A walk to learn

30070752_1823318197706738_1280556262_oAliceNova has another center in Montefiascone where I was working in the last three months. In this center they do different activities with adults and kids with disabilities. One of the activities they realize is “attività sul territorio” where the clients have the possibility to visit several cities in the province of Viterbo.This activity gives them not only the opportunity to discover new places but to LEARN. Learn to use the bus, learn to read the road signs, learn how to behave on the streets, learn about the dangers that one can face when walking, learn to cross the road, learn more about the culture and history they live in and that surround them.

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With each step and with each walk they learn a little bit more. As learning goes beyond a classroom, this activity definitely gave me the opportunity to see how important and efficient this way of learning can be.  Since some of these young adults have difficulties to remember and to be focused, this practical experience makes them put in action the things they learnt with the operators. And of course, it’s a great chance for the clients to strengthen and improve their relationship with the workers.

We have always known the benefits of walking for one’s health but who would have thought that it could bring benefits on one’s learning and social skills as well?

 

 

Written by: Inês
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Non solo cucina

Diana
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Nella mia esperienza SVE (Servizio Volontario Europeo) tra tante attività ho avuto la possibilità di lavorare nel laboratorio di cucina

… come vedete nel VIDEO.

L’attività del Centro consiste nell’imparare a comprare e preparare in modo autonomo  tutto quello che serve per il pranzo per tutte le persone presenti.  Devo dire che la cultura italiana è impregnata della tradizione culinaria e qualche volta mi sembra che il tempo trascorso durante il pranzo sia considerato “santo”. È l’opportunità per tutti per parlare e condividere.

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Ma questa attività ha un senso più profondo e non è “solo cucina”, perché ha anche forte capacità di sviluppo a livello psicologico. Allora, proviamo capire perché il laboratorio di cucina è importante per lo sviluppo dell’aspetto cognitivo di una persona. Prima di tutto dobbiamo conoscere quali sono i processi cognitivi, che sono: la percezione, la memoria, il pensiero ed il linguaggio. Soffermiamoci gradualmente su ciascuno di essi:

  1. La percezione: acquisizione sensoriale dell’interazione tra le persone ed oggetti di diversi materiali, temperature, superfici, colori.
  2. La memoria: sviluppo della memoria visuale, auditiva e operativa tra il ricordo dei piatti che ci sono stati preparati in precedenza, il loro nome, le fasi della loro preparazione.
  3. Il pensiero: sviluppo dei lobi frontali della corteccia cerebrale attraverso l’utilizzo dei piani con le fasi dell’elaborazione per la cottura dei cibi (in immagini o scritte). Si forma anche il concetto delle diverse fasi del processo e delle categorie (verdure, frutte, stoviglie ecc.). Si crea così la visione integrale del processo che è portato alla conclusione.
  4. Il linguaggio e la comunicazione: le attività si realizzano in gruppo, di solito nel laboratorio partecipano da 3 a 6 persone che devono mettersi d’accordo per arrivare ad uno scopo comune (preparare il pranzo). Questo facilita il mantenimento delle funzioni del lobo temporale sinistro della corteccia cerebrale.
  5. Sviluppo dell’emisfero destro della corteccia cerebrale :
  • I concetti matematici tra il calcolo dei prodotti e la quantità che serve, il numero di persone che saranno a pranzo, la quantità delle porzioni fino ad apparecchiare la tavola e contare le stoviglie.
  • I concetti temporanei. Il lavoro con l’orologio nel tempo della cottura per capire quanto tempo ci vuole per cucinare un preciso ingrediente oppure un cibo in relazione all’orario del pranzo.

E tra l’altro…..

  1. L’abilità manipolativa. Il laboratorio di cucina è pieno di attività motorie che servono per sviluppare la micro-motricità: tagliare, lavare, pizzicare, mescolare, triturare ecc.

Ed infine…

Così vediamo che il laboratorio di cucina offre un ampio campo per lo sviluppo e la correzione delle funzioni psichiche. Inoltre cucinare è un’ottima motivazione per tutti perché come dicono nel mio paese “chi non lavora, non mangia”.

(L’articolo, la foto e il video sono stati fatti da Diana Gomez.)

 

How to keep the fire

Lilla
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After years of constant moving, finally, I could stop in Italy. Before, I had been changing place, country, apartment, role, profession, language. Attempting to recreate the bondless happiness of half year Erasmus in Firenze, my first definitive foreign adventure in 2012. Since then, only five years passed, but I feel like a marathon-runner, who has discovered precious pieces of her puzzle wherever she went.

I remember:

  • the colourful bungalows of Whitstable, crispy seaside walks and biking, eternal green fields, white cliffs, the ample, majestic Canterbury Cathedral, my cat-ladys and all the supportive, nice people who were keeping me in line on my lonely hero’s journey, studying in England (… and last but not least, I remember the shortly deceased master chéf, RIP, Antonio Carluccio with whom I had a super short interview; his simple humbleness was a big honour and a real wow – as he said, the secret of good food and good life is using maximum 3-4 strong but likewise good ingredients);
  • museuming, “flâneuring” and immersing ourselves in arts in that Parisian spring with my group of inspiring, international friends (… and of course, how could I forget our Hungarian-vegetarian-philosophical community and the first steps towards a sustainable  household? );
  • trying to slow down and BUILD (numerous things, in so many areas, with the hope to improve and open up the world) in Hungary, while exploring more my motherland; commuting, hiking, volunteering, training, writing.dsc_0745

Since I was getting paid for working as a journalist and coordinating youth voluntary projects (asking, listening to and sharing amazing stories of amazing people), after a while, I got tired of  walking in my challenge zone and fighting. Because a lot of  times, I faced barriers difficult to overcome and tackle.

So the main reason behind my decision to apply for the EVS was to change perpectives, and share stories as a volunteer who lives, works, writes in Italy. (In most cases, about Italy, and till now, in most cases, to Hungarian readers in my weekly blog.)

Moving  worked out well for me. I am happy. And I believe, it is because you cannot feed a fire solely with fire itself. And so, if I were fire, this storyful reality would be my wood and air: the lands, the people, the work and the fact that in this EVS project I can not only collect stories, but experience, try, do and live through them! For instance, I will never forget the day when we started harvesting olives in the farm with locals. Hard to express how much I enjoyed every step. Likewise, our everyday activities make me glad: learning the language, personal and collective stories, about the past, regional history, good practices etc.

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Back to track, in a nutshell, I was coming to this EVS in Italy hoping (that can seem a childish wish at first glance, but after all, that is really how it happened!) to find my heart, be able to balance, and keep the fire. Because, during this previous, intense, shifting period of my life, more or less, I had always found motivation, work, objectives, place to live, people caring about me and people about whom I cared. However, that little pulsing organ deep down, in the hustle and bustle, came too close to stop, and not to give a curious leap, not even hearing another new story again.  And for a storyteller, this is definitely not a good sign.

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Till now, life proves me. My EVS project has given to me more positive things than I could ever dream about.  I am surrounded with great people who would catch me if I happen to fall. I learn something exciting and new every day. And important,  I found my heart. Or probably my heart has found me. We may never know the truth. But that is already another chapter of the story.

 

 

 

LIFE Choice

“Sometimes it’s the smallest decisions that can change your life forever.”
Keri Russell

My name is Rana Ramadan. I am a twenty-four year old Palestinian girl. I graduated from University in the year of 2016 with a bachelor degree in Materials Engineering. Right now, I am one of six girls (which you all know by now) that are participating in an EVS program.

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To spend a year, far away from your family and friends, to leave your daily life, pack your bags and just go to a different country to live, this is what I call a life changing choice.

What drove me to take part in this program is different than the other girls’ motivation. For me this was a first step in my future career. It was the thing that I wanted for the rest of my life, to work with disability, to be part of this magnificent world. I remember the day I saw the program invitation on the sending organization’s web page. The deadline was already passed, but there was something that drove me to send an email to see if I can still submit my papers. I was really happy when I received that I can send the documents despite that they were already in the interview step. Anyway I sent them and after three days I received an invitation for an interview. To be honest my hopes where not that high, but I did my best, and here I am. Six months after this interview and a choice that changed my plans, my perspectives, my dreams and my whole life, I am sitting in the living room of our apartment, near the city center of Viterbo, writing to you about my experience.

EVS started for me as a way to open a new door for my future in a career point of view, but after four months I end up to see different things in life. I met five girls from five different countries, backgrounds, mentality. We had our ups and downs, we laughed and cried. The amount of new things that we experienced in this small period of time makes me think about how much we can learn from each other’s life stories, how much we can help each other by a small word, a hug or even a smile.
EVS is not only a time that you will spend doing a specific activity that was written in your agreement. It is a decision that changes your life in a way that you never imagined it can be. It is a chance to see the world in the eyes of other people; to understand other cultures, lives, believes, and to make new friends. This is not a step that you need to think much about. It is something that all of us need in order to grow up, to know ourselves, to build our personality, and to be humans towards each other without a previous judgment. It is amazing just to wake up in the morning, knowing that today there is something new that you will know about yourself or others around you.  This experience so far taught me one of the most important things about myself. It taught me that sometimes the change you need is just behind the corner but you need to open your eyes to see it. EVS was this change.
So, if there is something I want to add before saying goodbye is that be your own change, work hard to accomplish your dreams and never think, that the small things you are doing right now in your life doesn’t count, because in a couple of years, or maybe days, these choices will turn to be a life changer.

Rome wasn’t built in a day

Lina
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Ciao a tutti! My name is Lina. I am nineteen years old, from Germany and I have graduated school in June 2017. Since July 2017 I have been living here in Viterbo, Italy with five other participants, all from different countries such as Portugal, Palestine and Ukraine. In the following paragraphs I want to introduce myself and tell a little bit about my motivation and aims regarding my European Voluntary Service.

These circumstances such as living with other people, while being on my own and working with disabled people, while having no working experience in this field made me apply for the project “Intercultururality”. The project takes place in various locations and centres, resulting in my working place to change during the year. Thus I have the possibility to experience different ways of professional working and the broad spectrum of people with disabilities. Everything while learning the Italian language and living intercultural exchange every day.

Doing an EVS is exciting, at times eye-opening, yet challenging regarding all the impressions one has to absorb and comprehend. During these first three months I experienced amazing things with friends and/or strangers, I questioned my decision of coming here, I made mistakes and I felt like I shouldn’t be somewhere else than in Italy right now. This process of questioning, learning and growing is what I aim for in my EVS while doing volunteer work. After this year I want to study at a university. I do not know yet what and where I want to study but I am confident to know by the end of my service.

Rome wasn’t built in a day.” – Great things need time. I see my time here in Italy like this. Which means I already have a lot of great memories. Moreover, there will be more difficult, boring, exciting and funny moments. And I can only judge at the end of my service what kind of an experience I have had. Lucky us, that we have got twelve months.

The gene of traveling

Inês
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Deciding to go to another country, leaving your life behind can be a difficult task. But for me it was a decision that I set for myself many years ago. My name is Inês, I’m 23 years old, and I’m a volunteer in AliceNova in Italy. I took an airplane on the twenty-seventh of June from Portugal to Italy, and I stay here for one year.

If everyone’s path shows how they end up being in the place they are, mine is very simple. Since I remember, I always wanted to travel, pack one of those big bags, put on my back and go. It took me some time to get the courage or to find the right moment. The first time I went abroad was when I entered university, and I took the opportunity to do Erasmus in Finland for five months. I remember that the professor responsible told me that once you go, you will always crave for more.

This became my reality. At the beginning of 2017 I had the opportunity to do one month of volunteering in Guinea Bissau in Africa. Without thinking twice, I went for it. But those who are born with the gene of traveling, aren’t satisfied with just once or twice. And when I went somewhere, I would not want “just to visit”. I wanted to take part in something, mix myself in the culture, with the people. I wanted to learn the language, the culture, to work, not only be an observant but a piece of the machine, the place.

So, just a few months before finishing my bachelor in Social Education, I started searching for voluntary projects abroad. Once, I had already stumbled on the site of proatlantico which shows every volunteer opportunity in Europe and partner countries, but I examined every opportunity seriously and carefully only this time. And then I found it: one year in Italy where I could put in practice what I studied.

I would be lying if I didn’t tell that at first, I was a little unsure. One year is too long! I just finished university, shouldn’t I find a job? I don’t speak Italian, so how can I work? All these questions rushed in my mind, but you know, brave people aren’t the ones that have no fear, but are the ones that despite their own fears keep moving forward. With this in mind, I followed every step given by the site and enrolled.

After a few weeks I got an email, scheduling a skype meeting. I’m still not sure if I did a good job or not in this meeting, but after one week I received an email, saying that I was accepted. And so, here I am. Three months have already passed, three months living in Viterbo, sharing a house with five girls from different countries, three mounts of discovering and learning. The past three months have been an amazing experience and hopefully the nine months that are still to come will be the same or even more incredible. Before I completely finish, I leave you with a quote:

“The use of traveling is to regulate imagination with reality, and instead of thinking of how things may be, see them as they are.”

Samuel Johnson

Why it is worth to be an EVS volunteer

Diana
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“Add something to the world that only you can add”

(phrase seen in Cremona, Italy)

My name is Diana, and I am an EVS volunteer from Ukraine. The decision to volunteer came to me when I was 7 years old, and I perfectly remember this evening – the truth, I dreamed of Africa; who knows, maybe I can get there. Volunteering for me means that selfish behavior can also be altruistic. Man, based on his personal goals, still has a “desire” = volunta to help and bring a bit of joy in the lives of others. In any case, I really hope that my project will be like this.

In this article, I want to share my first observations and analysis of the EVS experience. Of course, in major part, EVS is a youthful, energetic and fun experience. However, I would like to write about the deeper phenomena, which, in my opinion, are the basis. So:

5 reasons why it is worth to be an EVS volunteer

(The following is randomly ordered.)

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  1. Intensity. A volunteer project is clearly deterministic, it has a precisely designated beginning and ending. As with our … life –  we prefer to forget and ignore that it has an end. As Irvin Yalom (existential psychotherapist) wrote, “the idea of ​​death saves a person’s life“, so that a real knowledge of what this experience is the finale, gives an extraordinary intensity to everything that happens and an acute sense of “here and now.” You do not think about the “after”, but try to realize everything is planned, do not hesitate long before saying “yes” and agreeing to a crazy adventure.
    Furthermore, you are open and active, ready to learn about the world around you, in a word – live with might and meaning. Exactly this intensity cannot be compared with anything you experienced before. Because it is an opportunity to live a small life that is an integral part of your big and old life. You are living.
  2. It is just you. You will spend a lot of time with yourself, confronting yourself, as well as seeing different sides of yourself, even if you are a master of avoidance and departure from reality. Because when everything around you is unknown and incomprehensible (language, culture, customs), you will have to turn to a single familiar space = to yourself.
    Moreover, if you set yourself vital questions, then it’s a wonderful opportunity to find answers to them. If you have a little bit of reflection (and everyone is capable of it), you can analyze your strategies of behavior in problem situations and conflict solving, distinguish the true and false goals. Try to understand where social pressure ends and your own desires begin.
    You can find out what exactly is right for you. In this situation of dissociation, there is always a better chance to take a comprehensive look at the situation, your life. Of course, you will have time for a hobby. In addition, you will have time to improve your professional skills or try something completely different. It will be only you and your time!
  3. Values. Your system of values ​​”before”, directly “during” and in the “end” of the project will be very different. This applies to material and spiritual values both. Let’s start with the material ones: you are a volunteer, which means that you are simply limited in material resources. You should learn to determine what is really important for you, and without which things you can live. Maybe you can give up something, but it may happen that you overestimate the significance of something and will want to keep it just obsessively. You can think that life is very complicated without the usual things, but one day, without warning (and this will happen) you will just feel completely happy without them. I can guarantee you, that you will be out of your comfort zone, revaluating material and social benefits.
    A little bit about other values ​… you are far from your family, relatives, friends. You will probably reconsider your relationship with them, understand the importance of other things, for example, how much a simple hug means. You will come into contact with the culture and values ​​of another country – and believe me, they will remain forever with you. And for sure, expand your worldview and the ability to understand others.
  4. Personal capital. In the book “The Defining Decade” by Meg Jay (I highly recommend it), she is using the term of “identity capital” – a collection of personal assets and investments that we make in ourselves. She says, we can build this capital by collecting a variety of experiences, including volunteering. There is no need to write about many things, the main idea, that it is a kind of piggy bank in which all the knowledge and experience will be, that will help you approach the best version of yourself.
  5. Relationships. Relations with people in general, but especially with participants in your project. Many EVS projects imply that they involve several volunteers from different countries who live in the same place (as in my case). You have the opportunity to learn how to build close and sincere relationships with them (this is an opportunity, because if there is no desire, you can continue to use well-known “tricks”).
    During the project, you and them will know yourself the best and most – sometimes even better than old friends or relatives. After all, you will be together 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Then you can observe the dynamics of the development of these relationships: at times you will regress, and regardless of how old you are, will behave like a real child, illogical, too crazy and sensitive. There will be a lot of misunderstanding, and not just because you are from different cultures (which is understandable), but simply because we are people and there is nothing more complicated and exciting than human relations. You will try your best in these relationships, first out of selfish motives “because you will have to live with this person for a year”.
    At one point this moment will come (and it will come for sure!), when you suddenly notice that you care about each other simply because you are not indifferent to this entirely different planet. Here you have your intercultural exchange.

 

Thank you for reading till end. And the last … result … in a word – only you decide … when and where to start your EVS. 🙂

Thanks to my English redactor Lina Al-Akel. 😉