More Photos from Carmen Bajo

Normally I arrive at Carmen Bajo and unlock the door to my classroom to find it pristine, unchanged from the last time I taught. Laura and I are the only ones with keys, and for the most part we leave each others’ stuff alone, and nobody else goes in there when one of us isn’t around. I didn’t really remember how we’d left it last week though. While the team was on the ground, and since I had a key on me all the time (as opposed to the room downstairs, for which we have to hunt down the key every ten minutes), we used the art room as a storage room for all the craft supplies, guitars, cameras, and various other gringo junk. Assuming that I’d need to sort out some leftover ministry supplies, I came early today. Despite expecting to do a little work, my reaction when I opened the door was “Where the heck am I gonna have class?!” The photo below is en media res because I forgot to take a totally “before” picture.

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Again, I’d already been cleaning and sorting and rearranging for 45 minutes before I bothered to take a picture. There were several more very large suitcases full of stuff when I started.

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Jackpot! These mostly went upstairs to the women in the kitchen. Mostly.

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Jostin and Josué jam on some ukuleles (under very careful supervision). My two favorite parts were that they were both holding them backwards, and they were totally singing along to the awful noise that was emanating from the tiny instruments.

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What an influence the Canadians were. Unprovoked, the colegio boys chose to play real field (patio) Hockey instead of Wii Boxing. WHAT?!

Josué

Below are a couple of pictures of Josué. Josué (Joshua in Spanish, not to be confused with the name José/Joseph) is a 4-year-old boy who is part of the preschool program at Carmen Bajo. Back in September when Laura took me to Carmen Bajo for the first time in over a year to show me how to get out there using public transportation, Josué was pouting and crying the entire afternoon. Laura smiled a huge, genuine smile as soon as she saw him, called his name and held out her arms. Josué crossed his and turned around, running to the other end of the comedor and Laura just laughed. She turned around and told me that Josué was one of her favorite kids, and that he could be both sweet or mad. When he’s sweet, he’s really sweet. And when he’s mad, he’s really mad.

That was a Tuesday. I went back to Carmen Bajo the following Friday. And the next. And the next. Josué was variously pouting, frowning, crying, and screaming each of those days. I thought Laura was crazy, and I wondered how anyone could ever put up with this terrible little kid. But finally, after four weeks, I walked up the stairs to lunch one day, and there was Josué playing Foosball nicely with a couple of other little boys, laughing and smiling.

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I couldn’t believe my eyes. But the more time I’ve spent at Carmen Bajo, the more I realize that Josué is a really sweet little boy. He needs a lot of coaching to get there some days. And some days he doesn’t get there at all. But now, even on those days when he doesn’t get there, I can still see this great little kid underneath the frowns and tears.

In February, I was hosting the Grace Community Church team that helped take the Pre-Kinder and Kinder classes to the zoo one morning. Each of us “adults” (I still laugh at that term being applied to me, no matter how long the kids at my home church have been calling me “Mr. Danny”) took three kids. Except in the case of supervising Josué. By the end of our time there, we’d given him to the craziest, most energetic member of the team, and the other two kids originally in that adult’s care had been siphoned off to others. For the most part, Josué was doing what he was supposed to. Until the bus ride back to the Compassion Project. Fabian and Grace’s youngest daughter Raquel was sitting in the front seat with another 4-year-old-ish little boy. Josué wanted either to be in Raquel’s lap instead, or just to have the front seat. I’m not sure exactly what set him off, but he flipped out. I’ve seen some temper tantrums in my time, but nothing, and I mean nothing anywhere even approaching this one. He was flailing all over the place and beating the other little boy with both his fists. Raquel just huddled over her charge. I had the luck to be the next closest person over the age of 5, so I grabbed Josué and pulled him away, holding him in a bear-hug that I intended to both show my love for him and function as a straitjacket.

I tried to calm him down over and over as he cried and screamed and flailed, sometimes somewhat escaping before I’d pull him back into my arms. I must have asked him two dozen times to “Digame con tus palabras lo que quires.” I was doing everything, including conjugating my verbs for “usted,” to treat him like a person and not a problem. But he simply wouldn’t calm down, and I finally (literally) passed him to Grace, who held him the same way I did and just smiled. I mean grinned at this kid. She never spoke a word, and after about 45 minutes, the waterworks and most of the sound effects had calmed down. (Grace made quite an impression on the team through this, too).

Then one day last week the VBS group from the Pueblos Unidos team did Fruit-Loop necklaces for their craft. As the kids were coming out of their classroom to go upstairs for lunch, I saw Josué standing and smiling on the sidewalk. I swooped over and picked him up and swung him in the air, and he immediately screamed at me to put him down. Wondering what about that had changed his attitude so quickly, I did just that. I was stunned. He’d been smiling, and I’ve done this a hundred times, never getting that reaction. So rather than just thinking “Oh, that’s just Josué,” as I would have several months ago, I asked him what his deal was. “Tengo cereales in my bolsillo,” he said: I have cereal in my pocket. And that he did. He pulled out a heaping handful of Fruit Loops he’d stashed in his pocket during craft time. Now that’s Josué, I thought. Then we went upstairs to lunch, and Josué pulled out the rest of the cereal from his pocket. Handful after handful. I couldn’t believe a 4-year-old’s pockets were so big. He set them all on the table, and a couple of the kids around him looked at them longingly (as if they didn’t all have strings of them around their necks). When one of the kids asked if he could have one, and reached for a single Fruit Loop at the same time, Josué snatched them all away and clutched them to his chest, sticking out his bottom lip. I leaned over, from the tiny seat next to him that I was doing my best not to break (it wouldn’t have been the first time I’ve crushed preschool-sized furniture) and told him “Tienes mucho. Queremos compartir,” (You have a bunch. We want to share). I didn’t expect that to remotely work. But it did. He pushed one Fruit Loop to each of the 4 kids around him. Not the most generous reaction I’ve ever seen, considering that he had half-a-box-worth of cereal in front of him, but I took it. With a little more prodding, he actually doled out about 75% of the Fruit Loops to the other kids at the table.

This is getting long, but I’ll give you one more example before I make my point. Whenever we have a team at Carmen Bajo, the first thing we do in the morning is roughly an hour of devotions with the team and everyone from CB. We arrived one morning, and I scanned the room for the kids I know, one of them being Josué. He was standing in the middle of the room with a cup of Sprite (or something clear and fizzy) and not looking happy. He wasn’t crying or screaming, but he was a little down in the dumps. With a totally different reaction than I’d have had 5 months ago, I set my sites right on him. I figured there were two ways his day could go from here, and I knew which way I didn’t want it to go (and which way I didn’t want to listen to it go). And aside from that, I do just really love the kid. So while all the other gringos steered clear, I walked right up and asked him if he wanted to hang out with me for devotion. I truly have no idea how that came out of my mouth in Spanish, and in Spanish that a 4-year-old would understand, no less. But whatever I said, he looked up at me and immediately bobbed his little head “yes.” I took him by the hand and led him to a chair at the far side of the room, where I sat and plopped him in my lap. He finished his Sprite and continued to play with the cup. He hardly said a word, and he only got squirmy once, standing up and trying to pull me to come with him somewhere. It was in the middle of someone’s testimony, so I tried to get him to sit back down, but as soon as they finished, I decided it was less disruptive if I just stood up and went with him. Turns out after all the soda, the poor kid just needed to go to the bathroom. It would have been nice if he’d just said “Me voy al baño,” and I wouldn’t have delayed the poor little guy, but I guess he forgave me pretty quick, because he came right back upstairs with me and stayed on my lap until I had to go down the hill with a construction group a while later.

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So now we finally get around to it. Josué reminds me of me. Not because I was ever anywhere near the obnoxious little stinker than he can be. And yet because I am. I’m selfish and my feet are “swift to run into mischief.” I can only imagine that from the vantage point of God, I look like the flailing, screaming, child that Josué can be, refusing to be calm or rational or to think outside of himself (myself). And yet He sees through all that to the person He created me to be. The person who knows better, and just needs a little prodding in the right direction. He sits me in His lap and holds on to me, comforting me in my distress, and even in those times when I struggle with all my might to get away, to ignore Him, to head to somewhere that He can see I don’t need to be. That’s what we all need, to be held onto, cared for, even in our ignorance and sin. My love for Josué has made me thankful that God has love enough for that, love enough for me.

A Day and a Year

Saturday afternoon the team and Carmen Bajo hosted a youth event at the Nazarene Seminary here in Quito, where the group was staying. Tons of people from different churches came, and several from partner ministries and from Youth World. When Cameron showed up around lunchtime, she told me “I feel like it’s been a day and a year since the last time I saw you.”

You totally lose your sense of time when you are hosting a team. I actually turned to Christy in the bus on the way home last night and said “Is it still Sunday?” It was several seconds before she answered, giving me the Jack Sparrow stare as she thought about the question. Running with a team means that your days are incredibly long, both because they are action-packed and because you really are awake for an ungodly amount of time. But then you drop off 35 people at the airport and hug and cry and smile and think “Wasn’t I just here picking them up?”

So here I am, back to work before 9am the day after a team. And there they go, headed back to Canada to lives that I hope will be greatly affected by a week and a half in Ecuador. I would say that for the 70ish people directly involved in this whole operation, we’re probably all a little stunned it’s over. For the last eleven days we’ve walked up hills that would be illegal in North America, painted, lugged bricks, and mixed concrete. And it’s amazing what you learn about people as you work alongside them. But we’ve also given out shoes and cooked food and shared testimonies and put on presentations and VBS and worshiped together in church services and just by living life. It’s amazing what you learn from people when you plug into each others’ existence. I hope this is not the last time I see the Pueblos Unidos team, but if it is, it won’t be the last time I think of them.

Stray thoughts from hosting

I just want to share a few random thoughts and adventures from the last couple of days. We currently have a team of 61 people on the ground. It’s not the largest team Youth World has ever had, but it’s far and away the biggest Quito Quest team ever, so even things that we’ve got down pat like feeding and transporting and debriefing large amounts of people are really complicated. It’s been a challenge just keeping up with the logistics sometimes, much less learning 61 names and faces and personalities and stories. But it’s been a blast working with them and seeing both how much they are able to accomplish and how much they are able to grow. It’s an emotional roller coaster some days, even for us hosts.

For example: as I posted on Facebook earlier today, I started my morning trying to wave down our bus as it drove past me on Av. America and Dana pointed out the window and laughed. I was thinking her face was priceless, but as I tend to have a rostro expresivo myself, she was probably thinking the same thing about me. After I did manage to jog back to the bus, make it to the seminary and pick up our team, I (only semi-) accidentally got 65 people into the Mitad del Mundo monument for free. I didn’t feel that bad about it because a security guard watched us and 70 school children walk in, and the gringos bought some souvenirs. We also took the opportunity to hop on a chiva, which is basically a party bus. We thought we’d be getting a nice little ride around the Ciudad Mitad del Mundo, but it turns out we got a ride around the actual ciudad. For a dollar a person, we got a 20-minute excursion back through the parish of San Antonio de Pichincha, ducking power lines and waving at everyone we passed, all the while blasting music from Spanish reggaetón to the Black Eyed Peas. We made it back to the monument just in time to join the rest of our gringo group in dancing to “Foot Loose,” “Mambo Number 5” and “YMCA” as it blared over the speakers while curious and amused latinos photographed us all.

Then we went to El Refugio for lunch and an hour and a half of solo time. Having done a significant amount of that last night, I sneaked off and went to staff meeting, and the worship session there was exactly what I needed. After that I caught up with some of the rest of our team hosts and El Refugio staff and hid out with them drinking coffee in the Grace Center to relax, get to know each other’s plans and stories a little better, and process and plan. Then it was time for debrief.

Fortunately we’d had that little bit of transition time, because although debrief wasn’t as deep as I would have liked and hoped, it’s getting there. We had a few tears, but mostly just youth hashing out what ministry and relationships with each other and God will look like back in Canada. Having Christy back with our debrief group after a couple of days away for various reasons, I took the chance to take some notes for my own personal processing time and to pay attention to each member of the group and figure out who needs time outside of our normal plans to get deeper. We can pretty easily pick out the internal processors and the ones who are really wrestling with things. But being an internal processor myself, sometimes it takes a while to be able to jump in there and help somebody hash those things out.

Right now I’m tired, both physically and of processing. Therefore, this isn’t going to be one of those deep posts with a moral attached. But to sum it up, and despite my really low amount of energy right now, I will say this: as a certain former Quito Quest host once said to me “I love teams!”

Welcome To Ecuador

A couple of days ago, I decided to go on an adventure. Having received a notice that I had a package at the Ecuadorian post office, then having received a second notice because I waited forever to go and get it thanks to hosting a team, I realized I probably needed to go relieve the delivery service of whatever it was that they either couldn’t fit in Youth World’s mailbox at HCJB or for which they simply wanted to charge me.

The first part of this adventure was asking a million people where the post office is. Knowing that I’d be going by myself, I got several good directions and landmarks before I hit up Google Earth and drew myself a map that I could actually decipher. That was probably a little bit on the anal retentive side, but my Spanish isn’t perfect, and I figured I’d reduce the potential stress of the operation in any way possible.

A 25¢ Trole ride and short walk later, I saw the post office, exactly where I expected it. Many times we ask our short-term teams how their expectations lined up with the reality of their experience. This was exactly the spot where my expectations stopped lining up with reality. Even remotely.

The office wasn’t extremely busy when I walked in. There were two individuals and a couple sitting on benches in front of me. There was a window with a man working behind it, a door into his little area, a counter with a series of stations, and a Bank of Guayaquil/Western Union counter. Hanging from the ceiling above the counter with the different stations was a digital sign that said “Turno” and “Modulo” (Turn, or “Customer Number” and “Station”), but I didn’t see the typical little red plastic thing that spits out numbers. A woman was walking away from the door into the room with the window, and nobody in front of me seemed to be stepping up, so I just walked to the window and handed the man inside my slip of paper with the notice I’d received a package. I’ll also note that this seemed a perfectly logical decision because the door was clearly marked as the Package Center.

To put it mildly, window-man freaked out. He was outside in the main area at breakneck speed, telling me “No, no, no,” and that I needed to take a turno and wait for my number  to appear before I could be helped, and that I would have to go up to the counter and accomplish a series of tasks before I could come to his window. He was speaking very slowly, loudly, and clearly, but very simply and miming everything as he went, because (obviously) I’m a gringo. I was a little bit insulted at first that he didn’t even try to ascertain my level of Spanish (I understood every word he said to me), but I (1) gave him the benefit of the doubt in that (despite the lack of posted directions anywhere) I had, in fact, already screwed up his very much defined process and (2) was afraid that the directions would get more complicated later and that I might appreciate the miming down the road.

He took the turno (number) from the typical little red machine, which was hiding on the opposite side of an architectural column in the middle of the room. I went to sit down, but as I turned to face the seats, a heard a “bong!” and changed my about-face into 360 to see that my number had appeared on the sign. The guy at the first station behind the counter had been watching this entire exchange and waited until window-man had finished his diatribe to hit his button and call me up, as I was clearly the only person in the building who had not been helped. Great. I’ve been in the building for less than 30 seconds and two people think I’m a moron so far. Things can only get better, right?

At this point, I was at least prepared. I handed over my package notice, and was totally ready when he asked me for my two passport copies. Knowing how things change in Ecuador, I’d also brought two copies that included a copy of my Censo (Ecuadorian ID) as well, along with my actual Censo and my actual Passport. Probably because I was prepared for the worst, none of this was needed. I did have to fork over somewhere in the neighborhood of $6.00, though. By the Grace of God, I had some cash in my wallet, which (due to experience) I don’t normally take on the Trole.

I also had the presence of mind to take my turno and put it in my otherwise-empty back left pocket, where it was accessible, and as opposed to the trash. After a few minutes while counter-dude processed my papers and got my change, he returned and asked for my turno number, (which I remembered to be 321, but had to prove to him with the actual paper anyway). Counter-dude proceeded to write #32 at the top of my papers and told me that he would give them to window-man and that in a few minutes, window-man would call my number again. There was slightly less miming involved this time.

This gave me the opportunity to rest for a moment and laugh at the situation. From the benches in front of window-man’s area, I noticed there was a second digital sign with turno numbers, which was sitting on #30. People slowly trickled through the door to the right of the window, and the numbers ticked up to #32. I walked toward the window, but window-man saw me coming and just ushered me through the door. I suppose this was because it would be easier to mime directions when I could see more than just his shoulders and head. Insulted as I was still trying not to be, I just held out what paperwork I had left from counter-dude rather than ask what I needed to be doing in the cramped little office with employees in various uniforms from postal stockroom workers to a rather imposing soldier in an officer’s jacket. I basically spent the next several minutes handing papers to people, receiving those and more papers back, and handing them to other people running in and out of the office through a back door that led to a warehouse.

Finally a female postal employee told me to come with her. Of course, the most complicated questions and directions would come from her, and she did exactly zero miming. I followed the conversation for the most part as we walked through the warehouse and she picked up my package on the way. The problem was I had no idea the answers to any of her questions. “Who sent your package?” “I don’t know.” “Is it of any value?” “I don’t know.” “What is it?” “I seriously have no idea.” I think she just assumed I was saying “No sé,” because I didn’t understand her, rather than that I actually had no clue. I thought pretty hard about giving her my series of complaints that the notice they sent to me was completely useless in that regard, and because it included no useful information, I had no way of knowing things like who sent it or even from where or what they had declared was inside, so she was actually much more likely than I was to have a clue.

She turned the large cardboard envelope over and over in her hands, telling me that she didn’t like this kind of package because when you slice it open, stuff floats out that is really bad for you to breathe. When she finally got around to slicing open the package, I caught a glimpse of the sender’s name (someone totally awesome and near to my heart) and the description “Cotton hat.”  Even before she had totally gotten into it, she asked “Un gorro de lana?” “Wool” was close enough for me, and I was so frustrated (wondering why they brought me all the way down to the post office if they knew it was a hat and basically what it was made of) that I couldn’t think of the word algodón anyway, so I just nodded.

As she sliced it open and held her breath, I did have to give it to her that I understood why she doesn’t like those packages. Brown floating stuff the consistency of attic insulation went everywhere and stayed airborne for a while. Allergy-girl2 verified that it was, indeed, a hat, and sent me back to window-man, without my package. Window-man called in the uniformed army officer. They conversed for a while, then sent me over to a desk with a pretty young guy working behind it. Desk-guy had me sign a ton of papers, and asked me my name (Ecuadorians tend to have a hard time reading gringo handwriting, which I understand, because I have a terrible time reading Ecuadorian handwriting). I told him “Daniel” and he laughed and made some comment about “Daniel el Travieso” (which is “Dennis the Menace” in Spanish and which I actually already knew and therefore got his joke). I nodded and chuckled politely because I wanted my hat.

Desk-guy handed me a stack of papers, and sent me outside the office, back to the main part of the building to see the nice fellow at the bank counter. Desk-guy told me on the way out that I’d need to give those papers to bank-fellow and pay him half a dollar. I passed my papers and 50¢ through the space under the glass to bank-fellow, who looked at me like I was an idiot and told me it was 90¢ instead. I switched out the half dollar for a whole one and bank-fellow sent me back to counter-dude, who took my remaining papers, had me record my name and passport number, and finally handed me my re-taped package. He turned around and began a conversation with someone else. Normally I would stick around in this kind of situation and as “Am I really 100% done?” In this particular instance, with my package in hand and two hours of my life given to the post office, I power-walked right out the door before they made me pay for or sign another thing.

1At the rate I was going, and seeing as it was only 9:00am, I wondered if I was the 32nd person served on Thursday, or since the Ecuadorian Postal Service was founded in 1960s.

2I decided this was a better nickname than my originally-planned “package-girl.”

French Toast and Crazies

The very first night when I had moved in with Lourdes and her family back in October, she told me the hers was a “casa de locos,” a house full of crazies. And just to be clear, as I move forward with this post, I’m going to totally agree with that in a very loving way.

This morning I rolled out of bed at 5:45am to quickly get ready, head out the door, be on one of the first moving Troles, and be at Lourdes’ before breakfast. I wanted to make french toast (which as I mentioned yesterday, they’ve been begging me to do), but I didn’t want them to be counting on it in case I totally slept in, so I gave them absolutely no warning that this was my intention.

Fast forward to 8:27am. Marta and I have successfully loaded up a plate full of french toast on the table. The two of us are eating with Jose, who has closed the tienda downstairs to join us. Jose is poking his sister-in-law Marta with a fork like they’re both about 5 as opposed to 50. Lourdes (who has already eaten at lightning speed) is running around in high heels looking for her notebook, which she has clearly left in plain sight on the table. Adrian is wearing flip-flops, pajama pants, and a parka, listening to English metal bands and playing a computer game.

No wonder my facebook statuses have gotten so much more boring since I’m living up north again.

Pictured below is Marta making french toast. She’s being trying to teach me to cook Ecuadorian food for four months. I can’t begin to tell you how hard she laughed when I told her “Yo voy a hacer french toast. Quieres aprender?”

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New Writing Project

Yesterday I began the process of writing an article about Guardians, a program within the Inglés Student Ministries (ISM) branch of Youth World. Throughout my afternoon hanging out with the chaplains at Alliance Academy and the high school juniors and seniors who really run the program, there were tons of entertaining moments I just had to write about, but knew should never make it into something published with our organization’s name officially attached.

My first and favorite was when my friend Ashley had all of the kids circle around Dani, the girl who was speaking during the whole-group program. Her directions were “Everyone circle around and touch Dani… appropriately.” I’ve actually been in several adult groups where that particular disclaimer might have been helpful and effective. It’s going to be fun hanging out with this group as I work on the article.

Eating Like a Cat

I really appreciate when people from home have a good grasp of some of the differences between life here and life in the United States. I got an e-mail tonight from a friend of mine who quoted a statistic she’d read, which I’m sure would be just as accurate if changed to Ecuador: “In Costa Rica the average family consumes less meat than the average house cat eats in the United States.” Among other things, my friend went on to note how funny it was to think of me eating less meat than Sophie (my cat). At one point in time, I’d probably have ranted about that being incredibly sad as opposed to funny. Now, I’m still telling you that that statistic is sad, but I’ll admit anyway that the image itself is pretty funny as well, mostly because of some of my experiences.
There are several times that I can think of at which I’m 100% sure my cat was consuming more meat than me for weekends or weeks at a time because of the places where I was serving. In fact, for good chunks of time while I was living with an Ecuadorian family, there were probably even longer stretches than that.
When the Quito Quest interns helped put on a Vacation Bible School for Huaorani kids in the jungle community of Toñampare in June 2008, I can’t begin to explain to you how excited we were at the rare meals where we had eggs. Those were the main source of protein that went into our meals that week, and the only time we ate any meat for those seven days (eight days for some of us) were the totally random parts of chicken we might be lucky enough to get in our soup. Jerry kept getting heads and talons and odd organs (see this recent related post by my friend Dana), and the poor guy probably didn’t actually consume any of that chicken.
The difference between us and the Huaorani was that Chet Williams had several bags of beef jerky that he’d dole out to the guys every couple of nights after our devotions and debrief (and after the girls had left… we totally didn’t tell them either). More than just having “man time” with a comfort food (I can see my mom cringing at my description of beef jerky as “comfort food”), we were giving our bodies something closer to the level of those specific nutrients that they were used to, and our brains the reassurance of consuming (something that was vaguely) meat.
Even in situations that aren’t as extreme and isolated as an indigenous community that lives 30 minutes into the jungle by airplane, things are certainly different here on the food front. Let’s say that you are a single mother who makes just a few hundred dollars a month and has five kids, with no husband/dad in the picture. That’s a very typical family situation here. And in that situation, you end up eating a lot of rice and a lot of eggs. After you pay your rent and clothe your kids, those are cheap ways to get full and get protein, respectively.
Eating with Ecuadorian church communities and/or families, I’ve caught myself thinking on several occasions “Where’s the main course here?” and realizing that despite there being a large amount of food in front of me, I wasn’t thinking of it as a complete meal because there was no chicken, beef, or pork. And it took me until even writing this very paragraph to realize how cultural that is. The same way that Ecuadorians don’t consider a sandwich a meal (there is no fork involved, thus it doesn’t count), my own conceptions about what constitutes a meal come from my personal cultural background.
In fact, if I manage to wake up early enough in the morning to make it to Guajalo at a reasonable hour for breakfast, I’m going to make French Toast for Lourdes and her family (apparently Carrie did this and it made quite an impression, and they’ve been begging me for about a week to repeat the experience). I’m intentionally not going to buy bacon on the way just as a reminder to myself about my own unintentional cultural prejudices, about the need here, and about how good I have it. I’m not telling you that to sound all noble or anything (insert sarcasm: “really, you’re not going to make bacon for one breakfast?”). I’m just saying it’s nice to have those reminders sometimes.
But I’ll be thinking about Sophie chowing down on her Tender Bites back home.