December 30, 2004: Headlines: COS - Nepal: Volunteer Connection: Heidi Anderson likes to explore new worlds and different cultures. The most extreme change when she volunteered was when she went to Nepal for the Peace Corps for two years.
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December 30, 2004: Headlines: COS - Nepal: Volunteer Connection: Heidi Anderson likes to explore new worlds and different cultures. The most extreme change when she volunteered was when she went to Nepal for the Peace Corps for two years.
Heidi Anderson likes to explore new worlds and different cultures. The most extreme change when she volunteered was when she went to Nepal for the Peace Corps for two years.
Heidi Anderson likes to explore new worlds and different cultures. The most extreme change when she volunteered was when she went to Nepal for the Peace Corps for two years.
Heidi Anderson with Balfour Retirement Community
by Kitty Keaton
"I enjoy it. I feel like I've really accomplished something today. I hope others will consider it more."
It seems that when Heidi Anderson volunteers she likes to explore new worlds and different cultures. The most extreme change when she volunteered was when she went to Nepal for the Peace Corps for two years.
She was the only English-speaker in the village. She taught many crucial things to the people in the village. The most surprising feature of her entire stay was that members of three different castes came to her house for tutoring together!
The village knew that education is to be revered more than tradition, which can hinder and even kill their lives in the village. That must have been such a hard decision for the community to make.
And we should remember that we all can learn. While volunteering we each learn so much from that part of life, which we are nurturing, while others are in such dire need.
Heidi takes her cat, Buster, with her to visit the folks at Balfour Retirement Home. Buster really has some good friends there now. They come just before supper on a Tuesday or a Wednesday.
So if you are visiting anyone there, try to go then and help your friend pet and hold sweet Buster. Heidi says, "Two residents in particular just perk up as soon as they see that it's Buster who's come to see them." Heidi and Buster have made some deep and lasting relationships there.
Volunteering has given Heidi the opportunity to learn many new skills. She has learned a new language and how to communicate with others while studying body language and posture. Each volunteer opportunity involves a culture, which isn't her own.
She has volunteered with the youth of her community by being a Big Sister, right now with the elders of her community at Balfour Retirement Community, helps a friend at Ecocycle when she's needed. While in New York she volunteered for the I Have a Dream Foundation for two years, and she has donated bone marrow. That is an impressive list of accomplishments.
For fun Heidi likes to play soccer and hockey, she likes to hike and loves to go to downtown Denver for a good baseball game and come back to our wonderful little community called Boulder.
For information about volunteering with Balfour Retirement Community or other agencies, call the Volunteer Connection at 303-444-4904.
When this story was posted in December 2004, this was on the front page of PCOL:
| The World's Broken Promise to our Children Former Director Carol Bellamy, now head of Unicef, says that the appalling conditions endured today by half the world's children speak to a broken promise. Too many governments are doing worse than neglecting children -- they are making deliberate, informed choices that hurt children. Read her op-ed and Unicef's report on the State of the World's Children 2005. |
| Our debt to Bill Moyers Former Peace Corps Deputy Director Bill Moyers leaves PBS next week to begin writing his memoir of Lyndon Baines Johnson. Read what Moyers says about journalism under fire, the value of a free press, and the yearning for democracy. "We have got to nurture the spirit of independent journalism in this country," he warns, "or we'll not save capitalism from its own excesses, and we'll not save democracy from its own inertia." |
| Is Gaddi Leaving? Rumors are swirling that Peace Corps Director Vasquez may be leaving the administration. We think Director Vasquez has been doing a good job and if he decides to stay to the end of the administration, he could possibly have the same sort of impact as a Loret Ruppe Miller. If Vasquez has decided to leave, then Bob Taft, Peter McPherson, Chris Shays, or Jody Olsen would be good candidates to run the agency. Latest: For the record, Peace Corps has no comment on the rumors. |
| The Birth of the Peace Corps UMBC's Shriver Center and the Maryland Returned Volunteers hosted Scott Stossel, biographer of Sargent Shriver, who spoke on the Birth of the Peace Corps. This is the second annual Peace Corps History series - last year's speaker was Peace Corps Director Jack Vaughn. |
| Charges possible in 1976 PCV slaying Congressman Norm Dicks has asked the U.S. attorney in Seattle to consider pursuing charges against Dennis Priven, the man accused of killing Peace Corps Volunteer Deborah Gardner on the South Pacific island of Tonga 28 years ago. Background on this story here and here. |
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Story Source: Volunteer Connection
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Nepal
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