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It took all of 4 days to come up with an appropriate name for this blog, and I’m pleased to report it has slightly more depth than White Girl’s Assorted Perils.

Once again the solution to my not-really-a-problem presented itself when I wasn’t looking for it. The best solutions are always stumbled upon, yes? Or, in this case, driven upon.

Having completed the move to DC, I was ready to start my new and frightening existence among the East Coasties. But my parents requested one last thing before they left — how about we drive my route to work, both to familiarize me with it, and make them feel better? Because despite the fact they couldn’t change my participation in this, they could still impart essential wisdom like “turn left here.” So, I said sure. Why not. Good idea, even.

A few minutes later, I mapquested that mofo, printed out the directions, and set off towards the city.

My new apartment is just across the river in Virginia. First, it’s cheaper to live there, and second, it’s easier to have a car there. It also serves as a compromise with my roommate who works a little further back into The Commonwealth. Anyway, it’s barely across the border, so when emerging from the side road that leads to the highway, one is immediately greeted with the “skyline” of DC: the Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial, and Capitol dome. It’s, in a word, awesome. The actual definition of awesome, mind you, not the version popularized by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Focus on the awe part.

Maybe it’s because I’m a social studies nerd, or because I think America ~rawks~, or because I have a general appreciation for architectural beauty on display. But looking at that sight, I can’t help get excited. In a way like “man, I’ll NEVER get tired of looking at that.” And I don’t think I will.

“Wow,” my dad said, as if thinking the same thing as me.

“That’s what I get to look at sitting in traffic,” I replied.

“Not a bad view,” he understatement-of-the-year’d.

I continued driving on the 14th Street Bridge over the Mighty Potomac until reaching my exit — the sign that said “US Senate.” How exciting!

I felt like I was on some kind of patriotic high. Not a rah-rah America, post-9/11 bumper sticker kind of patriotic, but the kind born in civic pride — as if these buildings were personifying “checks and balances.” I caught myself reminiscing about the social studies lesson plans I used to write. I know, I know — but don’t judge me, ok?

A few more turns and some stop signs later, I made a left and noted via my directions that I’d be on this street for a while. After a moment I glanced in my rear view mirror and was stunned — there, in all its glory, was an unobstructed view of the Capitol Dome, larger and closer than I ever expected. I couldn’t stop gaping, so good thing it was an early Sunday morning and traffic was non-existent.

Nothing could top a sight like that, right?

Nope. So let me reintroduce you to the phrase “nowhere to go but down.”

As I kept driving, the buildings alongside the road gradually began to look shabbier. Some had boarded-up windows; others had graffiti on the sides. Instead of inviting shopfronts I saw bars on doors. I glanced in my mirror again. The dome looked slightly smaller, but still every bit as visible.

I sat at a red light and looked at a row of condemned buildings adjacent to a liquor store with a little kid sitting alone outside of it.

“Do you have to go on this road?” My mom interrupted my thoughts.

Distracted by the corner store next to us with the two bullet holes in its glass door, I didn’t answer. I took a last glance in my rear view at the dome and turned off onto the street that would lead to my placement site.

Talk about sobering. I can’t properly articulate that feeling — going from a sense of pride and awe, to wondering what the residents of this dilapidated, seemingly forgotten neighborhood felt when they saw it. Obviously, I knew I’d be working in a poor neighborhood. But seeing the landscape morph before my eyes, all the while that same dome that had excited me ten minutes ago turned borderline mocking. The Capitol can be seen from so many points in DC, but the people in power there don’t reciprocate that view.

To belatedly answer my mom’s question, yes, it’s the only route for me to get to work. Looks like I’ll have plenty of occasions to ponder this new twist on American symbolism in my mirror. Welcome to life in the Rear View.

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A bit of logistic overview to illustrate my position within AmeriCorps:

AmeriCorps > Sub-Program > Placement Organization/Nonprofit > Me!

My sub-program is an organization that has about 15 or so small groups in cities across the country. It’s education-based, so all the AmeriCorps members are placed in various teaching/tutoring/mentoring scenarios — whether it’s adult literacy, ESL, after school programs, charter schools… the works. My Washington, DC sub-program has about a dozen members placed throughout the city.

Two other members in my group have been assigned to the same Placement Organization as me. But after reporting for our first day, it seems that two of us are going to be moved to other sites within the city. I’ve worked with the secondary-aged population, so I’m staying at the teen center. I have no idea where my “colleagues” are going, but the majority of the other after-school programs in this organization are for “little kids.” So, bye guys.

This development is a little disconcerting to me. The woman I’d met over the summer who ran the program is no longer here. Things seem pretty disorganized at the moment, and I still haven’t been told exactly what I’m supposed to be doing. Or will be doing. Also, not having two other AmeriCorps people here means my support network just vanished. Sure, they’ll be around at other sites, but I’m not naive enough to think this year is going to be easy.

So, more about the site.

The Center, which is my generic name for this place’s much longer and formal name, is located within a housing complex, in what would not be described as a four-star neighborhood. According to a DC demographics site, this is the poorest area in all of DC west of the Anacostia River. 31% of children live in poverty in this general vicinity. It’s not the worst; there are some other areas of Southeast that climb as high as 55%. But compare that to areas of Northwest that have rates as low as .0001%. It’s hard to believe, looking at this place, that it could be worse. It features a liberal amount of the big three: unemployment, crime, drugs. Not all the youth who are in the program live in this housing complex. Some are from around the neighborhood, and few come from further out. The complex itself is supposedly mixed-income; based on what I’ve seen, though, I’m not sure how accurate that claim is at this point.

Anyway, the Center is home to a new after-school teen program that’s way beyond babysitting. And when I say “new,” I mean that this is the first year it’s strictly for teenagers. In years past, they had younger kids as well as a few older ones, but The Powers That Be have worked out a system with the other program, located over a building and up a floor, to separate the two groups. Teens with us, younger ones “Upstairs” (my generic name for that program).

The first couple hours are devoted to homework help, reading enrichment, or other academic activities. There’s a really fine line that will need to be constantly tweaked: if this place is too much like school, no teenager in his right mind would show up. But its purpose is not as a “drop in center.” This is supposed to have an academic focus. We just don’t want to make it school. Talk about hard.

Later in the evening, the program offers structured courses that vary by the day of the week: Photography, life skills, civics, media literacy, music, etc. There is a state-of-the-art music studio and real, professional recording equipment. The only catch is the music made there must have lyrics to help the world, not hurt it. Ok, then.

I already made my first mistake. It was stupid, really. I am never going to get anywhere with these kids if I show up looking like Miss Banana Republic. Well, it wasn’t that bad, but I’m just used to dressing like a teacher when I’m teaching. Makes sense, yeah? Not here. In my first set of ethnographic notes, my researcher side has deemed I need to blend in with my population more. And by “blend in” I mean, not give them any more reason to chalk me up to a parole officer. I’ll start by wearing jeans.

Apparently I’ll have a lot of time to think about my wardrobe. Our partnering nonprofit has wrangled its three AmeriCorps members into conducting its annual reading assessment tests at all of the DC sites. Which means we’ll be spending the next four weeks traipsing from ‘hood to ‘hood torturing these unsuspecting children with our bubblesheets. Here we go.

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Or so Pastor Lovejoy’s wife so eloquently put it.

Guess what. I’m a liar. But I also have a certain amount of self-preservation. So I say the trade-off is worth it. Problem? Co-Workerette has to make me feel like shit in the process.

I’m constantly fighting these internal battles of what I perceive to be dangerous and what really is. Is it actually dangerous around here right now? Or am I amplifying recent events in my mind because I feel uneasy due to the inexplicable complacency of Co-Workerette? I used to think her comfort level around here was due to her having worked here for a couple years. But after what happened in December, I just see it as naivety, therefore how am I supposed to believe that following her lead now is a good idea? She was so shocked and appalled that someone could steal her ring, after leaving it out on her desk. Girl, what are you doing with some priceless family heirloom in a place like this? And then you act surprised? Again, naivety?

I hate writing this considering what these kids live like, but there’s something to be said for the mental state of the volunteer.

So back to my liar liar pants on fire-ness. Apparently the kids have wanted a “sleepover” in the Center for quite some time. I immediately dismissed the notion as “disastrous” (to myself) for a number of reasons. But Co-Workerette being Co-Workerette not only humored them, but is going through with it… right smack in the middle of what you may call a “turbulent time” here?! Again, how am I supposed to believe that this is sound judgment from the person who is supposed to be in charge?

My brother had originally been coming to visit this weekend. Although he had to cancel a couple days before, I still used it as an excuse. Let’s pretend, for the sake of judging the low blow of this response, that he was still coming. Remember that this is a brother I haven’t seen in months, to whom I am very close, etc. etc.

Co-Workerette: So you’re coming to the sleepover, right?
Me: I can’t. My brother is in town.
Co-Workerette: You can’t leave him alone for the night?
Me: I’m sorry.
Co-Workerette. I can’t believe you. You’re letting these kids down.

Um… wow. Way to kick someone when she’s down. I’m letting them down?! After everything I’ve done and felt so far? Are you f*&%ing kidding me?!?! The fact that I had nothing to say in return is only indicative of how my self-confidence has seemingly plummeted since being here. I can’t stick up for myself. I should have been able to say “You are full of shit. And I’m not coming because you are completely lacking in sound judgment when it comes to operating this place. You have no regard for safety or, quite frankly, common sense.” But I just stood there.

I don’t want to, in any way, make it seem like my current “lack of support system” in this place is anything remotely approaching the lack of support system these kids deal with in their lives. But there is a strange parallel emerging. With nobody to back me up, I just take whatever is thrown at me. I say that I’m not here for the other adults. I’m here for the kids. I’m gaining an immeasurable… something, in doing this. But I’m also currently losing something in the personal, professional department. I don’t know what I’m doing wrong in regards to working with her, other than being aware that we have completely polar opposite teaching/interacting styles. I’m fine with that. But I get the feeling she’s more of a her way or the highway kind of a girl.

This extra layer of anxiety is something I didn’t anticipate. Not having another AmeriCorps member working here with me (originally there were supposed to be two others) and not being able to go to anyone with my concerns about adult responsibility here is making me crazy. And I’m already crazy enough.

*bonus entry previously unpublished during “live blogging”

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Lending credence to his “Wild Card of the Blog” reputation, Dimples was the first to prove me wrong. Sort of.

I’d hightailed it to Cincinnati the weekend after my last day. The following Monday afternoon, while blissfully inhaling a few Skyline coneys to make up for months of withdrawal, my cell phone vibrated.

I glanced at the display – didn’t recognize the number, but it had a DC area code. I flipped open the phone and plugged my other ear so to hear over the clinking of forks against plates.

“Hello?”

No response.

“Hello…”

Still no response, so I tried to make out the background noises. It wasn’t difficult. I’ve been around long enough to know exactly what “muffled cheese bus chatter” sounds like. And considering it was a Monday (field trip day) at 2:30 (return trip timeframe), it also wasn’t difficult to determine exactly who was calling. I’d have been surprised if Pixel or Red called, but either one of them most certainly would’ve talked.

“You gonna say anything, [Dimples]?”

Still nothing.

“Okaaaaay.”

About ten more seconds of cheese bus noises and he hung up. I smiled ruefully and closed my phone with a sigh.

So despite my predictions to the contrary, someone did end up calling. But it didn’t exactly amount to much. I’m guessing it was some kind of test. Maybe a bet with himself to see if I actually gave him a working number. Maybe he didn’t know how to say “I miss you.” Maybe he was just infernally bored and wanted attention. Whatever it was, it didn’t exactly bring me any reassurance that he’d call should he ever really needed something. I’m not that naïve anymore.

Now, three-plus months later, I seem to have figured correctly. He hasn’t called since.

I considered writing the ‘afterward’ back then – the week I was in Ohio when Dimples called. I had some downtime with nothing to do but watch the Reds flounder below the .500 mark. And to think. To turn the previous 11 months over and over in my head, searching for some kind of grand meaning. But it was too soon. I tried updating my resume and learned unsurprisingly that my AmeriCorps experience was impossibly un-bullet-point-able.

Yet, I didn’t come up with a magical summation tool in the weeks and months since, either. Seriously, how does Mr. Cliff Notes do it? My still un-bullet-point-able resume remains as useless as ever. Something slightly less useless? An old worksheet from 4th grade I found crunched at the bottom of my closet during the aforementioned Ohio trip. I read it then and had a good laugh. But now I’m thinking of it again.

It was a piece of regular notebook paper, but labeled with the proper name/date/room number notations that proclaimed “official school assignment.” I’m guessing it was either a class self-esteem workshop or a weird, badly masked child psychology study of which we were unknowing participants. Each student in the class had to write some kind of “anonymous complement” to you — 30 lines filled with 30 different scrawled platitudes. Mine was predictably dominated with the type of stuff that I recall being noticeable among fellow kiddies – mostly variations on “you are good at sports” and “you are funny.” But I was surprised to see one of the last entries on the page said, “you stick up for everyone, even if other people don’t like them.”

Maybe that was my cliff notes version all along. I am self-aware enough to know not much has changed in 15 years — try putting “those who other people don’t like” into a socioeconomic metaphor. I wish I knew who among my childhood classmates was so perceptive… because it really just boils down to that.

In another entry, I alluded to why I wanted to do national service instead of getting a teaching job right away, but it’s really a lot simpler. I grew up in a middle class, close family with supportive parents and siblings. I went to a suburban public high school and got a great education, including playing two varsity sports and taking enough art classes to open my own wing at the Smithsonian. My parents had the means to send me to the college I wished to attend, and there I studied hard. And in between that and drinking pints of Guinness, I contemplated the meaning of life. I didn’t really come up with an answer, but surmised two infallible truths: one, I love Guinness. Two, I really did hit the upbringing jackpot. Sure, it wasn’t glamorous or exciting, but I had safety, an education, and people who supported and looked out for me 100%. So this year? This year I just wanted to stick up for the people who maybe didn’t have that.

Yay, a summary!

But this wasn’t like making room at the lunch table for the new girl that nobody else would talk to. This was every day, every minute, even when I wasn’t technically “at work.” This was apologizing to my roommate for not really “being myself” this year, because of all the alone time and mental health days I needed on weekends. This was feeling like a total failure more often than not because I didn’t understand how to reconcile just “being there” as making a difference. I joked about thinking I was getting an ulcer in another entry, but I honestly don’t think I was that far off. Being that constantly stressed out was uncharacteristic for an even-tempered person like me, and I often felt trapped in a vicious circle of helplessness and guilt. I’d worry about them, then I’d worry about me, then I’d feel guilty about worrying about me because at least I got to go home at night.

Throughout the year, I had more than one person tell me things like, “I can’t wait ‘til you’re done working in that hell hole.” Well, okay… I get you. Except not really. Sure, I didn’t expect it to be as turbulent and emotionally trying as it was (not that my AmeriCorps subgroup didn’t secretly look forward to all the Made For TV Movie material I relayed at every meeting), but the whole point was to go where people needed help and to, you know, do that. People shouldn’t be so shocked that it’s difficult, as if I was there against my will or something.

So I did it. And now I’m done, right? Wrong.

See, now I get the inevitable “so how was it” questions. I resist saying “don’t ask me, ask dee roll dot org” and instead stick with my new standard “well… I don’t think anything will ever seem difficult, ever again.”

This wouldn’t be a true Capitol Rear View entry without a few semi-obscure references to variations on the nerdy, sporty, or musical. So let’s revisit our old friend Frodo Baggins, who wondered while trying to re-adjust to normalcy after destroying the Ring: “How do you pick up the threads of an old life? How do you go on, when in your heart you begin to understand, there is no going back?”

You don’t. Not with this kind of new perspective. Which is why my answer is that, at least in my current mindset, nothing could ever possibly be more difficult. I feel I’ve lost all rationalization to complain about ANYTHING, ever again. Problems won’t seem like problems. I’ll stop there before I start spouting clichés and just say that I know this because of waiting a few months to write this entry. Instead of the intentional musings of my service being the most telling, it has been the myriad of unintentional reminders while processing seemingly unrelated things. It’s as if my brain has been completely rewired with this new perspective, and nothing I do is the same as “before.”

Let’s be real. My Facebook profile’s employment section with the position listing as “Michelle Pfeiffer in Dangerous Minds” is completely sarcastic, as I didn’t do this to fulfill the stereotype and/or cultural delusion of White Person Saves Black People (which seemed cringeworthy before, but now is acutely nauseating). The very idea that they needed to be “saved” from something is upsetting to me, now that I’ve been part of the community. While it’s true that many of them face challenges both in and beyond their control that result in terrible circumstances, there are countless aspects of said community that I hope would never change. And until you truly experience and embrace another culture, you probably won’t understand how that’s possible, and why social injustice is wholly complex.

If this is all starting to sound like an academic paper to you, that’s because it probably will be some day. Soon. At a Georgetown University library near you.

Not that I’m surprised to be affected so much. I said before that I’m pretty self-aware, so I also know that I hold, at times, an unhealthy amount of empathy for others. Which is why I’m not capable of saying “my what an interesting year” and continuing on in my own world. Even if I’m not there anymore, even if I never see any of those kids ever again, I know that whatever I’m doing professionally will have some tie to them and that experience.

But I want to stress that what I did this year wasn’t some grand exercise or unique effort. It wasn’t any different than what thousands of other AmeriCorps members across the country and in various capacities did, even if mine seemed a little sexier due to certain events. So I can’t encourage participation in national and community service enough, even if it’s not the long-term kind like AmeriCorps. All you have to do is show up, fulfill, and be fulfilled. I don’t know how else to describe something that will affect everything else I ever do: how I see myself, how I see other people, how I conduct my life. There were lessons to be had in all of the good and bad that comes with that. On Abbey Road, Paul McCartney called it “carry[ing] that weight.”

So here I am, 24 years old and still don’t know what I want to be when I grow up. I’m going to have another degree that, by design, isn’t exactly concrete about career paths. According to Myers-Briggs I need to do something “meaningful.” I couldn’t agree more, but gosh, that narrows it down. Good thing I know how “meaning” manifests in reality, because I lived it for 11 months. And so the only thing I’m certain of is that whether it’s indirectly or directly, I want to help people. What, does that sound trite to you? Because I think of Dimples, Tyson, Pixel, Red, Cupcake… and even Darth and Michael. And it doesn’t. It never will.

President Clinton recently published a book called Giving, which details various stories of community service from around the country and world. It also provides numerous resources for readers to become involved with service, themselves. It includes a lot of AmeriCorps mentions because the program as we know it now was founded through a Clinton initiative in 1994, much like JFK is remembered for his involvement with launching the Peace Corps. So, back in September, I heard he was scheduled to sign copies at the Pentagon City Costco. Since I didn’t have class that day, I got there bright and early and was probably about 40th in line for a signing that wouldn’t begin for 4 more hours.

I brought academic reading material but instead found myself lost in thought and people-watching the decidedly pluralistic crowd. If you don’t think that could keep me amused for 4 hours, you must be new to this blog.

Anyway, the event finally began and everything moved along efficiently – not surprising given the sheer number of people standing in line and the encroaching time limit. After nearing the front, the Secret Service agent ushered me around a fort of stacked 24-packs of coke and I watched those in front of me walk towards the former president (who was standing) for a smile, a handshake, and a signature, before being quickly shooed out the back. Finally I was motioned ahead to take my turn. But seeing as this would probably be the only chance I’d ever get, mid-handshake, I said, “thanks for AmeriCorps.”

His demeanor completely changed. It’s obvious what a personable and charming guy he is, and clearly he’d been sporting his meet-n-greet politician face, but I sensed a sudden change in authenticity. Not to mention he was actually talking to me when he apparently wasn’t supposed to. He asked me my name, and wanted to know about where I served, what it entailed, and what I thought about it. Our 3-minute conversation seemed to last an eternity considering the circumstances. He ended his last response to me with a “bless you” and signed my book. I joke with my friends now and laugh that “I was blessed by Bill Clinton in the Fresh Produce section of Costco,” but it’s clearly a conversation I’ll never forget.

The Secret Service had been quite explicit about herding us like a long string of cattle – that in the interest of time and security, there would be no inscriptions, no photos, no dawdling. Just get your damn book signed and move out.

So after settling into my seat in a strangely empty car of a blue line train, I opened my book and was surprised to find something above his signature:

“Danielle, thank you for serving in AmeriCorps.”

I’d just been personally thanked by a president. Not for a campaign donation or attending a rally, but for something so intimately important to me that I can’t put it in words. And while I will always have that permanent reminder, right there in black sharpie on the inside of my book, it will never compare to what I now have in my head and my heart — this perspective and empathy for a group of people that will always be the root of my motivation for pursuing some semblance of social justice in our society.

I looked at the metro map across the car from me, settling on a familiar neighborhood stop.

“No… thank you,” I said.


–Danielle Thomas, November 2007

If you managed to read this far, you deserve a cookie. I’d also love to know what you thought. Questions also welcomed.

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