Blue 4 Does More
Blue 4, of the AmeriCorps NCCC Pacific region, is a team of 11 people hailing from all regions of the country. We are a group of 18-24 year olds committing the next 9 months to helping America through community service projects.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
1st Two Celebration Videos
We are currently in the process of uploading our Celebration Videos. Round 1 & 2!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S8BobCy7Aj0&feature=channel&list=UL
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dF4v7hyvhOM&feature=player_embedded
Thursday, July 12, 2012
A Reflection by May
My AmeriCorps NCCC journey started a year and a half before I stepped foot on the Pacific Region Campus in Sacramento. After I graduated college, I still was unsure what I wanted to do in life. I found out about AmeriCorps through the Peace Corps which I always wanted to be part of from a very young age. Through more research, I found that I was very interested in joining the NCCC branch of AmeriCorps. Unfortunately, I was two weeks late to apply for the fall session. Althought I was disappointed in missing the due date, I had another plan and applied for an Americorps program focusing on education called City Year. I spent my first year out of college working for this educational AmeriCorps program but AmeriCorps NCCC was always on the back burner.
In November 2011, I sent in my application hoping for the best. All required paperworks were done within a month and all I could do at that point was to play the waiting game. As my first Americorps term came to an end, I started to worry that I would not get into Americorps NCCC. I told myself that I would give myself a month after AmeriCorps graduation before I actively applied to other jobs. Sadly, that month came and I still was not accepted. Thus, I applied and accepted a position as a teacher at a private learning center near my home. I had given up my dream for serving another year in AmeriCorps.
Suddenly, two weeks before the Sacramento campus was about to start, I got an email that stated that I was "conditionally accepted" to the Pacific Region campus in Sacramento. I was somewhat disappointed because I have never been out of California before. I thought this would be the opportunity for me to travel around America.
I thought about my decision for a couple of days before I accepted the position. It was hard to tell my employers and my family that I was going away for ten months to serve AmeriCorps but I believe I made the right decision.
As I write this reflection nine months into the program, I am glad I made this decision. Although I didn't travel as much as I intially hoped, I have gained so much more through this program. As I get ready to leave this program, I leave with a sense of hope for the future and a bundle of memories compressed into one of the longest and shortest ten months of my life.
A Poem by Amber
Blue 4
People with a history
who are still half a mystery
All full of life,
and some strife.
Each engraved with love,
as sweet as a dove,
and intense as storm
for something bigger than self.
Disagreements on the small things
But a shared passion that binds us
Then, Now, Always.
We are Blue 4,
and the world has heard us roar.
A Reflection by Sydney
It's literally the last day of our stay in the mountains and I'll admit that I'm happy to go. This round was definitely the strangest, and I believe that a lot of us have undergone more dramatic transformations than we anticipated. At this point, all of us have become so comfortable with one another, that the idea of disrupting this strange micro-family makes me feel anxious. I remember when we would return to campus for transition and hangout in each others' rooms, too spent and overwhelmed to interact with non Blue 4 members. Now I'm sitting at our kitchen table in our housing, surrounded by family. Amber is staring at me and eating a truffle that Brad made, Alyssa is untangling her hair, Carolyn is sitting in front of her laptop blasting some awesome-ness, Sarah is sitting next to me. She just leaned on me, I'm going to miss her. Taylor is standing in the doorway chewing and staring. He just summoned me to pack the tent I used eariler. Brad is giving away stuff he doesn't want, and everyone attacked him. He simply let it all drop to the floor. Carolyn just put on "Midnight City" by M83 (at my insistence). What I can't help but think about, is how these moments, this familiarity, this comfortable life we've built, is almost over. This is truly once in a lifetime. I will never be here again, in this kitchen, with these people, listening to this song. It is filling me with a weird nostalgia. I miss this. I miss them, and I haven't even left yet. It's just so surreal, this entire experience feels like a dream. It was only the other day I met these people,and some part of me feels like it was a bit longer than that. This whole program to me is made up of moments like this, where everyone is just around. A part of me is excited to go back to the real world, but to me, these last 10 months have been as real as it gets.
A Reflection by Carolyn
I was having a discussion over our team's last transition with one of my really good friends on another team. We discussed our feelings about NCCC, and he had a saying about NCCC which I thought described the program to a T. He said, "NCCC isn't a life-changing program. It's life-shaping."
Coming into NCCC, I had zero expectations except for the fact it was going to be one of the most challenging experiences of my life. That much remained true. But as Blue 4 is packing up on the last day of our last project, I took my friend Colin's words to heart. He's right. My life hasn't changed.
In one week I'll be on a luxurious adventure to Hawaii, and then in another week I'll be at my cozy home in Stowe, Vermont. My lifestyle will go back to the way it was before. My friends and family will still be the same. I'll be going to New York City just the same. I'll be going back to college just the same. My life? It's the same. However...
How I shape my life is forever changed. I am changed, and how I will go about living my life will be completely different than it was before. I may be returning to the same life from before, but what I will do within my familiar surrounding is about to change for the better.
I now know what a full week of work is life, and then some overtime. I know the joys of giving back, I know what it's like to be constantly surrounded by people. I understand the meaning of "hard work", and I also know that from all of these experiences and challenges, I will be able to go on ahead in life. I can handle anything that comes my way now.
I may not live with 11 people who can support me like they have, but I also know that I will not only take away the experiences that impacted me, but the people too. Whether it's some of my new best friends on other teams, or the family of a team I live with, I'll carry these peole with me wherever I go.
NCCC didn't change my life. I'm returning to the life behind. NCCC shaped me and the life I am going to lead in the future, and I'll always be eternally grateful for such a gift.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Last Common Ground Submission
Sticks, sticks, lots of sticks.
We pick up sticks all day long.
Saving camp from fires.
Grilled PB & J
for dinner. With a side of
bacon. That's Blue 4.
San Gorgornio.
"Where you headed?" "The summit."
"Wow. You're ambitious."
What are your plans for
life after AmeriCorps?
No clue? Cool, me too.
Time to pick up sticks.
Don't put them in a pile,
They must look natural.
Saw a bear at lunch,
tried to follow after it.
What a good idea.
Time to go swimming!
What's that at the bottom there?
Aww, two more dead squirrels.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Last Week at Camp Nawakwa
Brad Winckelmann carries dead branches away from the cabins as a precaution to prevent the spread of potential forest fires. |
Sydney Lawson and Amber Anderson join Brad and move large branches and twigs away from the camp. |
Taylor Burback and Brad Winckelmann continue with fuel reduction by raking dead leaves and pine needles away from each building. |
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