Thursday, November 22, 2007

HAPPY THANKSGIVING


This is a picture of our Thanksgiving dinner. I thought we weren't going to do anything to celebrate Thanksgiving, but we put something together last minute. We woke up this morning and went to the flea market, where the favorite buy of the day was two pounds of the most beautiful strawberries I have ever seen for 20 pesos.
( that's $2 USD) Also bought potatoes for the feast later.

I bought a roasted chicken because the only way to buy a turkey here is alive, and then I would have had to kill it, pluck it, gut it, and cook it. GET REAL. Not only do I not have the stomach for that this week, I also don't have a pan big enough or an oven, so that was pretty much off the table. When we went to get the chicken Justino got excited about some ribs they had for sale, so we bought chicken and ribs instead of turkey.

I made mashed potatoes, but gravy doesn't exist in this country and since I didn't actually cook the chicken I had no drippings to do it from scratch, so I bought the closet thing I could find which was a cream of chicken and mushroom soup by campbells. It wasn't too bad.

I bought rolls, and then forgot to put them out so we will be having chicken sandwiches tomorrow.

We had corn, no stuffing or cranberry sauce. It was all about basics. There is also no pie here. I could have made one, like a chocolate cream, or banana cream since Jello is big here, but again, no dishes or oven, so I bought a "Pay de Queso" which is like a less rich, not quite as decadent version of a cheesecake. The best part was the coke.

My father in law came. Two hours late, which worked out because we only have two plates. He didn't eat pie, so more for me.

It all happened fast and was pretty anti climatic. I was trying to be grateful, in light of the day, but wasn't really feeling it until later when we went to see a sister from the church, and she invited us in. She has two small girls, ages 1 and 3. Her husband is a nice, decent guy and there is a loving feeling in there home.

It was looking around her house that gratitude filled me. We walked through a sheet that is hung as the only door, onto dirt floor. One room constitutes their whole house. We sat on a bench that came out a van that is the couch. The table is a rusty old refrigerator turned on it's side, and a newer smaller model sits precariously one one end so as not to rest in the dirt. She has a camp stove just like mine, and another small table to one side where she works. She was so excited for us to visit, and immediately insisted that she cook for us.

Such a gesture really touched me, because often we have visitors come to our house and I would love to cook for them, but am almost always intimidated by my toy kitchen and unless I have something already made, I fall back on the excuse that I don't have the space or the dishes to entertain. She made gorditas for us. They are like a fat tortilla with salsa and cheese, that you eat like an open faced sandwich. They were good.

As we waited for her to cook, I examined the structure of the house. One wall was concrete, and the other three where big cardboard boxes that had been flattened out and nailed together. I am not sure what the roof was made of, but it seemed to be at least a pretty solid protection form the rain. It was raining and I didn't get wet.

Behind the couch was the small bed where the whole family of four sleep. Eva and her two girls jumped relentlessly on the bed and laughed and loved it. They kept jumping from the bed to the couch, to the floor. I was mortified at all the dirt that they were tracking up on the bed, and I kept trying to clean off Eva's feet. Finally the sister told me, that it didn't matter, that they were used to the dirt, and she would clean it off before they went to bed. I was also horrified at the bugs that were all over the bed. They were new bugs that I had never seen. Look like a thinner fly with six spider legs, they were crawling and flying all over the bed. I just kept praying that they didn't bite and if they did that Eva wouldn't get bit. Last Sunday she got bit by something on her finger and it is still twice it's normal size and below the bottom knuckle is red and feels like she has a gum ball shooved under her skin.

Eva face and hands where covered in dirt by the time dinner was served. Justino looked at me and told me not to put any food in her hands, as to by pass the dirt, and head right for her mouth. That didn't go over so well, and before I could do anything about it she was eating fist fulls of dirt covered bean gorditas. She loved it, ate like a champ and had a ring of mud around her mouth by the time she finished.

As we walked home to what now seems like a palace, I finally felt the gratitude that one should have on this day. Every year for some time now I have made a list of 50 things I am thankful for, and as I think back on those lists I don't think I was ever thankful for the basics, like food, and flooring, and clean water. It never crossed my mind to be thankful for those things, because I had never given one thought to the possibility of life without them. Now I have seen what some people live without, and I am so grateful for the floor in my apartment, that is not dirt. I am so grateful for the walls that are not cardboard. I am so grateful for that sweet sister who is so happy and gracious even without those things.

I don't think I have ever given much thought to the first Thanksgiving. A day originally celebrated for a good harvest. They were in a new land, and they were grateful that they had enough to sit down with their families and new friends and eat. I bet they didn't have fancy china. I bet their kids ran around and played in the dirt, and even got bitten by a few bugs in the new world. But they recognized their blessings, and founded a day all about that. I woke up today ungrateful and focused on missing the extravagance that is Thanksgiving in my house. I am going to bed grateful and humble to be like the pilgrims, in a new land with new friends, and with my husband and daughter, and for the blessings I have. I truly have enough, not alot, but enough. I am so grateful for that.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

A less than perfect post about three significant events

I have decided that although I have had the perfect post in mind to address the following three significant events, I have found myself in the last three days without the strength to carry it all out. SO instead of delaying all the good news any longer, I will settle for the less than perfect post, that lacks pictures and is several days overdue.

1. My angel sister in law sent me the last installment of the wonderful Harry Potter series, and as I have been without books since I read the last ones she sent me, in August, I devoured it in two days. There are some perks to being sick, and now I hope it will be obvious why I haven't been on the computer as often as usual. I loved it by the way.

2. I GOT AN AUTOMATIC REAL LIVE, MADE IN THE STATES WASHING MACHINE. This news really merits it's own post. I had it all planned out, but due to illness the photos didn't get taken, and now I have had the washer running since Sunday, and it seems all very anti climatic. However, late or not, the fact that my hand washing days are over is not only extremely timely, in light of #3... wait we are getting there, but the most grateful bliss I have felt in since I got to Mexico. I even got, thanks to a neighbor downstairs moving, hookups for the washer. The original plan was to fill it with buckets. I still trek to the roof to hang dry, but oh the wonderment of being able to wash and sweep the floor, or take a nap, or cook lunch or WHATEVER at the same time, because there is a machine sweating and getting wet in stead of me as the clothes are scrubbed clean. I am so happy. I love my new washer. It also has magical powers because the first night I was here, some other neighbors that were moving tried to steal my new beautiful new toy, and my washer woke the up a wonderful soul who confronted the thief. He played dumb and said that he thought that was his wives washer. As if my new perfect in every way washer could be his wife's old beat up piece of junk that wasn't even hooked up. How rude. The worse part is that the thieving scum is a member of the Mexican AFI, ( like the FBI) supposedly employed to catch the bad guys, but like much of the law enforcment and security of this country, he is actually the bad guy him self.

3. Now for the biggie. The presence of an interesting unmistakable group of symptoms, and the absence of something else, it is has become quite clear that I am pregnant. Justino is elated and excitedly making this announcement, so I thought I better make it official. I estimate that my due date is July 16. I am not excited about being pregnant in a little town where there is grossly inadequate health care available to me, and where the idea of refrigerating meat is only sometimes embraces, ( the smell really sends me over the edge in my current state). But I have a washer, and the weather is cooling off, so I think I will survive. I am haunted every day thinking of having this baby without Justino, which unless we get our miracle by July will have to be the case, because I am not going to have to apply for legal status of another member of my family, so I will have to return to the states for the birth. Jusitno says that at least something in out life isn't hanging in the clutches of cursed limbo, and he is right. Our family is progressing. We are now waiting for one more member of our family. And that truly does bring us joy. Our stake president said in stake conference that joy is different from happiness. He said that joy is eternal and happiness is fleeting. He said that our happiness will rarely be complete because of the nature of this life, but we can have joy in our trials as we rely on the Lord. I am not very happy. I am sick, and scared and I don't want to face what is coming up. But I have perfect joy knowing that another beautiful baby is coming to be part of our family. And that is enough for today.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Yes, This really is happening

So yesterday in our stake conference ( a stake is a group of several congregations of our faith that are all in a similar geographic area, presided over by a stake president) I was in charge of the choir. We got there early for the last choir practice and suddenly Justino is telling me that the stake president wants to see me. Why I wonder.... must be about the choir.

So I get in there, and he says, how is the choir? Good... chat chat..... and then he says, "Sister Mora will you support your husband in accepting the call to preside over the Ejidal Branch?"
( Branch is a small congregation, Ejidal is the neighborhood, or area we live in, in Martinez de la torre, and where all the other members of the branch live) "We would like him to be the new Branch President?" ( a voluntary position that entails overseeing all the spiritual and logistical progress of our branch)

I am thinking, NO WAY will I support him in this calling! This is such a HUGE repsonsiblity to oversee the whole branch.... besides don't you know that we are leaving soon, dont you know we have no money and no job? Don't you know that our daughter is the biggest distraction there is in our whole branch? but I say...

" Yes president, I will support him" ( tears streaming down my face)

And then I say "President, I am crying because more and more it seems like I will never get back to my country, and more and more we are running out of money, and we have no job. we have gotten some ridiculous offers, and some not so ridiculous offers that would mean working on Sundays, and we have decided that we will Honor the Lords day and serve in His church, but...." he stops me and says,

" I promise you that the Lord has a work for Justino to do in this area, and I promise you that you will be blessed with every needful material thing for your good, and I promise you that you will be taken care of. I also promise you that you will go back to your country, but first the Lord needs you here. Someday you will understand why."

By now I can't even speak I am bawling so hard. Tear that aren't really sad or happy tears. I think tears of finally knowing what God wants us to do. We don't have to keep wondering if we are going home soon, we aren't. We are going to be here for a while. I haven't heard a word from the government since Sept. 28, over a month. Now we can stop waiting. We aren't coming home... yet.... at least not for a while.

Now we know it is going to be a long enough while that it is time to settle down.
This really is happening....Holy shit...
( oh wait I shouldn't say that I am the branch president's wife... hee hee, somethings don't change)