I was standing on my balcony this morning and noticed how beautiful it was. I felt the sun but it wasn’t searing hot.. There was a cool breeze coming off the water, and I thought about the contrast to where I had just been. There were no cool breezes to take the edge off– just hot winds blowing dirt and dust everywhere. Our lives are so different from those we visited in Ciudad Acuna, Mexico It is challenging to step into their world.but as any of on our team would say, “well worth it”!
These trips are, at the very least, a reminder about how lucky we are; of how blessed our lives are. It seems that I take more time to stop and savor the moments of my life– more than I did before I went to Acuna. I even notice running water over the tooth brush in the morning, watering my garden and flushing my toilet. All these simple tasks seem luxurious. Certainly being clean is a luxury.
Our 8 day trip to the Alpha y Omega School epitomized who Global Support is. It was certainly a mission trip in that we helped the students paint, patch and build walls and even showed them how to work with running
electricity. The kids were extremely interested in learning and many of them gained some minimal skills in carpentry and painting and lets not forget patching drywall.. More importantly, they were the ones that helped us to help them make their school better. Vandalism is alive and well in that part of town. It is the second poorest Colonia in Acuna. These kids know more about making holes in walls than patching, and more about tagging and graffiti than painting. Having them see what it takes to repair their holes and paint, perhaps they will think twice before doing it at the school. I don’t think paint is often used on their homes as most are made out of concrete block or worse yet cardboard and tar paper. Paint is a luxury.
We made friends there. Kids that helped us every day, all day. Octavio, Marco, Héctor, Luís, Deya, Ofelia, Patti to name a few. We took 4 teenagers with us and they enabled us to quickly relate to the kids at the school. Being that they were cute Americans only helped us get the local students to participate!
Especially the boys. Many laughs were had over failed attempts at Spanish and English. We all lived with our Spanish- English dictionary by our side ready to figure out just the right word, often resorting to pantomime and charades to help. We would sit in the shade together trying to communicate about our lives. Those impromptu moments were some of the most meaningful. This was bridge building between cultures at its best.. Maybe we helped these kids to see beyond their world of hopelessness. Perhaps the door of possibilities became open in those moments?
I have found that God is in the unexpected and often the spontaneous on trips, and this one was no exception. I fell in love with two little girls at the Orphanage next door to the school. I pray for them everyday as their situation was horrendous. We would go over to the orphanage for lunch each day, prepared by two wonderful Mexican women we hired. We loved on those two children and watched them glow and laugh… They, of all of the children we met remain
on my heart.
There was another surprise encounter with a young women that we had noticed working with us, yet clearly not a teacher nor a student. We discovered she was the custodian, a local who had dropped out of school and this was her job. Jessica, from our team, and she hit it off and there was a connection that allowed us to notice and acknowledge who she was by inviting her to lunch and giving her rides home. By paying attention to her we watched her emerge from a quiet, in the background, even marginalized person to someone laughing and engaging with us, even trying to speak English. We bought her a birthday cake on her 19th birthday and sang happy birthday in Spanish that we learned the night before. From her reaction I wonder if she had ever had a cake before?
These are the moments that we savor from our trips. The moments where we see God at work, calling out people to tell them they are important. And that they do matter.