Quito Days Kickoff

I’ve heard many different people talk about fireworks here, and every single description I’ve ever been given includes the phrase “…would be totally illegal in the U.S.” Whether it’s the sheer amount of fireworks used, the danger level involved (you never just stop at sparklers), or the lack of safety precautions or cleanup of leftover open flames, it’s always sounded incredibly dodgy, perilous, and similar to my weekends in high school.

Somehow, I’ve always missed out on fireworks here. I left too early in 2008 and came too late in 2009 for 10 de Agosto, and someone (who shall remain nameless) forgot to purchase 4th of July fireworks before we left Quito for our intern retreat when I was a summer host. This situation was finally rectified Saturday night, with the kickoff of Quito Days this year.

December 6th is the anniversary of the founding of Quito, and the week leading up to it is filled with parties, neighborhood band performances, fireworks, bullfights, and food. I’m still working on bullfight tickets, but Marta and Erica took me down the street Saturday night to an empty lot with a bonfire and a bunch of people dancing to the neighborhood band playing traditional Ecuadorian music. A couple of groups performed dances in costume, and it was pretty fun to watch. It wasn’t even so bad when Marta literally dragged me out to dance, despite my pleas.

After an hour or so, I saw a man go for the gigantic bull costume that had been stashed in a corner. It was a wooden frame with something similar to papier-mâché on the outside with which a single man could run around wearing. What I did not realize until someone came running over carrying a torch was that it was literally covered in fireworks.

At first, they just lit a few wheel-style fireworks that spun around on the body of the bull and showered us with small sparks as the guy ran around the circle. Everyone screamed as he got close to them, but nobody ran for cover. So, trying not to stick out at this kind of thing more than I already do, I remained seated, (somewhat) calmly covering my head and hoping nothing nearby would burst into flame. After his second round, they started lighting the stuff that actually flew off the body of the bull in who-knew-what-direction. This time people ducked and covered, and I turned tail and found myself watching from 20 yards away near a big wagon I behind which I could take shelter at a moment’s notice. Marta seemed to think this was a good idea as well.

Sometime during the third or fourth time the “bull” ran around the circle of onlookers, they brought out a gigantic heart on a 15-ish foot pole, and set that up near the bonfire. The fireworks all over this thing were lit as well, with sparklers on steroids lighting up in sequence clockwise around the heart. As the provided a little bit more illumination, I realized what I thought was the empty center of the heart was actually a large portrait of Christ being showered in progressively more sparks as a second and third set of sparklers went off, followed by rocket-like fireworks the size of anti-aircraft missiles launching from the top and back of the heart. During all of this, the bull is still running around, still launching its own fireworks, and still sending spectators out of the way, particularly when it begin to set fire to the large stack of fuel, tinder, and kindling for the bonfire. The fuel pile, in fact, was at this point as big as the bonfire itself, and would have become a second one had it not been for the rain. I was also thankful it finally started more than sprinkling, because it gave us an excuse to head home around midnight.

All in all, I have a burn on the top of my head from a stray spark, and it was pretty hard to wake up for church in the morning, but I’d totally do it all over again. Maybe from a slightly safer distance.

Ecuadorian Thanksgiving

I can’t imagine a much more memorable Thanksgiving. For several of us, today was our first Thanksgiving in Ecuador. For several more, it was the first Thanksgiving they’d ever celebrated. We had people from (at least) the United States, Canada, Ecuador, Japan and Peru, speaking (at least) English, Spanish, French and Japanese. In fact, three of those countries and all four of those languages were represented at our table alone.

Somewhere around fifty of us got together on Laura and Jorge’s roof to celebrate as traditionally as possible. There was the traditional turkey and gravy and potatoes and cranberry everything and salads. There were also tropical fruits and Marlo’s pesto dip and sushi. The kids all played in the rooftop hot tub and we listened to Andean music interspersed with country and the Black-Eyed Peas.

I have to say it was cool to celebrate such a holiday estadounidense so cross-culturally. I’m also glad we escaped those “let’s go around the table…” exercises that I really should appreciate but just tend to seem cheesy to me. I do, however, have tons of things to be thankful for. The most obvious to me today was the people in my life. There were people there today from so many different backgrounds, and even among the gringos at Youth World, we have different traditions and cultures from different parts of the United States (and elsewhere). I love learning from people, from their backgrounds and perspectives and individual knowledge and stories. I can think of so many people who blow me away constantly with things they’ve done or scripture they know or the ways they practically apply their experience in missions. I love having people to laugh with, people to share ridiculous moments with, people who think sushi on Thanksgiving should continue to be a tradition, people to learn from and grow with, people who love God, and people who are just as eager to teach with their experience as they are to learn with their lives.

I certainly missed my family today. I missed my brother’s goofy (but sincere) prayers, my dad’s laugh, and my mom’s insight (and potato salad… and gravy… and apple pie…). But I got to see several people who I’ve not run into in a long time, including several friends who have been out of Quito, and my friend John Andrew who I met at IT training in Illinois and who has been working in Guayaquil since this summer. And not that my friends here in any way replace the people with whom I’m used to spending Thanksgiving, but I was glad to be surrounded by so many awesome people and to have a chance to spend the day in such a unique way and be able to share that.

Power

I just realized I haven’t mentioned the current electricity situation in Ecuador on my blog. My apologies.

We’re having rolling blackouts right now because Ecuador is simply running low on electricity. All the power here is hydroelectric, so because of the recent lack of rain (though the President’s propaganda machine is blaming it on all the past regimes) this is a measure to conserve energy and not totally use up what we have.

It’s a little obnoxious because a big chunk of the time that I have office hours built into my schedule, there’s not power here. My house is in the same sector as the office, so the electricity is always out in both places at once. This requires a lot of thinking ahead, particularly because my job involves writing (which I do on a computer, which needs power) and web updates, which involves more writing and communication (e-mail, thus computer, thus power). For instance, today I had a Quito Quest meeting at 9am, which ran past 11:00am, when the power was scheduled to go out today. That meant making sure my computer was charged, all my e-mails were sent, and everything I needed to work on was downloaded already. I then proceeded to go home, take a shower, and go to Supermaxi (grocery store) and lunch while the power was out, and worked on writing an article that didn’t require internet access to complete.

I won’t lie and tell you I haven’t complained a little bit about this, especially since there are days when I’m working at the Youth World office in the North with no power, then return to Lourdes’ house in the South just in time for the power to go out for three hours there. But really, I could certainly have it worse. Although it makes me even more behind on my blogging, it does remind me to be social and not spend my entire life behind a screen. It is a little funny though, when I get voice mail messages from home making sure I’m still alive.

Some vague updates on my life: I’m working on finally finally getting my completed Casa G article into a publishable format with some pictures and other fun stuff, and running with a new theme on my La Red article so that the writing portion of that can be finished this week as well. Tomorrow (Wednesday) my friend John Andrew (who has been working with International Teams in Guayaquil) will be coming up to Quito to hang out for a while, Thursday is Thanksgiving (obviously) so all of the Youth World crew that are in town will be celebrating at Laura’s house, then finally on Saturday the Jensen family and us three interns ‘s will be heading to Mindo for a short retreat. Hopefully that will mean lots and lots to write about, and that I will have some time to actually do that and post it.

Catching Up

I just wanted to recognize that I’ve been failing at this whole blogging thing. It’s funny how slow-paced life seems right now compared to Youth World during the summer. And yet last summer I always found a few hours at least every two or three days to get a post up. While I haven’t been as good as I used to be, I haven’t been as bad as you all probably think I have been, which is the purpose of this post. I’m calling attention to the fact that while I have been without internet for a while, I have still been writing. So here are some links to everything I actually published today, going back more than a week.

October 27- Life with Lourdes

October 30- Students

October 31- Saturday in the Store

November 2- Never Know

Never Know

You never know exactly what’s going to happen around here. It lends itself to great Facebook status ideas. You should all look forward to that whenever the phone company gets around to hooking up the internet connection here.

Yesterday was a lazy morning. I woke up just a little too late to make it to EFC for the early service, and knew I’d destroy everyone’s plans for the day if I went to the late one, so I caught up on reading, writing, and devotional time most of the morning. Lunch was pescado, which is always amazing here. I was even corrected in my manners and specifically told to eat it with my hands (and after I gave in and put down my fork, Lourdes bragged to everyone all day about how Ecuadorian I was). Weekend and holiday meals around here (yesterday fell under both) always mean that both the whole family is here, and usually at least two people from the church. Doña Jimena and her daughter were here to join us for the pescado, and I was invited to go see the place where she and Teresita (my Godson Luis’s sister) work making bricks in the morning to learn all about it. I thought they were kidding.

After lunch I sat down to write, but Marta asked me “Nos acompañas?”  (“Will you come with us?”) I wasn’t sure who “us” was or where I’d be accompanying1 them, but since Marta and her mom were on their way down the stairs together, I figured I’d be hanging out with them in the store again.

Turns out we started out going on a walk. I’m not sure if we were intentionally house-hunting to begin with or if it just seemed like a good idea once we started seeing for sale/rent signs around the barrio.  Apparently Marta is looking for somewhere to live here in Guajalo (this sector of Quito) to be closer to her family and the store, now that she’s working here. We walked around the neighborhood behind the store, up the hill and around the corner, and I realized we had come up behind Emaús. I actually didn’t know that road kept going all the way around, so I feel like I learned a shortcut to the church. We kept going and crossed over the highway to go up the hill that looks down on the old storefront where Emaús began. We even actually stopped and looked inside one of the houses for rent we found and probably would have checked out some more, but many of the people were gone, I’m guessing for the holiday weekend.

It was early afternoon when we started out, and roughly 6:00 when we came back. I thought the lazy day that I had intended was about to commence, but my phone rang literally five seconds after I’d stepped back into the tienda. It was Cameron, and she was looking for Lourdes. I gave the phone to her, and they talked for less than a minute with Lourdes mostly just saying “Okay… okay… okay…” before she hung up, handed the phone back to me, and headed off upstairs. I decided to just hang around the store, but Marta looked at me skeptically and asked if I was going to go upstairs and change my clothes. Apparently Cameron and Lourdes both thought the other was going to tell me that we’d been invited to Cena at the Vivancos’ house.

I make the distinction that it was cena because here in Ecuador, there is a difference between cena and merienda not totally unlike the distinction between Supper and Dinner in the southern United States. Like supper, merienda is the meal at night, wherever it is, whoever it’s with, and whatever you’re having. The definition of cena borders more on an event. It’s a big holiday dinner or when you have people over. So basically you know to expect a bigger meal than pancitos and coffee.

When we got to Cameron and Roberto’s place, I could hear other people already laughing and talking inside, and I was excited to see Maggi and her kids (Omar, Maria Jose and Gema) and some others from Emaus. We had a great time playing Ker-Plunk and eating dinner, then hanging out together and drinking coffee and taking pictures. I escaped for a few minutes to call my family on the Vonage phone, and then fiddled with the piano with Gema for a while, before we all crammed back into Lourdes’ car with Omar and me in the “trunk” area behind the back seat.

I was somewhat zoned out on the way back, except for some brief periods where Omar was talking to me in English2. During one of those moments, Omar asked me “See where we are?” “Yeah…?” I responded, looking around at the gigantic hill we were on, although not necessarily3 sure where “here” was. He told me it was about a kilometer away from home and we would be walking there in the morning. His mother chimed in at that point “A las ocho.” Great. I not only have to be functional and sociable at eight in the morning, but I’m going to be climbing a stinking mountain. Turns out this would be the adventure to go see the brick business that had been mentioned at lunch.

So this morning I woke up at about 6am to do my devotion and wake up in my room. I listened until most of the noise outside my door stopped, meaning that most everyone was down in the store (sort of like the last couple of semesters of school how I’d wait until everyone else in my house was gone to work or school before I left my bed), took a shower, ate a breakfast so big Lydia would be proud of me (because food kept getting put down in front of me) and somewhere around 8:00 Omar walked upstairs.

We headed off down the street down the house-hunting route, past Emaus, and up the Pan-American highway until at one dirt road indistinguishable to me from the rest, Omar hung a left and we began trekking the steep road that was sometimes paved, but easier to climb when it was only rocks and dirt.

Omar seemed to be handling it a lot better than I was. But about three quarters of the way up he finally groaned a little bit and I didn’t feel so bad about complaining anymore, so I breathlessly said “Yeah, yo soy de la costa.” Omar responded in English, “I’m from here and I’m tired.”

When we finally got there, Jimena let us into the brickyard and went to find Teresita. Teresita then proceeded to explain the process of making bricks to us, and I caught bits and pieces. The mud-walled “oven” where the bricks were baking looked to me about as tall and wide as those prefabricated storage sheds you can buy at Lowe’s or Home Depot, or roughly the size of my bodega at my apartment in the north. It was just four walls about twice as tall as me with a ladder going up to where huge plumes of smoke were rising from the open top. I’m not sure how many bricks I would have thought would have fit in there at one time, but my guessed would have ranged from several hundred to a couple thousand. At some point, Omar asked. “Diez y seis mil,” Teresita responded. My eyes bugged out about as much as Omar’s did, and he could tell he didn’t need to translate that 16,000 bricks were baking right next to us. She also told us that when the bricks are done after two full days, the oven is still so hot that you can cook your meals in it for at least two more days.

We hung out and talked for a little while more before heading back down the mountain. Omar decided we should take the bus on the way back. I think we should have taken the bus on the way there. At any rate, I spent the rest of the morning in the store and shopping with Jose at the Mercado Mayorista (huge market where you can buy in bulk. Basically the Ecuadorian Sam’s Club) and then we closed up for a while to go have lunch, which Adrian had been working on all morning. He showed off his chef’s skills and made chop suey for us, which was fantastic (and I have thus been singing the “Hong Kong Fuey” theme song in my head the rest of the day).

This afternoon has been dedicated to writing and teaching guitar. Except that I lost track of time and suddenly Gabriel was here exactly when he was supposed to be, nothing unexpected happened. And the way things work here, that was probably the most unexpected thing about the long weekend.

1I had no idea that “accompanying” was spelled like that. Thank you, spell check.

2As I told Amalia the other day, “Yo no habla mucho antes de diez en la mañana, y yo no hablo español después de diez en la noche.”

3And by “necessarily,” I actually mean “remotely.”