Everything is finally in order for the 2012 Federal Parliament presentation of the 25 Most Remarkable Teens in St. Kitts and Nevis ceremony on November 14, 2012. I will be posting the names of the honorees in a later blog, including the profiles of each recipient.
I’ll also share the story behind the organization and implementation of this highly successful project, and the story of those who would have had it fail, but that too, will come at a later time. Unfortunately, it’s a story of small-minded people and truly represents the ugly side of human nature.
I’ll be leaving for New York next week and I’m very excited that I’ll be seeing my daughter Sarah and spending a couple of weeks in the city I love more than any city in the whole world. If only I could find a job there…
I’ll be returning to St. Kitts on October 18 and will spend the next few weeks finalizing preparations for the November 14th ceremony, and sorting through all the stuff I’ve accumulated in my two plus years, both at my office and my house. Shipping some things home – not much I want to keep – and having a yard sale for the rest.
My landlady told me yesterday that I’ll have to pay an electricity bill that she expects will be about $1,800 before I’m cleared to leave in November. Last October – that’s right October 2011 – lightening struck my meter, making it necessary for the meter to be replaced. The people at Public Utilities took care of the replacement in late November, but no one has shown up to read the meter since. I’ve made multiple trips to the Department of Electricity – stood in the hour plus line several times now – only to be told that the reading on the meter remains at 0. Trying to reason with the man behind the cage by explaining that I’d read the meter just that morning and it registered 1204 didn’t work, threatening that I would be returning to the U.S. soon and leave behind a huge unpaid bill didn’t work either. Basically, the man said that they’d get to it when they get to it.
I’ve been thinking about what I’ll miss when I leave here and I realized it’s not things or places that I‘ll miss, but my overall approach to life. The simple quiet I’ve learned to enjoy; living life in the present. The feeling I get when I walk down the main street of town and locals greet me as though I’ve lived here always. And of course, the kids I’ve come to know after spending a year mentoring and sharing their dreams for a life well lived.
These are just a few of my favorite things.
And so it goes on October 3, 2012.
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