This is slightly different than the typical Irish Goodbye where the person is in a bar and leaves without telling anyone (likely because he/she/they are too intoxicated). Additionally, these goodbyes can manifest in odd conglomerates that don’t fit into one category, but generally each person fits pretty well into one particular description.Īnd so– without further ado, The 5 Goodbyes: I’ve experienced these throughout my entire life, but have only now been in a situation to really think about it. These are not exclusive to my pre-Peace Corps experience either. and over the past 6 weeks I’ve noticed that there are 5 basic ways people tend to approach saying goodbye– some amusing, some not so much, but interesting all the same. Saying goodbye is rarely easy– in fact it can be a myriad of things besides that– awkward, painful, sad, confusing, etc. But as my departure day is quickly approaching, I’ve been particularly interested by the different ways people have approached saying goodbye. I’m also slowly coming to terms and being okay with saying goodbye to life as I know it, something I’ve been struggling with a lot over the past several months. I’ve said goodbye to City Year, goodbye to Cardozo, goodbye to my kids, goodbye to my home, friends, and family– basically everything. Recently I’ve been traveling a lot to say “goodbye” and “see you in 2” to my friends and family, and I’ve noticed something.
![themod 1.3 thug 2 pc themod 1.3 thug 2 pc](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/3w7UBTXwSP4/mqdefault.jpg)
I have 6 days until I meet my PCSA32 group (!!!!!).