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Lorrin Windahl: Out of Africa

14 June 2005

As a new member of the CobaltNiche team I recently returned from an eight month placement in Uganda (www.visituganda.com), East Africa as a Student Partnerships Worldwide (www.spw.org) health education volunteer. I took a year off from the design profession and life in comfy Adelaide to see what it was like to live in a rural village with no running water and no electricity. It was a chance for me to share my knowledge with these less fortunate people as well as to learn more about them and their way of life.

I lived in a mud hut on the school compound with my two Ugandan counterparts. We taught very basic health education in both Bufumbo Primary and Bufumbo Secondary schools and organised workshops for the wider Bufumbo community. Some of the topics we taught included HIV/AIDS, teenage pregnancy, puberty and sanitation.

My time in Uganda was made even more memorable by being proposed to by dozens of love struck Ugandan men, for having minor buttock surgery in Kampala, for surviving near death experiences in ‘metal coffins’ (Ugandan taxis) and having to make a speech at the funeral of a complete stranger.

When I arrived back in Australia and to Adelaide I realised that I needed a new adventure and as a result made the move to Melbourne where I started work for CobaltNiche as a Product Engineering Designer.

It really was an amazing experience and the people I met enriched my life in so many different ways. I am very thankful that the Ugandan people are so friendly and welcoming of a foreigner. It is also remarkable that with so much poverty and disease these people are still able to laugh and smile and have a positive outlook for the future.