Tuesday, April 24, 2012

We have a New Bed!

They say that it's important to get a good night sleep!  I'm sure a good bed goes a long way to making that possible.

Our New Bed - we are really excited!!
We have been using an air mattress which has been good, but it keeps us pretty close to the ground which makes for a pretty long "spring out of bed" in the morning (not to mention in the middle of the night).  There’s also all the creepy crawlers who live down at ground level and like visitors - even when the visitors don't like them.  So, we were in the market for a new bed.

This is the air mattress being deflated for removal!
We actually wanted a platform bed so that we could have some storage space underneath for plastic boxes with our clothes.  We only found one platform bed for sale, it was rather high off the floor, had a huge black lacquer headboard, and was almost $500 for just the frame (or platform). 

We opted to buy a mattress, some wood, stain and polyurethane, and make our own!

We had a couple building parameters:
The height of the headboard was limited to 36” by the window.
The plastic boxes are 10.5” and so the space underneath should be about 11.5”.
We wanted a pretty normal height for the bed which should be about 24” to 26”.
We didn’t have a lot of money for this so we planned on no more than $100.

I made the design myself... well, actually there were vestiges of ideas from the waterbed we had early in our marriage.  I was a little concerned about strength but it has turned out to be rock solid!

We are very happy with the final outcome and the total expenditure for the platform frame was actually under $85!

You can view the movie of us setting up the bed!! (It's only 3 min 20 sec)



Friday, April 6, 2012

Semana Santa and Carpets in the Streets

A tradition in Honduras for Semana Santa, or Holy Week, is the alfombras en las calles, or the carpets in the streets.

So, we headed off Friday morning, 4-6-12, with our friends to 'El Centro' (downtown) to see the colored streets!

Here's Ellen with Chad and Nikki standing behind her.

Our first stop was to watch a procession in the streets depicting Christ's journey to the cross.  Amazingly, the streets of Tegucigalpa were all but vacant this morning.  Even so, there were police present at either end of the procession and blocking off the street - very nice.

The people that were gathered were very intent on the procession and very solemn.

They just acted out the part of stripping Jesus of his robes and beating him.

"Cristo es la Resurrección y la Vida" which is: Christ is the Resurrection and the Life!

The people use colored sawdust to created amazing designs.

Some are just incredibly colorful patterns and others are actually pictures depicting scenes from the Easter story.

Some of the pictures were being made freehand as this one was.  They first draw out the picture on the asphalt in chalk and then fill in with sawdust.  Here a woman is working on the beard of a man's face.

This is the same picture from another angle.  You can see how nicely the faces have been made!

Other pictures and patterns use large stencils made by cutting out cardboard.

Here is a huge stencil made by taping several sheets together.  The image that's being made is a picture of Moses standing before the separated waters of the Red Sea.

Occasionally I would talk with the people creating the designs and once I was actually invited to help!

These folks had already been working through the night on multiple designs and everything has to be completely finished by 11:00 am Saturday.

This video shows the design creation in process!

The alfombras bring lots of tourists and so, just like in the States, there are vendors selling snack stuff.  She's is selling a variety of chips... like fried plantain.

He's selling gum and other candies.  We bought some 'chicklets'.  All the gum is 'chicklet' but the gum we purchased was trident.  They were sold in tiny little boxes, with four little pieces, all for 15 limpera for two boxes (about 75 cents).

There are several people stationed around with water tanks to spray the sawdust to keep it in place.  Notice there's also a police officer to his left.  There were plenty of police in the streets to deter would be thieves and trouble makers.

This was a huge picture and very well done, though it doesn't quite show up as well in the photo.

Great last supper scene!


My favorite!  Jesus is The Good Shepherd!  All who trust Jesus for salvation are the sheep of His flock!

"I am the good shepherd. 
The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep."
John 10:11















Semana Santa at the Rio

This is Semana Santa, or Holy Week, and it is both a huge religious celebration and vacation time.

The big positive is that this is an easy time to talk about Jesus, His death and resurrection, and what that means personally.

The big negative is that for many this is a big time of drinking.  So much so that everyone says to limit driving, drive only during the day and the morning is best, and in no way drive at night.  The man in front of Ellen at the grocery store was buying 28 cases of beer.  Maybe he's having 200 friends and relatives over and it's really not that big of a deal.  Then again, maybe he's having over a few...

We went to the river with Pastor Arturo's church on Tuesday.  They were having a picnic and baptism and would be staying most the day, but we said that we could only stay part of the day and would leave early. When we met up with the group at a central square in a nearby town there were ten people needing a ride!  We took them and realized that the Lord had plans for us to stay the whole day!

We went to a place where people go to dig out sand for construction by a river and sometimes in the river.  Because of that, the last bit of driving was rather tricky and felt more like an X games 4x4 course rather than a road... not that it really was a road!

There was a short hike from where we parked to the edge of the river.  This really had the feeling of going to the beach in the states - sand, prickers, flies, and really, really, hot!

There were about 20 kids of various ages, and about 10 toddlers.  We had several moms with us but Pastor Arturo and I were the only men.

No sooner had we set our bags down, the kids raced for the water, and the swimming commenced!!

The folks we were with don't have extra income for swimsuits so we all just swam in our clothes.  Which is still every bit as wet and fun as swimming in swimsuits!

Some of the folks went off to try their luck fishing.  They didn't have poles but rather used circular nets with small weights along the edge.

Pastor Arturo has a lot of experience and skill in this type of fishing and you can see him here making an expert throw.

The catch wasn't big... both in numbers and size, but they did fry up nicely!  If you look closely you'll see little crab legs sticking up in the front of the pan right behind the handle!!  These are like little mud crabs.  I got to taste one (shell and all) and it tasted... crabby.  Well, what was I expecting?!

When the fish are this size they just fry up the whole body and you eat it, head, tail, and all!  Yummy!  I think Arturo wants more!!

We also enjoyed the watermelon that's currently in season!  Super sweet and sometimes super silly too!

After lunch, Arturo had a word to share followed by prayer.

This was followed by a children's lesson given by Ellen and Arturo's wife, Griselda.

They used an object lesson given to Ellen by a woman from our home church in MD.  There were 16 colored plastic eggs (symbolizing new life), and in each was something to symbolize a part of the passion of Christ.

There were things like little silver coins to represent the 30 pieces of silver Judas received to betray Jesus, and a little horse shoe nail to represent the spikes put in Jesus' hands and feet, and a tiny little sign that read "Este es el Rey de los Judios" (This is the King of the Jews), and many others.  The children really seemed to love this lesson.  They were excited to be picked to come up and open an egg, and equally excited to talk about what it meant.  PTL!!!

There were also four baptisms.  Here an older woman who has just recently accepted Christ is being baptized.

Three children were also baptized including Arturo's youngest son!  Arturo's son is in the blue shirt.

We had a blast and were blessed!!  It was so much fun that we could almost forget... forget the material poverty around us and the ugly stain of sin that seems to touch every person.

Ellen is holding a beautiful little baby boy and his mother was also there enjoying the day with us.  She is 15 years old and the baby was fathered by her mother's 70 year old uncle.   The father of the baby takes no responsibility for the child and shows no remorse over what he's done.

Another young lady of 18 at the picnic had a three month old baby girl with her.  She had left her family to live with a man, but he beat her daily, and so she finally left him and returned to her family...  already pregnant.

Of course, there's the regular drinking that plagues the nation and at a peak during the celebration of Holy Week.  These are all symptoms that reflect the heart condition here.

The answer is not simply 'education' as some say or meeting material needs, but rather the need is for new life!  A change in heart and spirit.  A realization that in our own strength we are helpless to overcome and change ourselves, but that Christ has already lived the perfect life for us, that He came and died that we might live and live abundantly!

"The thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. I (Jesus) have come that they may have life, 
and that they may have it more abundantly." 
John 10:10