Friday, July 31, 2009
Photos Reminder
Friday Blog
Today everyone attended VBS for our final day. There were over 50 kids again today and once again a group of kids were desiring to learn more about Christ and were presented the e-cube. The teenagers that had been a little bit stand-off-ish all week finally warmed up to us beyond playing soccer and basketball. We had the opportunity to share the e-cube with them after buying them some cokes, and one of them is a believer. The park where we held VBS all week is the neighborhood hangout for a couple of the older kids who deal drugs and are heading down a dark path. We discussed the options that these younger teenagers have before them regarding eternity and the choices they have before them, comparing what they see right in front of them. The older kids fully joined in by the end of VBS, which was a small miracle in itself. Rolland and Jo Ann Smith will continue to work with a local couple who is running an AWANA program from their house and attempt to follow up with many of these kids in the housing project.
We went to Pollo Argentina for a delicious lunch of bbq chicken and carne asada. Marcos and Sweet Cheeks prefer the spicy taco choice, but for most in the group this was the consensus favorito restaurant for the week.
Tonight we will have our final time together and will read from scripture and give testimonies as to what Christ accomplished over this past week. Thank you all so much for your prayers back home!
Thursday Blog
Today was our largest day with 55 clubbers, 10 of them new for the first time this week. The kids are really looking forward to coming and seeing our team and enjoying VBS. Many of the students took a trip to the local Texcoco market and did some shopping among the more authentic market (opposed to the more tourist type areas). The smells from the raw meat, pork rinds, and other various “authentic” foods permeated the scene. Mucho purses and trinkets ...
We also ate at one of the nicest authentic restaurants in Texcoco. Goat shoulder, raw meat (yes, no typo. Check with Sweet Cheeks to see how that one was!), tamarindo (nut juice), watermelon juice, horchata, Carne Asada and enchaladas were among the choices. We also visited a cathedral which was holding mass. In the front was a bed with Jesus in it, and every January first they lower the bed down for people to come and view it. A vivid reminder of the darkness that abounds down here.
Bug Attack
Mosquitos and flies have been in a full fledged frontal attack all week. We have been experimenting with sticky tape thingys you hang from the ceiling, which have caught some flies, room plug-in bug killers, deet bug repellant, and Senor Carlos even offered each of the young kids 5 pesos to each kid who showed him 5 dead bugs in an offensive effort. Mass bug bites and itchy-ness abound ...
Wednesday Blog
We had another great day at VBS with nearly 50 kids. Only Laura and Zach stayed home today, which means people are recovering well from various upset stomachs, etc. More kids raised hands and wanted to learn more about Christ and were presented with the e-cube.
The students and Pastor Carl visited the pyramids in the afternoon and got to see the Aztec ruins firsthand. The entire group then met back after the pyramid tour and went to El Guero (“The White Man”) for some authentic spicy tacos for dinner. Mucho picante!
Tonight Carl shared a scripture with the group and we each had opportunity to share how Christ is using or challenging us individually this week and how our hearts are bringing glory and worship to Him through our actions. God is growing each one of us in mighty ways! Although we are all tired, fully exhausted, mentally and/or emotionally worn down, God has been good. He has supernaturally energized everyone to represent Christ, both in our house as well as at VBS.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Tuesday Blog
Shout Outs!
Ma and Pa Kelly - Holahey! I get to use mi spanglish here. I miss you all (including David and Joey and all those married folk). See you soon with the traditional spanish “buzz kiss.” I may need to move here as well as Germany. I will have to make up for all of the “1000 words a day” for the whole week for the Lord has been doing so much!! Love, Kristin :-D
Jan and Phil~
I miss you guys tons. We are doing great here... only a little sickness and some broken things :) I hope everything is going great. Hope Pete and Nessa aren’t too much trouble ;) See you in a few days. Love you.
~Ash
Mom and Dad and Hannah and Heather Williams:
HOLA! I love and miss all...would have called a long time ago, but don’t have phone access. :) Hope you’re all doing well. I sure am! Thanks for your cards...they made my day! Love you all and i’ll see you soon! I’ll try to call in Texas. :) Love: Caley Bug
Hola family and friends-- God is good! All is well. Thankful for plenty of rest and no sickness. I am using my Spanish A LOT. I love sharing Christ with the kids. I love you all. -Beth
Hey there Dan and my 3 lil kiddos! I miss you guys a TON, but that is NOT stopping me from serving God and the people here! I can’t wait to see ya’ll on Saturday...or the kids that is on Sunday! Hope you are staying out of trouble and being good for Dad! :) Love you all! And “hola” to my other family (mom, dad, sisses, etc) and friends! Can’t wait to see you either!
-Love, Anna
Hey family!!
I miss you all!! It has been such an amazing experience so far! The kiddos are sooooo cute and my spanish is much better this year so it is a lot easier to communicate, even though I still have no idea what they are saying a lot of the time haha. Yesterday and the night before was not super comfortable...i shall explain later as Pastor Carl says that I must be careful with my words on here... :) Anywho! I love you all! Ttyl!
~Amanda
Hola Mis Galver Padres y hermana:)
I miss ya’ll tons...BUT I’m having a wonderful time QUE BUENO! The Lord has been so evident during this trip it’s been awesome and I’ve been tested in many ways already...but growing like a plant, fertilized with the word of God! No sickness yet...maybe my Mexican genes play in my favor down here :) The Lord has opened my Spanish translation skills but the speaking is still a bit rocky...but many fun moments:) Te amo todos!
SAMJO
Communication Faux Paux
So one of our groups first International blunders came at the expense of Mr. Drain, formerly known as Mr. Bain. Carl and Mark had gone out to grab a burger with Rolland and Jo Ann and on the way out, Marcos turned around and nearly ran over a small Mexican girl and said “Excusa Me!” Marcos confidently had been working on his Spanglish. Once out on the sidewalk, Jo Ann nicely informed us that Marcos had just requested that the little girl flush him down the toilet! No wonder she looked at us with such a peculiar stare!
Now Pastor Carl laughed most of the rest of the night, made a lengthly retelling of the story the next morning at breakfast to our group, and finally retold the entire story to Antonio, our van driver, on the way to Monday morning VBS. And yes, the “encouragement card wall” mysteriously filled up with sorted images of toilets with Mr. Drain being disposed of in a variety of ways ...
All About Sinks and Windows
Another of life’s little mysteries is, “How exactly do they build sinks and windows down in Mexico City?” Hey, I’m so glad you asked! Let’s start with the bunkhouse. Now, not being female, nor living in the bunkhouse, I can really only provide you with the report and results. The actual contents of the story will have to come from one of the girls involved. Now I do know how men act in a group shower situation. Depending upon your towel snapping prowess, you either play “offense” or “defense” and no, age really has nothing to do with this “immature” activity. Now whether towel snapping, or simply leaping off the sinks in some sort of display was involved, again, you will have to ask the girls for a first hand account. But what I do know is one of the sinks ended up on the floor, broken. Now the other two (yes, they had no less than three sinks ... speaking from the “house” side where the Bain’s share one bathroom (not too bad) and the Chica’s share one bathroom ... yes, if you are thinking seven people and one sink you are starting to get the picture) sinks in the bunkhouse are sketchy at best regarding how solidly attached they are. But Ashley, oops, did I mention a name? I forgot we weren’t going to do that.
Okay, so why wonder about windows? Wells, they have bars on the windows, which are installed on the inside. This seems nice, allows one to open the windows to let in a breeze, etc. So during the family day, Noah and others of us, along with the Mexicans, engage in a favorite activity down here of playing soccer. Competition being what it is, a nicely placed kick landed a soccer ball in middle of one of the windows of the bunkhouse. Now there are bars on the windows as you recall, but they are on the inside of the window. Right, so not much good here other than keeping the ball out of the house. Now since one broken window isn’t enough, Cheeks, Noah, and company thought hey, we gotta finish our game! Okay, so you see this one coming from a mile away. The window directly above the previously broken one becomes the next target. Noah is now able to join the Mexicans in feelings of remorse and guilt ... poor little Noah ... actually it was difficult to show that sympathy amidst laughing so hard, but Noah, there was sympathy for ya! Builds character. Toughens one up. Okay, back to VBS and enough pondering for now...
Water and Electricity
So, how exactly does one’s hot water arrive in his or her shower you may wonder from time to time. So glad you asked. First, the Mexican mechanics. The girls bunkhouse with Beth and Anna, as well as the Chica and Bain house, each have an underground tank of water. This tank has an electric pump that pumps water from the underground tank through a small pipe to a large black tank on the roof of the house. (Yes, I do realize the questions you may already have ... hang on). Once there, gravity takes the water from the big black tank down another small pipe to the water heater, all of this still outdoors mind you. The pilot light needs to be lit for heat, in which reading Spanish instructions is mildly helpful during this process. Now that the water is hot, when you turn it on in the house (bathroom, kitchen, etc.) gravity is how fast you can get it.
So exactly how big is the hot water tank? Thanks for asking. There are those of us with the privilege of finding out that the water tank holds exactly 8 1/2 showers ... give or take. What does it look like to find this seemingly trivial information out? Well, let’s walk through the process. After a long days activities and not enough sleep, it’s time to shower. Amidst a hot refreshing shower, shampoo nicely lathered up in your hair ... BAM! ... just like that, no water. Not just no hot water mind you. No water. Done. Nada. Yeah ... that sinking feeling that started up in your gut finally makes its way to your brain and you only then realize just how limited your options really are. You see, a call for help at that point becomes a rather delicate situation. Help can arrive in the form of involving others ... “Hey, did all the rest of you guys know what’s happened to ... ?” Or your help may involved your spouse handing you cold water from the sink, glass by glass (yes, this is not the fastest or most comfortable of processes) until you have sufficiently rinsed out enough shampoo to be “done.”
Now from here, we begin to ponder electricity. What does electricity have to do with an uncomfortable shower? Hey, so glad you wondered. Recall how the water gets pumped to the roof of the house, so that gravity can do it’s thing to get water into the tank? Right. So why not just turn on the switch and be done? There is nothing to stop the pump from continuing to pump once it’s full, so it manually needs to be turned off. You’re right ... you want to do this before 8 1/2 showers, give or take, have taken place. But it’s not that simple. The fuse box, previously mentioned by Carl’s small miracle in a blog, does not provide enough electricity for the fridge, lights, curling irons, iPod and phone and camera chargers, clocks we plugged in, coffee, and cooking griddles. Now understand that often the straw that breaks the camels back is that coffee maker (Laura), not that we’re mentioning any names (Laura) in order to protect the innocent (Laura). The situation is quite different for the one (Laura) in the kitchen. Fully clothed, able to freely walk about and make many of lifes trivial decisions such as, “hmmmm ... coffee really sounds good about now. I think I’ll turn it on.” Yes, this blows the fuse, stops the electricity, and becomes a frustration due to lack of coffee and lighting until the fuse (yes, a Mexican fuse and a Mexican fuse job) gets repaired. (I can only imagine just how much fun Pastor Justin might be able to have playing with the fuse box). But this frustration of the “trial” of patience waiting for hot coffee and lights differs just slightly from that of the sudsy shampoo-ridden unlucky shower number nine victim. Not being clothed, wet, shampoo dripping from your head, your options literally shrink right before your very eyes and you envy the options of, well let’s face it, anyone else in the house. So now you know and you don’t any longer need to wonder.
Monday Blog
Today we departed for Heroes (pronounced like Arrow-ess) for our second week of Club de Ninos, first week for most of the students and Beth and Anna. However, following our family day yesterday, the injured reserves list (out with “mal” stomach or other assorted issues) included: Laura, Kendra, Sophia, Caley, Brittnay, Amanda, Ashley, and Karen. However, in order to field a full team, we only benched Laura, Kendra, Anna and Zach who stayed home with mucho resto. Everyone else played through the pain. Attaway! “Diah Poo Poo” became the talk of the day for the girls. We attribute this widespread catastrophe to an “authentic” pot of beans that was served yesterday. Perhaps it was the mystery meat ...
Our two Mexican missionaries this week are Samai and Ale (pronounced Samm-ah-ee and Ali) who are both very nice girls. Our VBS at Heroes is in a track housing area, with some government assistance. Many casas literally identical, and if you make a wrong turn on a street it’s time for a hail mary pass to find your way out. There is a very nice park that we will have for the week with a basketball court, soccer court, cement area for chalk, jump rope, etc., an area to hang a tarp (way to climb the trees to secure the rope Noah, our in-house grease monkey) for shade, and a play area with swings, teeter totters, pummel horse, even bars, and other various play equipment.
We had 28 kids turn out for day one. The plan is to do additional canvasing early tomorrow morning. The entire area received fliers over the weekend. However, there were a lot of teenagers hanging around the park, so perhaps the moms were checking us out and the safety of the park before sending their kids. Several of the kids came after club got going today and we’ll see what the Lord has planned for the week. Also, our previous location Rolland and Jo Ann had been working in for many years, whereas they have only been working on this location for four months, and this is their first VBS at Heroes. Spirits are up, everyone is downing bottled water, and we continue to covet your prayers.
Monday Blog
Today we departed for Heroes (pronounced like Arrow-ess) for our second week of Club de Ninos, first week for most of the students and Beth and Anna. However, following our family day yesterday, the injured reserves list (out with “mal” stomach or other assorted issues) included: Laura, Kendra, Sophia, Caley, Brittnay, Amanda, Ashley, and Karen. However, in order to field a full team, we only benched Laura, Kendra, Anna and Zach who stayed home with mucho resto. Everyone else played through the pain. Attaway! “Diah Poo Poo” became the talk of the day for the girls. We attribute this widespread catastrophe to an “authentic” pot of beans that was served yesterday. Perhaps it was the mystery meat ...
Our two Mexican missionaries this week are Samai and Ale (pronounced Samm-ah-ee and Ali) who are both very nice girls. Our VBS at Heroes is in a track housing area, with some government assistance. Many casas literally identical, and if you make a wrong turn on a street it’s time for a hail mary pass to find your way out. There is a very nice park that we will have for the week with a basketball court, soccer court, cement area for chalk, jump rope, etc., an area to hang a tarp (way to climb the trees to secure the rope Noah, our in-house grease monkey) for shade, and a play area with swings, teeter totters, pummel horse, even bars, and other various play equipment.
We had 28 kids turn out for day one. The plan is to do additional canvasing early tomorrow morning. The entire area received fliers over the weekend. However, there were a lot of teenagers hanging around the park, so perhaps the moms were checking us out and the safety of the park before sending their kids. Several of the kids came after club got going today and we’ll see what the Lord has planned for the week. Also, our previous location Rolland and Jo Ann had been working in for many years, whereas they have only been working on this location for four months, and this is their first VBS at Heroes. Spirits are up, everyone is downing bottled water, and we continue to covet your prayers.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Sunday Update
Sunday
Thursday - Day 4
Today we had another tremendous turnout ... just over 150 kids. Song time is very energetic, as the kids are learning most of the songs we have been introducing to them. Obed and Stephanie continued doing an outstanding job with running their teaching times. The Bain and Chica kids are leading groups during craft times, spending time working with the local children, speaking with them in Spanish and playing with them. The kids particularly love jumping rope. We brought in several really big ropes, one of which Carl cut in 1/2 and we tried some double dutch. Karen Bain did a great job demonstrating double dutch to the kids. Several of them tried it, but it is muy dificil (very difficult)! Coloring with crayons, chalk on the pavement, playing soccer, basketball are all enjoyable times.
This afternoon is laundry day. Right down the street from where we are staying is a laundry mat. It’s 20 pesos for a load if you provide your own soap, and 26 pesos if you have them just use their soap. Very reasonable. Today we also got the Ritz Carlton prepared for the rest of the team. It’s the bunkhouse on the property, but comes with it’s own facilities (all tiled, actually a bit nicer than the house!), figured out the water and got it running so we’re all set for them to arrive tomorrow.
Tonight, we’re all going out to have tacos with everyone who has been involved this week with VBS for a celebration dinner. We rescheduled it since tomorrow is when the rest of the Salem crew arrives.
Continue to pray for our team, both those here as well as those coming tomorrow. We’re going to be at the Nevin’s home to do some marriage counseling. Sunday is our day to host a major bbq for our entire group as well as the local missionaries and as many local Mexican families as can come.
The landscaping team showed up today and got the yard in ship shape. I only wish our yard at home got worked over like that in such a short amount of time. Wow.
Friday - Day 5
Our final day of the first week of VBS. We had over 150 kids once again and topped the day by presenting the gospel as well as reviewing the basics with the parents while the kids got to receive a balloon animal. Three of the moms accepted Christ and Rolland and Bryan will follow up with them. Praise the Lord for allowing each of us to be a part of such an incredible week and for the professions of salvation by the kids. What a great week.
The eight travelers made it safely ... and on time! Praise God for that. They were met by Carl at the new airport and were able to get moved in to their new “home” for the next week. Mark and Karen Bain accompanied Roland and Joanne Smith at Bryan and Susan Nevin’s home to help teach on marriage for their small group. After an inter-cultural game of Guestures, Bryan interpreted as Mark and Karen presented and helped lead a discussion. Many from their group will be planning on attending our bbq at our casa on Sunday following a teaching time from Pastor Carl.
Saturday - Day 6
Today was a fun day! Our team got up a little earlier than usual and had breakfast (19 of us now) and loaded up in one van and headed out to Mexico City. At Xochimilco we rented a boat and toured the canal, did some shopping at the market, and had a great authentic Mexican lunch. The canal area was an original Aztec area where the Aztecs filled in the lagoon to build their city on and have now been filled in for tourists as well as locals to tour and enjoy the scenery. There are over 1,000 boats and over 8 central areas that you can embark on a boat with miles upon miles of areas to see. Then we drove into Mexico City right into the heart of the city, around the circle at what is the “White House” of Mexico, museums, political and business centers, the zoo, Mexico’s largest soccer stadium, the tallest building in Mexico, and many other buildings and areas. Fortunately, we were driving opposed to walking through this as we got caught in a hard rain storm. Busy first day for the students and Beth and Anna! They all wanted to shout out to friends and family back home praying and know that spirits are up and everyone is excited, enthusiastic and ready to serve this upcoming week. No one sick ... very important detail!
Please remember to pray for us tomorrow as we entertain a large group of the Mexicans here at our casa for church, bbq and fellowship!