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You Can’t.

Posted on 15, Feb

Before leaving on the World Race over a year ago, my sister questioned my desire to go in many ways.  The biggest question I remember hearing over and over again was, “how can you go, help these starving people, help the homeless, be with orphaned children for a few weeks and then leave them?”  It was a valid question, and most of the time I had no good answer…in fact, I don’t think I ever had an answer.

Today, I will answer it…You Can’t.

In reverse order, I will answer why that is…

Thailand – Walking down the streets of the Nana Entertainment District (overshadowed by the Marriott Hotel) I had no clue how real the sex-tourism was.  From the broken lives of the girls being treated as nobodies in this world to the hurting, lost men lurking the streets, there is not a day that I can walk and not think about the far reaching effects of Human Trafficking, and the need for people…US…to walk into horrible situations and bring Hope into them…Bringing Jesus and God’s Kingdom to them…everyday I think of them…everyday.

Cambodia – My stay was short in Cambodia, but in the few weeks there, I spent some time at the “Happy Tree Orphanage” where many kids diagnosed with HIV or AIDS were living.  I remember two of the girls, who decided that they needed to have me do a photo shoot of them, and in turn gave me a tour of the AIDS hospital.  As I walked through the halls and around the playground, it hit hard that these kids all have a very short life expectancy.  I wonder today how many are still alive, how many are sick, how many of them know what they are up against in life.  Also in Cambodia I can’t get out of my mind the faces of many victims of land mines, still active in the countryside.  Or the stories of survivors of the mass genocide that took place in the killing fields.  I saw the need for God’s healings, the need for Jesus to come into these places and truly turn around the future of the country.  I still see the need for all of US.

Vietnam – A country that I love so dearly, faces that I think about every day.  From the multitudes of orphans that have birth defects resulting from chemicals spread during the Vietnam-American War to the college students who are some of the most incredibly friendly people in the world, I can’t go a day without thinking of them all.  I remember many of the people who I encountered in Vietnam, and see how God is moving in that country…a country where the government would rather not have anything to do with Christianity, to which laws forbid much of the freedom that we have in America.  It’s a country that has prostitution and human trafficking that is growing quickly, they are in need of Jesus to use US to help direct the future of Vietnam as well as Christianity in the nation.  I remember them daily…and don’t forget any of it…ever.
Thailand (Northern) – The villages in northern Thailand captured a special part of me.  Maybe it was the growth of the church, the drug addicted villages transforming ever so quickly, the welcoming people, the smiles on everyone’s faces…there are thousands of reasons that I could speak of on why I loved northern Thailand.  There is a huge and intense need for Jesus to use US in northern Thailand as there are people in great danger and living in fear of the Burmese Army.  There are hundreds of thousands of people…humans…fleeing from Burma in fear of their lives.  It is a really catastrophic situation which needs Heaven to be lived out on Earth…through US…not a day goes by that I don’t think of them…not a day.
India – A country that was a struggle for me…in many ways…is in great need for Jesus to create a movement quickly.  A place where the government shuts down many Christian run organizations.  It is a country where overcrowded streets create for dangerous (and rather humorous and exciting) travel situations.  Many people in India come across as rather difficult and aggressive at times.  It was a difficult place for many reasons, but I know that Jesus is moving there.  The needs in India range from God breathed healings and miracules are needed for the orphaned children, the trafficked children, the lepers living in colonies, the hungry, the hurting, the lonely people living each day asking for distress…they need US…and I haven’t forgotten it one day.
South Africa – The orphaned children, the HIV & AIDS victims, the graphic living situations, the danger, the lack of value on human existence.  There’s no way that I can forget many situations I found myself in in Africa…held up at gunpoint, sitting in the dirt with orphans, seeing the white vs black struggle, the physical/emotional/spiritual hunger that rages through many in S. Africa…not a day goes by that I’m not reminded of the needs for Jesus in Africa…not a day goes by.
Swaziland – What more needs to be said about a country so engulfed in the AIDS / HIV epidemic that the average life expectancy is near or less than 30 years old.  The need for healing, food for the hungry, and education are in huge demand for this small country.  The ways that God used US in Swaziland will continue forever.  Not a day goes by that I don’t somehow think of the kids walking miles after miles for the one meal they will get in any given day.  Not a day.
Mozambique – What a time it was for US in this beautiful country.  The incredible healings that take place in Mozambique, the hunger for significance, the thousands of orphans, the grateful and welcoming people in Mozambique, the horrible roads…it’s all part of why I loved my time in Mozambique.  Again, not a day goes by that I don’t think of the people WE prayed for, the lives that were transformed and changed in this country of hurt and poverty.  Miss it daily…and never a day that I don’t think of it…
Bolivia – There’s no way I can forget this beautiful…beautiful…beautiful country.  From the incredible mountains to the lush green of the rainforest, it is gorgeous.  The landscape can’t fool you though, this is one of the poorest countries of South America, being landlocked severely limits it’s export capabilities, causing industry to overlook the country.  The constant turnover in their Government causes turmoil daily in much of the country…yet Jesus is lived out in this country.  I miss the time in the rainforest working on the orphanage…while I may not have met any of the children that are now living in the orphanage that we helped to complete, they are constantly on my mind.  Never a day goes by that I don’t think of the nights I spent with Rusty and some of the girls of our squad talking (attempting to talk) to Remberto, an amazing missionary to his country, who left everything behind to build orphanages around Bolivia with his family.  He is an amazing man…I miss him daily.
Peru – From the vast desert-like area of Chincha to the lush Amazon Jungle, I miss it all daily.  I miss so many of the people at the Iglesia Berrea in Iquitos, or Templo La Mies in Nauta…I can’t get the images and lives they are living out of my mind.  I can’t forget that Pastor Nester is living in Los Jardines, Chincha…and the earthquake torn area surrounding him.  Not a day goes by that I don’t think of those days…not one day.

Through all of this, I come back to my sister’s question…”how can you go, stay there for a little while and leave?” and my answer is … you can’t.

Not a day goes by that I don’t wake up wondering what I’m doing of significance.  Not a day goes by that I don’t think of these countries and the multitude of things that I could be doing to help any one of them.  Not a day goes by that I don’t wonder how many people I encountered are still among us.  Not a day goes by that I don’t think of the lives that could be turned to God…through you or me.

Yet things hold us back….that’s for another blog though…for now, oh sister of mine…my answer still remains empty…while I did see so many people, and sit in awe of so many things across the world, I still must say, I don’t know how…other than it changes your life in more ways than I can count…and (not to brag, but…) I can count pretty high.
“You Can” … the more up-beat blog coming soon!!!
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OK, while we were in the jungle, there was an intense video made while on duty in the middle of the night in attempt to ward off pirates, jungle meanies, and the occasional stray dog. While many were scared and didn’t want to guard the boat, we knew the whole time that we needed to protect not only the boat and the contents, but our shipmates. We braved the mosquitos, and stayed up well past when any missionary in Peru should have, and here’s a little clip of what it was like…Mostly Becky and Caroline, but I chimed in some too on the 2nd video!

And, Night #2…

AND

Our approximate route was announced! While this sounds odd…being that we left in January…it proves just how hardcore we are…we left on an 11 month, around the world, abandonment life changing journey for Jesus without even knowing where we were going…and it was just fine! Keep in mind that any of this can change at any time, but it looks right now like it will take our team to:

Month 1: Chincha, Peru
Month 2: Iquitos & Nauta, Peru
Month 3: Bolivia
Month 4,5,6: ok…we go to 3 of the following 5 countries:
Botswaina
South Africa
Mozambique
Malwi
Swaziland
Month 7: India
Month 8: Napel
Month 9, 10, 11: a combo of:
Cambodia
Vietnam
Thailand
So there you have it…a small snippet of what life in the field or The World Race is like, and a snippet of where this journey is taking us. Your continued prayer and support is much appreciated. I am currently still in need of approximately $2,500 in support to complete the Race, and more importantly, change the world for the sake of Jesus. (you can help this cause by clicking on the “Support Me!” link on the left!!!) This year is not about me, it’s not about the blogs I write, the pictures I share, it’s not about the humorous videos we make…it’s simply about changing the world for Jesus, and making this world a better place, one warrior at a time!

Thanks!!!!

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But….I’m entitled to that!

Growing up in a middle class home in Northwest Ohio, I have an expectation to the life I am allowed to live. I am entitled to live a life with a nice house, hardwood floors, a family who cares, a car to drive, a family vacation, a pair of nice shoes, a warm meal that isn’t chicken and rice EVERYDAY…EVERY MEAL! I’m starting to learn other ways…learn that I don’t deserve any of it…I was simply blessed to be born into a different situation that in my mind is considered better than some of the places I’ve been here in Peru.

Growing up in a house with a dad that is a homebuilder, we always had nice homes…since I can remember we always lived in new homes. It was nice, clean, and just as the house got old, we’d move into another nice, new house. There was a solid foundation, carpet, a solid roof, all kinds of nice luxuries…and I loved that! It’s simply not the same here in Peru. In Iquitos, I had a great experience to spend time with Deborah, a 10 year old girl who lives in a completely different place than I did when I was 10. Here’s her and her brother walking back to their home (which is in the background)…

What really matters in our lives????

I look back to my life a few short months ago. I lived in a nice house, slept on a nice bed, drove a nice car…all GREAT things! I was extremely happy with where I was in life…but was it all the STUFF that made me happy? I had great friends, is that what made me happy?

I look around here, seeing houses that are built on stilts because it floods all the time…and wonder…why do they live here? Why not pick up and move on? Go find a job somewhere…do something with your life. You are living in poverty because you choose it…but then I look around again…with different eyes…eyes of compassion, eyes not seeing the poverty, but the wealth…what I think of as seeing things in a more Godly perspective. Sure, I had a nice house, but then again, I had a nice debt to go with it. Sure, I had a nice car, but I owed money on that as well. Sure, it was all nice, but it all came with additional responsibility. Not that responsibility is wrong, but it sure isn’t the best thing in the world either! I look at the people in the village near Berea (the church we’ve been working with here in Iquitos) and see smiles. Sure, there are diseases that are apparent…and that’s not good…but look past it, see the simple things that make these incredible people smile. It took a $120,000 house, a $20,000 car, and a crap load more STUFF to make my life “happy” and here, it takes next to nothing. They don’t have the stresses of an everyday USA citizen’s life. Instead, they smile when a visitor simply drops in, even when that visitor doesn’t speak their language. Close your eyes, imagine a person knocking on your door ( or ringing your doorbell ) and you answer it…and it’s very obviously someone from another country. Would your first instinct be to open the door and invite them in? NO…we know that the world is a DANGEROUS place, and we can’t do that! We can’t trust people! But that’s not the case here…it’s OK…it’s safe. The person at the door isn’t coming in to rob you…you know that they’d be wasting their time! Instead, it’s a culture of giving…a culture of being very greatful to the people who they encounter. It’s OK to open the door. It’s safe. I laugh all the time I sit and think about it…we invite kids to the church for vacation Bible School…and the kids hold our hands as we walk them to the church…IMAGINE THAT…a complete stranger, obviously from another country, holding your child’s hand and walking them away from your house, and you aren’t in the least bit worried…not because you don’t love your children, but because you actually trust and have faith in the people of the world. I’ve learned so much to not trust people…everyone’s out to get you, and rip you off…and that sucks joy out of your life. You aren’t friends with those you don’t trust…so if you trust people in the world, you have a lot more potential for friends!

Look into the eyes of Deborah. Does she look sad? Does she look like she is missing out on anything in life? Is she entitled to more out of life? My flesh cries out, yes, this girl who loves to be hugged, loves to be held, loves to laugh, loves to play jokes on our group, climbs trees like anyone I’ve ever known…she deserves more blessings…she is an incredible inspiration to how you can truly be happy without much. I met her as she was barefoot, walking around without even sandals…through the mud trenches, over the dirt paths, across the rickety wood bridge…she curls up on my lap at the evening service, shivering from being cold…all with a smile on her face because life is good…her laugh will make you smile from the inside out. Has God loved me more than her because I had more STUFF than her? No…we’ve simply lived different lives in different places, and God loves us both the same. I wonder, God, can I sacrifice some of those blessings that you’ve given me in life and give some of them to her? Wait…if I give some blessings to her, and some to the next person who deserves more (in my eyes), and then the next and the next and the next…I may not have any more blessings from God in my life….would I be willing to do that?

Would You?

More on this “Entitlements” series to come throughout the year.

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Amazon River Video

Posted on 10, Mar

During our stay in Nauta, Peru, we left for a tour of the Amazon River, and here is a video of Becky and I at the lookout post….

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Back to Iquitos!

Posted on 4, Mar

We’ve dis-boarded our Amazon cruise boat…El Buen Samaritano (in english: The Good Samaritan). Here is a simple picture blog of our time there…

El Buen Samaritano

The Youth of Nauta that we worked with

A skit our team performed for the children of Nauta…during Fiesta con Dios (Party with God)

Some of the youth at Fiesta con Dios

Some images of Nauta and along the River

We stayed along the Marañón river that flows into the Chambira River to form the actual Amazon River a short distance down river from where we were. The GPS Coordinates of where we stayed are:

South 4° 30.543′
West 73° 34.529′

There are HUNDREDS of other pictures of Nauta and our time living on the Amazon River on my photo site www.markstratmann.com

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I look out, across the swiftest moving navigable river I have ever witnessed. The sound of water rushing past the boat gets drowned out with sounds of natives paddling hollowed out canoes upstream of the mighty Rio Marañón where it meets the Rio Chamibira to form the Amazon River. Am I really living on a houseboat on the Amazon river? Yes, two weeks of my life are spent living with the locals in Nauta, Peru…my home is a houseboat built for missionaries on the Rio Marañón. Car horns are a blast from the past, the sound replaced by loud boat motors powering small boats up and down this mighty river. The mosquitoes took my leg and lifted it off the ground last night.

My sister and parents like to refer to this boat as my cruise ship vacation for the month…let me paint a picture of this cruise. We have 31 people living on this houseboat, a boat with what I would approximate to be less than 1,500 square feet, with a whopping 2 bathrooms. The girls got the penthouse suite, a covered balcony that is now a field of mosquito nets, barely room to move. The guys went down under to the bottom quarters, much like an unfinished basement of the boat…shared with the engines and pumps of the boat. The sound of a gas powered pump filling up one of our water tanks at 4:00 am is a good wake up call, it’s too hot to sleep anyway! We must stand guard on our cruise ship throughout the night too…you know, protect it from pirates and intruders. We take shifts protecting our boat…anywhere from 1-2 hours a piece sitting on the front of the cruise, protecting our fellow vacationers with a machete in hand. A typical shift, from 2:00-4:00 am involves seeing a few locals power their canoes upstream, or disappearing quickly drifting downstream. Often locals are walking along the river…so far no real exciting action…we’ll see what tonight brings! Our shower water is straight out of the Amazon river, not filtered at all…oh, and to wash dishes? Dip a bucket into the river and get some water…yeah…I guess that’s safe.

There is no real recreation on the river, the current so swift that you can only swim in protected areas along the bank for fear that the undercurrent will suck you in. It is a large banana shipping channel, with locals going upstream empty, often in a motor powered canoe with 3-4 other canoes aboard, and drifting back with a boatload of bananas. Our partyboat host Jorge Montero T. has informed us that most of the boats we see throughout the night posses drugs, ready for marketing around the world. There is also a market for timber from the Amazon Jungle, many illegal logging businesses do their work throughout the night as well.

Our ministry here includes helping the Tempa de Mais (Church of the Harvest…I think). Most of us are assisting with Fiesta con Dios (our replacement name for Vacation Bible School…meaning Party with God), and a smaller group of us are working with the youth of the church (12-20 years old). Fiesta con Dios has somewhere around 100 kids, and the youth group consists of around 12-15 so far (more are coming as time goes on). We will continue to bring joy and Bible stories to the Fiesta con Dios, and encourage the youth to reach out to their community of Nauta and grow close in community with each other. The youth of this town invite spirits into their lives with the use of Ouija boards, coming in contact with dangerous spirits. The church is growing here in Nauta, in a town of 18,000, there are approximately 15 churches servicing the area. The vision of Tempa de Mais is to grow and service the town with small groups in the different areas of town.

Our time on Nauta started Monday, February 18th, and will end February 29th. A short trip to the village, but with our cramped living conditions it is probably a good thing it is a short stay! Our community of World Racers grows closer every day, praying for each other, celebrating with each others (birthdays and accomplishments) and encouraging each other. It is great to get to know these people so quickly…waking up the the same 27 people every day is trying at times, but it is great to always have friends nearby to laugh with. Our days are filled with much laughter, which is great amidst seeing some of the most poverty stricken areas in the world. Our time in Peru is quickly ending, with Africa quickly arriving in our sights (april 18th (ish)). Our next destination is Bolivia, where we will end our time in South America. I have learned tons, and helped many in our month and a half of serving God this year. THANK YOU to all of my supporters who are making this possible. The world is becoming a better place, and Jesus’ love is being shared everywhere we go!

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Safe Landing

Posted on 16, Feb

We have safely landed in Iquitos, Peru!!!

Our off time in Lima was a great time of rest and teaching from our coaches Michael and Kathy Hines. It was great to spend some time eating at Chili´s in Peru, having a bed for a few nights, and experiencing the high class technology that is involved in a hot shower! We landed in Iquitos yesterday at around 4:45pm, and were greeted by the heat and humidity of Iquitos! We will be leaving Iquitos Monday morning to head to the small town of Nauta, Peru…not sure of our exact ministry there, I am sure that God is lining something great up for us!

With that quick update allowing everyone to know that we are safe, I thought I´d give a quick update on my support standings. The amount currently in account with the World Race is near $7,600, when I add in the amounts that have been pledged, that total comes to near $11,500 of the $13,800 that is needed. THANK YOU to all of my supporters! Those who have pledged monthly support, thank you for continuing to support me monthly, please make sure that the credits are being credited to your account, as I have had some trouble with computer glitches! You can support me by clicking the Support Me! link to the left.

THANK YOU for all of your prayer, mental, emotional, and financial support!

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Our time here in Chincha Peru has drawn to an end. I sit with my thoughts, and try to process what all I’ve seen, and put it into some words. Peru is an interesting country thus far, and we have one more Peruvian environment to see, the Jungle / Amazon area. Here are my thoughts, not necessarily in any chronological order.

We landed in Lima, Peru on January 6th, 2008. My thoughts of strange customs searches and headaches of problems with visas were quickly dismissed as I got the random search of sending my bag through an x-ray machine and moving on to immigration. That headache was gone, and soon enough, a man speaking only spanish looks loosely over my passport and stamps my first stamp on the shiny new passport. OK…that was TOO easy…there must be another search or something..nope. It was all too easy of a process.

Our first night started off in a hotel in Lima…a city of 9 million people. I found my first thoughts in Peru thinking about how hot it was at 2 in the morning. Not being a huge fan of the heat and humidity, I was glad that I was too tired to care, so I sucked down some water out of the box of filtered water, and drifted away into my room. My room was perfectly crafted with a window that was jammed open, a fan with no guard on it, a hard bed, and my personal bathroom. The bathroom was clean, complete with the trash can to place used toilet paper in…apparently you don’t flush that here! It was 2:00 AM, and the buzz of the fan allowed me to drift off to sleep…we had to be awake by 6:00 to get breakfast and be on the “race” around Lima and on to Chincha…our ministry destination for the month.

Race day was just too exciting…I never imagined that 6 people could fit into a small taxi with the driver laughing as he drove us into the mystery of our next location…and the taxi is a car that 99% of the people in the States would have placed in the junk yard! We buzzed around without any sense of security as traffic lights and turn signals are obviously replaced with honks and hand signals. I wonder what side of the road they drive on here…it took a long time to decipher that they still drive on the right side of the road, but it’s merely a suggestion in Peru.

On our bus ride from Lima to Chincha, a short nap was gotten in the midst of watching the landscape. I was not sure what I thought the landscape of Peru was going to be, but desert like conditions were not on the horizon. Poverty stricken huts speckled the side of the Pan-American highway. These are the huts you only see on television, why am I seeing it? Is this really where I’ll be living for the next month? Yes…it is. We arrived in Chincha with only one thing on my mind…food. We had eaten in Lima, but the excitement and exhilaration of being in Peru didn’t make my appetite do much of anything, but now it was time to eat.

We got to the end of the race destination, and found our contact…rested for a moment and finally got some food. My first meal in Chincha was Pollo a la Brasa…Chicken with fries…YAY! something I can eat does exist here in Chincha. We made our way to Iglisia Emanual, the church we would set up our tents for the month…and set up camp in the back of the yard…right next to the goat pens. It was just wonderful.

Our team has spent our time here in Chincha working in a new community called Los Jardines. It is a small village that was devistated by the earthquake last August, and is still very young in the rebuilding stages. The homeowners nearly all lost their entire village made of adobe (bricks made out of mud) and have gotten some assistance from Japan to build temporary homes out of thatch. The problem is that none of them are in a financial position to perminately rebuild their homes. These “temporary” homes are slowly becoming perminant homes. Throughout all of this, they have had only one spigot of running water for approximately 30 families, a few privet bathrooms (which equate to a hole in the ground with a few rotten boards overtop of it), and only about 4 young trees…and a LOT of dust. Most homes have a plastic roof covering the ragged shelters, leaking water in whenever it rains. Another of my blogs describes our time and projects there, so I won’t go back into it here.

My first couple weeks here I found difficult personally. Living in a desert really works on me, and I realized the need for green plants in my life. I didn’t mind our living conditions, taking showers out of a bucket, living out of a tent, it’s all fine, but the heat and dust got too me and gave me a bad attitude, and I often found myself complaining all the time about one thing or another. I needed an out, so a few of us went to the highlands…high in the Andes mountains. It was a wonderful trip…I wrote a blog about that as well, so I won’t get into that trip either. After that trip I was refreshed and ready to take on the rest of our time here in Chincha. My mood improved and my outlook was much better, still can’t say that I loved the desert, but I had a refreshed look on life!

Peru has proven to be a really interesting place. From day one, I realized that people don’t measure distances in miles or kilometers, they measure it based on how long it will take some form of public transportation to get you there. Nobody owns cars, everyone takes either a Moto (a small 3 person vehicle), a taxi (a small station wagon typically), a Combi (a minivan like bus), or a full fledged bus. Ask someone…how far is it to ___(fill in the blank)___, and your response will be a measure of minutes or hours, not miles or kilometers. People here are extremely welcoming. Our first time in Los Jardines was filled with people welcoming us into their homes, and offering us food (which they had very little of) or drinks. Children here are the next best thing to community children. Kids generally play all over the neighborhood, playing consists of soccer or volleyball (volleyball often is played without the net…maybe a line in the ground, usually just bopping the ball around for HOURS). I recall one instance of a child carrying around a baby, and when asked who the baby was or who the parents were, the child had no idea who the baby was…and that was not only OK, it was normal.

Poverty here isn’t the same as I have experienced in the U.S., here having a cow stolen or lost means much more than an inconvience. They don’t have a loss and end up at the insurance company to replace damaged goods, or to the mortgage company to borrow money to start fresh again. It instead forces you to depend more on your friends, family, and neighbors. Without strong relationships with them, hard times could easily turn into devastating times.

It doesn’t take much to see the variety of lives here. Just blocks from the president’s palace will take you to some of the most painstakingly poverty stricken areas I’ve ever seen. The people of Peru seem to work to survive, not work to prosper…it’s a different mindset, and I have yet to decide which is better. I see many sadder faces than happy faces while sitting in the plaza in the middle of Chincha. Not that they don’t have happiness, as MANY of the people here are filled with joy and welcoming lifestyles, but I see many sad faces here. I loved serving God alongside Pastor Nester as his smile would turn any frown upside down…and the children are a smile waiting to happen at all times. Simple things that you do for people…a home visit, a greeting with a friendly smile, and smiles emerge from the faces here. Happiness is often hidden just below the surface in many cases.

Here at the end of this month, I will indeed miss Chincha in my own way…I know that my personal struggles with the landscape and the change in lifestyle will drift away as the bus leaves and be replaced with thoughts of Pastor Nester and Pastor Desi and his wife, and the accommodating ways of the Chinchian people.

Interesting facts:

Gas is approx $4-5 US Dollars per gallon here
Rice is served with everything, including pasta
Ice cream in the Mountains is special
Sublime candy bars are the best (kinda like a hershey bar with nuts)
Morochas cookies are yummy, kinda like Keebler’s fudge stripe cookies..kinda
Chicken is a main staple with rice
I don’t like any of the sauces I’ve had on the chicken
I like the K-Fe restaurant with Crapes with Nutella
A Mixto-Completo is yummy (sandwich with ham, cheese, and EGG…yummmm)
My favorite form of transportation is a Moto
Learning other languages is very difficult for me
Inca Kola is the beverage of choice here
Large cash transactions in Peru require US Dollars (which is available at most ATMs)
Something in the air/water/environment makes our team sick a lot
The Andes Mountains are amazing
Goats snore
In Peru wedding bands are worn on the right hand instead of the left
Volleyball is a street sport, and is played often without the net
Sandboarding is fun
The two main languages here are Castellano (Spanish…main) and Quechua
Rumor is that spanish movie translations often use Peruvians because of their clear dialect

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Our time here in Chincha, Peru is quickly headed to an end. Our next location is near Iquitos, Peru. The current details are not set in stone, but it sounds like we will be living off of a barge in the Amazon river. Here’s a little video that Rusty Jackson made. Rusty is our squad leader, and has helped us the past few days digging holes in Los Jardines for permanent plumbing. This month has been filled with so many interesting stories, and I’ve learned tons of “stuff” from this month. A short recap of things that have happened in Los Jardines:

A plaza / garden for the middle of the community
Pastor Nester has a good start on rebuilding his house after the earthquake
Electricity has been brought into the community for the first time
Permanent sewage plumbing has begun and is quickly being added to the community

Short list of changes made in me:

New confidence in God providing for every need in life
New confidence in myself, and who I am
Less weight (I need a new belt…the food here isn’t my favorite, but I’ve found some good stuff)
My first trip overseas (unless Canada counts)
A realization that you really can live with very little material possessions
The more stuff you have, the more weighted down you are in life

There’s tons more I’ve learned, but that’s all I’ll add for the time being.


New Bathrooms in Los Jardines from Rusty Jackson on Vimeo.

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Our time in the desert of Chincha Peru is drawing to a slow end. With two weeks left, a small group of us went to the mountains of Peru to see what green grass and trees look like once again. We traveled 3 hours to Lima, then boarded a bus to Haurez, Peru…about an 8 hour bus ride through the night. Then boarded a combi for another 45 minutes to an hour and a taxi for 20 minutes to make our final destination of Musho, Peru…a small village in the mountains…and oh it was AMAZING. I didn’t realize how sick and tired of the desert I was until I saw life in the way of trees and grass. It reminded me of the importance of the garden / plaza we have worked on in Los Jardines.

While there, we met some guys from the jungle who were there on a 30 day discipleship program. We also met Ryan and Nichole who are missionaries in the small town of Utupampa. It was very encouraging to be on that trip, and learn how other people live in Peru. Everyone in the mountains were very nice and accomidating to us. We went to their church services and were overly welcomed. We got to hear the jungle guys sing a song about coming from the jungle to the mountains to serve Jesus and learn what it means to suffer for Jesus. Many of these guys had left their village for the first time. We got to see the top of Mt. Huascaran Sunday morning…unfortunately I don’t have pictures of that, but the picture would have been worth a billion dollars. We saw the mountain base, and then a cloud, and then the snow-capped top of the mountain. It reminded me of life, and how we sometimes need to make it through the clouds of life to see the true beauty of the situations we are in. I know that the cloud of desert sand I’ve been living in has been difficult, and this trip was refreshing.

We leave Chincha, Peru on February 11th and go to Lima, Peru for a few days to regather ourselves and rest for a few days. Then it is off to the Amazon Jungle in Peru for the month of February. Then we’ll be off to Bolivia in March, and off to (probably) Africa in April…our exact route is yet to be determined…but I’m sure that the adventure will not end! Lots of travel in the near future will require lots of prayer…along with our time in the Jungle. It doesn’t sound like we’ll have much of any internet connection while there, so I’ll try to actually post something more before leaving!

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