I'm currently living and working in Macas, Ecuador, on the edge of the Ecuadorian jungle. I teach English to elementary, junior high and high schoolers at the only Evangelical Christian school in the province.
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Reentry
It was hard to come back to Ecuador, for the first time ever, I find myself missing family and friends in the States! Not that I didn't actually miss people before, but it wasn't much different than when I lived in a different area of the country from them, now I'm much more aware of them not being close by. It's an odd feeling, and I suppose I should figure out what it means! :) Coming back wasn't all that hard, other than missing people (and NOT wanting to leave my nephew!!!), I slipped back into life here, as if I hadn't been gone. In some ways it felt as if I had been gone a really long time and in other ways, as if I hadn't been gone at all. Other than the fact that there's more humidity here, I wasn't noticing that much difference, I know a lot of people everywhere I go, both here, in Macas, and in Oregon (case in point, I went to the mall in Salem with my grandma and saw at least 10 people that I knew and/or was related to, without planning, I can do the same thing walking down the street here!). I can cook at both places, talk with people, etc. Then I got online this morning and was reading some friends and cousins' blogs and heard something out the window. Reason number one why living in Ecuador is different than living in Oregon: it's the annual festivities celebrating the anniversary of the virgin's appearance here (at least I'm pretty certain that's what's going on) and so they have a parade. There's a parade for practically everything here, which is fun, since I love parades, although most are really little or the not so interesting civic parades when all the students and teachers dress up in their formal uniform and then the police and military parade behind the students. The folkloric parades are MUCH more interesting!! :) The parade going on right outside my window, right now, is made up of people from every single parish in the country!!! At least that's what it appears to be. :) I could be wrong, it's possible a few parrishes are missing, but the ones that ARE here, are certainly from all over, there's some from Quito (7-8 hrs by bus), Guayaquil (10-12 hrs by bus), Loja (10-12 hrs by bus, I think) and everywhere else, too. Each group has a banner with a saying, either from a Catholic father, or a verse from the Bible, a picture of the virgin, and where they come from. Each group also has it's own uniform, usually the same t-shirt and baseball cap (think youth group mission trips at the airport ready to leave) and singing a different song from the other groups. It's amazing the devotion that people show towards the virgin here; it makes me wonder what they would be like if they turned that devotion towards Jesus! People are incredibly devoted, but it makes me sad that they're putting their devotion into a person, granted a person who (if it really was a manifestation of the virgin Mary, they never actually say that it's Mary, just a virgin) helped change the world by giving birth to Jesus, but she's still human, not God. Why worship the created, when we can worship the Creator? He's more powerful! The parade definitely reminds me why I'm here, to show people about Mary's Son, Jesus, she was His mom, but He's God! :) Definitely different than in Oregon (of course, that might have something to do with the fact that it's one of the least churched states in the country, at least that's what I've heard), oh and it's really green here, too. Maybe I should send some pictures of the green to my mom, she's been missing it. :)
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