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| Fetching water for home | 
In our pre-departure trainings, volunteers were always reminded that despite their skills and competencies they should not expect to produce miracles in their placements.  We are there to share what we have and  not to impose.
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| Chickens come home to  roast | 
I have not accomplished for others anything inexplicable but I  had  recent personal experiences that I can describe either as  serendipity,  good luck or miracle.  
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| Prisoners on the way to  court 
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My getting into volunteer work in Uganda started  with the chance reading of the VSO ad in an 
in-flight  magazine during  our return flight from a family holiday 
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| Papyrus  stringed into mats | 
 
last December 2009.  New year's day found me filling-in the forms for sending online on the first business day of 2010.  I thought this was a 
wonderful gift to me because volunteering was something I wanted to do some years back. 
 
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| Highway vendors | 
Initially, I was to go to Vanuatu, formerly known as New Hebrides. The  prospect of living in the South Pacific  Islands attracted me until I  accidentally met a stranger in one of our  trainings.  I started our  conversation by telling him that I admired the  intricately carved  wooden cane that he was using.  He said it was a gift from a tribal  chief in Vanuatu. 
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| Shot of the moon taken at high noon in Gulu | 
That's when I learned that he  volunteered in Vanuatu, a place that he  could circle on foot in one day.  (He could be exaggerating because of  his limp.) I then changed my  topmost placement preference to Africa.  I was not  disappointed.   I think at this moment that with these two unexpected occasions, Someone up there where the sun and the moon are, had given me the choice of serving time in Africa - now. 
 
you followed the signs :)
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