Wednesday, December 14, 2011

It's a Great Place to Visit, But I Wouldn't Want to Get Sick There

Starting in January, Project Ulpan will have a full-time doctor living in the Valley, bringing medical care to the 7,500 people there closer than they have ever had it.  Turns out that last weekend I had the honor of being the doctor's first patient.  But first, a little backstory:

Ginger and the boys left last week to head back to Nashville for Christmas.  My plan was to hang around for about another 10 days to finish up some water things and help out with several meetings and trainings we had going in the Valley.  My error here was actually making a plan in the first place (see my extensive research on this topic filed under: PLANS, nothing here goes according to).  The day Ginger and the boys left, I did what any healthy man would do - I drove to visit some nuns.  And it only took 6 hours - a speed record for a nun run.  These amazing women have run a health promotion and training program in southwestern Guatemala for about 40 years, and it was very impressive.  In truth, I was along because Kris and DeeDee and Christian were my ride back to the Valley.  So, the 4 of us and the new doctor went to visit to see what we could learn.  The road was crowded and bumpy and full of sugarcane trucks because it's harvest time right now.  Also, there were a few stops where we were searched to make sure we didn't have fruit or other things that might infest the crops there (I didn't mind that necessarily - it makes sense, but I wish that governments put as much effort into addressing the trafficking of humans as they do the trafficking of fruit flies).

Throughout the visit, it became clear to everyone that I didn't know very much about medicine (more on that later), but thankfully I was able to work in some of my best nun jokes ("dressing as a nun is easy once you get into the habit", "you must think we're as fun as a barrel full of monks", "I assume you're Cardinals fans", and so on).  They actually weren't Cardinals fans, though, but they really liked the Detroit Tigers from the 1960's and were pleasantly surprised to talk with someone who could recount Denny McClain's amazing 1968 season and how Al Kaline is one of the most underrated players ever.  They also said that they are working in one community in particular where they have a desperate need for water, and it looks like next spring we are going to "trade" some water work for some medicines and health promotion work.  It's always interesting to me how things get intertwined for the good.

And, along the way, it occurred to me that I wasn't eating or drinking much at all.  By the time we returned to Guatemala City, I was feeling pretty rotten and really just wanted to sleep.  I looked up my symptoms on WebMD and it said definitively that I had a kidney infection.  That is probably not fun anywhere, but in the mountains of Guatemala it's especially un-fun.  The combination of bouncing along the "roads", the drizzle, the cold (it's surprisingly cold right now), the real discomfort in my back and side, and the fact that whenever I went to the bathroom it sounded like I was sending a Morse code message made it pretty miserable.  Thankfully, of the past 144 hours in the Valley, I slept about 120 of those hours.  One of the few clear decisions I made was to move my flight back from next week to today.  Feeling better and sitting here in the airport gave me some time to reflect on another event that occurred around me in the last few days.

One (evening?) Kris came in to where I was sleeping and said "Sorry, but this guy's got a broken arm and this is the best place to help him".  I really don't remember much else from that time, but the story was that he had fallen and had a severe break that needed immediate medical attention, but before getting him to he hospital for setting / surgery he needed to have the break immobilized.  Kris (who could probably use a nap by this time as well) was able to put to use some wilderness training and apply a splint.  The family was distraught.  He was a new father and needed to support the family.  Bear in mind that this sort of injury is often a death sentence in places like this, and even in the best case scenario he wouldn't be able to work for several months, if ever again, and most of the people here live day to day.

The next day, a group of friends and family came and asked Kris if he could take them to the hospital to visit their friend, who by this time had been informed that he needed treatment costing 1,500 Quetzales (which he didn't have) or they would need to amputate his arm.  More of the story came to light as well - that the man had in fact been intoxicated and got into a fight with his father-in-law over the fact that he'd been unkind to his wife and threats were made and punches thrown and just a general sad situation on the family front.  I really don't know any more than that, but I suspect that the story, like all stories, goes back several years and possibly generations.  I guess we have the option to pay attention to the sweet story of a family rallying around a loved one who is hurt and we have the option to pay attention to the story of a man who made some exceptionally poor choices in exceptionally trying circumstances.  Or, we could pay attention to both stories, for they are part of a larger story.  The Ulpan

So here I am - we're about to board the plane.  I get to come and go.  I get sick and can make a few calls and change a plane reservation and a few hours later be finishing up a drink and typing away on a computer.  Another man my age gets sick and faces selling all his property or losing his arm.  However, even given his grievous mistakes he's made with his family, he is currently surrounded by his family.  That's what I want to be as well.  Thank you, God, for a kidney infection because it pushed me to do what I should've done in the first place: stay with my family who is that light in my life.

Friday, December 9, 2011

On Babies

"The Word became flesh and dwelt among us" John 1:14

People have lots of babies in the valley.  Our family of five is considered a slightly small family compared to many in Guatemala.  Over the past few months, DeeDee and I have been helping with a baseline study of the valley.  Questionnaires are filled out by a random sampling of families in each village on basic health and education.  Questions are asked such as "When do you wash your hands?" and "What do you do when you wash your hands?" (ie: Do you use soap).  Among the questions are also "How many times have you given birth?" and "How many of these children are living?".  These questions are the hard questions to enter into the computer at times.  Some families have six children and all are living.  Others are more difficult.  There are women who have given birth four times and none are living. When asked "Who helped you give birth?", most women answer that the local mid-wife or their mother helped.  One particular woman, however, answered that no one helped her give birth to her children.  As a woman who has given birth, this is difficult for me to understand.

Even closer to home, our friend and employee in Project Ulpan, Julio, asked for time off about a month ago because he needed to help a friend build a tiny casket for their 8 month-old baby.  Only a few days after, Kevin and my boys witnessed a village digging a grave for another tiny casket.  It is telling and sad that the newborn we visited last week doesn't yet have a name.  Maybe that's just the custom in the valley, but why?  Is it because so many die that names are not given until later?

There was a baby born a little over 2,000 years ago who we celebrate at this time of year.  In the birth of this baby lies all our hopes.  The hope that His light will break through the darkness of babies dying and people hurting.  I find that the Christmas songs that mean the most to me this year are the ones that talk of the hope we have with the birth of Jesus.  One particularly poignant song to me this year is Point of Grace's "Emmanuel".  If you've heard it, the melody is beautiful, but the words are what convict me most (If you've not heard it, find it and listen to it).  The last line of the chorus says, "Emmanuel, be God in us".  Jesus came to be God with us.  But He didn't leave us empty-handed when He returned to His father.  He gave us His spirit, and with it, the ability to continue to be "God with us" to a world lost in darkness.  He paved the way for us by His perfect example and then said, "Now, go be my light to those you find in need".

So, I celebrate Christmas this year with extra spaces in my heart for the people in the Ulpan Valley and with the hope that our presence there will be a light in the darkness for them as their lives have been a light in my darkness.  I celebrate with thankfulness overflowing that God's perfect plan doesn't leave us alone but gives us His presence forevermore.  I celebrate that God is with us.








Thursday, December 1, 2011

Dry-erase Boards: A Love Story

The past several years have seen some remarkable improvements in technology, especially in the area of communication.  The fact that I can sit at a computer and talk to people anywhere in the world for free by way of Skype, all from a place that's an hour from the nearest electrical service, is amazing to me.  Think about it - cell phones, iPhones, the internet, satellites, GPS, and countless other devices are all so commonplace that we barely even notice them, except for maybe when watching re-runs of TV shows from the 1990s and notice that most of their issues could have been solved by mobile phones.  None of these inventions, however, can even approach the importance of the dry-erase board and the contributions it has made to humankind.

I know there are some old-fashioned chalkboard apologists out there, and to those people I just have to say that all you are is chalkdust in the wind.  Dry-erase boards use markers that, while not quite as tasty as chalk, come in a wide variety of bright colors as diverse as "green" and "blue", and for extra emphasis when underlining something important, even "red".  Black dry-erase markers are so 2005.   Go to any office building and inspect the dry erase boards in individual offices - that's how you can tell who is the brains of the outfit and who does all the work.  I used to work with a man (and friend) named George Garden, whose marker board was epic.  It was always full of engineering formulas and complicated things like "process and instrumentation diagrams" and other things that looked like the washing instructions you find on the tag of your shirt.  And for any of you who drink water in Brentwood Tennessee, rest assured that the only reason that water ever got to your house was because there was a note on Travis Lankford's dry-erase board to build something or fix something or "ignore what that geeky engineer down the hall just said".

So what, one might ask, does this have to do with mission work in Guatemala?

Our work here has gotten busy enough that we now use a white marker board in our planning and designing so much that even men like George and Travis would be impressed.  Here is a photo I took a couple of days ago after a minutes-long planning session:

Aside from noticing that I don't know how to turn the flash off on my camera, you'll notice there are references on here to water projects in places like:
  • Sesalche I, where people don't have water 3 months out of the year because their source goes dry and for whom we are building a reservoir and extra lines to augment their system
  • Sesalche II, where the 800 people there obtain water every day from the same location where they wash their clothes and themselves, and where not surprisingly there are high rates of sickness
  • Sequixpur, where 400 people drink out of a river when we can get safe water much closer to their houses than the polluted river for about $10 a person.
  • Benitzul, where we live and where many people, especially on one end of the village, still have to look for water.
  • Don Bosco Setex, where we've designed a new spring box for them that will double their supply and are looking to construct later this month.
  • Semesche, where a very simple project can get water to about 200 people.
  • Santo Tomas, where someone built part of a system 12 years ago and never taught them how to maintain it, so it hasn't worked since.
It's wonderful and humbling that we are getting so busy with what we are doing.  Water isn't the answer to the problems in these communities, but it's a start.  It really helps, when dealing with the 17 communities here, to accomplish something with water or bridges or other things along those lines, because it seems that they are much more receptive to what we say about health or education.  I think that's maybe the point of Jesus's conversation with Nicodemus - that if people can't trust us with what we do and say about earthly things, they're not very likely to trust anything we say about heavenly things either.  And there's a part of me that truly believes, through some supernatural occurrence, that Jesus used a dry erase board when trying to explain it all to Nicodemus.  Maybe a dry-erase scroll.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thanksgiving with Native Americans

390 years ago, a group of Pilgrims had a celebration with some of their new Native American friends.  The same thing happened today.

We had gotten the advice long before we moved to Guatemala to make sure we took the time to "do familiar things" and "make things feel like home", and holidays are a really good excuse to do familiar things in familiar ways.  The typical Thanksgiving at the Colvett household includes throwing frozen hot dogs at passing cars, but since we don't have a freezer, hot dogs, or passing cars, we had to make other plans.  A couple of weeks ago, we decided that we were going to have a true Thanksgiving feast, complete with turkey and stuffing and stuffing turkeys like me.  So, with a little forethought, we had some friends bring some food from the US as part of a visiting team last week and we did a little out-of-the-ordinary shopping ourselves.  We also invited several people here who we are close to and had a great day.

The turkey, which is for some reason the centerpiece of the Holiday, was a special challenge.  We don't have an oven here in which to cook one and we didn't want to use a turkey fryer because we figured that setting fire to the Ulpan Valley would be frowned upon by the 7,500 people here, although it would teach the principle of "stuff and burn" to people who are more accustomed to "slash and burn".  So after doing some intense research (i.e. Googling for a few minutes), we determined that we could cook a turkey underground (like what might have actually been done in 1621).  So, yesterday we spent about 4 hours using machetes to chop down and chop up firewood.  We had some help from our Mayan friends here, and their wood was cut fairly cleanly but the ones we cut were basically turned into mulch.  The next step was to dig a hole:



The hole needed to be about 3' by 3' by 3', so this took some time.  Notice how nice and bright the sunshine is.  That lasted for about 45 more seconds.  Getting a fire going in a hole isn't as easy as it might sound, but it is as smoky as it might sound.  However, we borrowed a trick from the original Pilgrims and started soaking our firewood in kerosene.  I assume their 50-year old kerosene heaters they borrowed from other missionaries didn't work either, so what else did they need kerosene for than to create an explosive pit of jet fuel?  Speaking of which, let me just say "Poof! No eyebrows!" and leave it at that.  Here's proof of pre-poof:


You can see our good friend Roberto Caal in the background cutting up wood.  We'd given up long before this.  Next was the most sacred of all Thanksgiving traditions: the burying of the turkey where you usually park the Mazda pickup.  Of all the things to baste a turkey with, soil is pretty low on the list, so we once again followed the path of our ancestors and wrapped the turkey in aluminum foil, then in banana leaves (those grow on Cape Cod, right???) and then a screen mesh we typically use to screen outlets to spring boxes and then secured it all with rebar tie wire:


It was pouring down rain at this point, and well after dark, but to protect our fire we had constructed a plastic tarp over it, firmly secured with scrap lumber, broken fence posts, and I think a small turtle.  We were, however, quite confident that we could keep the turkey moist, since there was a nice mix of water and kerosene in its soon-to-be-occupied grave.  So about 10:00 last night, we buried the turkey and nervously awaited its exhumation this morning.  It did stop raining during the night, and most of the family stopped throwing up as well.  Here's Kris opening the poultry-geist this morning:


Put simply, it was the best turkey I'd ever had.  Really, I was chicken at first, maybe a little sheepish, and almost had a cow when I tried it because the concept still seemed fishy to me, but I really pigged out.  Our company was even better.  It brought to mind times growing up when Billy Ray Warren would write on a chalkboard all the things people said they were thankful for, or when Steve and Debbie Gampp in Boulder would invite a strange new couple from Alabama to their house to share the holiday.  It brought to mind the fact that my mother was with my aunt today and Ginger's sister was with her parents today.  We were right there with them all.  That's the great thing about holidays and being a part of God's family.  In this picture you see a bunch of lost Pilgrims and people like Manuel and Roberto and Julio and their wives and their kids and right there with them are people they've never met.  But they're all at the same table, and there's plenty of room and plenty of food.

We capped the evening off with a viewing of The Polar Express.  Movies have become a real favorite of people here, and it makes us feel like home.  Afterward, right at sunset, we said our goodbyes and said "hasta manana" to our friends, or in some cases "wulak chik alooy", which means "see you soon, friend".  And as we said goodbye, a huge rainbow spread across the east end of the valley, and this sight was on the west end:


Happy Thanksgiving.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

It Takes More Than One Wing To Fly Straight

Over the past few months we have met hundreds of people here in the Ulpan Valley.  Not surprisingly, the ones we have gotten to know the best generally fall into two groups:
  1. People who live near us, and
  2. People we work with frequently
And a few people fall into both categories.  This post is about three of them - Juan, Ignacio, and Arturo, and how similar they are to people and groups we know in the United States.

To describe anyone in just a few sentences is doing them (as well as the describer) a disservice because you wind up stereotyping or gossiping or overgeneralizing.  But over the past few weeks, as I have gotten to know these men and worked alongside them, I have become fascinated with their different talents and different approaches to life.  It makes we wonder if the lasting effect of our time here will be mixing people together who ordinarily wouldn't be interacting very much.

Juan is very motivated and seizes opportunities to make things better for him and his family.  In fact, he sold us the land the Project Ulpan facilities are located on so that he could benefit from a long-term relationship.  When the initial water system was constructed in Benitzul, he made sure that the line ran to his house and there was a good supply there, and when opportunities to serve on things like solar panel committees, water committees, etc., present themselves, you can rest assured that he or his wife will be a part of that.  He is respected in the community, but not completely well-liked because of his assertiveness.  It's almost an elbow-you-outta-my-way sort of assertiveness, but this community would be less than it is without him in it. 

Ignacio, on the other hand, is very quiet and meek - so much so that it's often difficult to even hear him speak.  I think that he is like the majority of the people here in that way.  He works and never complains, but works at a slower pace than others, and they notice that.  A couple of weeks ago, he came to visit and you could tell that he was very timid about what was on his mind.  He was asking if we could help him with a water situation near his house and it took him close to a half hour of "I hate to bother you" to get to that point.  Incidentally, the water situation he wanted help with was a location in a cave where many people crawl down 100 feet of mud to get water (including an 80-year old woman - everyday).  A few weeks ago, a rock fell and killed a woman doing her laundry.  The end result of this is that we will be installing a solar powered pump here and actually using it to augment the water system, including the portion near Juan's house.  I hope to post pictures of an 80-year old woman getting water at her house for the first time ever in the next few weeks.  Ignacio has helped us with some other situations here and is a true friend, but if everyone were like him in the Valley, I fear not much would ever get done, even though it would be a very peaceful place.

Arturo is one of the few people in the Valley who everyone refers to as "Don", which in a very Godfather sort of way is a term of respect.  Even other communities know and respect him.  I do too.  He is illiterate and barely speaks Spanish, but he is the local resource from everything ranging from horticulture to knot-tying to construction.  If there is something that needs to be done in the community, he will be the first one there and the last one to leave.  He shares his food and his very limited goods with, as best I can tell, everyone.  He serves on virtually every committee in the community, but it comes across more as "service" than "what do I have to gain by doing this?"

At this point in the post, it is tempting to create some analogy like: God doesn't want us to be like Ignacio because he wants us to tend the field and improve things, but he doesn't want us to use our success for our own benefit like Juan - he wants us to share and be like Arturo.  Some or all of that may be true, but maybe the lesson here isn't necessarily that Person A needs to be more like Person B, or that Person C is better than A and B because he is a blend of their gifts.  Maybe the lesson is that Person A needs to be put in situations where they can learn from Person B, or Person B needs to be put in situations where his talents complement those of Person C.  I think we get too hung up on trying to change people into something they aren't, or trying to change ourselves into something we are not.  Instead, we could simply just accept that God put different people here for different reasons, and the end result can be beautiful.  It can also be chaos.



All this to say - from 1000 miles away the whole "Occupy" thing seems strangely reminiscent of what we are trying to end here - where people mistakenly believe that they don't need other people, regardless of what "percent" you find yourself.  After watching an infant be buried yesterday and two others in small communities die in the past week, I feel like inviting a team of Wall Street bankers and occupy-ers to come to the Ulpan Valley for a week and pour some concrete and fit some waterlines together and work with men like Ignacio, Juan and Arturo.  In each their own way, I think the three of them would be able to teach such a team quite a bit.

Here is Ignacio showing me the cave that will be a new water source for the west end of Benitzul and the east end of Esquipulas.  We're 100 feet below the walking path here, and the next rock that falls here I want to hit a concrete box with a pump inside and not a human being.


This was sunrise out our front door a few days ago.  Not really pertinent to this post, but I just kinda thought it was pretty.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

GIVE THEM THE OPPORTUNITY TO SAY "NO"

A few years ago at my former job, when I was dealing with a particularly "interesting" client on a particularly thorny issue, I asked a mentor named Garland Rose what I should do to potentially resolve the issue.  What I needed to do was to ask them to do something that I figured they probably wouldn't do, so I was struggling with why I needed to ask them in the first place (by the way, I'm not purposefully being ambiguous here - I really don't remember all the specifics of the situation).  Garland's advice was simple: "You need to give them the opportunity to say No", and it was good advice.  The end result of that was that they did indeed say "no" and that was pretty much that, but the advice has stuck with me:  even if you expect someone to say "no", you at least need to give them that opportunity.  There is probably some spiritual application to this regarding prayer and petition and our ongoing conversation with God, but this post is about a meeting I had last night with the Benitzul Ulpan Water Committee.

Backing up a little, about two and a half years ago, the first project of any sort ever done as part of Project Ulpan was a water system for the village of Benitzul.  It was primarily a construction effort at the time, but as relationships grew and we learned more about the communities here, we grew with them.  And as one might guess, any water system - in Nashville or in Benitzul - is only as good as the people taking care of it.  A real problem in the developing world is that many well-intentioned people give money for a project - like a new well or a new school or a new hospital, but there is no follow-up for the training and the maintenance and eventual "ownership" of the project by the community.  It's a difficult line to walk between helping and enabling and I'm not sure there's a clear litmus test for when you're doing either.  But, at some point, the goal is to make the project sustainable and self-reliant, and last night was a big step in that direction.

Without boring anyone with the details (probably too late for that), the community approached us with a request to extend their water system a little farther to make it more accessible for a dozen or so more families.  Because of the generosity of www.thelivingwaterproject.us and several individuals, we have more than ample money to accomplish this extension.  But, we felt that this would be a good time to walk with the community through the process of collecting money from the "customers" and saving that money so they can pay a portion of the cost.  The portion we proposed to them was approximately 10%, which interestingly is analagous to the "match" portion many water systems in Tennessee must pay when applying for state or federal assistance for water projects (whether there is ample follow-up or training for those projects is a different set of opinions for a different time).  I really had no idea how this concept would be received, but I felt it was important to "give them the opportunity to say no".

It turned out that their reaction was one of thanks and of excitement and of total agreement.  I was really proud of how the Water Committee felt an eagerness to make an investment their system and in their community.  They said they would have their share of the money in the next couple of weeks.  I think this is a great precedent and a great sign that we are helping teach them how to develop their community.  It's easy to forget that most of us work in "community development" - that most of what we do (engineering, teaching, doctoring, preaching, making, selling, cleaning, etc.) is for other people and for the "good" of the community.  It's also easy to forget that everything we've accomplished thus far in the "developed" world has been the direct result of someone giving someone else the opportunity to say "no", because every now and then the answer is "yes", and that's when things move in the right direction.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

A Stormy Night

     The following is Sam's account of our stormy night:

One night there was a huge storm. It involved a loud noise on the tin roof, a small landslide on the side of the house, and some working in the morning. That night was strange and scary. Lots of people were up for the most of it. Here is what happened.
       The most annoying part of the night was that the rain on the  tin roof sounded like you were in a movie theater with the volume all the way up, and glass was shattering constantly.  My friend Zane and I were asleep for most of it.  We were only awake for the loud part of it though.  From what I hear it went on for hours, and hours.  The front porch was wet all over, and it was covered all the way by tin too.
      Another strange thing that happened during the storm was that there was a small landslide right on the side of our house. All of the sudden we heard a thud.  I opened my eyes and I saw water seeping through the walls. The others went around the side of the house and they said, " Yep it's a landslide."  As it happened a thin tree trunk fence had fallen down with a lot of mud and hit the side of the house.
     The next week  involved cleaning the little bit of landslide up from the house. We also had to dig up mud from a drain.After that we cleaned up the utensils that we used. And then we took the mud in the wheelbarrow down to the road and dumped it out.
      All in all we were okay, but tired.And I still can't believe I slept through most of it!

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

God Provides

We've been in the valley for a little over a month now, and most days we are there, I think to myself that a year will not be long enough.  Oh yes, there are days that creep by (mostly the rainy ones), and I think on those days that a year will be more than plenty.  Yesterday, however, was the first time that I thought to myself that I would get on a plane immediately if someone handed me a ticket.  You see, my parents have been planning a trip to see us for almost as long as we've been here.  We've been counting down the days and making plans for a fun Halloween party while spending some time in Antigua (you who know me well know my love for a good Halloween party! ).  But our plans to see my mom and dad came to a halt on Sunday when we received a call from my dad saying my mom was sick.  Don't worry, it's just a stomach bug, but she was in bed with fever and would not be able to come.  The wind was taken out of my sails, and I, quite frankly, found it difficult to get out of bed yesterday morning.  I probably need to insert here that my sister, Mel, still came yesterday, and we are thrilled beyond measure to have her here!  She's like food for the soul, and as Ben said yesterday, she smells like our house :)!  However, Mel has been here before, but my parents have not.  We were looking forward to taking them to the river to find rocks and to the market to see all the beautiful produce...the list goes on and on.  I really just wanted to see my mom and dad.  Is it weird to still need your parents every now and then even when you are a parent yourself?  Now I need to insert that I know the trip was not possible Mom, and I am not upset at you in the very least!  I wouldn't have made the trip with the stomach bug, and I am, in fact, 30 years younger than you (always will be :)!  I think I speak for all of us, though, when I say that we are ALL dissapointed.

We made our way to the airport to pick up the Hatchells, my sister, and Brian Berry, and my spirits were lifted just to get to touch my sister and see her, as Cata says, personally.  Shortly after piling into the bus, Brian handed me an envelope FULL of birthday cards from some of my favorite people at Otter Creek.  Not only was it full of cards but also full of money for the specific purpose of pampering myself on my birthday.  As I read through the cards (while we were stopped on the road for 2 hours straight), I was overcome with gratitutde for my friends who are truly the hands and feet of God.  You see, I needed to read from Gail Srygley that what we are doing here is important and from Kelly Harlin that we are prayed for daily.  It reminded me that even on the hard days, we are here for a reason and God will not leaving us hanging out on a limb.  Not only that, but he will send us comfort when we need it.  For me, it was through the words of my friends as I sat on the bus yesterday.

Here's the great thing about our God.  He knew way back a few months ago when Kelly asked my husband what I would like for my birthday, that it would come to me a just the right time.  He provides for us in all kinds of ways; from the big ways to the small ways.  It's amazing to look into the pot of food that Cata has beautifully prepared and think that there is no way it will serve all of us as well as the 7 other people who have decided to join us.  But, supernaturally (because God is a supernatural God), we all have plenty to eat.  It's a modern-day loaves and fish story in our kitchen on a weekly basis!  He provides for us, and we hope that he is using us as His vessel to provide for the people in the valley.

It's a beautiful day in Coban today, and I am enjoying breakfast on the patio with my children, my sister and my good friend Cata.  The Lord provides...

Sunday, October 23, 2011

The Best Laid Plans of Mice and Men

I think the original line from that poem makes the assertion that even the best plans can sometimes fail. Not to overgeneralize, but in the Ulpan Valley, plans NEVER fail, but they ALWAYS change. We expected that to some extent, but we're certainly being kept on our toes pretty much all the time. There is a great deal going on right now, and with that there are many people who need to know what they need to do when. The people of the Ulpan Valley are accustomed to having meetings - in fact they seem to crave them about as badly as every place I've ever worked. The only difference is that they go into the meetings expecting to accomplish very little and socialize a lot, whereas in the corporate world there's some strange expectation that a meeting is going to actually yield something besides more meetings.

So, over the past few weeks we have gotten into the habit of meeting with team members for things like scheduling and needs and things like that. They seem to enjoy it, and it seems to do some good. The problem is that we try to schedule a week in advance, and most of the time we're lucky if plans don't change for 5 minutes at a time. Case in point - last Sunday we were back in the Valley after being gone for a 4-day weekend in Guatemala City (this was not a vacation - we needed to get some new tires for the truck and get our passports stamped for 90 more days, and maybe in a few months I'll be able to share that experience and still keep this blog "family friendly"). So on Monday morning we met with some of the folks working with us about what needed to happen last week and how in the world we were going to pull it off. Everything worked out on paper pretty nicely: Julio was to go to these villages and set up meetings for what's termed a "baseline study", Roberto was to go to these villages and do other things, construction materials for latrines in Semesche were to be ordered, assistance for the midwife training on Wednesday and Thursday and the 73 participants in it were going to happen, a small water system expansion to the Benitzul School's latrine was going be constructed, and so on. We actually had it all worked out pretty well.

So, it came as no surprise at 6:15 Tuesday morning when a 9-month pregnant woman showed up at our door needing to be rushed to the hospital in Coban. So, all the "shuttle Julio to here" and "take materials there" we had planned for the day went out the window. The trip to Coban is not particularly easy. It can take anywhere from one to two hours on difficult roads, and with all the rains we've been having, those roads are even more difficult, and meeting the occasional truck on a hill makes it even more interesting. We really don't want to become a "taxi service" for the people here, but in this case, there was really no way we could (or should) say no. The trip was straight out of a movie, complete with fog and rain and cows stuck on the road and the obligatory woman screaming in the back seat having contractions. The end of this part of the story is that 30 minutes after we got to the hospital, she had an emergency C-section, so this turned out to be a good trip to make. And while I was helping out in Coban, most of what we hoped to accomplish was actually accomplished up in the Valley.

So we went to bed Tuesday very tired and looking forward to a more normal day on Wednesday. That was a mistake. Shortly after dinner Wednesday it started to rain, which in and of itself isn't unusual, but it got harder and harder over the next couple of hours. We tried to go to bed (our house is better than a tent, but heavy rain on a tin roof can be very loud) but just kind of gave up after a while and we just laid there in the noise staring at the ceiling, which we were glad to have but ceilings should be seen and not heard. Given the recent landslides in the area, we somewhat nervously keep an eye uphill when it's raining, and sure enough, about 11:00 we heard a loud thump against the wall of our house and when we looked outside we saw that a large chunk of the hill to the side of us had slumped off. It sounds more dangerous than it actually was, but it was still a little disconcerting. After a couple more hours, the rain finally slacked off and we all slept great for a few minutes.

On Wednesday morning, I needed to get some maps to the far end of the Valley, so I started the approximate 30-minute drive to the village of Sesalche II. There were, as expected, a few smallish landslides on the way, but when I got to the river it had been above the bridge very recently (I now know that the river is prone to flash flooding). Since a large truck had just passed, I assumed it was OK for my pickup, and that turned out to be the case, but a little further up the road a secondary stream crossing was still completely over the road and I could go no further. Another day, another change in plans.  We survived.  The remainder of the week, a few other everyday things cropped up to keep us hopping, like a dead (really un-jumpable kind of dead) car battery, a smallish snake visitor, and the biweekly festival known as "the latrine cleaning" - fun for the whole family.

And the funny part of it all: we wouldn 't have changed a thing.  We got a lot done, we adapted a lot, and we learned a lot.  To cap it all off, our dear friends Jim, Danna, Zane and Emma Arnett were here to visit and to witness the mayhem.  They totally rolled with all the punches and we had a great time.  Back in June, Jim mentioned to me that they were considering coming for a visit, but he was concerned that October might be "a little too soon" and that we wouldn't be all settled in.  I told him that we'd probably never be settled in (little did I know at the time how true that was) and that by October we and the kids would be very ready to see some friends.  That might have been the best decision we made in our whole planning process.  It's wonderful to see friends who remind you of other friends and remind you of home - I anticipate heaven is a little bit like that, with possibly a few more Cheetos.  Please come for a visit.....but don't get too hung up on making really specific plans for when you're here: God is a better trip planner.


Here are our kids and the Arnett kids playing in the river.  There are lots of really pretty rocks to find here, and even some interesting pieces of pottery.  A few hours later, the water was over the tree in the background.



It's not a great picture quality-wise because there is rain on the camera lens (go figure), but it's a great picture of our kids playing with some of the local kids.  Ben is still in his "I like to dance and sing like Michael Jackson" phase, so please keep him us in your prayers.  Later, we all watched the movie "Babe" in Spanish - see the "screen" on the wall.  Something about farm animals who can talk transcends all cultures....




Just a typical day at the Ulpan II market.  It was a fun time for everyone, except for the cow who was butchered.  As many plans that we had changed for us this past week, I think the cow encountered greater changes.  And there was much rejoicing.  Moo.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT THE WEATHER, BUT NO ONE DOES ANYTHING ABOUT IT

That's one of my favorite Mark Twain quotes.  Many of you know that, among several other ways, I am a huge weather nerd.  When I was young, I used to beg to stay up until 10:15 so I could watch the weather, and then as I got older I would actually plan my time around things like the Weather Channel's Tropical Update, which came on at 10 'til the hour, every hour.  At one time, I could name every anchor on the Weather Channel and have considered getting tattoes of cold fronts and perhaps even awkwardly-located low pressure systems.  So, I am very excited that one of the things we will soon be installing in the Valley is a fully-functional weather station, which we will connect to the internet so that the whole world can share in the joy and excitement of knowing what the barometric pressure in Benitzul Ulpan is at any given time.

There are practical applications of this as well.  It is good to know precipitation patterns when you are doing things with water: are there times that springs might go dry, would catching rain off rooftops be sufficient, how high would a bridge need to be over the river, and so on.  Because climates in the mountains can vary from place to place (if you refer to them as "microclimates" you will make Weather Channel anchor Jim Schwartz proud), we really cannot rely on any data from semi-nearby places like Guatemala City or Coban.  So we need this, right?  It's not just a toy.  I promise.

The past couple of weeks have really been impacted by the weather in the Ulpan Valley.  As one might guess, it can often get somewhat rainy in the tropical rain forest - it kind of goes with the territory.  But sometimes it gets exceptionally rainy, and this is one of those times.  The locals refer to it as "chippy-chippy" or "mus-mus-hab" which are synonymous for rain that just goes on and on.  We have learned that all 7500 people here are qualified to work for the National Weather Service.  They all seem to just know when it will start raining and when it will stop.  In the mornings, if other people are putting their clothes out to dry, you can bet that the rain is going to hold off for most of the day, but if you don't see them out, you can expect to get pretty wet that day.  A couple of days ago, one of the men working with us on some construction projects, Manuel, told Kris and I at about 7:00 in the morning that a concrete pour was possible that morning because the rain was going to hold off until 2:00.  It started raining at 1:59.

Aside from some long camping and hiking trips I've had, it's easy to forget that we have done a really good job of insulating ourselves from the elements.  We don't really "live" in the weather - we prepare for it and tolerate it and predict it and at times just complain about it.  The flood in Nashville of May 2010 was a stark reminder that there are things in this world that we are completely powerless over.  We get reminded of that every day here.  In the past couple of days, many people in Guatemala and Mexico have died in floods and landslides.  It's not an everyday occurrence, but it is a common one.  Yesterday, we drove to Guatemala City in the rain and 30 minutes after we passed a particular spot on the highway a landslide occurred and blocked all 4 lanes of traffic.  A smaller landslide keeps recurring near our home in the Valley, and many mornings over the past couple of weeks 15-20 men slop out in the mud with picks and shovels to clear it as best they can.  But it keeps sliding.  And they keep working.

The people here are resilient to the sometimes difficult conditions.  The men work in the fields or on construction projects under tarps (or not) in downpours and the women walk for hours, often barefoot, up and down muddy mountains to the market or to obtain water.  It's just a way of life.  A few nights ago, as we tried to listen to the podcast from last week's service at Otter Creek, the rain on our metal roof was so loud that we couldn't hear it.  So we had to content ourselves with discussing some prayer items and taking communion (which consisted of hot chocolate and popcorn - close enough, right?).  To top things off, we had a somewhat-unnerving earthquake one night during a rainstorm.  But thankfully there was a huge nerd at our house who had the USGS earthquake website among his Internet Explorer favorites and within a few minutes we were able to determine that the shaking was, in fact, a 4.5 earthquake and not an entire mountainside sliding off on our heads. 

God is God when it is raining and when it is dry and when the crops grow and when they don't.  He's also God of the things we only talk about and of the things we can actually do something about.  He's God of the weather and God of water systems built and yet to be built.  It's a rainy and exciting time for us in the Ulpan Valley.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

SO WHAT ARE WE DOING, ANYWAY???


Remember the Seinfeld episode where Jerry and George were talking at the restaurant about nothing? OK, so maybe that was every episode. But there was one in particular where they stopped in the middle of their dangling conversation and just asked "So what are we doing, anyway?" - it was a hilarious, and kinda sad if you think about it for a while, scene. George and Jerry both came to the conclusion that they really weren't doing anything that amounted to anything for anybody and that their lives were a series of non-accomplishments (that really sounds like it should be a word). We came to Coban this weekend for some hot-shower time and some faster-internet time and to buy some groceries. Yesterday, as the boys and I were in line for Dominoes Pizza, we were stuck in line behind a herd of Mormon missionaries, and the guy in front of us was quite enthusiastic and talkative. I, on the other hand, was grumpy and tired and really didn't want to talk to someone 15 years younger than me who went by the name "Elder".
But, among the 14,326 questions he asked me in the span of "15 minutes or less" was: "so what are you doing here anyway?" We've made some pretty broad statements on this blog about what we are doing: helping people, learning a culture, etc., but it occurred to me that there is a lot that we're doing that many people might not know about. Also, I've been asked several times by several different people what SPECIFIC things are going on and are being planned - not just for our yearlong stay here but for the 10-year Project Ulpan program. So, in no particular order, here is some discussion about what specifically is going on:
  • Water Supply Projects - Most of you know that through the support of www.thelivingwaterproject.us and others, three clean water projects have been completed in two different communities. There are 15 more communities to go, and each of them have a need. This is special to me - not just because there is a distinct need for clean water in the Ulpan Valley (and about half the world), but because the simple act of having a water system gives something of a communal structure to communities who desperately need them.
  • Education Projects - To say that education is lacking in the Valley is like saying that Hitler was a little moody. It's a problem with the teachers, who maybe show up a couple of days a week, with the system, which provides little oversight and little funding, with the families, who provide little encouragement and help, with the children, who don't take it seriously, and with the entire lifestyle, which doesn't have a mechanism for rewarding education. It's like an elaborate modern-day serfdom, where people just learn to subsist, and there's no value to learning math or history or reading. It's sad that my kids know more about Mayan history than any of the other 5,000 kids in the Valley. We're working with the schools and the parents, and even through home-schooling our kids we're hoping to set an example. We have a goal of starting three secondary schools this fall, and if that falls short, we'll try again next year. But the main hurdle is to provide a light at the end of the tunnel that shows a benefit to education.
  • Economic Development Projects - These will hopefully become that light at the end of the tunnel. The last thing we want to do is train the best and brightest from the Ulpan Valley to the point that they can leave the Valley. Some will, and that's OK, but there needs to be a means and an opportunity for the hardest-working young people to stay close to home, to be (hopefully better) teachers in the schools and to work in areas that bring some income and jobs to their friends and families. We aren't completely sure what all these will look like. There are some microcredit (Google Mohammed Yunus for some inspiration here) programs beginning in the Valley, and more to come. Maybe the future is in aquaculture or commercial organic agriculture or in ecotourism or in manufacturing clothing. Who knows? There is opportunity for all these things in the Valley. And for anyone reading this and saying "I'm in business, not a doctor or engineer or preacher, so there's no use for me in the mission field" I want to point out that a sense of business is one of the greatest needs these folks have. A business sense is by default a long-term effort, and it forces people to look further down the road than perhaps what has been customary.
  • Solar Power Projects - The Ulpan Valley has internet access but no electricity. In fact, you could legitimately say that any invention from between 1500 and 2010 is not common here. The nearest electrical grid is about an hour away, and it doesn't seem likely that the system will be expanded in the next several years. People can certainly survive without electricity, but it's really hard to pump water without it or hold night classes or run machinery or anything like that in its absence. We currently have solar panels in 7 communities, and people are using them to recharge cell phones at about $0.40 a pop. In each case, the "solar committee" consists of trusted women in the community and in each case they are repaying the cost of the solar system. It's a beginning stage of economic development and empowering women and things like that. Before the year is out, I predict that the sun will be powering lights in schools and at least one water pump.
  • Libraries - What good is literacy if you have nothing to read? We are starting 8 libraries in different communities this year. Anyone who has a stash of books written in Qeqchi that just aren't selling at the yard sale, let me know. Actually, if anyone wants to get together a shipping container full of children's books (and bibles and books for grown ups), then we'll get in touch with Healing Hands International and send it here, along perhaps with a few boxes of Dino-egg Oatmeal for my kids.
  • Bridges - There's something spiritual about building bridges. Here, it's literally life and death. there are two rivers bisecting the Ulpan Valley, and crossing each of them is "muy peligroso". It's amazing to watch a villager loaded down with 150 pounds of wood or corn crossing a 50-foot long bridge consisting of two logs. It's also disheartening. One project coming up this spring will be headed up by a team from Lipscomb University engineering students and will replace a particularly dangerous bridge used by 4 or 5 communities. I like the fact that we are viewed as bridge builders. As I write this, I'm looking at a bridge across a flooded river here in Coban, and this bridge is not only partially submerged, but has no hand rails. There's a good chance it won't last the day, leaving a few thousand people inconveniently stranded on the other side.
  • Nutrition Projects - The people in the Ulpan Valley eat almost solely corn and black beans. you see a few chickens running around, and even the occasional cow or pig, but meat is a once-a-month treat for most people here. Traditionally, the Mayans grew squash, tomatoes, peppers, sweet potatoes, and about a million other things, but there's very little diversity left now. Through our garden, we hope to re-introduce people to not only the fact that they CAN grow these things, but that they NEED to grow these things, and they need to EAT these things (and not trade them for candy).  We hope to couple this with some soil conservation projects and some projects with Heifer International for increasing food diversity and security.
  • Soil Conservation - Deforestation is a real thing here. We always learned that it was the mean old paper companies and the mean old logging companies doing all the damage, and while I'm sure that's the case in some places, that's not the case here. The tropical rain forest is being cut down by machetes one tree at a time. This is partially due to the fact that families need to boil their water to drink it (something we hope to remedy in 15 other communities). It's not because they're bad people, and certainly not because they have no respect for nature. It results from land use and from some land ownership policies that are unfair. Traditionally, where they have practiced slash-and-burn, and on 45-degree slopes, the topsoil doesn't stick around for very long - again we see the problem of not looking too far down the road, and with a high infant mortality and short life span, you can understand that mindset. We have begun terracing our garden to keep the topsoil in place, and we will be teaching others to do the same. Re-planting the rain forest is a little beyond our scope, but at a minimum we hope to help make a transition from "subsistence farming" to "sustainable farming".  Between terracing slopes, composting waste, raising red worms (we have about 600 of them in buckets now, ready for our garden, and more in our composting bin, which isn't as gross as you might think), we have lots to learn and lots to teach.
  • Latrines - In this area, many homes do not have a latrine.  They simply use the bathrooom outside the house or out in the cornfield or wherever.  Needless to say, the most basic of sanitation needs are present here.  A few months ago, as a pilot project, we worked with one of the poorer communities here to construct 4 or 5 basic pit-type latrines - in the hopes that they would catch on and more could be built.  We have now constructed over 400 of them in almost every community, and there is demand for more.  The good news is that this pilot program was a success, but the bad news is that it drained the "sanitation" budget in a hurry.  No matter - it's money well spent, even though we technically flushed it down the toilet.  Maybe in a couple of years there will be a "Phase 2" of this program, where more latrines are constructed and/or different types, such as composting latrines, are constructed.  One of the nicer aspects of this program was that the people all paid a nominal amount for the materials for their latrines, and supplied the majority of the labor for constructing them.  It really gave a literal "buy-in" to the project.
  • Stoves - We have been invited for meals at several homes now, and that is always touching and always interesting.  As has been the tradition for a couple of thousand years, they cook indoors on an open fire on the floor, balancing logs on three specific stones that are passed down from mother to daughter.  What happens is that the whole house is almost always completely filled with smoke, and in a place with so much fresh air, it is unfortunate and sad that so many suffer from respiratory ailments.  Many kids cough constantly, and many older people have eyesight problems resulting from this practice.  We will be building some "pilot project" stoves in the near future, first at our place and then at some neighbors' homes, that still burn wood (but less of it) but most importantly funnel the smoke out of the house.  And if we can figure it out, we hope to incorporate those same three stones into the design.  But, the technical issues consist of block and mortar and simple things like that.  The larger issues are tradition and practice.  This is a good example of the competing goals of not changing a culture but changing health.  Josh Graves, "da preacher man" at Otter Creek, talks euphemistically about being "up in someone's kitchen", where you get up close and personal with them.  In this case, we actually are in someone's kitchen, and that will make this difficult.  Telling someone how to obtain their water is one thing - telling them how to cook is another.
  • Medical and Dental - We have hosted some medical and dental clinics and plan on several more.  There are some people who need treatment and attention for what might currently be ailing them, but what excites me is the deliberate plan to educate people on a regular basis on some of those preventative measures that can improve health.  For example, there are very few tooth brushes in the Ulpan Valley.  We have visited schools and distributed tooth brushes and toothpaste to the kids there and showed them how to brush their teeth (our kids are the best teachers for this).  But, unless there is programmatic follow-up, all we've done is give the kids a novel break from whatever form of school they were having that day.  This fall, a team of dentists will be preparing a formal plan for this program, and hopefully over the next decade we can phase out the "clinics" part of things because of better education and practice.
  • Personal - Kris Hatchell has a good saying: "it's about the people, not the projects".  That's hard to remember sometimes, but it's very true.  As is the case with most of us, we rarely remember specific things we did with people, but we remember how those people made us feel.  We didn't come here to just visit, but visiting is perhaps the most fun and the most rewarding and the most important.  In some ways, it's like marketing - where relationships are developed over time and those relationships are the precursor to projects.  If we can't be trusted to share some tortillas and coffee with someone, it is unlikely we will be trusted on any other matters either.  If we do this anywhere close to right, when we're done, the people here will say "we did this ourselves".
So, if any of you have actually made it this far in reading, I'm sure you're thinking that we've bitten off more than we should have.  That's probably true, but that's the side I want to err on.  Bear in mind that this is a long-term project that has already directly involved over 100 people and will probably involve several hundred more volunteers over time, so most of this will ultimately be accomplished by others.  And along the way, I'm sure that God will open some other doors and point us in a direction we haven't yet considered.  He unquestionably has the ability to "fix" everything here and everywhere, but I believe he enjoys working on projects with his kids, which is something to which I can relate.  I think he wants us to try different things, and if everything we try works perfectly, then we haven't tried nearly enough things.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

PICTURES!!

So, Kevin promised pictures exactly a week ago, and I'm just now getting around to doing it!  Things work a little more slowly here in Guatemala, especially in the valley.  We are finding that our computers are the last places we find ourselves, and our work has shifted to more manual and interpersonal labor instead.  We are taking a break again in Coban this weekend (only for a night) at Hotel Don Francisco.  The people who work here bend over backwards to make us feel at home and welcomed here, and it's very nice to be in a place where the meseros in the restaurant know my kids by name.

Even so, we had to pull ourselves away from the valley this morning.  The kids, especially, are forming good relationships with the other children as was predicted, and it made us a little sad to see Enebol's face this morning as he realized we wouldn't be around today.  One of the community coordinators, Roberto, has invited all 8 of us to his home tomorrow for lunch.  He said yesterday that we would have meat, which is humbling when you realize what cost it is to he and his wife to prepare a meal with meat for us.  In short, we are building relationships in the valley, and we are humbled by the welcome we have received thus far.

Also as predicted, our car has become a very popular item. Last week, the kids, Cata, DeeDee and I ventured to the market about 20 minutes from our house. We parked the car and walked around the market for awhile, and when we returned to the car, it was completely overflowing with people wanting a ride up the mountain!! DeeDee shared the front seat with a lady who, we discovered at about halfway through the trip, had a live chicken at her feet that she had bought at the market. Yesterday, we went to the river (currently my kids' favorite thing to do, plus it gets boots squeaky clean!!) to collect some rocks for our garden. A sweet family stopped at the river and asked for a ride up the hill. When we said, "15 minutes", the reply was, "no problem". And if you know the hill I'm referring to, I'm sure you can understand why they were content to wait. Their sweet daughter, Anna Maria, helped my boys find snails in the river, and I wish you could've seen the smile on her face as she hopped into the back of the truck with them for the ride up the hill. At the end of our ride, her mother pulled an orange for EACH of us out of her bag as a way to say thank you! It brings tears to my eyes to know how generous so many people are in the valley with the little they have. It also makes me feel guilty about the many times I've found myself being selfish in times past.

I have to take a moment to give a shout-out to Cata as well. For the many of you who know her, you know what a gift she is to any family who is fortunate enough to have crossed her path. She is already the most popular person in the valley as well! When we walk down the road, you can hear almost everyone we pass say, "Cati!!". We've told her that she could be married three times over if all the men hadn't married at the age of 16 :)! We simply couldn't be doing what we're doing without her...I believe this with all my heart!

And finally, drumroll please! The pictures!










Los trabajodores



Cata doing laundry




Me helping Cata do laundry...hee hee.  She can do twenty pair of socks in the time it takes me to do one!



Using a handsaw requires extreme concentration!






Zaac doing some masonry work



Kris and Ben polishing off one of our favorite meals that Cata makes: Chow Mein!







Bananas from one of our banana trees




 Cata's Cafeteria




 Our Pila





 Kevin's and My bed

 


The kids' beds




 Kevin skyping with a bunch of curious onlookers surrounding him




Our Shower...we're living in luxury!



 A typical morning view



Our bathroom


Our clothes dryer


Our garden in progress.