities brought up about the state of our country. About how much the wealthy benefit from new policies while the poor and middle class suffer from these same policies. How wages just aren't matching up to what people need to survive, how everyone's just out to make more money, no matter who they/we trample in the process. It's pretty depressing, really. Will things ever really change? Will my efforts as a social worker and citizen really make lasting improvements for those in need?
I don't really know, to be honest. Yet I still have hope. And, if you're wondering, I do recommend Belcher for a teacher. Of course, we'll have to see what I think next week when we recieve our take home mid-term. I've never had my whole grade rely on just a mid-term and final before, so I'm quite nervous. I'll let you know how that goes.
On a random note, a bit of advice for those of you who are in the process of applying to grad school: Get your medical information together! I can't tell you how much I wish that I had gathered all my medical records way before I even sent my application in. For example, since it's now 7 years after I started my undergrad, my undergraduate colleges put my records into some vault off campus for storage and thus made it harder to retrieve. Avoid the frantic paper chasing!
Hope you all have a wonderful week,
Sharon


Comments
Hi Sharon, I just picked you at random because I have a question that no one seems to be mentioning in their blogs...I am considering going to UMB, but I love in Louisiana right now, so it's very far from me. So clearly if I did decide to go there I wouldn't know anyone. So my question is...have you gotten to know anyone in your classes, or are they just too big? What is the interaction like with the students in your program?
Posted by: Stacey | October 3, 2007 2:04 PM