Happy Birthday
The previous day, Leah and I were walking to the bus after buying groceries when a man ran past us--very closely-- with a police officer 15 steps behind him with gun drawn. As they both rounded the corner, two shots were fired. We were probably 30 feet away from all of this, and that is definitely the closest I have ever been to a police shootout. After being here for awhile I can't stay that I was completely surprised by it, but poor Leah hadn't even been here two weeks at that time and I knew she was a little spooked. Later down the block we saw the man being hauled off by the police officer and he wasn't limping or anything, so I suppose he shot in the air or in the dirt. I should have been more affected by it then I was--I think I was more scared by my lack of fear than anything else.
Saturday Leah & I went to the market for what I would consider her first "real" cultural experience, and by real I mean not rubbing elbows with the rich and famous like we do at school, but rather seeing how most of the population lives. These farmers work so hard to harvest their food and drive it into the city, and then only get the equivalent of $.50 for a huge pineapple or $.04 for a cucumber. How they survive I am not certain, especially with gas almost at $3.50 a gallon here. It makes me remember that summer when gas in Florida was around $3 a gallon and how everyday on the radio and TV people's outrage poured out over this travesty, and here it just seems so.....different. I wish I could come up with a more descriptive term, but the right word escapes me.
I was reminded about this time I was in a taxi that stopped to get gas before taking us to our destination, and the driver, who was very nice and easy to talk to, put 50 Lempiras in the gas tank---this is like the equivalent of $2.50. I asked him why he put in so little...I mean afterall, he is a taxi. He told me that if he put a lot of gas in his car that people would siphon it out and steal it. That thought had never occured in my little privileged American mind.
Anyways, back to this weekend. After the market, Leah and I went with a small group to
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After meeting up with some of the Hondurans that work the feeding centers day in and day out, we loaded into the cars and went to the poorest outskirts of the city, way up in the mountains after driving up dirt roads that can only be driven with 4W
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I realize that all this sounds quite depressing, and on my birthday I must admit that I was a little depressed. My heart was broken over Norma, I had seen children who had so little that I could probably double their entire family's yearly income with what I pay with in taxes for my job with benefits (that job in the U.S., by the way, would put me under minimum wage. Just added that for perspective). I was also finally feeling a little freaked with the shootout that had just happened a couple of days prior along with some other incidences that I had heard about recently. I thought,
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I had also been reminded of a conversation I had had earlier that day about traveling around the world. On the bus back from the market, people were talking about all of the fantastic exotic locations that they have been, and I thought about maybe after this contract in Honduras that I could pack up and move to somewhere new, and then after that somewhere new. I could keep teaching as a missionary and I could probably convince myself that I was doing what God wanted me to do and that I was a good person. But that night, sitting on the floor of my closet, crying and talking to God on my
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