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	<title>Comments on: Deciding What To Do After Peace Corps and Money</title>
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	<link>https://myboyfriendlivesinkenya.com/?p=229</link>
	<description>Musings on a long-distance relationship</description>
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		<title>By: sjp</title>
		<link>https://myboyfriendlivesinkenya.com/?p=229&#038;cpage=1#comment-305</link>
		<dc:creator>sjp</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Jun 2011 15:35:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Hello and thank you for this wonderful blog.  I am currently in the 9th month of my peace corps service in Peru.  I just wanted to leave a comment to encourage people who are in the first stages of a peace corps ldr- my boyfriend and I are doing great, even without technology like video skype or cell phones.  A fundamental quality of being a peace corps volunteer is the resilience:  the ability to face and overcome outrageous obstacles, all the while maintaining belief that anything is possible.  This is what it means to be a peace corps volunteer.  You have to believe that, even if a place and a people have a desperate lack of resources, with enough hard work and dedication life will get better.

I visited him (he lives in Japan) a month ago and, as was eloquently stated in one of the blog entries after a trip, the love that is there in letters in emails is just as strong in person.  So don&#039;t fret about if your significant other is going to be without the technology to talk to you every day.  I live in a very rustic location and we get to exchange emails a few times a month.  It still works.  You can do it!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hello and thank you for this wonderful blog.  I am currently in the 9th month of my peace corps service in Peru.  I just wanted to leave a comment to encourage people who are in the first stages of a peace corps ldr- my boyfriend and I are doing great, even without technology like video skype or cell phones.  A fundamental quality of being a peace corps volunteer is the resilience:  the ability to face and overcome outrageous obstacles, all the while maintaining belief that anything is possible.  This is what it means to be a peace corps volunteer.  You have to believe that, even if a place and a people have a desperate lack of resources, with enough hard work and dedication life will get better.</p>
<p>I visited him (he lives in Japan) a month ago and, as was eloquently stated in one of the blog entries after a trip, the love that is there in letters in emails is just as strong in person.  So don&#8217;t fret about if your significant other is going to be without the technology to talk to you every day.  I live in a very rustic location and we get to exchange emails a few times a month.  It still works.  You can do it!</p>
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