Monday, October 30, 2006

Flying solo

I’m in Pinalito alone this week. Melanie is traveling with her parents for several days, and I have opted to stay in the village to attack my to-do list. Although I put on a great “tough-girl face” when Mel and her parents drove away last Friday, I have to admit to some shaky nerves throughout the first few nights alone. It is pitch dark by 6:30 these days, and my routine dinner-for-one—a peanut-butter sandwich-- takes a mere 20 minutes out of the evening. I’ve never known three hours to crawl by so slowly!

Much like a blind man will rely on his hearing to compensate for his lack of sight, I turn to the village to compensate for this empty apartment. In the morning when I wonder who is awake and making tortillas, I only need to listen to the coughing coming from the smoky kitchen. When the boys file into the mission gate to make their daily rounds, it’s easy to tell who’s who by the swing of their machete or their whistling.

Desperate to fill my daylight hours with voices and activity, I have redefined a 9-5 workday by spending it with the village. By 7 a.m., and I am making eggs for the boys. By 8, a few women have arrived to get their work assignment for the day. Now that my garden is well weeded, and mostly eaten, (advice on insecticides, anyone? I am finished with organic!) I spend the day outside the mission, checking on sick, swollen bellied children or planting beans and cucumbers in a neighbor’s garden. Even when it is dark, I’d rather be kicking the soccer ball around than inside my lonely apartment. The kids love having Sarita all to themselves… I forget to be a grown-up—to wash dishes and sweep the constantly dirty floor—when there is no one here to notice my mess!

And the village never fails to keep me occupied. Over the past two weeks, Pinalito has experienced two deaths. Freddy, who I have mentioned and pictured in previous blogs, returned to Pinalito after only a few days on the coast as a 14 year old “working man”. His mother Maria, having long suffered from chronic pneumonia, died last Sunday. Freddy got home in time to wrap his mother in a grass mat and bury her in the cemetery. He is orphaned now, along with two older sisters, three older brothers and his 11 year old sister, Rosa


Although I didn’t know the other man very well, Cleto was once a fixture of Pinalito. He was shot is a drunken argument before I arrived in July. Unable to purchase sterile dressing and to keep his wound clean, his family had been using plastic grocery bags to draw out the fluid in his body. Cleto has suffered infection and malnourishment throughout the 3 months that followed the gunshot, and he has been delirious since I met him. This death arouses an anger in me that is so deep… anger at myself (unfounded I know) because I don’t know enough about infection and antibiotics, and anger at the unfairness of his death. This man would have lived had he been in the U.S. His wound would healed easily in a hospital, and today, he would be working with a physical therapist and drinking protein shakes to work his abdomen back into shape.



When a death occurs in Pinalito, the villagers respond with extreme anxiety. An afterlife is a source of great anguish in an area that supports so little living. The people seek every possible supernatural assurance that their relative is no longer suffering. While making tortillas with Freddy’s sister-in-law this week, I noticed an altar built in the corner of the cabin. Inside a “crib” of several dozen pine branches, there was a fat Guatemalan-style cigar, a bowl of water with a piece of a banana leaf floating in it, a whittled wooden cross and a candle. This altar stands in the corner where Freddy’s mom once laid suffering. It is a mixture of more religions than I can relate… Christianity maybe, Catholicism and witchcraft. The family is unsettled about Heaven, worried that Maria’s long struggle in life has not ended with death.




This is another reason why I am working as a missionary… When Paul Farmer wonders why the people of Haiti mix medicine with voodoo and religious iconography, a wizened Creole woman challenges, “Well Doctor, aren’t you capable of understanding complication?” Well, I can understand complication. I really do. I understand the reckless desire to find something tangible in a place that otherwise offers so little assurance. But I also understand the simple abundance of God’s love. And although I cannot explain it to Pinalito in perfect Spanish, I can plant a garden with them, kick a flattened basketball for hours, and listen to a staticky radio while eating a bowl of bland black beans. Through this routine, I slowly find the words (and the courage) to share my faith in the simplicity of God’s grace. Jesus lived and died selflessly, so that we don’t have to anguish over our entrance into Heaven. Pinalito deserves the peace of God’s plan, and it is my task to share it with them.

…………….





So the week started out slow and sad, but as I collect my thoughts for this blog, I am happily exhausted. A week of “flying solo” has pushed me to depend on the people of Pinalito, and on God. I am not lonely, for my neighbors Maribel, Gladis and Rosa insisted on keeping me company tonight. I forced myself to set aside my book and chamomile tea, and I read fairy tales to the girls instead. I offered them a hot shower, which all three took together, and then I combed and braided their hair while they drank hot milk. My apartment is a now wreck of empty milk cups, muddy footprints, and gassy Guatemalan children sleeping in the bunk beds next to mine. It has been a memorable slumber party.

Good Night!


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Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Another journey

I'm en route to Belize today. Melanie and I are renewing our Guatemalan visas, and the rules demand 72 hours across the border. Rugged mountain woman that I may be--don't expect me to argue a short beach vacation! I don't miss the traveling that this vacation involves... the buses, boats and taxi cabs could wear anyone out, but I have enjoyed this sights and sounds of the journey. I had not yet noticed the monotony of Pinalito... but this morning's reintroduction of black Caribbean culture, corn dogs, and jiggling bellies has reminded me of the world's variety and COLOR!

I'm writing this note on a pier overlooking a laggoon at the Belize-Guatemala border. There are about 15 other people waiting for a "water taxi," and the scene reminds me of a few things:

1)Poverty is widespread.
Although Belize is considered to be one of the wealthier countries in Central America, I am still staring at a clapboard house, and smelling tortillas cook on a wood fire. There is screen attached to the widows of this house-- which would signify great wealth in Pinalito, but this screen is ripped to shreads. And despite the toilet at the back of the house, there is a trail of muck that leaks from it's pipes and creates a moat around the yard. What's even stranger to me is the hint of south Alabama that I cannot help but associate with this place. (I am remembering the small town where my Mom grew up...) I know that I don't have to leave the U.S. to find this kind of poverty... I have seen clapboard houses, bad plumbing, and rotten teeth in small town Indiana, just outside of my bustling Miami University college town. My point is: the grasp of poverty is wide. My mind is knotted around its workings.
2) With that said, I never thought it possible to feel so connected to the strangers of the world. My experience in Pinalito has already created a compassion in me that is hard to contain. I am quick to give up my seat to a woman on the bus with me... I know that she has had a hard morning with her four hungry children. The nodding drunk hunched on the docks strikes a chord as well... he has opted out of his difficult life. Whereas I would have once judged his alcohol breath, now I pity his tired body. On another note, the strangers that have contacted me to encourage and support my work here have been incredible. I reiterate my thanks to them... I am finding new meaning in the term "family in Christ."
3) Depite such entertainment in this journey, I miss Pinalito. My mind races to think of all I could be doing right now. Upon leaving the mountain last Sunday, I discovered that my buddy and constant helper, Freddy, will be leaving Pinalito to start working on a farm near the coast of Guatemala. I am crushed. Freddy is about 15; his Mom is sick with chronic pneumonia, his sister counts on him for food. He needs to make money, but I fear this far-off "coast" will entail for him. At this point, I feel rushed to get more ACTIVITY established for the teenagers of Pinalito... I want to provide them with a little work if they need it, but mostly, I want to fill their brains with wisdom to make smart decisions. They have no reason to stay on the mountain, and they have no idea of what they will find below.

My return trip will take me through Guatemala city, the capitol, where Melanie and I will purchase some movies and computer software for the community center. I just want to provide my friends with SOMETHING TO DO... their brains crave it.