day one

Written on Wednesday morning, but then life picked up speed 
and we didn’t have internet and the kids fell apart and and and…

Yesterday was in-country orientation.

My husband and I met with one of the country reps (the other one is out in our town, getting our work and housing situation straightened out) while the children went to the zoo with two absolutely amazing childcare workers.

Julie is a university student and phys ed teacher, and Wilmer is a K’ekchi’ who has come into the city to watch the kids and accompany us out to our town. Julie doesn’t speak English at all, and Wilmer speaks some English and loves to joke and tease.

I warned them that the kids were buggy. They’ve been strapped in and locked up for the last two days and without a normal schedule for the last couple weeks. It’s been driving the younger two absolutely bonkers to be stuck in a walled and gated house with no yard. I told Wilmer and Julie that they had a lot of energy to burn…and would there be any places they could run around for awhile? They said yes.

I needn’t have worried. They ran those kids ragged. After the zoo and lunch at a pizza place (the littlest is stymied by the fact that there is no pepperoni here), they brought them back to the MCC offices where we were having our orientation, and for the next couple hours, they played games that involved constant running. It was a beautiful sight to behold.

In the evening we headed over to the Mennonite Seminary (Semilla)/guesthouse/language learning program (CASAS)—i.e. The Garden of Eden. Trimmed lawns, flowers everywhere, coffee bushes, sprawling flowering vines—after our (only) few hours living in the concrete, locked-up, crime-ridden city, it was pure paradise. We had supper with our Virginian neighbors (who are here for several months leading and EMU cross cultural), and they graciously accommodated our exhausted, grumpy, and (still! after all that running!) bouncing-off-the-walls children.

Today we have a few more hours of orientation before we jump on the Monja Blanca (i.e. “the white nun,” the name of a bus line) and head up to Alta Verapaz and our new home.

So. That’s what’s been going on. Now for the deeper stuff.

We knew that Guatemala is considered dangerous and has huge security issues, so I was prepared mentally. But being here and actually seeing all the armed guards is unnerving. They say that there are SIX private guards for each policeman. This means that stores have men standing guard. This means that delivery trucks travel with armed guards. This means that some houses have their own round-the-clock guards. This means that entire streets are gated off, with a guard at the gate.

The last part, gated streets, is new to me. When I was here thirteen years ago, all houses were walled (with barbed wire and broken glass on top) and locked. There were guards, too. But where the gated streets were only for the wealthier areas, now they’re everywhere.

figuring out our new cell phones

It’s a challenge to keep myself emotionally grounded with all these guns and gates. I vacillate between flashes of Oh-My-Word panic and pretending I’m invincible. I hope the stress lessens, but from what I hear from others, living with these security issues is always a bit stressful.

The younger two children, however, have absolutely no fear. (Questions of the day: how do you teach children to be afraid/cautious without making them scared?) At CASAS, I let
them run up and down the street (it was gated) and before I knew it, my
younger daughter was the whole way at the other end chatting with the
guard. She reported that he spoke a little English and was very
friendly.

Hasta luego…

8 Comments

  • Feather Rocketship

    Maybe it'd be useful if you emphasize that being aware of potential dangers is the very thing that helps us keep ourselves safe from those dangers, and that there will be other people watching out for them as well, including you and your husband, the friends they will make, etc.

  • Melodie

    Praying for you all. Your card is on my refrigerator just like it is supposed to be! The pictures of your kids running/dancing are great. Will the feet ever come clean??

  • teekaroo

    Our problem is that we have to try hard to make it scary for our fearless boy, but that is way over the line for our timid girl. We refreshed our stranger danger talk a few weeks ago and now she's too scared to walk the four houses to her friend's house. Good luck with that.

  • jennifer

    So fun to follow your journey. My husband and I went on a short (12 days!) mission trip to Antigua about 12 yrs ago. I'm looking forward to seeing Guatemala again, through your lens. Praying for safety for your family, sprinkled with excitement and challenge. The adjustment to coming back home and living in what seemed like luxury was the hardest for me…

  • the domestic fringe

    Oh, wow. I didn't know all that about the security. I guess I just didn't realize how unsafe it was there. I bet your kids will be friends with all the guards before you leave.

    I think it's a beautiful thing when kids don't have to live in fear. I'd talk about it with them, but not so much that they are afraid to go outside.

    Wow. That was vague. Sorry, but I guess I have no good advice. I will pray for the safety of your family while you are away.
    ~FringeGirl

  • Laurie Longenecker

    The Monja Blanca…I remember that linea. Thanks for the update. Your question–how to teach them to be cautious without making them afraid–such a fine line. Maybe it will be clearer in Carcha. Hopefully?

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