"Humanly speaking it is impossible, but not with God. Everything is possible with God." Mk 10:29
"For the man who wants to save his life will lose it, but the man who loses his life for my sake will find it." Mt 16:25
"Some want to keep the gospel so disembodied that it doesn't get involved at all in the world to save it. Christ is now in history." Oscar Romero


Sep 28, 2007

Rabitt's Hole

Where have we landed – we feel like Alice in Alice and Wonderland, freshly emerged from falling down the rabbit’s hole. We are alien; in our surroundings, in our family, in our persons. Which way is up and which is down. How do we recover from such an intoxicating experience? At least we have money right? No, we don’t even know how to spend it, where to go to get milk, eggs, cereal…where do we throw our trash…how do we not get blanketed by mosquitoes…how much water can touch my person – drinking?, washing hands?, washing dishes?...how do we keep our boys sane in this seemingly insane place…That was day one.
Day Two. We have cell phones. We can call each other. We can conceivably call home, but it will cost about $5 for 30 seconds. We found food! Cereal - $6-$14. Bug spray - $10. Internet - $.50 per 30 minutes!!! Slow, but the connection is steady. Can count to 10 in Kiswahili, Moja, etc. We can casually greet people. We can say “no thank you” to hawkers, trying to sell us socks, or hats, or newspapers we can’t read yet. We have mosquito fumigation - we’re saved!
We have arrived! Sort of. We have our own wheels! We need insurance, but we can drive. We met friends, and now know our general location and living area within this vast city. I can leave my house and get to the “main” road – despite the 3-foot divots and random lakes made by people cutting water lines to get a couple of buckets of water…
The heat is bad, but it’s similar to Columbus. It gets quite warm by 9am and will not cool down until 9pm or so. We’re told “this is cool – wait until December”. The other strange thing about the environment concerns day and night. Because we’re miles from the equator, the sun comes up at 6am and it goes down by 6pm everyday, all “seasons” (I put that in quotes b/c there is only a 10-20 degree change between seasons).
The people, oh the people are wonderful! They are so kind and friendly – if you engage them. They like foreigners, they are patient and helpful. This is a fundamental difference between Africans and Americans. Africans value you, the person, above your contribution, or purpose – above what you offer to them. Americans often value just utility – usefulness, satisfaction of need, etc. An example is how Americans mock and treat people rudely for not knowing English – or at a minimum - Americans who display open annoyance b/c of the delays or inconveniences caused by a foreign worker at some grocery store or retail location. As Christians, we have much to learn about valuing others. We came here b/c we thought we did – we found out how much further we have still to go.

4 comments:

Kirsten Kinnell said...

So, so glad to hear from you! I can only imagine how you guys must feel-- what a crazy adventure!

We miss you guys like crazy and are praying for you! How are the boys doing? We're praying for them especially.

Love!
k & s

lorah said...

Great metaphor, guys. I love Alice in Wonderland...
Love to you. Miss you terribly, and praying for you. Call you soon! (With the new African calling cards we are going to get!)
- the Campbells

Gregg Hay said...

Hey guys,

Loved reading this! Hope things are going really well and that you are enjoying these irst couple weeks. We are praying for you. Dan, are you able to follow the Buckeyes there?

Alainna says, "Dear Jude, I really miss you. I love you. I think it's cool that you have a car. But my dad says you can't drive it back here. Bye."

Bless you guys,

Gregg, Grace, Alainna and Liam

Phil and Judy said...

Hello All,
Glad you got the "blankie" we sent with the Millers and now Asher is "whole" again! Also, that you got the Pirate's ring and blue cowboy that Jude left at our house... and, oh yes, that you guys are settling in!
Love to see the progression the messages you all post reflect how you're feeling about being in Africa.
I know it's difficult to keep posting b/c of the internet problems, but pleaaaaaaaase keep us all in the loop.
Big hugs to all,
Dad