Yesterday I was feeding fresh sardines to sea turtles and nesting turtle eggs in our hatchery, and this morning I have mucked out, hand fed and scrubbed a beautiful elderly elephant in the river. This afternoon will probably be helping our cute little students speak English in the local Tsunami villages. I'm very proud to say this is my job!
It's my sixth week working back in Sri Lanka as a coordinator with Plan My Gap Year and it's already been a whirlwind of laughter, tears, fun and stress; life is still hard in the sunshine don't worry!
There's been a great bunch of volunteers to help me settle into my role easily and it's been amazing to work with all the local staff again each day. The hours end up being long and it becomes every waking moment of your life, but luckily I feel very much part of a big family here which makes it all worth it!
Last week was Sinhala and Tamil New Year, the biggest celebration in Sri Lanka, so we were lucky enough to join in with all the festivals and traditions throughout the week. On Monday and Tuesday we had a fantastic time hosting New Year parties for our Children's Home and our teaching project students, playing traditional games that are surprisingly similar to back home, with an Asian twist! Lime and spoon race, mini marathon, pin the eye on the elephant, blindfolded yogurt feeding, finding a coin in flour with no hands, and a piñata style clay pot filled with coloured water. My favourite one is in a line with your team, passing water with just your hands from a bucket to fill up a bottle the fastest! And all ending in a big water balloon fight!
Day 322 - Friday 28th April 4.24pm
There's not been a cloud in the sky, the breeze is delightful, and I've finally had a day off laying on the beach! After seven weeks of working in an office my 'golden goddess tan' has certainly fallen to very low, pale standards.
I’ve been missing home a little bit recently, still feeling like I'm settling in and I haven't quite started a routine of things yet. Slowly slowly! I’ve got a fantastic support of family, staff and friends around me though, helping me to feel a little bit more at home.
My daily diet is now a breakfast of rice flakes, buffalo curd and honey, or milk rice and spicy coconut sambal. Proper Sri Lankan curry that makes your eyes run for lunch and dinner, with fresh king coconut and green tea as snacks. Does make you fancy a spag bol once in a while though!
Day 363 - Thursday 8th June 11.28am
I feel full of gratitude and joy today, after a beautifully humbling morning. We have been to visit the rural village of Pahalawalivitiya, a very small community of 18 families that were strongly affected by the recent floods. Two families homes were destroyed completely, others damaged and still two weeks later they have no clean water or electricity. We spent the morning at their school, which hosts the eighteen students from grade 1 to 5 with their five teachers and principal. The school is located on the banks of Gin Ganga, a large river that bore the flow of rainfall from up-country. The water level at the school reached the tops of the doors, ruining the entire contents within. The school books and documents are currently drying inside one of the classrooms, with hope to salvage as much as possible.
As we arrived you could tell the children had never experienced western visitors, by the look of novelty, excitement and curiosity on their faces! The school consists of two small simple buildings, with mesh wire windows, worn wooded bookcases and rickety rustic chairs. You can't even begin to imagine yourself in that situation, and still they are trying to cope. Even simple tasks of cooking or drinking a cup of water when you're thirsty is not possible, but as a community they are really coming together to help in any way they can.
Together with our volunteers, we had put together help packages for each of the families in the village, including dried food and school supplies. After our welcoming assembly, crammed into a small brick classroom, we gave out a package to each student, with teachers and families grateful beyond belief. It really makes you appreciate how lucky we are to have access to all the bare necessities and simple things in life, as well as the luxuries we take for granted. There is so much more to learn in the world than we can ever imagine.
We spent the rest of the day playing games and singing songs with all the kids, from Zap to Duck Duck Goose. It really was a special day and the smiles on their faces as we waved goodbye is an honourable memory that will stay with me.
Day 379 - Saturday 24th June 2.18am
A truly Sri Lankan, Sri Lankan evening. By truly Sri Lankan I mean manic, disorganised, weird and wonderful. A full performance of spiritual and cultural blessings for a good four hours with a broken mic that went on and off every three seconds, dancing around like there's no tomorrow, how we often like to dance in the office. The whole performance has eleven scenes and actually lasted throughout the night, with fire and chanting and a chicken sacrifice. I wasn’t entirely sure what was going on, baffled by each coming minute. Hence a truly Sri Lankan, Sri Lankan evening.
Summer is creeping up and I now have my new accomplice Steph to help me battle it out, let’s do this Sri Lanka!
Day 398 - Thursday 13th July 11.44am
Suddenly the time has nearly sprung that I get a weekend holiday in England, it's strange to think about all that I have experienced, achieved, learnt and been challenged by in the past five months living in Sri Lanka. I can't wait for a salad and hot shower!

It's always amazing to hear the volunteers come home excited about how many newly hatched turtles they were able to release into the wild or how their quietest student got top marks in their test paper. When I'm stuck behind the desk working out logistics and updating spreadsheets I ache to be getting hands on at the projects again, but it's really inspiring to see how the volunteers learn and blossom from their experiences too. I know that exploring further away from home helped me in so many ways to figure out what it was that set my soul on fire, and I've become close to others who I can see are discovering their own path. Thank you all for being my motivation, inspiration and for making my job a real pleasure!
There are so many others that have inspired me, unaware they are teaching me things. My Sri Lankan families, colleagues, friends and the local community around me. Especially the PMGY team - I have never met such dedicated, hardworking and grateful people, who will never hesitate to lend a helping hand. In the western world we easily take things for granted - basic necessities and skills and luxuries and our family or friends. Stepping further than your hometown helps you to see a different perspective on many things, which is why I have continued to travel and encourage others to give it a go. Who knows what you might find?
I have certainly found a lot for my own life, but nonetheless I am extremely excited to be visiting everyone at home, to cuddle my mummy and puppies and get bullied by my sister and a foot rub from my Pa (I need one after a year in flip flops...) and to celebrate a very exciting time with my best friends and the Bride to be... Pass us the Prosecco!!
Day 405 - Thursday 20th July 2.31am
Sat at Gate 14, Bandaranayake airport, about to board the flight that has always been too far away to think about. My mind cannot comprehend that right now I am about to fly home, leaving Asia for the first time in thirteen months, and being reunited with my family and friends after my longest adventure so far. Are you sure this is real?!
The past few weeks have been a blur of excitement and stress and work challenges making me feel emotional. I don't know if it's because I've had four hours sleep for the past two nights but now I don't really seem to feel anything, I know I am extremely excited to see everyone again, and fill my belly with home food (BBQ, lasagne, fresh salad, Cadbury's, full English, real milk and a good old takeaway curry would be ideal). I have even disconnected myself from work, preparing to shut down my PMGY brain for a week of quietness and clearing my mind. I've just treated myself to an airport foot massage to kick start the journey - it was absolute bliss and felt dreamy as I dozed off for a bit! I was almost tempted by a 12$ spaghetti bolognese at the new airport Pizza Hut but thought I would save it for a real one when I'm home!
6.06am - Landing at Dubai International Airport
Well this is the snazziest plane journey I've ever been on (apart from our accidental business class flight from Australia); can you believe there's wifi, plug sockets and even star mood lighting for the night flight!
I was squeezed between two rather large men, but when one spotted a free row of seats I was in luck and the big guy even agreed to swap so I could have the window seat. It's a boring flight sat anywhere else, I watched the sun rise over the hazy city, thinking about all the lives I'm passing beneath me.
I'm pretty shattered after three nights without proper sleep, so it took me four hours to eventually watch Beauty and the Beast - it was too good to miss! The journey is surreal to me too, not only doing it alone after so many with Megan, but thinking about Sri Lanka and even missing that already. My dear friend and big sister is due to give birth any moment and my life here really has grown to become home.
7.55am - Seat 79k, 3633 miles away at DXB
Well this is snazzier - my first double decker flight! I forgot how long I haven't flown with a non-budget airline. I have my aquarium hole view of the morning sunshine (apparently reaching a casual 44 degrees today) and right now two empty seats next to me... is this my lucky day?!
Time to catch more movies and probably no sleep. Before I know it I'll be embracing my family in the frosty air of England!
Day 442 - Saturday 26th August 5.08pm
Wedding madness and moving house, crammed into the limited hours at home, it certainly was eventful! It was fantastic to be home again, to see Kathryn walk down the aisle, to say goodbye to my childhood home, and to devour as much real chocolate as possible. Going home for a weekend was definitely not long enough, making it more intense and emotional and surreal. As I landed into Gatwick I was also at the tear-jerking scene in Lion, a film about an adopted boy on a quest to find his family in rural India. Wheels hitting the run way, Saroo embracing his long lost mother, tears filling my eyes as I knew that was about to be me after 400 days away.
I was very grateful to be able to make that trip, but just as grateful to return to Sri Lanka and feel I was at home yet again there too.
But as for now, I’M IN THE MOOFOOKIN MALDIVES!
Oh wow. Yes, here I am. In the Maldives.
As an incredibly kind and (surprisingly) well-kept surprise, I have joined one of our #PMGYMaldives weekend trips with Tharindu and five other volunteers, for four days of the most beautiful beaches, reef snorkelling and a splash of Maldivian luxury.
We are currently at the Andaraan Prestige Vadoo Resort, a tiny little island with the iconic wooden huts branching out into the turquoise seas. The snorkelling here is out of this world, I can’t get enough of it. Just this morning we saw star fish, eels, baby reef shark, giant parrot fish, long pike fish, sea cucumbers, fish camouflaged in the sand, yellow stripey ones, funny Pinocchio noses, all the friends from Finding Nemo and the best of all – right up close to a wild turtle. This was all just at the bank of the gleaming sand at our feet, with a spectacular and slightly scary drop off point. Wow wow wow.
The beauty of the Maldives is right up there with the Philippines, but luckily being on much smaller islands there are less crowds around us too. Today we got a pass to the Andaraan Resort for a taster of honeymoon luxury, with fancy food and the most divine beach to enjoy. Yesterday we took a boat trip to spot turtles, snorkel in the best reefs nearby and enjoy our fresh catch of tuna upon a divine sand bank. Absolute bliss!
We’ve been lucky to have perfect weather, although I’ve managed to painfully burn my calves after getting too excited at the views and forgetting to put on sun cream for a while. Oops. There’s been plenty of opportunities to relish the fresh seafood, enjoy the turquoise seas and take in the glory of the Maldives. Beautiful country, fantastic company, and one very happy Emma. Thank you Philip and Ashika for making this possible!
Day 464 - Sunday 17th September 6.14pm
Be present. Be grateful. Be alive.
My six months in Sri Lanka have come to a close, packing up my laptop and notebook for the year and saying goodbye to the students, staff and my family. But this time it wasn't quite so bad, because I know in less than four months I'll be back again.

Let the next chapter begin.
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