So going away from just blogging what I do every day, I would rather write what I learn, and about new perspectives that I continue to discover.
First off, I have learned a great deal about the AIDS/HIV epidemic. There are many issues associated with the disease, not all relating to prevention (though that is most important). There are social, ethical, and moral issues that need to be dealt with. There is discrimination against those with the disease. Hospice care for those in the last stages. The government's role in everything (especially the boundary between encouraging protection and "promoting" sexual behavior). Help for those living with it. Family support -many families disown those diagnosed, forcing them to live in the streets. It is a big problem, but I see efforts being made to increase awareness and deal with it one step at a time.
I guess I have learned that AIDS is about more than those that get it, and the dilemmas created by the disease are worth exploration by everyone.
On another note, I read a quote today at the George Price Center that had a profound effect on me. George Price was the "father of Belize." He lead Belize to independence and had a major hand in shaping the country.
"The danger of ideology is that you believe something and you try to tamper and shape reality to that and it doesn't work sometimes. We cannot go wrong when we work our constitution and invest our time, labor, and talent in the work of continuing creation....People get bogged down in ideology: in rhetoric over action."
Just think about it :)
Last of all, I find myself continually questioning-or defining- the aspiration to "better one's life." Not to get into the trite subjects of money and the definition of happiness, but more of the universal application of American ideas. I recently talked to a couple who literally spent their own money to build a technologically advanced farm for a university here. It was abandoned in less than a month. More than anything here, I see a lot of peace. Well, not really peace, but people content. It may be laziness, but I don't think so. They could try and get a better education. They could try to come to the States. They could try to own a business. But they don't see a need. Which leads me to wonder if the "need" is subjective, and for all of the wonderful opportunities we wish to create, how many of them will be, and need to be seized?
I believe that fulfillment is a personal thing, and we should be careful in forcing our definition of success onto another.
This is mostly just ramble. But it is good brain food :)
Jacob Tonks