Thursday, July 30, 2009
Aqui Al Pie de la Cruz
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Too Much Cuteness
In case you don't remember, there is a large epidemic of pneumonia-bronchitis-lung infection stuff going around Paraguay at the moment, and the schools' winter breaks were extended an extra week so that kids could get well. Not that this did much good, as on Monday, when they started back, less than half of the kids showed up. I have been gone for a month now, and in that month, I have been in the classroom twice and this is only the fifth school day I have witnessed. Yet, after lunch today, when I came back to the school, the kids from the jardin class who were out on recess came towards me running, yelling, "Hello, Profe! Hello!" They are learning basic Engish and say things like hello, thank you, and I love you all the time. I've been in their classrooms twice, and they still call me profe, which means teacher. Weird, yet sweet stuff.
Enjoy this familiar tune:
This week has been fairly uneventful. It's just me and Sis.Bir until next Wednesday, because Bro.Bir is in Argentina. Sis.Bir and I didn't go along because of car trouble and the fact that school started back up this week. Oh well. Maybe another time. I've been busy making up pictures for posters and flashcards, and it's nice to have a lot to do and to help with. I'm not liking the 6:30-5 hours and the moment, though. Tomorrow should be a shorter day, praise God. I at least get to sleep in until 7:15 instead of 5:45. I'm making a trip to Cerro Lambare this week or next week, where I'll have to hike up the hill. That should be a story to share. I'm going with Diana either next Monday or next Thursday. Not sure which yet. I'll keep you posted on that and close with a picture of Cerro Lambare. I took this picture from the restaurant on top of the grocery store down the street from where I live, called SuperSeis. The grocery stores here have buffet restaurants on top of them, with delicious Paraguayan food. Even the Sopa Paraguaya wasn't bad, and I haven't been a fan of that so far.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
More Recent Happenings





Last Weekend...finally
Afterwards, we headed over to the Christian school in this town and there was a volleyball court set up on some concrete, a table with some food, and goats. Goats, wandering around out in the middle of the field. I think I’ve mentioned this before, but soccer here is about as crazy as football. Therefore, I was getting quite an education in soccer. That is, what team I should cheer for, which happens to be Cerro, I guess. I don’t know anything about that team, but apparently they’re good, I guess. I got to see some real Paraguayan futbol (soccer), too, because there was a game going on at the bottom of the field. It was fun to get to see all of that, too, but the people are crazy. It is so much more competitive here than there.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Better
A note for you though. When showing a Paraguayan friend how to do a hairstyle, do not tell her that she has more caballo than you. This means horse and she will laugh hysterically at you. The word is cabello. Noted.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Sorry If This Is Getting Old
Don't get me wrong, I really do love this country. But there are things that need resolved.
Thank you so much for the support you've given me so far. It helps a lot.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
*yawn*
The lights in the background are from Asuncion. We're in Villa de Hayes in the picture. It's named after Rutherford B. Hayes, who happened to be born in Ohio and go to Kenyon. Mad props. Long story, I'll explain later.
I'll also put up pictures of the monkey I saw in the yard of one of the church ladies today. Just because I love you and I think it's that awesome.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Walter Cronkite is dead and Milanesa is greasy
So, I have been ridiculously busy this week, which explains my lack of presence on the blog. I'm in the process of creating another spreadsheet, but this time I'm being less creative and am cloning another person's program, but changing a few things so that instead of the missionaries' total funding spreadsheet, they can use it for the school, and then another one for the church's finances. This spreadsheet that I had to decipher was a monster. 39 lines on the top, upwards of 300 down the side. Please shoot me. On top of that, there were formulas adding together boxes on other sheets that had other formulas in them adding yet more formulas. Thankfully, I finally figured it out and have the rough framework on the school sheet done and will finish it up next week after the school's secretary enters some of the numbers.
The other major project this week has been getting used to the ancient photocopier in the office. I think Johannes Gutenberg used it. I've been copying pages for the Bible school's textbooks and for the Ladies' Conference in August. Next week's project, on top of finishing the ridiculous Excel sheet, is to work on the program for the Ladies' Conference. I've also been working with some of the ladies in the church on the sign language song and it's coming along great. They've been working really hard and I'm thrilled to see how great that they are doing.
During the ridiculous number of hours I've logged in the office this week came a not-so-pleasant experience. While I was in the office alone, a man came in, after having already come in once and talking to Diana, Sis. Bir, and Kathi, and asked about when Bro.Bir was going to be back. I told him that I didn't know, and I thought he left. Apparently, after this exchange happened, he stole Diana's cell phone right off of her desk. Sis.Bir thinks that if I hadn't been in there, he would have taken all of our purses and her laptop bag, too. A very scary experience, although I'm thankful I didn't know the man's intentions while he was in the office, or I probably would have freaked out.
Tomorrow is another youth thing in Luque. I have to get up at six, be at the church at seven, and Diana and I are riding the bus to Luque, which will take about an hour and a half to two hours and two or three buses. I've been instructed to carry a copy of my passport and visa, carry a small bag instead of the big one, and very little money. Also, to sit by the window and not by the aisle where someone could grab my stuff. Not sure how I feel about those warnings. I will take lots of pictures and be back on here tomorrow!
Monday, July 13, 2009
Pwnd
Saturday, July 11, 2009
The Mosque
This story has already circulated to quite a few people in the church and food bank, so I figured I might as well post it on here, too. Feel free to mock and laugh at my stupidity.
The first day that I was here, I got woken up every morning by a chant. It sounded to me like a call to prayer and so I asked the missionaries if there happened to be a mosque nearby. Bro.Bir told me that Ciudad del Este, a little bit east of here, has the largest Muslim population in South America, and that millions of dollars are funneled to Bin Laden annually. It has the third largest black market in the world. Who knew? I assumed that this is what I'd been hearing and told my family and friends about the mosque, telling them how it annoyed me every morning by waking me up.
The other day, I was sitting in the church office at about ten in the morning, I heard a very familiar sound. This was unusual, because usually when I heard the mosque, it was at 8:45 in the morning. I asked Sis.Bir what the sound was.
"Oh, that's a horse cart carrying produce with a megaphone. They're very loud and annoying."
That's when I listened very closely to my mosque. And could actually understand what they were saying.
"NARANJAAAAAA! MANDIOCA!!!"
Friday, July 10, 2009
Asuncion
The thing that I thought was amazingly cool was that the natives are all up and down the street working on their crafts and trying to sell them. Very persistently, I might add. The lady in the picture, in case you can't tell, is weaving a bag like the one next to her with her hands and her feet! It's like that all up and down the streets. They have native products and there's also a very big demand for pirated goods like movies and games. They have a big problem with these vendors not only selling pirated goods but also selling pornography on the streets along with the movies. A lot of the movies they sell are not even on shelves in the US yet.
The natives also tend to protest a lot downtown. This is a picture of a protest camp on Plaza Uraguaya. It's right in front of the government buildings and apparently they usually protest for land. They camp out here until they get the land they want, sell the land to a third party, and come right back and ask for more land. It's a never ending cycle.
Soccer is huge here. This picture is of the official stadium for Paraguayan futbol, or soccer. Soccer is to South America as football is to the United States. It's absolutely huge. There's a giant soccer ball in front of the stadium, but I didn't get my camera out in time to get a picture of it. Street vendors were selling a lot of the jerseys and stuff and were making a lot of money off of them because of what a big thing soccer is.
Finishing off the day trip was a trip to the mall and McDonald's. This is a Paraguayan Oreo Milka Paradisio McFlurry. The ice cream is dulce de leche soft serve with hot fudge and white chocolate chunks with chocolate chips mixed into them. It is absolutely delicious. Pizza Hut here, however, is not good. I had it at the mall today and they put pretty much no sauce on your pizza. I ordered a combo with a personal pizza and breadsticks. The personal pizza was about six inches across and absolutely tiny and they gave me four huge breadsticks. Good thing I like breadsticks.
Tonight, I started working with some of the ladies in the church on a sign song. It's an interesting thing, working with sign language and music in Spanish because of everything being backwards, but I think it's going pretty well. We're trying to get all of this ready for the Ladies Conference next month. Sis.Crosley, the missionary's wife from Argentina, will be speaking. I'm pretty excited about all of that.
Tomorrow, I have the day off and will be doing my own laundry again after sleeping in until who knows when. I'm getting into the routine here but it's getting pretty exhausting sometimes!
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Recovery and Impending Road Trip
I'm doing much better, and have been much too busy to really get to sit down and write out a well thought out blog post. I've been working in the church office all week and really, really like doing this work. I've been doing data entry on Excel sheets for the padrinos or sponsors for the kids at the school. Nuevas Alturas provides free education to the poor of Lambare, but in order to do that, people need to choose a child to sponsor and pay for the education, which comes out to $10 per month, per child, and they try to raise at least three padrinos per child. It took about two days to enter the renewals and new sponsors and to color code who was new, who renewed, and who needed to be sent a renewal notification. I came up with the system myself because the one that the Birs were using was extremely complex and I decided it was easier just to use my own. It ended up being faster, too. Today I took the addresses from the Excel sheets and put them into Microsoft Word and printed off a few hundred envelopes. I then had to sort the envelopes according to the same color coding system that I used on the Excel sheets. It's a tough job, but they really needed someone to do it and I love being able to help. Also, I'm a huge techie nerd, so this is awesome for me.
I have become a neat freak while I've been here. You may all gasp and faint now, if you'd like, especially if you've seen my room in its....special state. Cleaning here is a great way to zone out. I've become insanely organized, because when you have limited things from home, it's easy to freak out if you can't find something because you can't exactly go to Wal-Mart and replace whatever it is. So, if I start getting bummed out, I'll straighten up my room or reorganize my shoes or something. It helps a lot. Hopefully it will stick and stay when I'm home.
Rain here is a huge issue. This is their winter season, and they don't have snow. Today was about the same temperature as late October to early November and is about as cold as it gets. The real problem is the large amounts of rain. It doesn't rain buckets, but even a little rain here can cause huge problems because of the lack of proper drainage systems and the condition of many of the homes and neighborhoods, as well as the roads, which are the most atrocious roads that I have ever seen. Do not complain about a US street until you have driven down the roads in Paraguay. They are awful. But, because a lot of the neighborhood roads are dirt or stone (No, not brick. Jagged stone.) and there isn't a developed gutter or drain, the roads flood terribly.
Sis.Bir says that the flooding in these pictures isn't even really bad compared to what she has seen while she's been there. She says that water has been known to get to the hood of their truck! This is why it's very hard for people to get to church or school when the rains hit. It's really amazing how much we take for granted, like gutter systems.
Here's something that I thought was actually better here. While I'm not incredibly crazy about the Paraguayan food overall, with the exception of empanadas or giso, meat here is so much better, and seems to be a lot...fresher. After I took this picture, Sis.Bir finally told me that you're technically not allowed to take pictures in grocery stores, which is a real shame. The delis here are insane! It's like being in Anatomy and Physiology all over again. Fresh liver, and when I say fresh, I mean, it's bleeding and was probably removed from the cow five minutes before I saw it, right out in the open for you to check and pick and choose. It's amazing and I really hope that I can somehow sneak a picture before I leave. It's fascinating. But, this is one of the meat stands, right next to the baked goods. The cows I saw in the random field were missing yesterday. I think I found them.
Speaking of the baked goods, there they are. Be jealous.
I got some really good news today, too!
I may being going to Argentina at the end of this month! Bro.Bir has been asked to go to Rosario and Buenos Aires and they are going to take me with them for a week! I'm really excited because although I flew through Buenos Aires, I wasn't able to see anything that I had wanted to. I've wanted to go there since I was little, and I 'm really excited to finally have the chance. I'll post more details as I get them!
Monday, July 6, 2009
Well, I thought I was doing better...
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Youth Services
Friday, July 3, 2009
If the pictures arent' showing up...I'm sorry.







Thursday, July 2, 2009
First Post from Paraguay
I’m sorry that I haven’t written for the past couple of days. Hopefully you have been able to keep up via Twitter, Facebook, or my dad’s blog to know that I have made it to Asuncion alive. I’ve had to make several adjustments over the past few days, and have not really felt up to blogging. I realize that there are people from church reading this blog, and I’m sorry if I bum you out at all with this post. I will try to dull down the bad stuff as much as I can, and let you know more about the good stuff, but the truth is, being a missions worker is nothing like I expected, and I need to be completely honest about it.
The good stuff first.
Asuncion is beautiful. Lambare, where I am living is beautiful. However, they are not, to the average American eye, major tourist areas. The architecture is amazing. Most of the homes are white with red, clay colored slate roofs. There is absolutely no division between la ciudad and el campo (the city and the country). For example, the Birs, and by extension at the moment, I, live in a very nice rancho. It has three bedrooms, two stories, two bathrooms, and a courtyard. Next door, there are three very poor families, with roosters. I get woken up by the roosters every morning. Yesterday, we were driving along, coming home from the school and the church, and I saw cows. Yes, as in “Moooo….”. Cows. Just sitting in a random patch of grass in the midst of a bunch of Laundromats and empanada stands. It was fairly surreal.
The school was amazing. It’s very small, with three classrooms, a kitchen, and an office, with a courtyard in the middle. The kids seem to like me. I got so many hugs yesterday. They talk very fast and I try to talk to them, but it doesn’t work out very well. “Mas despacio, por favor” (more slowly, please) has become my favorite phrase. I did manage to make a friend at the school- one of the teachers named Deisy. She speaks no English, but has very good articulation and speaks very slowly so that I can understand her. We were able to talk for about twenty minutes yesterday, about our backgrounds, our families, and all of that stuff. She thought that Teacher Academy seemed very cool. I made one of my first mistakes yesterday, though. Deisy was telling me about the temperature in Paraguay during the summer and how incredibly hot it was. She asked how warm it was at home during our summer. I told her that in Ohio right now it was summer, and was very hot. ”When I left home on Monday, it was ninety degrees,” I told her. She gave me this look like I was insane and said “Ahhh….si….en Paraguay en el verano es treinta, veinte….” (Ahh…yes, in Paraguay in the summer it is thirty, twenty) I forgot that here they use Celsius. And I have no idea how to use Celsius. So, she probably thinks I live in a fantasy world at the moment. I was also able to talk to the Guarani teacher, who also teaches second grade. Guarani is the native language and a Guarani class would be the equivalent of our English classes in the United States. His name is Elias and he offered to teach me how to say some things in Guarani and asked me how I liked Paraguay. The people working at the school all seem very nice and hospitable. I was also able to sit in on their children’s service yesterday, or “cuto”. Don’t ask me what that means because neither I, nor the missionaries , know why they call it that.
They are attempting to build a new school across the street, with six new classrooms. It was apparently supposed to be ready this month, but due to excessive rains, they haven’t been able to finish it. It was nice to be able to see the progress on the building after hearing about the necessity to buy this land on the DVD that the Goodrums gave me last year.
I love all of these things, but one thing is extremely hard here. I hate being away from home. I was never really at home anyway, because I was usually with Dawn or Mistie or, back during the school year, Rachel. Because of this, I always considered myself a fairly independent person. However, being 6000 miles away, by myself is probably the most difficult thing I’ve ever done in my life. People keep telling me that saying goodbye was the hardest part, but I really have to disagree with them. I have felt horrible since I left Houston. I was praying that I would have a fever at the Argentine airport so that they would send me back on a plane to the United States. But, I didn’t, and that airport was the worst experience. I got stopped at customs because they thought my books weren’t books, and ended up opening my suitcase to make sure that they were, in fact, books. The airport was huge, and although there was a McDonald’s, I couldn’t find it. In order to get into the country, I had to wear a face mask, because they were afraid of swine flu. Once I got to the Paraguayan airport, they didn’t make us wear face masks, or say anything about them, and when I got off the plane and into the place where my luggage was and my passport was stamped, I was horrified to see that everyone was wearing a face mask and I was not. The fear of disease is really getting to me. Sis.Bir made the mistake of telling me about Dengue. I have medicine to prevent malaria, but apparently, Dengue is a mild form of malaria, and there isn’t a medicine for it. She said that nearly everyone in the church has had it, and she is the only member of her family who hasn’t. Her neighbors apparently had notices put on their doors a little while back. She told me not to worry because people usually don’t die of it, but they are usually sick for about two weeks, with chills, aching bones, and flu-like symptoms. This terrifies me, because I haven’t felt great since I got here. I’m sure that it’s not that, but right now, I’m feeling pretty awful and am terrified that I’m going to get swine flu or Dengue and have to go to a Paraguayan hospital. Add to that, the fact that Pneumonia and Bronchitis are going around the school, and I’m a nervous wreck.
I haven’t really been able to eat since I left. In Houston, I picked at my dinner at Chili’s, causing even the waitress to comment that “You didn’t even eat it…”. Airline food, obviously, is just disgusting. Even here, I haven’t been able to eat, and we haven’t really eaten anything Paraguayan. We’ve had sloppy joes, pancakes, fried chicken, and mixtos, or grilled ham and cheese, since I’ve been here. I’ve just not been able to eat and Sis.Bir is convinced that I’m hungry and trying to be polite. But I’m really not. I’m just ridiculously homesick. I’ve slept a lot, not eaten a lot, and every chance I get, I’m on Skype with my parents or friends, because I go insane when I’m thinking of home and can’t talk to anyone. My first night here was horrible. I talked to my parents and when I got off to go to sleep, I couldn’t sleep because I found letters that they had written me and stuck in my suitcase, and started crying really hard, after trying so hard to keep my composure in front of the missionaries and to not cry. Then, for some reason, after that I couldn’t stop worrying that something horrible was going to happen to someone in my family, and I was going to have no way to find out because my BlackBerry doesn’t work, I have dial-up internet here, and even if I could find out, it’s a 21-hour trip home, at least! I feel so lost and alone. That night, I went and talked to Sis.Bir because I just couldn’t handle it any longer. I told her, point blank, that I didn’t think I could handle this six months. I missed home too much, and if I felt like this, there was no way that I would be any help to anyone. I was scared, sick, and just wanted to be at home, in my own bed. My family missed me, I missed them more than I could say, and it just wasn’t working for me.
This is the part where some of you may be frustrated with me, or even mad. Please don’t. I really am trying and this is really this hard for me.
She told me that she wanted me to commit to a month. Bro.Bir is going to Peru and she wants me to help her for the two weeks that he is gone and while winter break is going on. One month, and if I was still absolutely miserable, then they would take me to the airport, and I could go home. She told me that she thought I was incredibly brave for even getting on that airplane by myself at eighteen and coming over to Paraguay.
A month right now is my goal. I know that I’ve been working for the past year with a six month to a year mindset, but right now, the idea of a month is what I can handle. I have July 28th marked on my calendar, checking off the days. If after a month, I’m okay, I’ll try for another. The ultimate goal for me right now, although even this hurts to think about, is coming home once my first visa is up, in September. I’m sorry if this hurts or disappoints any of you. I honestly am going to give this all I have, but I really don’t know how much that is at the moment.










