Where
has the time gone? It feels like just last week I was thinking how much stuff we
had going on in April and now April is over. Today was a relaxing Sunday of
churching, baking banana bread with good friends, playing a girls soccer game (I
scored a goal!!) and just hanging out. Three weeks today until almost everyone
will have left Port and started the long journey back to their home countries.
Yesterday
we got back from our mission trip in La Fortuna de Bagaces (building the church
in San Bernardo). It was a great trip and the end result was a nice little blue
church that still needs windows, a door, and electricity but that will get
finished over the next few weeks by people we will hire with the money left
over from the trip fund raising. Though we only needed $8,000 we raised over
$10,000.
All
the extra activities we planned went really well too. There was a talent show
in the church one night, in which Alyssa, Sarah and I were going to sing Lord
of the Dance. Well we tried to sing and it was going well until Alyssa started
laughing and then we all couldn’t help but join in so it turned into a rather
embarrassing episode of trying to finish singing while stifling laughter in
front of over a hundred people. But the audience got a good laugh if nothing
else good came of it. We also had a couple of events planned in the town of San
Bernardo, which is a ten-minute drive from La Fortuna. We invited all the
people in the town to come to the main field to play games and sing some songs.
Well a few people showed up and we had a really good time with them playing
Ninja. Erin and I went up to a crowd of local people and talked with them for
ten minutes in only Spanish! We were scared to go but once we got there it went
well and we found things to say. One of the things I have been learning lately
is that when there is a need that needs to be filled, I can’t wait around for
other people to fill it because otherwise it won’t get done. I need to be the
one to fill it. I need to bold in my faith and constantly be doing things that
take me out of my comfort zone (like talking to people in Spanish). I can’t use
things like my lack of Spanish or physical weakness or sickness as an excuse to
not do things that need to be done. We had similar activities planned for the
high school and those went really well too.
The church building was pretty straightforward- just a bunch of premade walls that we had
to slide down in between some cement posts that we dug holes for at the
beginning. The most dangerous part was climbing up onto the scaffolding with
the cement blocks and sliding them down without crushing anyone underneath. We
had to mix our own cement by combining rocks and sand and cement and then just
adding water and shoveling it all together. It was hard work but so much fun to
work together and see things get done. It’s definitely true that many hands
make light work. Then we also had to level the ground and lay cement on the
floor. Finally we painted. After 5 days of working the church was done (apart
from the other things that I mentioned earlier). Luckily the property where we
were working was right in front of a papaya farm so every day we could take as
many yellow papayas off the trees as we wanted and eat them during our break or
take them back to the main church to eat later. I didn’t like papayas when I
came to Costa Rica but I have definitely changed my mind about them now.
I
stayed with a host family with another girl from our group while we were there and that was a really fun time
too. We just slept there and ate our dinners there, the rest of that time we
were out and about doing community things. The family was wonderful- they were
a really generous family and gave us lots of food and love.
A scary thing happened on Thursday night. We went to some hot springs to
hang out for the night and I was taking a break from being in the water when
all of a sudden a beetle flew into my ear. It started burrowing down my ear
canal and when it got to the end and couldn’t go any further it started using
its pincers to get further down into my eardrum. When it realised that it wasn’t going
anywhere, after about a minute, it came out again. By that time, I had been screaming at the top of my lungs, flailing around wildly and the whole rest of
the group had gathered around me trying to find out what they could do to help.
On the way home I recovered and we all laughed about it later J Anyway now
it’s getting late and I am going to finish reading the Hunger Games (because it is amazing). Goodnight!
Lucky you were debugged Gen. That must have been a scary experience!
ReplyDeleteYou have obviously gained a lot of confidence in CR (not that you were that short before!) and grown spiritually. But that's what your trip was all about. Apart from learning Spanish, and that sounds to be a plus too! Love you lots dear.
Nanny and Grandad xxoo