Monday, March 26, 2012
Six months ago the Molina family had their car stolen. Martin said when the police recovered it two weeks later, it was totally stripped – engine, seats, transmission, everything. Since a number of people contribute to the mission fund all year round, we had built a little balance in our account. After talking to the Mark and Laura at Canby UMC, we decided to help the Molinas buy a new vehicle. According to Pastor Martin they had been looking at cars for some time when they came across the black Malibu pictured in one of the posted photos. Marian, the Molina’s youngest daughter, was enamored with the car and especially loved the drink holders in the back seat. She was excited beyond belief when they brought it home.
Team meeting this morning was 7:30 am. Nathan and I were quite surprised to find that the men’s shower was warm – even hot! Neither one of us said anything to anyone for fear of causing an outbreak of jealousy. However, inline propane water heaters are a new addition to the church and this evening the women are enjoying their own hot shower. Since there’s only the two of us guys, the women get to rotate through our shower as well. Best to keep everyone happy!
After the team meeting and morning devotional delivered by Hayley, we split into our work teams. Jane took a group to the parsonage (pastor’s house) to tackle a couple of projects. Jane, Andrew and Marco are resealing the roof using a liquid plastiseal that brushed on with a broom. The house is a 2 bedroom ranch-style home with stucco outside and a slightly pitched roof. It developed a number of leaks this winter. Andrew commented that even though he is from Oregon and used to the rain, he’s used to the rain being on the outside of the house, not the inside. It doesn’t rain often in Mexicali but every time it did, they’d line the living room and dining room up with buckets. Lyndsay, Nathan, Kristin and Hayley are tasked with scraping the peeling texture and paint from the ceiling, resealing the drywall and retexturing and painting.
Mindy’s crew consists of Maddi, Marian, Heidi and Julene and they’re painting the hallway on the third floor of the church a cheerful bright blue. Mindy also had the idea to paint every door (6 of them) a different bright color. It’ll really liven up the Sunday School hall. Robin and Julie are scraping some old tiles off a concrete floor on the third level and laying new tiles. Kelly and Karen are freshening up the nursery with some new paint and painting the sound booth. Lois and Becky are on a curtain project. I took them out to the parsonage (about a 15 minute drive from the church) first thing this morning so they could figure out what curtains are needed and match colors and styles to the house. Pastor Martin brought them back to the church and they did some fabric shopping at a store near the church and have been busily ironing and sewing all day.
One of our learnings over the years is that there is never enough time to get everything done that we’d like to do. One of our ways of maximizing the people hours of project time is to minimize the supply shopping impact. So I became the official shopper. I spent most of my day running back and forth to the hardware store – 3 trips this morning. Mixing paint is a long slow process and with the number of colors we needed mixed, my first trip to the store took over two hours. The pace is a little different here and I’ve learned to adjust. the checkout lines are typically long and the cashier are painstakingly methodical. Good opportunity for me to practice patience! While they were waiting for me to return with supplies and paint, most of the teams did prep work and cleaning. The team at the parsonage pulled a bunch of weeds that had sprung up around the house. There’s not a lot of green anywhere around the city and when I asked for some weed killer at the hardware store, I wasn’t particularly surprised that they don’t have any. Doesn’t sell well ‘cause no one needs it. They do, however, sell ant killer that is likely able to stop an elephant and is probably illegal in the US.
All of the teams were feeling good about their work progress when we got together for lunch at 1:00. Another excellent meal – rice, beans and beef with homemade corn tortillas. One of the best surprises was an iced coconut/pineapple drink that Martha made for lunch. After spending the morning in the dry, dusty heat, it was incredibly refreshing. After lunch we had an hour break which gave folks time to nap, shower or relax for a bit. As I mentioned, Mexicali is in a dry climate. With the lack of moisture and foliage of any sort and so many empty lots and undeveloped areas around town, the wind really moves a lot of dust around. It seems like most of us feel a little bit gritty all of the time so are always ready for another shower. The dry air also brings dry skin and chapped lips to we moisture loving Oregonians.
I posted a picture of one of our vans driving down the driveway beside the church. There’s a smallish parking lot accessible through a roll up steel door and this narrow driveway which opens onto a busy street. We’ve always parked back there with little problem. It’s a little unnerving the first few times you negotiate the path but we’ve only lost a little paint to the concrete walls. The big van we’re using is one we’ve rented before from the Oregon Crusaders Drum and Bugle Corps. Since we were here last year, the church added a metal frame around an in-window air conditioning unit that overhangs into the driveway space. The frame added just enough size that the big van can no longer get past it. Our solution is to get everyone and everything out, drive it as far into the driveway as we can and shut the gate behind it. Squeezing out of one of the van doors and sliding past the van to exit the driveway has me regretting not sticking a little closer to my running regimen.
We gathered to load the vehicles and head out to the colonia for our afternoon Vacation Bible School at 2:30 only to find someone had parked their car in the driveway in front of the church trapping our small van and the trailer. We went to neighboring businesses, waited a while and called a tow truck. The flyers we passed out said VSB would be starting at 4:00 and we began to get concerned about getting there and set up. After stressing and discussing, we stacked 5 tables, 6 folding chairs, an amp, the pieces of the puppet stage and our 7 bins of crafts, costumes and puppets on the laps of 9 of the 10 people we stuffed into the big van (the 10th being the driver…), piled 6 people into Pastor Martin’s car and 5 people into Andrew’s car and headed out. We left Martin, Marco and his girlfriend at the church to bring the small van when the driveway was cleared. (They arrived at the colonia about an hour after we did.) Nothing like a little unplanned adventure to keep everyone focused!
Although we were a little late getting set up, the crowd quickly grew. Beautiful afternoon, not too windy. We use the concrete basketball pad in a park in the middle of the neighborhood to set up our tables and stage. Today there were 5 different crafts plus face painting and bubble blowing. The crafts will change every day but the face painting and bubbles are very popular and remain constant. After about 1 ½ hours of crafts, we gathered everyone in front of the stage for our skit – Daniel and the lion’s den. Pastor Martin told the story while various team members acted out the roles. Mindy put together the costumes and the kids were mesmerized. Following the skit the puppets took the stage. Lyndsay organized the puppet team this year and the show they performed today was about some ducklings. The puppets act out a Spanish cd with numerous stories. Today’s had a lot of quacking in it and the Ducks on the team were not disappointed to hear many of the kids quacking after the show was long over! Near the end of the show, the narrator started talking and Lyndsay had picked a baboon puppet to play the part. When the baboon poked up onto the stage there were a few surprised screams from the audience.
VBS concluded with Pastor Martin talking to the kids for about 5 minutes and a brief prayer. Then it was time to load the vans and hit the road back to wonderful smells and hot food! At one time I counted about 80 kids at VBS plus at least 30 adults. That’s a pretty good first day for us and we’re likely to see the crowd grow over the next few days.
We talked about highlights of the day on our way back from the colonia. As usual, VBS and seeing the joy of discovery on the faces of the kids was the overwhelming winner. However, at least one person was pretty thrilled to experience their first earthquake today. There was a 3.4 quake late morning. Not unusual for this area but surprising for those of us that felt it and didn’t assume it was a passing truck.
During the hour between dinner and team meeting (with devotions led by Mindy and Maddi), a group of folks hand wrote the name and address of the church in the front of the 200 Bibles we brought to give away the last night of VBS. Lots of great fellowship this evening and a bunch of satisfied and tired mission trippers. We do have a couple of folks that brought colds and sore throats with them. Hopefully another good night’s rest will help them all get back to 100%.
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