Our long first two weeks…

Our first two weeks here on the islands were long and exhausting.  If you ever have the need to be adventurous, try sharing one room in a hot sticky environment without running water or reliable power, for a month (more or less) with 5 other people (only one of them being an adult)!  Also, try for a week to keep the non-adults from falling into a deep cistern, big ditch or an open fire as they dance around danger in different directions at every waking moment.  Yikes!

Anyway, after a week of orientation and a week of home stay, we are now moving and settling into our house!  (House pictures to come… I haven’t taken any yet… too busy sweeping, mopping and trying to kill mosquitos…Sorry!)

Happy Birthday Josiah! He turned 3 during our home stay and a team member brought over a cake!

The first danger for small children: Open cistern in the back

2nd: Open Fire Cooking

3rd: 15 foot drop off the back door

Host Soulai opening up a fresh coconut for drinking (after he climbed 40 feet to get it with his hands and a banana leaf !)

Brother cutting up some sugarcane for the boys.

New road to come?

Cooking green bananas.

Homestay family and friends

Waterside view…

Saying bye for now…again

As we leave our new friends that we made at our orientation, it reminds us of what it means to be in this line of work…denying what comes easy…leaving what is familiar, fun, and comfortable and starting over again.

Some good friends

Josiah and his friends

Good friends don’t let friends take baths alone!

Friendly turkey (at a local Kenyan home visit).  Dale has not lost his touch yet! Island chickens get ready!

Mark and his climbing buddy in a loquat tree.

“Help me climb this tree!”

It’s always hard to say bye for now…

Learning Cross-Culturally

Last week we learned about Cross-Cultural Perspectives and Communication.  What culture do you come from or identify with?  Are you a ‘universalist’ or ‘particularist’?  Polychronic or monochronic? Do you communicate ‘directly’ or ‘indirectly’?  How do you change your style to communicate to a different culture more effectively?  Needless to say, we are being challenged and the final exam is cumulative over a lifetime! =)

Besides the mental challenges, being immersed in a new culture comes with some physical challenges.  Some of us…well almost all 70 of us have been a little sick in one form or another.  A lot of us have gotten traveler’s diarrhea, gastroenteritis (vomiting and diarrhea), runny noses, cough and fever.  Abigail has had diarrhea for the last 4 days and Big Dale got sick last night after a home visit and dinner with a local Kenyan family. Think about us as you talk with the Father today!

This week we leave to go back to Nairobi and on Saturday Aug 11th we will be on the islands!   We will have a little more orienting to do then do a one week home stay with a family from the local culture before we move into our house at the end of the month.  We look forward to finally settling down soon!

Washing hands before eating

 

Princess Abigail watching the “talent show” as people volunteered to share their talents on our last Friday!

Dale and Mark sharing brain teasers at the “talent show”