I was at the Tzu Chi premise this morning before leaving with some volunteers to my inaugural home visit. Yup, this is the first time I'm visiting a home NOT for Hari Raya or Deepavali but to see the other side of life - the not-so-fortunate. Prior to the home visit, there was a parent-children bonding session in the music room.
I arrived at 8:20 AM, and there was ample parking space. I headed off to Tzu Chi's music room which I've never stepped into in my 4-5 months as a volunteer. As soon as I arrived, a senior told me that there's a problem with the audio-visual, and my colleague was already waiting for my help. Gosh, I'm not an expert in AV stuff. I had to take off my shoes and put them into a cloth bag which was provided, then bring them along into the room. My colleague, who told me about today's event, was meddling with her notebook.
Let's cut the story short before you nod off... see the photos below:
A senior volunteer giving a briefing in the music room |
Senior volunteers doing a role-play of a scene. Kids and parents watch attentively |
So, what did you learn from the role-play? |
Senior volunteer discussing the home visit etc. with parents while their kids listen |
Food time after the home visit. Bring your own containers. No styrofoam boxes, please. |
Now it's the parent's turn to talk. Feedback time. |
The kids were cute, and they got restless after some time. What did they do? They sat on the floor and turned the chairs over and played with them :) Why those people can't keep their speeches short? I also noticed that the legs of each chair have white "booties" to protect the parquet floor from scratches or marks. Cool idea.
Guess what? I didn't understand almost all of what was said because the entire session was conducted in Mandarin. Tzu Chi, being a Taiwan-based organisation, conducts all activities in that language. Nevertheless, there are some English-speaking people there, too.