Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Guatemala, Day 6 (Thursday 10/26/17)

Thursday morning required a little more get-up-and-go so we could eat breakfast, check out of the hotel, and load our luggage in the truck. While we waited, I took a few last photos of the hotel grounds and also snapped this photo of our team’s back rub train.

Taking one look at Katie’s eye, we realized the problem wasn’t an irritation from the water party. It looked to me like pink eye had set in. We showed her eye to Blanca, who conferred with Jaime. Katie hated everyone looking at her swollen, red eye – and it was hurting her, too. Jaime made a call to a pharmacy, planning to pick up some eye drops on the way to Caballo Blanco.

We left the hotel, stopped at the pharmacy, and I gave Katie her first dose in the parking lot of the pharmacy. She was already struggling a bit with the pain and the belief that everyone would be staring at her red eye. She decided to wear her sunglasses all day long to cover up her eye.

We got in the van and made our last drive to Caballo Blanco. On the way, Nestor and Jaime agreed to let us stop at a beautiful overlook we had passed every day. We got a quick group photo, then hopped back into the car.

Also on the way, we stopped at another photo opportunity. We had passed fields of these beautiful red flowers every day, and I always begged Nestor to stop the van so I could take photos. Finally, Nestor agreed and I got to snap a few photos through the van windows. Blanca jumped out of the van and snagged one for us to see up close. It’s called Brain Celosia or commonly known as Red Cockscomb. Jaime told me they’re grown once a year and sold specifically for Day of the Dead.

Once we arrived at Iglesia Bethania, Jaime gathered us and the pieces for the pump so we could assemble it and lower it into the well. But before that, we got one last look into the hole before it was capped.

Then we got to work.

Each person grabbed a section of PVC pipe that was attached to a rope held by Connie and Mary. The first pipe section was lowered and then the second section was glued and fitted to the first section, then lowered. The third section was added, and so on until we reached the bottom of the well.


Next, each team member grabbed a metal bar with a loop on one end and a hook on the other. These bars were lowered piece by piece into the PVC pipes we just installed in the same way – all the way down to the bottom of the well.


Jaime and Nestor capped the well then added the pump handle. While they worked, Sonja started teaching the kids who were hanging out with us a few songs. Of course, they started with the Baby Shark Song! Then the kids taught their own songs in Spanish, and Blanca helped translate the words.

When the handle was installed on the pump one of the men started priming the pump, working the handle up and down until – FINALLY! – clean water started pouring out. Once the water started flowing, all attention turned to the well. Everyone crowded around and the kids took turns pumping out clean water.

Someone produced a bar of soap and hand washing began in earnest.

After a few minutes, one of our team members decided to fill their water bottle at the pump. This was a really beautiful sight to see because it was the proof the locals needed that the water from this well is SAFE to drink. Every day we had been there, the gringos were careful to never drink local water. The Guatemalans knew this was because the water wasn’t clean and could make everyone (including them) sick. All of a sudden, the new well was spewing water that was drinkable even for the gringos! The very next thing to happen was one of the women approached the well with a glass and filled it up, then drank from it. This was the moment when everything crystalized for me: all these days of hard work, all the months spent preparing for the trip, and all the years since Katie was seven years old and won this trip and started saving to fund a well on her own. We got to see a dream come true as clean water gushed forth from “our” well.

Everyone lined up for photos around the well: photos of Katie and Hannah with the kids, photos of our team with the kids, and then a photo of just our team.

In celebration of this moment, I pulled out a pineapple stamp and an ink pad and asked Hannah to stamp each kid’s forearm while I took photos. It was my way of passing on the love for my Hawaiian ohana, Leilani (who is called the Pineapple Princess by her family).

It was time for us to head inside the church for our dedication ceremony and worship service. The church members had reserved the front row seats for our team and it took me a moment to realize the men were separated from the women. After we sat, we were welcomed by the pastor and elders and then a few soloists got up to lead us in worship songs.

Katie was very self-conscious during the service because she removed her sunglasses to be respectful in church. She was also in pain from her swollen eye and sweaty from being inside the hot church (we all were), which made her pretty miserable. It was hard for her to enjoy the service.

After a while, our team members were asked to come stand at the front of the church. I wasn’t exactly sure why, until every church member stood and formed a line to hug us one by one. It was overwhelmingly beautiful and such an honor.

At one point, I stepped out of line to take a photo and happened to catch Dan’s eye. His chin was trembling and he was tearing up, just like me. A thought popped into my head about the significance of this day in my life: on October 26, 1996 my brother Jackson died from cancer. Now, 21 years later, I was celebrating life on what has typically been one of the hardest days of the year for me. I felt God redeeming this day in a way I never expected.

After the line of hugs ended, everyone took their seats again. The pastor asked any team members who wanted to speak to come to the front and say some words. One by one, we spoke while Blanca translated for us. As much as I hate public speaking, this was actually the most enjoyable public speech I’ve ever made. Maybe because I had to slow down and wait for translation? Or maybe because I felt like the room was full of people I could consider friends and extended family.

When our speeches ended, boxes of Bibles appeared and each team member grabbed a pile to hand deliver to every adult in the church. Every person I handed a Bible to had this look of pure joy and gratitude on their face. Not only had we helped this village access clean water, but we got to give them God’s Word – the true living water that sustains eternally.

The pastor ended the service by asking everyone to step outside and circle around the well. He prayed a dedication over it, gave it a few pumps, and we all clapped when the ceremonial first water poured out. We spent some more time taking photos around the pump. This family photo includes a drawing Jackson made for us to take to Guatemala, so it’s the closest thing to having Jackson there with us.

Just ten minutes later, it was time for us to say goodbye and leave town. We gave countless hugs and many thank yous, and just as we were about to depart our friend Alder ran up to give us one more goodbye. He didn’t think he’d be able to see us before we left, but he got out of school and raced to see us. It was the perfect farewell, then we loaded the van and waved goodbye while some of the kids chased our van down the road.

We made a short stop on the side of the road when we were talking about crops we were passing. Blanca told us the fields were full of sesame seed plants, which made us very curious. She snatched a plant and showed us the pods on it.

When you split the pods, you find tiny sesame seeds inside! Blanca told us the farmers let the pods dry on the plants, then harvest the seeds by walking along and shaking the plants to loosen the sesame seeds into waiting baskets.

We drove an hour back to Retalhuleu and stopped at our hotel for a potty break, then hit the road for Antigua. The time stamp on my last photo in Retalhuleu said 12:51pm, which will become an important fact a bit later.

Katie’s eye was hurting a lot, and she needed some quiet time to withdraw. She sat in the van’s back row and listened to music on her phone, while the rest of us chatted a bit and settled in to relax for the two-hour drive.

About thirty minutes into the drive, traffic came to a standstill. We sat patiently, then curiosity got the best of Dan and he opened his Waze travel app on his phone to find out what the traffic issue was. He could see an incident just a little bit up the road, and we realized this was a good time to refuel, have one last bathroom break, and buy snacks at a gas station right beside the road. While we waited for the bathroom and bought snacks, rain started falling. All of a sudden, Nestor and Jaime started hurrying us to get back into the van. Some of us were still buying snacks and got flustered with converting the money, and I think we ended up spending WAY too much money on Snickers and Cokes!

When we got back into the van, this was our view of the road and the huge traffic jam that had only worsened while we stopped. Yes, traffic was stopped both ways, with drivers making their own lanes on the road’s shoulders.

Nestor and Blanca explained what Jaime found out at the gas station: apparently there wasn’t a traffic accident up the road. It was a highway shutdown! Local truck drivers were protesting working conditions by simply stopping their trucks in the middle of the road and causing chaos for the police to clear. Jaime was told the mess could take a few hours to clear or maybe even a few DAYS. What?! Jaime’s plan was to slowly work his way through the traffic and get to the area where the protests were centered, which is where the traffic jam ended in one direction and started in the opposite direction. We all hunkered down for a long drive, thinking it would just be a slight delay. Yeah… right! Eventually, we passed a gas station where a bunch of protestors were gathered. You can’t see it well in this photo, but this was it.



Katie had been steadily feeling worse because her eye kept hurting, even with ibuprofen. She was still sitting in the back row of the van and seemed to be caving into herself the longer our road trip took.

We kept driving slowly for what seemed like forever. The traffic would clear just a little bit, only to get bogged down in other areas because now the oncoming traffic had a huge jam. Once we cleared the major messes, we stopped on the other side for a quick break. When we stopped, I asked Katie to hop out of the van and let me add more drops to her eyes. By this point, I had started putting drops in both eyes because I noticed her touching the “good” one once in a while. She refused the drops until we were far enough away from the van where no one could see her, then broke down crying on my shoulder when I finally got them in her eyes. My heart ached, wishing I could make this hurt less for her – or at least get us back to Antigua so she could go to sleep.

When we got back in the van, Katie and I hogged the back row so she could stretch out with her head on my lap and (hopefully) sleep. As we started the last leg of our epic road trip, someone decided we should start singing hymns to pass the time. This is when the holiest part of the entire trip happened for me. At first, I barely sang in the back seat because I didn’t want to wake Katie if she slept. Instead, I tried whispering the words as a prayer to God to help her feel better. Pretty soon, the whispers turned into shaky songs and then became full-out worship. From my seat I could see everyone in the van, singing along and even raising their hands in praise to God. I had my sweet daughter’s head in my lap, giving her comfort and stroking her hair. Dan was in the front seat, nodding his head with the singing. In the midst of this bizarre, endless road trip situation with our bodies crammed into a van, our stomachs empty, pink eye spreading by the minute, and not knowing when we’d make it home, we could actually turn it into a two-hour long worship service unlike any I’d ever witnessed. I felt God’s presence in that van with every song we sang in testimony of His glory.

I wish I could share photos of these moments, but the van was dark and the roads were bumpy. I do have dark videos of the singing, but only because the audio is something I wanted to capture so I could relive the moment later. Of course, no video/audio recording could ever measure up to those moments in the van on a dark Guatemalan highway.

We finally arrived at the Living Water compound in Antigua around 8:30pm, after leaving Caballo Blanco at 11:40am. What should have taken three hours took a total of nine hours. We were hungry and tired, and Katie was barely hanging on so I whisked her to our room and got her into bed. I wet paper towels for her to wipe her eyes (then throw away), and we curled into bed together. She finally fell asleep without eating dinner, so I went to grab a quick dinner before everyone headed to bed.

Click here to read about day 7 of our trip to Guatemala. (The link will work when the next blog is posted. Soon!)

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