Thursday, February 21, 2008

Contact Info

All,

As I leave in just 3 days, I thought I should post all my contact info for all those letters that you will be sending!

Alicia Feuillet, PCV
Peace Corps/Malawi
Box 208
Lilongwe
Malawi

Packages should be kept small--padded envelopes as oppose to boxes are best. After the first two months I will be moved to my permanent site and will have a new address which you can use if you like, but mail can always be sent to this address and I can pick it up when in town. After the first several months I will also have a cell phone (oh, the wonders of technology :).

During the course of my service internet and email will be sporadic so I plan on this blog being my main source of communication with all of you. I will try to write as many letters as I can, but the blog will have the most up to date happenings.

Thank you for your thoughts, prayers, generosity, and outpourings of love and kindness--I am truly grateful. Wish me luck!

Love,
Alicia

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Yes, We Can

Barack Obama's, "Yes, We Can":

It was a creed written into the founding documents that declared the destiny of a nation.Yes we can.It was whispered by slaves and abolitionists as they blazed a trail toward freedom.Yes we can.It was sung by immigrants as they struck out from distant shores and pioneers who pushed westward against an unforgiving wilderness.Yes we can.It was the call of workers who organized; women who reached for the ballots; a President who chose the moon as our new frontier; and a King who took us to the mountaintop and pointed the way to the Promised Land.Yes we can to justice and equality. Yes we can to opportunity and prosperity. Yes we can heal this nation. Yes we can repair this world. Yes we can. We know the battle ahead will be long, but always remember that no matter what obstacles stand in our way, nothing can stand in the way of the power of millions of voices calling for change.We have been told we cannot do this by a chorus of cynics...they will only grow louder and more dissonant ........... We've been asked to pause for a reality check. We've been warned against offering the people of this nation false hope.But in the unlikely story that is America, there has never been anything false about hope.Now the hopes of the little girl who goes to a crumbling school in Dillon are the same as the dreams of the boy who learns on the streets of LA; we will remember that there is something happening in America; that we are not as divided as our politics suggests; that we are one people; we are one nation; and together, we will begin the next great chapter in the American story with three words that will ring from coast to coast; from sea to shining sea -- Yes. We. Can.

The REAL Application Process

In my prior post I outlined the 11 step process to becoming a voluteer. Seems really straightforward, doesn't it? Now you get to see what the reality of those 11 "easy" steps actually looks like. Each entry involved some sort of phone call, paperwork, paperwork, and more paperwork. As always, remember to be patient (and organized)--it will be worth it!

6.07-7.07 Did LOTS of research and worked on my on-line application.
7.5.07 Submitted on-line application and Health Status Review form.
7.10.07 Had phone interview to follow up on intelligence activities by myself or family. Received Legal Clearance to proceed with application process.
7. 13.07 Last letter of recommendation submitted on-line. Recruited called and we scheduled the Interview
7.18.07 Interviewed at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Office in Arlington, VA. Interview/paperwork/fingerprints took three hours to complete. Recruiter requested two additional references from a close personal friend and a volunteer coordinator. Said he would call me shortly about a nomination spot once additional letters had been received.
7.19.07 Requested additional letters from friend and volunteer coordinator.
7.24.07 Additional recommendation letters were submitted on-line.
7.24.07 Recruiter called with my placement options and job assignment. I can choose between Sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern Europe, both working on Farm Management and Agribusiness. I told him I needed a day to think about it–I called back 3 hours later and said, “I want to go to Africa.”
7.24.07 I am officially a Peace Corp Nominee!
7.28.07 Received medical packet. Began filling out forms and scheduling appointments
8.8.07 Had dentist appointment (now I can flash an awesome smile through this long process)
8.10.07 Met with doctor to start filling out forms and get some shots (Tetanus, polio booster, TB). Need to schedule yet another appointment to complete paperwork
8.13.07 Blood work completed (I hope). Ouch!
8.14.07 Had ophthalmologist fill out eye glasses prescription form
8.15.07-8.20.07 More doctors appointments, lots of blood tests, waiting for lab results, more calls to doctors office. eh.
8.25.07 Hand delivered medical packet to the Peace Corp Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
9.05.07 Received dental clearance
9.06.07 Peace Corps “officially” receives my medical packet. Now, I wait.
10.25.07 I receive my medical clearance–huge relief!!!! Peace Corps needs yet another recommendation from a work supervisor. I call old employee and have recommendation letter sent.
10.29.07 Talked to someone in the Africa Placement Office. She told me I have been invited to serve in the U.S. Peace Corps!
11.5.07 Received my invitation to serve as an Environment volunteer in Malawi!
11.7.07 Call HQ to accept my placement
11.16.07 Mailed my passport to HQ and provided an updated resume and aspiration statement to the Malawi Country Desk
1.20.08 Received my staging packet
2.21.08 Go to Arlington, VA for staging
2.23.08 Fly to Johannesburg, South Africa for a overnight layover
2.25.08 Fly to Lilongwe, Malawi!

How to apply to the Peace Corps

To all future volunteers--you are making a great decision! When I was applying I found the blogs of PCVs very helpful, so I thought I would outline the process for you. Two pieces of advice: be patient--think of it as practice for when you get in the Peace Corps. Second, stay on top of things. Call, harass, make appointments earlier. Do whatever you have to do short of camping out at headquarters to get things done.

1.) Do research: Gather as much information as you can about what you are getting yourself into. The more you know, the better you will feel and the more questions you can answer for your family and friends (to make them feel better).
2.) Application: Fill out the online Application, Health Status Review Form (only available once you submit the online application). Once you submit the online Application, you are officially an Applicant.
3.) Interview: You will meet with your recruiter (they will be very nice, I promise) and have a long conversation about your abilities, skills, questions, mental preparedness, coping mechanisms, cultural/dietary concerns, and regional preferences. No personal questions are off limits, so be prepared! You will turn in a form to authorize a background check and get your fingerprints taken.
4.) Nomination: After the interview, your volunteer will call to tell you if you can move to the next step, if so, congrats you are an official Peace Corp Nominee! You will get a job description and region of service. You will be a Nominee for the next few months, so get use to your wicked awesome title.
5.) Evaluation: This step is easy (for you at least). The government will do a background check, so long as you are not a criminal and haven’t participated in intelligence activities you don’t have to worry about this stage.
6.) Medical Review: The most dreaded and painfully tedious step by far. You will need a physical exam, dental exam, eye exam, GYN exam (for the ladies, obviously), and blood work. Each exam comes with its own set of specific forms. Remember, patience is a virtue. Your medical packet will only be complete when HQ in Washington, D.C. says that it is. They may request additional blood work, a visit to a specialist, or that those wisdom teeth have got to go. Don’t leave anything blank, it WILL delay the process.
7.) Invitation: Once you get your medical clearance you are an official Peace Corp Invitee! YAY! It is only at this stage that you get your country assignment and departure date. This comes in a letter in the mail (try not to check obsessively, for your own sanity).
8.) Preparation: Get ready to go. Pack your very light bags, close bank accounts, sell your car, have long lunches with family and friends.
9.) Staging: At this point you are a Peace Corp Trainee, and will be so for the next three months! You will fly to your staging city somewhere in the United States and meet the other Trainees going to the same country. The three days involves paperwork, training sessions, last minute vaccinations, and stuffing your face with food and drink that you won’t see for the next 27 months.
10.) Training: Once in country, you spend 3 months with your new super cool Trainee friends and split your days between intense language lessons and culture/safety training. As always (it wouldn’t be the Peace Corps without it) there is lots of paperwork. At the end of the 3 months, you are sworn in as an official Peace Corps Volunteer.
11.) Volunteering: Two years of the “toughest job you will ever love.”