Just as I’m about to go to bed, the water comes back…so I fill containers for 30-60 min. instead Still thankful for water! |
Bathing with very little water (or just not bathing much!) becomes part of the variety in life rather than an Olympic undertaking… grabbing a torch (flashlight) when the lights go out and swiftly moving dinner over to the backup gas camp stove seems like a minor move rather than frantic feat. That’s not to say some of these things don’t get to me sometimes, they do, but they are smaller hurdles than in our first year. Day to day life is still often a problem solving activity.
One of the food stores we shop at regularly: Chipiku. |
So, less lifestyle altering things are new to us, but there always seem to be new relationships. The expat community is always revolving with some doctors and teachers coming for a year or two, short term missionaries for 6-18 months and people visiting any of the above. Although we are 5 weeks into the new semester, learning names of new students at EBCoM is still a common activity. And just when I think nothing much new has happened lately, a new cultural nuance will strike me back into feeling like a beginner again. It keeps me on my toes, and often my knees.
Byron Borger says
Thanks so much for writing this, so real, so helpful to see what your life is like, now after three years. May God bless your work and witness. Keep writing!
Beth Huffnagle says
Can it be that you have two full years of Blantyre life under your belts already? That seemed a long way off when you started, and now it is your new normal.
I would like a post on the sounds of Africa; do you still hear them, or has it all faded into the background?
Looking forward to each new chapter in the blog!