Friday, July 15, 2011

Almost done...


I’ve been so bad about blogging that it’s hard to know where to start at this point, so I’m just going to share some highlights.  Since the last time I blogged:

We painted a building at La Quinta that will become a feeding center

We celebrated Children’s Day and Father’s Day in Nicaragua

I received an apron as a gift from a very old woman named María Vicente

We met a girl named Alba who has been married for three years, has a one year old daughter, and is only 16.  We’ve been back to visit her a bunch of times, and she seems to really want people to talk to.  One of the girls on my team bought her a Bible that she took to her today!

We met a man named Juan Carlos and his daughter Caterín, who has chronic kidney problems and needs surgery because her body can’t process a lot of foods and she has severe allergies that cause her to swell and be unable to walk.  Keep them in your prayers…it is expensive to buy the special things she can eat, but they don’t have enough money for the surgery she needs either.

We ate delicious street tacos

We got caught in town in some serious rain and accidentally skipped youth church…

We saw Transformers 3 in Managua and were frozen by the air conditioning

We piled 15+ people in the back of a tiny burnt orange pick-up truck multiple times

We celebrated the Fourth of July with red white and blue outfits, an “American” dinner (consisting of hot dogs and hamburgers, guacamole and chips (more American than you might think since the Nicaraguans use eggs in theirs), macaroni and cheese, and rice krispie treats), a water fight, and fireworks

We prayer-walked seven times around each barrio we work in and met, prayed with, and invited so many precious people to church services and the “house churches” that we’re working on starting

I went to two Nicaraguan hospitals with one of my teammates because both of our leaders were gone for the day, and I almost had to translate.  Thank goodness Emma got there in time for her third and fourth hospital visits of the day.

We’ve played with a lot of adorable children

We’ve celebrated two Nicaraguans’ birthdays and two teammates’ birthdays

I’ve been to the Pacific Ocean for the first time (in a van that puts any CSBC van to shame) and ridden a horse down the beach

I saw three of my teammates get baptized in the ocean!

We celebrated Children’s Day again

We helped a family wash dishes and do laundry (after spending a lot of time going to houses to ask if we could help and getting a lot of blank stares and questions or just nos.)

We spent a day intensely training to play in a soccer tournament, played in the first day of the tournament (which turned out to be way more intense than we thought…entry fees and everything), and placed third out of three teams.

All of these things have become normal.  La Quinta Esperanza, Diriamba, Carazo, Nicaragua feels like home right now.  As I think about going home, I just keep thinking how weird it will be.  To have a room to myself, a double bed, air conditioning, a washing machine, a dishwasher.  To drive my car on paved roads, be able to go places by myself, be able to flush toilet paper, not have rice and beans with every meal.  We just turned off the lights in our room for the night, and as I’m typing this there are all kinds of gnats, flies, and who knows what else swarming to the light of my computer screen.  It seems like going home should be going back to “normal,” but that’s not what it feels like, and I don’t think that’s what I want it to be.  When I get home, I don’t just want to be who I was.  I think I’ve learned things on this trip, and I want that to affect what my life looks like when I get back.  I’ve learned a lot about living and loving in intense community.  I’ve learned to be confident in who I am in Christ and to be more open both with people I’ve come to know and love (my teammates) and with the people that I meet.  I’ve learned to be content in waiting and listening for God and not always knowing his plans.  I’ve been reminded that he is faithful to keep his promises and that he delights in the joy of his children.  I know that he will not give me a task that he does not equip me to complete.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Pictures!

(almost) the whole team on a van!

My "couch-bed"

The gate to our compound.
some niños from a school where did our dances.

Hannah's studying to be a dental hygienist, so we taught the kids how to brush their teeth during Sunday School and gave them toothbrushes and toothpaste that her class donated.

Complete with motions. Translating words like "spit" and "swish" is not the easiest.

We made this banner at training camp, and it used to be hung on the wall above my bed (before it fell on me one night...).  The roots have words that are things we want to be rooted in as a team, and the purple words are fruits we want to see while we're here (in Spanish).

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Longest Blog Post in the World.


I’m a little late blogging, so I’m sure a lot of what I will say has already been said on the team blog, but here goes anyway.  My half of the team is living at La Quinta Esperanza, which is a compound run by a woman named Juanita who has an amazing story.  She takes in kids and teenagers from the barrios around Diriamba and takes care of them and sends them to school.  There is a preschool on the compound and a church (the pastor and his family also live here).  We live in what used to be Juanita’s house, but is now used to house mission teams like us (15 of us in 14 beds in 3 little rooms with 2 bathrooms…makes the house I’m moving into with 11 girls this year sound like a piece of cake).  My bed is the most accessible in the main room, and we all hang out/have team time in here, so it has become the couch (so I sleep in a couch bed and it feels like I’m right at home at the Shamba).  The church here is working on a project they’re calling “Misión 70” in which they are reaching out to the barrios and trying to get 70 new people to know Jesus and join their church.  So, for our first month here we’re working with them on that.  It’s nothing like what any of us were expecting, and it’s been kind of frustrating at times, but we’re learning to have patience with the language barrier (no translators, so one of the leaders and I are doing our best) and trust that God is in control and will use our time here.  Here’s what our schedule looks like for now:

Sundays:
9-11: Children’s Church
We plan a whole bunch of games and songs and such and a little lesson to do with the kids from the barrios.  The kids are split up into 4 classes semi based on their ages, and I have the oldest ones.  We hang out with them for about two hours and then walk them home.  This past week we talked about trust using Proverbs 3:5-6 and we had a bunch of blindfolded children running around, and the week before we talked about Zaccheus.
3-5: Big Church

Mondays:
Workday
We do random work around La Quinta or whatever else they tell us to do.  Last Monday we split into three groups: one built a ramp to make it easier to drive into the compound, one swept up trash and burned it, and my group took out a retaining wall and moved all the stones/concrete.  That was a fun job that involved finding a tarantula, a scorpion, some kind of weird spiders, and poisonous centipedes that don’t die when you cut them in half.  All of us finished way early, so we ended up being able to go into town for the afternoon.
This Monday we were supposed to paint, but it turns out we’re supposed to be painting a mural somewhere, and they hadn’t bought the paint yet, and we hadn’t figured out what we are painting, so instead they took us to San Marcos to visit an hogar de ancianos, or a nursing home (literally a home for the ancient).  We just spent a few hours talking to the people there, which was fairly frustrating sometimes with limited Spanish speakers and lack of conversation topics, but I think they enjoyed having us there.  Then we spent the afternoon learning new dances and stuff for a special program on Sunday for El Día de los niños (Children’s Day).

Tuesday:
Fasting and Prayer until 3
For Misión 70, everyone in the church has chosen a day to fast and pray for the ministry, and we were assigned Tuesdays.  We spend time together in the mornings and then have a lot of free time to spend with God and talk to our prayer partners or do whatever.  We’re thinking about asking if we can use the money that would be used for breakfast and lunch on Tuesdays to buy some Bibles to give to people we talk to in the barrios.

Wednesday, Thursday, Friday:
Ministry in the barrios
The first few days we were here, the kids at La Quinta taught us a bunch of dances and dramas that they use for ministry (we’re talking pretty legit dances choreographed by Nicaraguans, if some of you were thinking of DR or CSBC-style creative movements).  Now on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays we hike through the jungle to the barrios and spend our mornings and afternoons there.  Most of the time we do our dances and dramas somewhere and then the pastor explains them and we pray with the kids and families.  One afternoon we just gathered up a bunch of kids and split up into groups and had stations with different games.  Someone from La Quinta led each one and then gave a little devotional type thing at the end that was somehow related to the game.  That was really fun because we actually got to spend some time with the kids and I think we all felt like it was more effective than the dances and stuff.  Then on Friday afternoon we went back just to talk to people and invite them to church.  It didn’t go exactly how we thought it had been explained to us before, and it was kind of frustrating at times, but we definitely had some good conversations, and a lot of people said they would visit the church.  We’d like to be able to spend more time building relationships with people, but the pastor is not a huge fan of suggestions, and it’s kind of difficult to communicate with him sometimes.

Saturdays are our day off.  We spent the first Saturday in Jinotepe, which is close-by and especially close to where the other team is staying.  We used the internet and explored the market and got milkshakes.  This past Saturday we went to Masaya, where there is a huge market (that is also a lot more touristy). 

That’s what we’ve done so far! After July 3rd Misión 70 will be over and we’ll have a lot more freedom to decide as a team what we want to do.  This is really long, so congratulations if you made it all the way through, and I’ll try to blog more often so they’ll be shorter.

Note: I wanted to have time to change this a little, but the internet is suuuper slow right now and we're running out of time, so I just had to copy paste.  Sometime soon I'll have internet again...

Thursday, June 2, 2011

I'm leaving tomorrow...

And the idea of fitting everything I need for two months into this bag is a little overwhelming:
(The fact that I still haven't really unpacked from family vacation at the beach last week doesn't exactly help...)  So naturally I'm doing this instead.  I do think that I finally have everything I need, though.  Tomorrow morning I head to Tennessee to meet all of my teammates, and then on the 7th we fly to Nicaragua! In honor of my excitement about starting this adventure, here are 5 things I know about Nicaragua [with a little help from Wikipedia], in case you wanted to know:
  1. The east coast was an English colony and the west coast was a Spanish colony.  Because of that, the regions are very different and a lot of people on the east coast speak English and a lot of the place names are English. [learned that last semester in a class about "the new Latin American novel"...look at that college education paying off.]
  2. The Panama Canal could have gone through Nicaragua [you can practically already get from coast to coast on the water, and apparently someone is still considering building a canal there].
  3. It has the nicknames "La tierra de lagos y volcanes" (The Land of Lakes and Volcanoes) and "La tierra de poetas" (The Land of Poets).
  4. The currency is called Córdobas and the exchange rate is about 22 Córdobas to 1 USD.
  5. In 1990 Violeta Chamorro became the first female president of Nicaragua, as well as the first woman elected president in the Americas.
 This time tomorrow I'll be somewhere in the air between Richmond and Atlanta!

*Edit: It's only 5pm and I'm basically done packing! I think I fit everything in my bag AND it weighs less than 50 pounds. Success! Also, click on the link to the right of the page to read my team's group blog while we're gone (right now it hasn't been updated and just has old posts from the team that came home earlier this month).

Thursday, May 19, 2011

The Beginning

I'm going to Nicaragua! This wasn't my original plan for the summer, but God has definitely opened and closed some doors, and here I am!  I'm leaving in barely over two weeks. I'm really not that into the idea of starting a blog, but I thought it would be a good idea for those of you who want to know what is going on for these two months.  No guarantees about how much I'll update, but I think there will be a group blog too that I'll post the link to.  For now, here's something about the trip:

Here's where I'm going:


Jinotepe is in southwest Nicaragua, about 45 minutes south of the capital, Managua, and close to Lake Nicaragua, where there are freshwater sharks(!).  I'm going with about 30 other college students (who I'll meet for the first time when I get to Tennessee for training), and we'll be working in two smaller teams most of the time.  According to what we've been told, we'll be doing a little bit of everything, from visiting hospitals, a senior center and a rehab center, to construction.  We'll be working with ministry hosts who have started a compound in the neighboring slum community that focuses on serving families who live in the dump with a preschool program, feeding programs, and outreaches.

Thanks to all of you who are supporting me, and especially for all of your prayers!