I cannot even begin to tell you how often I sit here looking at a blinking cursor and blank white page wondering how in the world I am going to put into words all that I am experiencing. This is one of those times. As a good friend described it, "New people, new food, new culture, new home, no inside plumbing... WOW!" I want to spill the beans and share each and every detail, but there is no way to recount two weeks of life and there is no way you want to sit and read that..... So, let me just share with you a few random Hannah-facts about life in rural Ethiopia.
Relationships are BIG! Whether it is going down to have coffee with some of the staff or sharing bumbalino with a neighboring family, people appreciate time.
Electricity: take it or leave it. For all of you who were worried: YES, we do have electricity. It is just unpredictable. There are days when it goes out 4 or 5 times a day, then there are times when it stays on for a full day or 2. You just never know.
Despite popular belief, Africa is not always blazing hot. In fact, here in Chencha things are pretty chilly, at least for right now. Currently, we are wrapping up the rainy season, though it has been awfully sunny for the past two days. As the rain moves away, my understanding is that warmth will move in.
BYOTP (Bring your own toilet paper). I'd say 4 out of 5 times, when you use a public bathroom, it is a TP free zone. Carrying toilet paper was a trick I picked up on VERY quickly!
Life is beautifully simplistic. There is a certain beauty that thrives in the lifestyle here. It comes from the relationships, the lack of constant connection, the freedom to be a little dirty, the mindset of giving and sharing with others even if it is all you have.
As I roll into week 3, I am happy to be pretty well settled in. I am grateful for easy adaptations, doors opening in the near future, a handful of words that I have picked up in Amharic, and the beginnings of what will amount to great relationships by the end of this year. Please pray in the coming week that God would continue to provide opportunities for me to serve, that I would continue to pick up on the language, and that in all things--good and bad--I would turn to God.



