"you are the salt of the earth. but if salt loses its saltiness, how will it become salty again? it's good for nothing except to be thrown away and trampled under people's feet. you are the light of the world. a city on top of a hill can't be hidden."

matthew 5:13-14

Saturday, December 24, 2011

i'll be home for christmas (if the barge gets here in time...)

Hi, friends and family! Weeeee’re baaaaack!! :)
Bryan and I made it back into onto US soil this week, tired out after about an hour of sleep on the plane but well and excited to be back at home for the holidays. It was so wonderful to see IAH airport covered in tinsel, wreaths, and garlands. We certainly got to enjoy a bit of Christmas cheer in Peru over the past couple of weeks, but you can only feel so festive when it’s 90 degrees and raining cats, dogs, and mosquitoes outside every day! So now we’re back, rested up, and ready to celebrate the birth of Jesus in just hours’ time!
Before I go on, I promised pictures from Huaraz, Mancos (near Huascaran, the tallest mountain in Peru and in all the world’s tropics), and Machu Picchu – and these are just so beautiful that I have to show you them first!


 Mancos, Peru from our hostel window

ta-daaaaa!

we bought bread from this precious woman every morning

in the Black Mountains - a local woman walking to town in traditional garb

rockin out to Slumdog Millionaire soundtrack with John on a hike

Huascaran!

a family's farm on the way up the mountain

phew. made it! (well, we didn't actually get to the snow line...but hey, we tried!)

 Llanganuco Lakes 

Machu Picchu with my love

John and some llamas above the ruins


More photos of our time in Iquitos, Nauta, and the jungle, of course, are on their way. Just blame the fact that I’m still on Peruvian time. ;)
Since I last posted, Bryan and I traveled to Iquitos again to get ready to go on “Viaje Navidad,” the annual Christmas Trip where we gifted dolls, play pistols, little wind-up cars, and baby toys to thousands of kids in about twenty-five towns in the Amazon. In Iquitos, we met up with Pastor Jorge, his daughter Grace, and a few church members and friends from the jungle who would help us with preparing the gifts, cooking, and working the motors. Finally, we were on our way! A barge ride and a couple of days later, the group of us was traveling from tiny river town to tinier river town in Jorge’s “mini-barge,” singing with the kids, distributing gifts, and being fed with literally hundreds of manguas (think mangos, only smaller), oranges, passion fruit, mamays (“rose apples”), and avocadoes. Fortunately, I also got to meet many of Bryan’s friends that he hadn’t gotten to catch up with yet (including Richard, the panaderia guy, and his huge family again), paint not one but two churches, and go to over 20 villages.
Two weeks later, Bryan and I left on a barge to get back Nauta a couple of days before the rest of the gang to make sure that we would catch our flight back to the States in time. Good thing we did, too, because Jorge and company actually ended up waiting two extra days for the-barge-that-wouldn’t-come. They only just got back into Iquitos a couple of hours before we drove to the airport! (A bit of a close call, yes?) When we got back, Jorge reminded us of a time when he had waited two whole weeks in the jungle for a barge to pass by…oh, Peru. What are we to do with you? So in the few hours that we were in Nauta, we got to see Chris and the progress she’d already made on her “get-away haven” for jungle missionaries. She already had a wall inside her house half-way up and under construction (YAY!), and she expected to get electricity with a Peruvian month. A couple of days later, we were all packed up and on a night-flight back to the States!
Now, this is the part where I might be tempted to say something like, “I had an amazing time, learned a lot, wouldn’t change a moment of it, and would do it all over again in a heartbeat.” But although I did have a wonderful time and definitely want to go back to Peru someday soon, I’d be lying through my teeth if I left it at that. To be completely honest, immersion was hard. Even though I stayed in Zambia for four months rather than the two we spent in Peru, I wasn’t “immersed” in the African culture at all, really. I could speak English to nearly everyone I met, I taught in English, I lived in the compound with the other South African missionaries and American interns, and we had incredible facilities that worked nearly all of the time. I had a microwave, refrigerator, and grocery store just around the corner, for goodness’ sakes. Please don’t understand me: the amenities we had really did help the long-term missionaries to be productive and (frankly) to endure, and their daily work was intimately connected with widows, orphans, AIDS/HIV patients, malnourished children, and people struggling to survive deep in the African bush. Many would argue that the conveniences on the base were necessary, critical – but even so, we lived in a Western haven with people who spoke English fluently, were used to the American culture, and understood the concept of “personal space.”
In Peru, we didn’t have that bubble. Every morning, it was punctured. “Personal space” does not exist in Peru. It’s not part of the culture. Your skin isn’t even your own. A couple of the women we traveled with on the Christmas trip picked through my hair for lice – not because they thought I had it, but because it’s a demonstration of affection and friendship. The teenagers and kids followed me everywhere. I walked twenty paces away to get a picture of the river, they followed. I went to the bathroom in the middle of the night, my roommate followed. I went to the river to bathe, 5 or 6 little ones grabbed their bars of soap and followed. I walked down a sidewalk and in about two minutes’ time, ten or twenty kids followed. I couldn’t communicate effectively (man, am I glad that Bryan’s fluent – jungle Spanish is rough), I was tired of eating rice and carbs all the time (we actually had more meat on our trip than was normal, but my American metabolism screamed for more protein and fiber), and I felt helpless to even cook or do the dishes. Everything smelled like dirty Amazon water, including freshly-washed clothes (we washed them in the river, obviously), the chickens started at 3:30 am every morning and didn’t quit till the afternoon, and the mosquitoes…oh, the mosquitoes. I never have to see a blood-sucking bug again. I just wanted to hide in my mosquito net all the time, away from the people I couldn’t talk to, away from the food I didn’t want to eat, away from the insects I couldn’t shake.
And the worst part? I was certain that I was the most intolerant, spoiled girl who ever walked the earth - and I felt so guilty for it. I was disgusted with myself that I was so annoyed, so done with jungle life, so anxious to get back on that barge and head back to the city of Iquitos. I was finally (and for the first time) going through cultural immersion, and I haaaaated that I hated it. 
However, with a little bit of time, space, and a whole lot of perspective, I’m starting to be able to look back at our trip with renewed appreciation. I obviously still need a few more months to process, but already I can see how God’s going to use my time in Peru to shape me into the servant I want to become. Even while we were still there, in the midst of my intolerance, I began to appreciate the incredible hardiness, faithfulness, and steadfastness of the Peruvian people. I came to understand in my heart what I had already known in my mind: this was the majority world (i.e. “third world”), and the culture and privileges that I was used to in the States, from personal space to opportunity, were in fact not “normal” at all. Protein, timeliness, and clean water are luxuries that most of the world can’t enjoy. Even a seemingly little thing like understanding English puts us far ahead of the curve for getting jobs, making a decent income, and breaking out of confining societal systems.
Most of all, though, my experience in Peru taught me the living definition of grace. As Paul Tillich puts it,
"Grace strikes us when we are in great pain and restlessness. It strikes us when we walk through the dark valley of a meaningless and empty life...It strikes us when our disgust for our own being, our indifference, our weakness, our hostility, and our lack of direction and composure have become intolerable to us. It strikes us when, year after year, the longed-for perfection of life does not appear, when the old compulsions reign within us as they have for decades, when despair destroys all joy and courage. Sometimes at that moment a wave of light breaks into our darkness, and it is as though a voice were saying: 'You are accepted. You are accepted, accepted by that which is greater than you, and the name of which you do not know. Do not ask for hte name now; perhaps you will find it later. Do not try to do anything now; perhaps later you will do much. Do not seek for anything; do not perform anything; no not intend anything. Simply accept the fact that you are accepted.' If that happens to us, we experience grace."
Mix that with a little bit of John Piper:
"'God is not served by human hands, as if he needed anything, because he himself gives all men life and breath and everything else.' (Acts 17:25) A God who cannot be served is a God who can only be enjoyed. The great sin of hte world is not that the human race has failed to work for God so as to increase his glory, but that we have failed to delight in God so as to reflect his glory. For God's glory is most reflected in us when we are most delighted in him."
It was (and still is) a hard lesson, but my sole object in life is to accept grace and delight in God, allowing him to lavish grace on and delight in me. I learned nothing else over the last two months, understanding just that was worth the struggle.
So what now? Well, now (as hard as it is to hit “pause” on wedding coordinating, gift-buying, and life-planning), it’s time to stop and celebrate Christ! I hope you all have an amazing Christmas Eve and an even better Christmas with friends, family, and loved ones. Thank you, as always, for your thoughts and prayers, and I look forward to talking with yall soon!
Con mucho amor,
Stephanie :)

Saturday, December 3, 2011

mosquitos and bedbugs and fleas, oh my!

¡Hola y un gran abrazo de peru, amigos and familia!

Over the past four weeks, we´ve had a wonderful time in Peru. Machu Picchu was beautiful and certainly lived up to its reputation. (Pictures soon to come!) After staying in hostels in Ollantaytambo and Cuzco (the towns closest to Machu Picchu), spending a night at the Lima airport (not as sketchy as it sounds, I promise - we weren´t the only ones rollin out the sleeping bags in dimly-lit corners), and staying with Bryan´s good friend Pastor Jorge in Iquitos, Bryan and I went to Nauta to spend a week or so with Chris, a missionary who lives there. A few days before, John, Bryan´s younger brother, got incredibly sick off of ceviche (a traditional Peruvian dish of fish ¨cooked¨ in acidic fruit juice) and actually ended up flying home that week. He´s at home and doing well now, so I´d just ask for prayers for his continuous health over these next few weeks as his body reacclimates itself to American food!

When we first got to Chris´ house in Nauta, we were shocked to find that we had some unexpected housemates: two kittens in Chris´ store closet completely tangled in what looked like fishing net. They were covered in fleas, newly born (maybe two days old), and bloody from trying to free themselves from the mess of strings and knots. We were able to free them and clean them up a little bit, but despite a few days of flea shampoo treatment, force-feeding canned milk through a floppy straw (try finding anything close to an eye dropper in Nauta), and covering them in lots of blankets so they could keep warm, they both died. It seems like such a small thing to get upset about - aren´t there starving children in Africa or something with which to occupy my mind? - but it was absolutely horrible. Add on to that the fact that Chris´ house now has fleas, and I´m sure you understand that that week for me was a doosey.

Thankfully, the rest of our time spent in Nauta with Chris was fantastic, and her unflagging optimism and can-do attitude definitely cheered me up. She´s now living in a newly constructed (soon to be) two-story house that she´s working to get ready for use as a pastors´ retreat center. Her vision is that the house might be a welcome haven for Peruvian pastors who are now missionaries planting churches in the Amazon jungle. Although Nauta isn´t a thriving montropolis, it at least has motocarros (think Central Park´s horse-drawn carriages in NYC...only your horse is a motorcycle and instead of ten thousand taxis littering the streets, you have motocarros), a decent marketplace, restaurants, a place to get cool drinks, etc - a perfect get-away for the men to relax, reenergize, read, and recooperate before they head back out to their churches along the River.

Right now, Chris´ place doesn´t have electricity; there´s no divide among the kitchen, living area, or bedroom; the only way to get to the partially finished upstairs is with a ladder; and her bathroom is blocked off with black plastic trash bags. All that´s quickly changing, though: the city agreed to wire electricity to her street today, and her sons and other work groups from the States will soon visit to help finish nailing in the upstairs floor boards, put in walls, redo her draining system so she can have two functioning toilets and showers, and bring in computers and books for the pastors. We´re so excited for all her hard work finally paying off! While with Chris, we got to meet her neighbors and friends (many of them under the age of ten and always wanting come in to play), start putting in the floor boards for her second floor, help organize the downstairs, hang out with the kids, have coffee and tea with the moms on her street, and dream with her about the materials she´d like to have available for the pastors while they stay there. Her dedication to this project and to the people of Peru was truly an amazing thing to witness!

In the middle of our stay with Chris, Bryan and I caught a barge to San Pedro, a tiny village (42 adults) upriver of Nauta, to visit one of Bryan´s good friends Richard. He and Bryan had lived and worked together in the jungle almost four years ago, so it was wonderful that we had the opportunity to see him, meet his new fifteen-year-old wife (and they got married two years ago...!!!), visit with his family, and check out his new panaderia (bread shop)! While staying in San Pedro, we got to learn how Richard makes bread (and even help out a bit), travel in his peke-peke (think small motor canoe) to sell his buns, sweetbreads, and crackers to clients along the river near his village, visit more of Bryan´s friends in a nearby town, and hang out with Richard´s brothers (i.e. play soccer - this is Peru!). I found out that Spanish in the jungle is MUCH more difficult to understand than it is in Iquitos or even Nauta. While I´d prided myself in comprehending at least 75% of what was said in Iquitos and almost all of Bryan´s side of conversations, I had trouble understanding the people of San Pedro at all. I´d ask them to repeat what they said, please, and repeat again, and slower, and please use different or smaller words...nothin. I survived on pointing to things, saying ¨Lo siento, no comprendo¨ (¨I´m sorry, I don´t understand¨), and gesticulating in crude sign language. Oh, cultural immersion.

Bryan and I are now back in Iquitos staying with Pastor Jorge and his family for a few days before we head out on that Viaje de Navidad I mentioned in my last posting. As it turns out, not only will we travel to over 20 villages to deliver toys and Christmas cheer to little ones, but we´ll also get to paint a church that has been through some serious difficulties over the past few years. Hopefully we can bring a little bit of hope to all!
Finally, as per my usual, here are a few more itemized learnings for your enjoyment.

You know you´re in Peru when...(cont´d)
(15) 9pm is late and you get up when the first obnoxious rooster crows - 5am.
(16) Should you be blessed with a shower, it´ll likely be what the locals call a ¨widowmaker,¨ appropriately named for its electrical box less than a foot away from the showerhead. Gracious.
(17) You consider a bathroom top-notch if it has any one of the following: toilet paper, toilet seat, no entry fee, handicap accessibility, warm water, any water, soap, any way to dry your hands, doors to its stalls, a way to flush the toilet.
(18) Pigs, rather than dogs, are on leashes.

And you know you´re in Iquitos when...
(19) You stow away on a barge for five hours before you learn that it´s not heading out that day. Try again tomorrow.
(20) There are more motocarros on the road than taxis in NYC. Really.
(21) A family of four on a motorcycle isn´t an uncommon occurence.
(22) You get bedbugs from hostels.
(23) You get fleas from gatos.
(24) The number of ants per square meter easily outnumber the number of people in the entire city.
(25) Uncovered manholes in the middle of the road are expected and as common as speedbumps (and much more detrimental to your car!).
(26) Jugo (juice) is as critical to survival as water. (Actually, considering the state of water in Peru, I´d venture to say it´s more so.)
(27) Mayonize on rice, french fries, eggs, toast, and fish isn´t at all uncommon.
(28) You truly appreciate the luxury of a non-dirt-floor.
(29) The ceviche sounds good only in theory...
(30) You begin to think in broken Spanish.

Lastly, you know you´re in the Amazon jungle when...
(31) There are three public, co-ed bathrooms for about two hundred people on a three-day barge trip. Glorious.
(32) You drink oatmeal (¨Quack-er¨ as it´s pronounced here) for breakfast.
(33) You keep a monkey as a pet, but dogs are pests.
(34) Bathtime is social hour.
(35) The two jars of peanut butter you brought for emergency-purposes-only is starting to look a bit scant.
(36) You get so many mosquito bites from the jungle that you look like you have a bad case of chicken pox.
(37) Your Thanksgiving is your first day in the jungle - so you celebrate with rice, pasta, eggs, and fresh homemade bread, and more rice!
(38) You are attacked by giant moths when you preach.
(39) You mow the lawn with a machete.
Thank you again for your prayers and support, and please enjoy this wonderful Christmas season!

Con mi amor,
Stephanie