Friday, July 31, 2009

Farewell Mexico

Firstly, I´d like to share that I´ve thoroughly enjoyed almost everything about this week. It actually started last Saturday evening when I went to a soccer game-- wearing my new Tigres jersey-- with Michael Lee and Mauricio, a friend I´ve made down here. Though I missed the one goal the Tigres scored when I got distracted by a bird, I really enjoyed the game. During halftime, Powerade sponsored what can only be called a Most Extreme Elimination Challenge Obstacle Course (ok, I suppose it could be called something else), in which volunteers would try to run across spinning logs and almost always bust, then proceed to a series of ascending spinning cylinders, bust again, then run to an eight-foot platform-- if they made it that far, which they usually didn´t, grab a gigantic baloon, and jump off of the platform and try to bounce off the balloon onto the ground. Only one contestant managed this part successfully, and many missed their balloon completely and landed on their face, no doubt sustaining minor injuries. If they survived this, they were rewarded with the privilege of kicking a penalty kick. The game was good too.

That night, I moved into the hotel, and proceeded Sunday morning to meet the group of about 25-- 4 doctors, some nurses, a physician assistant, a physical therapist, a medical techologist, and some ¨normal¨ people. Monday, we went to a nice Christian nursing home and cared for the residents there until about 2 o´clock, the usual quittin´time this week. That night, two 18-year old guys who are on the trip and I played a pick-up game of soccer until about 11:30, which we have done every day this week except Thursday (we stayed at a restaurant until 11:30 and it was raining). On Tuesday, some of the group went to a different nursing home, while the rest of us stayed at the hotel to give a clinic to some of the Federales who have been staying there. The rest of the week, we were at Bethel Presbyterian Church (where I´ve been for two other weeks) running a clinic with our doctors, an optometrist, and a dentist from the area. We´ve also traveled to the hill with the gigantic Mexican flag in the middle of the city (Asta Bandera), as well as to Chipinque, where I went with Robert Bristol my first week here.

The doctors on this trip (a Navy flight surgeon, an internist, a pathologist, and a doctor of emergency medicine) were all incredible examples to me of what it looks like to be a Christian man and a Christian doctor. I learned a lot from them, and feel much more prepared and at peace as I enter med school in just over a week from now. Thanks so much for all of your prayers and support! I´ll post here a few more times in the coming week or two, then will probably let it r.i.p. See you all soon!

Pictures of Week 8

My final week in Mexico has quickly come to an end. Here are a few snapshots that capture the variety of stuff I got to do and see this week. Reflections to follow as soon as I get a chance.


This is the whole group on a hill with a gigantic flag (not shown) that overlooks the city (Asta Bandera)
Here we have a shapshot of the clinic in action at Bethel Church, where we were on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday.

What we have here is the impromptu clinic some of us gave on Tuesday to the Federales who are staying at our hotel. The doctors instructed them on emergency medicine and general health then checked blood pressure and glucose and anything else they needed.


This is a shot of the clinic we gave on Monday to the residents of a nursing home.



Mauricio and me at the Tigres game we went to on Saturday. The Tigres tied with Puebla 1-1. I missed our goal because I was looking at a bird. But the halftime show was one of the funniest things I´ve ever witnessed.




Friday, July 24, 2009

Pictures of Week 7

Here are a few photos of this week´s campamento de verano. Lots of kids, heat, fun, dirt, songs, and sweat.
The girls who always wanted to play a hand-slap game with me.

The santuario jam-packed with munchkins.

My charges, plus Michael Lee.


The dusty, dusty courtyard behind the church.



The singing children.
I continue to enjoy my time here and am counting down the days. Until next time!




Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Rescue!

With this post, I hope to rescue my blog from the stagnation which has engulfed it the past couple of weeks. VBS last week really took a lot out of me: we were at the church or the nearby park from 8:30 in the morning to 8:30 at night, sometimes longer. And it was over 100 degrees every day, with no air conditioning outside of the pastor´s office. But that being said, I had another great week deepening my relationships with the people of Bethel Presbyterian Church and forging new relationships with the teams. One team of about eight hailed from Chattanooga (I think from First Presbyterian Church) and another of about seventeen from Muncy, Indiana. In the mornings, we ran a clinic at the local park that consisted of basketball drills, pick-up games, a couple short object lessons by the team members, and a couple hours of pick-up soccer. After lunch, we helped run the Campamento del Verano (VBS), which drew fifty to sixty image-bearers from the neighborhood. After a chaotic first day, I and the youth leader from Indiana took over the games and had a lot of fun with the kids. The final day, I gave an object lesson to the kids at the park in Spanish. Friday night, we had a despedido, or send-off, and the people of the church chose superlatives gave out little wrestler (luchador) trophies-- I got ¨best at Spanish,¨believe it or not. But I´m not content with my progress so far and hope to imprint much more Spanish on my brain in my last two weeks here.

This week, I´m working with a team from New Jersey who is doing VBS in the morning and building a concrete wall in the afternoon. Fortunately, I´ve been able to opt out of the manual labor, which is nice since my back still hasn´t recovered from an intense 2 weeks of nonstop disc golf in early May. But I´ve found myself in charge of about twenty fantastic nine- and ten-year-olds, and am really enjoying my time with them. In the afternoon, Michael Lee (a pastor with whom I´ve hung out a lot the past few weeks) and I head back to the house where we´re staying or figure out something to do. We have had some great talks and get along really well-- he´s an answer to prayer. Yesterday, we decided to go downtown to buy a couple soccer jerseys (which are really expensive here) and almost succeeded in getting lost. This afternoon, we´ve just been hanging out at the MTW office getting stuff done. The rest of the week looks about the same-- I hope to get lots of reading and Spanish study in.

The Medical Brigade comes in on Saturday and will open up their clinic back at Bethel on Monday (as far as I know). I´m really looking forward to meeting some doctors and nurses and hopefully getting a lot of hands-on (or at least eyes-on) experience. This type of work is really what I wanted to do all summer, but the Lord had his own plans. Pray both that I learn a lot of practical things and that I will also come to a better understanding of how medical missions works and whether I would be interested in doing some of it down the road.

As I near the end of my summer (I fly out on August 3rd and start medical school on August 10th), I am so thankful for a chance to see what missions is like first-hand. At times (especially on the off-weeks), it´s been very boring, and there are people I´ve met with whom I simply have nothing in common and with whom I would prefer not to be. On the flip side, last week I was stretched too thin, with no energy for reflection, mitigated desire for spiritual cultivation, and a reflexive neglect of the mind of Christ. Yet between these extremes, I have had stretches of days and even weeks where I´ve read great books every night then found myself on my knees, thanking God for His Spirit, praying for others, and asking for wisdom for decisions I face. Francis Shaeffer has been tugging my worldview back to a more Biblical place, Soren Kierkegaard has been showing me the despair that we all mask when we don´t submit to Christ, Dr. Abraham Verghese has been telling me about what it looks like to be an internist, and my buddy Kirk Norris (via his blog The Kingdom in Thailand) has been showing me what it´s like to feel God´s call to missions in the midst of ministry yet experience the uncertainty of how to get there in this complicated world. Though for several reasons I have not experienced a call to be a missionary to a foreign land, I think I´m ready to minister to my neighbors over the next year, who will mostly be med students. It´s become trite to say that we´re all missionaries, but the fact is that we all have the same call placed upon us, and professional missionaries aren´t any more spiritual or any more obligated to share the Gospel than anyone who has submitted to Christ´s call. Yet my failures teach me that I am far from capable of having the mind of Christ, his consciousness and mindfulness and perfect union of soul and body. My prayer today is that God would give me the will to not just think, but to do. That is what I do feel called to, which is only different from the call to be a missionary in the specifics.

I hope this post has been edifying. To that end, I´ll drop a Kierkegaard quote on you from his preface to The Sickness Unto Death that has not left my mind for the past two weeks:
¨All Christian knowledge, whatever formal rigour it betrays, should be concerned. But what edifies is just this concern. The concern is the relation to life, to what a person actually is, and thus, in a Christian sense, it is seriousness. In a Christian sense, the superior elevation of disinterested knowing, far from being greater seriousness, is frivolity and pretence. But again, what edifies is seriousness.¨

Even in our most mirthful and mindless moments, we are called to have this concern, this seriousness about the spiritual well-being of others and ourselves. How convicting is this obligation! Nevertheless, may this concern enlighten our minds with ever-increasing brightness as we live out our faith in the the One who was concerned enough for our lives that he gave us His own.

Palabras VI

Sorry it´s been so long, but here is a sample of the words I´ve picked up in the last couple weeks:
papalote = kite or windmill
peluche = stuffed animal
thatched hut = palapa
liga = elastic band
panza = stomach
cierra = saw
chongo = ponytail
turkey = pavo or guajolote
taller = workshop, lab, studio
acero = steel
crayola = chalk
tapa = cap, lid
tapa rosca = twist-off bottle cap
ballena = whale
mariposa = butterfly
abrazar = to hug
trampar = to cheat
junta = meeting
sarten = frying pan
stripas = intestines
rasgon = rip

And my two favorites for the past two weeks: tocallo, which means namesake (there are a lot of other Daniel´s down here) and carne de gallina, which literally means hen´s meat but usually means goosebumps (though I haven´t had goosebumps a single time in this oppressive heat!)

Monday, July 20, 2009

Pictures of Week 6

Last week was the most exhausting week of the summer, but the kids were a lot of fun and the team was solid. Here are 5 snapshots of the week:
Those kids got nothin on Daniel... which is incidentally the name of this guy, who can also run really fast.
That kid is about to get dominated.
One of the many little things that just make my day. Not sure whether you have to wait for a normal urge to become urgent before you can enter. My guess is yes, you do.
The team walking around the waterfall at the start of the Riverwalk downtown.
Most of the group after a rollicking morning at the Parque Estrella, a combination of zoo and amusement park that would be about $60 in the States and is $6 here.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Pictures of Week 5

At last, the promised pictures of English Camp.

Javier and me. He's the man. Helps out alot at the church.
The real-life mariachi band that showed up at our fiesta on Friday. Hot.

The kids.


The kids at the park.



The church.
I'll post more later. Sorry, I always seem to be in a hurry.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

English Camp

This week, I had the privilege of working with 3 young teachers, 2 seminary students, and 1 teenager from Charlotte, NC. It was an answer to prayer to have people all more or less my age to be with for. We were joined by a missionary here, Carol, as well as another soon-to-be missionary here, Mike. Each of the team had wonderful and unique gifts that really came out through the course of the week, in which we did an English Camp for kids during the day (we had about 55 kids) and a basketball ministry in the evenings in a local park (approximately a million kids come out for that). The team members helped me in the ESL class I taught in the afternoons, which varied from 4 to 15 people throughout the week. Last night, we had a true Mexican fiesta at the church, with a surprise visit from a legIT mariachi band. Pictures to follow.

Though I was very busy this week, I did have a little time to reflect. Among other things, I´ve really been impressed with the Mexican culture this week. I was talking with a really neat guy named Javier yesterday and he pointed out that it´s ¨no problem¨to live in your parent´s house your entire life. He lives with his grandmom, his parents, his brother and sister, and his dogs, and he sleeps on the couch every night, and it´s ¨no problem.¨ Rather, it´s a part of their approach to life, in which family almost always comes first. We Americans are so much more individualistic, materialistic, and independent than our neighbors to the south, and though it has made us richer, it´s also sapped our spirit, which is fed by by fellowship, by family, by community. As I think about my own life, I am most thankful for the times of true community I´ve experienced (such as at Ridge Haven and in RUF), while at the same time I grieve for what could have been so much more, and for the millions of people who have less community that I do. Young people are seeking to reinvent this paradigm via facebook and twitter, but these things... and anything else that isn´t real... are poor substitutes for having a dinner party, a barn raising, or (more remotely) a village fair. There are a lot of reasons why we don´t do these things (or do them much) anymore, not the least of which are a misplaced and overwraught sense of privacy, an underappreciation of fellowship, simple time committments, and the simple fear of man (and the corresponding insecurity). I am always encouraged when I see people getting together, making community, forging bonds, and my challenge to myself and to you readers is to be more intentional in your relationships. Indeed, the same can be said for our relationship to the Lord.

I have some more things I´d like to share, but I´ll close for now. Thanks for your prayers!

Friday, July 10, 2009

Palabras V

Great week of Español, even though it was an English camp! Try these words out next time you get a chance!
escopeta = shotgun
¡chale! = oops
lagartijas = push-ups
verguenza = pain or embarrassment
sombrilla = umbrella
cuerda = rope
bato = dude
descalzo = barefoot
abanico = fan (the kind that moves air around)
manga = sleeve
sarten = frying pan
encestar = to score
cavar = to dunk
bandeja = tray
burro = donkey
borroso = fuzzy, blurry
¿a poco? = seriously?
planta del pie = sole of the foot
cinta = tape, shoestrings
moralla, feria = coins
sabana = sheet
colcha, cobertor = covers
pensamiento = thought, on purpose
banqueta = sidewalk

And my favorite word of the week: tentempie, which means snack!

Friday, July 3, 2009

Team Number 3

Tomorrow morning I greet my new team at Monterrey International Airport. There will be 5 of them, and I was told they are from the Old North State. We´ll be doing English camp at a church named Bethel, which for me means playing with kids then teaching their parents English. Pray that our efforts would encourage the church, which happens to be situated in the one of the poorer parts of town.
This week, I´ve spent a lot of time here at Pablo´s house reading. I wrote half of my short story, but I hit a wall and have shelved it. I know you´re all disappointed ;-) I´ve also hung out with the youth of Cumbres, including a good ¨cell group¨ (Bible study) last night (we were supposed to go bowling today but it didn´t happen). I´ve enjoyed the time off, especially since I´ll be in a different hotel and with a different team for each of the next four weeks. I´ve really felt your prayers... keep it up! With love. Dan

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Palabras IV

I`ve got some good ones this week:
Carcel = prison
¿Te rindes? = Do you surrender?
almohada = pillow
bateria = drums
ojala! = wow!
abanico = fan
guacala! = gross!
tentar = to tempt
enfrentarse = to confront
adivinar = to guess
taladro = drill
sancudo = mosquito
totompos = tortilla chips
pozo = well or hole
morder = to bite
meta = goal
al azar = by chance
a la carrera = in a hurry
granero = barn

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

A new friend

Just wanted to share a little about this evening. I just got back from hanging out with Pablo´s nephew, a 21- year old guy. He and his brother got me supper, so I went over to their house to eat with them and hang out. I watched the Simpsons; it´s probably funnier in Spanish than in English. Anyway, since this guy plays the guitarra, I asked him if he wanted to jam. So, for the first time in a month and a half, I busted out my harmonicas and had a good time playing along with Spanish worship songs. We then got to talking, and he ended up sharing his story: he had started drinking at age 14 because he had gotten caught cheating on his first girlfriend and had seen movies where people turned to alcohol to make them feel better. However, he quickly became addicted to it, and also did some drugs. He tried to quit many times, but he never could. Finally, he decided to check into rehab (a place called Centro de Rehabilitacion), where over the course of six months God began a work in his heart and he eventually got cleaned up. The rehab center was charismatic, and he saw many healings and a lot of speaking in tongues. Since his uncle had explain the doctrinal errors of many charismatics, he started going to Cumbres with his family once he got out of rehab, and has really been growing as a Christian the past 6 months.

Coming on top of hearing Jose Luis´ story yesterday on the hike up Cerro de la Silla (he also became a Christian in the last few years), I was really refreshed by seeing the work God is doing right now in people`s hearts. The church really is growing, and I have an opportunity to be a part of this if only I can get out of the way of God and let Him call the shots. My prayer for myself is this, and I now have a new friend for whom I can pray the same. Gracias a Dios!