We've begun saying our goodbyes. The toughest one was probably with Carmen and Genaro, they have been our closest friends here and we will miss them terribly. We still have a few more visits with them before we go and a dinner out with them (Tortas Kuwait!!) but it has been difficult to say goodbye. Pastor Lupe has been by a couple of times and all of our neighbors have been weighing in and telling us how much they will miss us.
Last Sunday night after two and a half hours of church in a little windowless building stuffed with 60 plus souls and no air conditioning we were all hot and tired and ready to go home. But a very enterprising push cart vendor parked his cart across the street from the church and he was selling ice cream cones for four pesos each. Talk about an entrepreneur! He was instantly overwhelmed and nearly everyone from church got a cone. We just about wiped out his entire supply of ice cream. We all milled about on the street and sidewalk visiting in the warm night air. Jose Miguel and Jazmin had their wedding pictures from two weeks ago so we were passing those around and admiring them and just generally visiting with one another. It was one of those moments when I thought, hmmmm, this won't be happening in Olympia!!!
One of our neighbors, Yolanda, is a tiny, sweet, yet rambunctious little Christian lady and she came by and was admiring our plants on the patio. She particularly loved one of the weird little cactus plants that Ralph had and I would have loved to have given it to her but another neighbor had just bought the whole lot. The next day when Maribel came to pick up all the plants I mentioned how much Yoli liked that particular cactus but she didn't comment on it at all and I thought oh well. Last night Yoli came by and said Maribel had given her the plant as a gift. She was thrilled to death to have it!!
We've been selling things off, trying to get back down to what will fit in the back of the pickup again. That is really our toughest challenge!! We do have most things sorted and many of them packed at this point, essentially just the basics that we are using every day left to pack. I think we'll be okay getting it all in at this point.
The selling of stuff has been kind of a riot. We had several people vying for our living room set and one lady wanted it saying she would return last Thursday with the cash, but she didn't show up so we sold it to someone else. The first lady showed up after that and was upset that it was sold, so I took her number and said if the other lady changes her mind for some reason it's yours, never thinking the other lady would change her mind. But last night she showed up and had done just that. She decided it's too big for her house and could she please have her money back! So we did that and then called the first lady to let her know it was hers if she still wanted it. We should know today if it goes back on the block or not. Too funny.
One lady gave us a deposit on our washer in dollars but said she needed to keep the dollars and wanted to have them back when she came to pay in pesos and pick it up. No problem. Others have paid and picked up their stuff already and the house is beginning to look a little sparse.
And our landlords came by yesterday afternoon and wanted to let us know how much they would miss us...they even wanted us to come over to their house for dinner but we won't have the time to do that unfortunately. When was the last time your landlord invited you for dinner?
Our truck gave us a bit of a scare on Monday too...several of the guys came over to help Ralph get the canopy back on the truck and discovered that transmission fluid was leaking out! And our 30 day warranty on the transmission work was long gone. So we prayed a bunch on Monday night and got up bright and early Tuesday and took the truck back to the Ford dealer. Bless his heart, our neighbor Henry followed along to give us a ride back to the house and to interpret if we had the need of that. Ralph explained the problem to the service adviser and he took a look at all our paperwork and announced that it was likely just a seal but that the would have to keep it for a few days. Turns out it was a seal, praise the Lord, and even though the warranty was expired they did not charge us for the repair, again praise the Lord, and we had the truck back in two days!! Now it's in the shop at Dakota for the road worthiness check, belts hoses, brakes, etc. and we should have it back tonight. One more thing off the checklist of things to do before we go.
Through all of this we've been trying to squeeze in some online job hunting and have both applied for a few things. I even have a telephone interview scheduled for August 13th! Amazing what technology can do! A few years ago this would not have been possible at all due to delays in mail and whatnot. Now they can just e-mail and set things up. Please keep the job hunt and the house hunt in prayer!
Life here is winding down and life in Washington is beginning again, little by little. We are thankful for all we have learned here and all the people we've met. God is good!!