This past week or so has been pretty routine, so I am thinking about the little things in life. Sometimes they make life difficult, but sometimes they provide pleasures and contentment that keep me going. (You can decide which is which!)
The rainy
season is ending. I have talked before
about the torrential rains that come in the last weeks. Grass grows as you watch it (only a slight
exaggeration). I have found out that the
lawnmower here can cut grass that is wet (something I was always warned not to
do in the US). You have to cut it when
it is damp or wet since there are long periods when it is either raining or
everything is wet. I also found out that
the mower will cut tall grass as long as it is not thick. Look at the height of the grass in the photo
and the other side of the path that was cut yesterday. No problem!
(The view is from my house looking toward the Bible School pictured in
the background.)
Cheap stuff
is not worth buying if you think of the long-term and the consequences. When I
got a new toilet last year, the plumber bought a cheap plastic seat (the only
one available in GB). Toilets and seats
are not sold as a unit. You can see from
the picture that the seat was not quite the same shape as the bowl. And, it is thin plastic. With time, as you would expect, the mismatch
and the weight of bodies (mostly mine) using it caused the plastic to crack.
The first two cracks were small and in places that it didn’t matter. The third, though, was a “cheek pincher”! So, I made a black bandage. I had the word out that I wanted a new one
(and hopefully one that fit). While I
was in Yaoundé applying for a new passport, I bought a new solid seat that
(almost) has the right shape. Still, it
is so solid and thick that it shouldn’t crack even with the slight
mismatch. Interesting colors, don’t you
think? (That was the only choice. Now there are matching seats in ELCA houses
in Yaoundé, Garoua Boulai, and Meiganga.)
I am still
using the borrowed computer that will go to Bouar when I get a new one. It had Windows 8 which I don’t like. A technician here told me that he could put a
legal copy of 7 on it and I was happy.
After having installed 7 (and all the programs, too) twice, there are
continuing problems. Every day or so, I
get a black, white, red, or blue screen that stops all work. Fortunately, when I turn the computer off and
restart it, all the work comes back. The
technician says it is some hidden format that makes the computer continue to
look for Windows 8 features. Sigh. This week we are going back to 8 (which will
mean re-reinstalling all the programs - again).
Big sigh. Meanwhile I am saving
everything twice – once to the hard drive and once to a disk – just in
case. (I have always been one to back
things up, but not hourly…)
I am
teaching two Trauma Healing Equipping seminars in GB. Last year, I taught the lessons to the Bible
School students in a Healing Group. This
year we are reviewing the lessons as I help them learn to teach in a
participatory way – that is making the participants do most of the talking and work
in the learning process. This is not
easy for these students as it is far outside of their learning experience. We are, however, making progress. (They have worked in pairs to plan and teach
three 10-minute lessons. Now they are
all up to almost acceptable! Next week they will try teaching on their
own.
The second
seminar is happening on five Saturdays in a row with Lutheran Church leaders in
GB. We have completed three. The first week we were scheduled to start, we
had to postpone because there were two local funerals that almost everyone in
the class had to attend. (These are the
church leaders, after all.) We have had
a little trouble since then with absences or tardiness, but most are present
most of the time. All who come are
actively involved and highly participative.
(So, how do Bible School students who don’t understand what it means to
lead and actively participate get to be dynamic leaders like those in this
Saturday class??) It is a joy to work
with them. They ask perceptive
questions, raise relevant points related to their work and life in GB, and strive
to grasp information and methods presented.
I love teaching! (That’s a big
thing that has lots of little related aspects…)
I have a
new, solid screen door! No one can cut
this screen (which is double the thickness of the one on the last door). Even if someone did, s/he couldn’t get
in. No space between bars and a keyed
lock (with no key left in it). Now I can
have ventilation in security! And,
people can know when I am home. (By
custom, people of the region will not knock on a shut door. They assume the person is not home or, if
there, resting and not wanting to be disturbed.)
The Bible
School Palm Oil Project (long-term project that will help make the Bible School
more self-supporting) also grows some food crops to help nourish the students
and teachers. The yams were just harvested. These are not yams like we get in the
US. They are huge! And, white
inside. Here are two of the three I got
as my share. (They would have given me
more, but one lasts me a week!) Ever
seen this kind before??
I miss the
music that was on my old computer.
(Fortunately, my sister found the back-up flash drives that I left in
Philadelphia and I will get them next month when someone comes this way. I am very grateful to have made the back-ups
and that people are generous with their limited suitcase space to bring me
replacement stuff. That’s when I’ll get
my new computer and camera, too.) But,
since I had little music, I tried out a couple of CDs I found here at the guest
house in GB. I don’t know who left them,
but they are interesting! Both are
musicians from the Central African Republic.
One, Laurent Eze, made the CD (Ïn Blue Note”) himself (it seems from the
poorer recording quality.) I can’t find
him in an internet search, but know he’s from CAR because of the Sango in which
he sings some songs. Some great
keyboarding, too. The other is Bibi
Tanga and the Selenites (“40° of Sunshine” – that’s Centigrade – hot!). The internet says he is a Central African,
son of a diplomat, based in Paris. Some
songs are in Sango, some in French and some in English.
The other
CDs I have (Ricardo Arjona’s “Sin Danos a Terceros” and Julieta Venegas Ötra
Cosa”) are from my friend Eduardo in Ecuador!
Yes, he sent them by DHL from South America to Cameroon – it only took a
little more than a month! Ricardo is
from Guatemala and Julieta from Mexico.
So, I have world music! And,
certainly enjoy listening to it.
I had a
local tailor make me a blouse based on a model I had. It fit the first time! The blue and the embroidery are attractive,
no?
So, what
are the little things that you are thinking about these days? What questions do you have about other little
(or big) things in my life in Cameroon?
Note: I have not mentioned the situation in CAR
because it is unchanged. Bouar, Baboua,
and Gallo are calm. The roads in the
west are passable if one goes with the UN escort. Violence continues in Bangui and other towns
in the central and northern parts of the country. The elections were pushed back (again) from
the 13th to the 27th of Dec. They really want to have the first round this
year (2015), but insecurity continues to be a huge issue. Pray for peace.
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