Thursday, November 5, 2009
A Network Could Not Be Found
An Unexpected Holiday and an Elephant
We walked through an austentacious castle and piled onto a really tired looking elephant. It was fun, but the real gem of our day was the incredible story we heard from a new Indian friend. I’m too tired do this incredible story proper justice, so I’m going to bullet point it for you. (His name either sounded like Submarine or Subaru so I’m going with Submaru for now. I’m really bad at names.)
- Submaru was diagnosed with stage 4 terminal brain cancer at age 15. He was given three months to live. He asked God to give him two years. Duing this storytelling, Submaru whipped out a pink hospital ID card from his briefcase that listed out his diagnosis. (Why do you need an ID card listing your terminal illness on it? That is India for you.)
- He went back to the hospital a week later and was cancer free. It was medically inexplainable.
- Mysore is another one of India's hubs for prostitution, and many unwed mothers have babies to use them as money-making beggars. Per Submaru, parents use their young children to beg for money as long as they are cute enough to produce. After the children get older, they are told they will no longer be supported by their parent(s). If the children refuse to leave the house, their eyes are cut out - so passersby will have pity and give them more money because they are blind. (I saw Slumdog Millionaire, and thought this was only shock-value screenwriting.)
- It is nine years later, and Submaru now pastors one of the only christian churches in Mysore. His congregants include over 150 children whose stories are like the one just described, and beyond belief. His prayer is to build a building for a church and for an orphanage, so that these children can be loved and fed. He is literally the only person in their lives who is telling them they have value in this world.
- Submaru is genuinely grateful for every day that he has. His eyes welled up with tears as he told us his story and said that he does not understand why these children have to suffer as they do. He prays that he could take their place - and that they would be set free.
It wasn't such a bad elephant ride after all.
Teletransport and Really Big Problems
Yesterday was a hard day. It was emotionally draining and physically uncomfortable. We visited three slums, one of which was home to a young slum pastor, his wife, and their three children. They rented a one-room shack for 300 rupees a month – that is about $6 USD. It was unbelievably cramped – the size of an average office elevator. Five people slept in, lived in, cooked in and stored their belongings in a space the same size as an American closet. Their youngest child was 2 months old and I wondered aloud just how they found the space in this shack to reproduce. Michael, Ted, Ashley, Austin, and I were invited in and left our shoes at the door.
The seven of us were smashed inside this house like a scene from a circus clown car – except it wasn’t funny. Dinner was cooking on the stove and there was no ventilation. My eyes burned as smoke blew directly into my face. Have you ever sat around the wrong side of the campfire with the smoke right at you? You’d just scoot your chair over a few feet - yet none of us could move. We sat still for 20 minutes and listened to this man talk about his wish for a better life for his family; yet he also told us of all the things he was grateful for. He longed for a better job that paid him fairly and allowed him to feed his family. He prayed for a larger home and for good health.
If I wanted to sound like someone with a good heart, I’d tell you that I had a wonderful time of fellowship and that I prayed and loved this man well. But I’d be lying. From the moment I put my bare foot on the dirty, musty floor of his home, I wished it was time to leave. The physical discomfort was easy to identify. I was tired, cramped and my eyes and throat were burning.
I struggle to reconcile my emotional response. My American instinct was to think of this man as a brother – the same as me. All men are created equal, right? Sure, he has the same organs as I do, the same heart. But the differences in our life experiences created a rift that was too big for me to cross.
Too big of a problem for me to make sense of today, anyhow.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Slumdogs
We spent the day visiting three local slums, meeting people in their homes and praying with them. The sheer number of people we saw today and the conditions they live in are difficult to describe.
It was truly a visual and emotional overload. Tonight at our team meeting we tried to process what we saw, but it is hard to wrap our heads and hearts around what we witnessed.
At one point a family invited us into their home and five of us stood in a room only a few feet wide and no more than eight feet long. It was so cramped that we could not stand without touching each other. The room was filled with smoke from cooking dinner on an open fire in the room. There was no ventilation and it was very difficult to breathe. It was hot, cramped, and uncomfortable, even for a few minutes. Then the father told us that five people LIVE in this home.
None of us knew what to say (other than "thank you for inviting us into your home"). The five of us could barely stand in a space that five people live in? In America we'd say this room was too small for one person. College dorm rooms are much larger. But here in India a whole family crams themselves into this space every day.
And this was not just one family. We saw row after row after row of homes like this. Home after home, as if the groups of homes would never stop.
One family asked for prayers for their health because many in their home were sick. With such a small living space and everyone in such close proximity disease spreads quickly. Add to that no clean water or sanitation, and no access to medicine or a clinic, and it is easy to see why everyone gets sick so easily. Here disease kills so many from illnesses that we would consider minor in the US, sicknesses that could easily be prevented or treated. But for the Dalits of India even a cold can be life threatening.
The sheer numbers were overwhelming today. There were SO many hurting, sick, broken people. I've never seen anything like this in my life. We want to do something. We want to help and make a difference. But with so many and such need, it's hard to imagine a solution to this problem. The poverty is simply mindblowing.
Our team is doing well, but we are all exhausted physically and emotionally. I'm now sitting in the dark on battery power because the power just went out where we are staying, which seems like a fitting end to a day that has been so draining.
I'm not quite sure what to do with today. It was overwhelming to say the least. There certainly are no easy answers. But then again, I sure didn't come to India for easy answers.
-MB
Getting Our Groove On
The ladies all got some new threads including some fantastic drawstring "MC Hammer" pants. Don't they look lovely?
Our hosts here in Bangalore have been so warm and friendly and showed hospitality like no other. They welcomed our arrival with this sign, which read "Aspen Groove Community Church."
Love it. Scott, what do you think about making the name change official?
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
Quotes from India
We spent the day settling in, getting (re)acquainted with our hosts, and eating meal after meal. By my calculation, we ate 10 meals in the previous 48-hour period. (Lunch, Dinner, Dinner, Breakfast, Dinner, Snack, Dinner, Breakfast, Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner.)
This is my second time in India. I packed my previously formulated expectations for what is normal in this country, yet I find myself discovering India’s surprises all over again through the eyes of my teammates. And It’s quite fun.
“I just don’t understand why there is an enormous hole in the back side of all of these buildings.”
“Is that a cow – walking in the road? What is it doing there?”
“What is that smell?
“We just ran a motorcycle off the road! Why aren’t there more car accidents?”
“We almost ran over that mother and her baby.”
“I didn’t learn the ‘shake the object in front of the consumer until they buy it’ technique in my marketing class.”
“Shut up!! You have maple syrup?”
And, after stuffing our faces – “It’s a good thing we have these huge drawstring pants to wear.”
We're off to visit the slums this morning. More later.
Monday, November 2, 2009
Halfway
Cheers!
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Rocky Mountain High Fructose Corn Syrup
Friday, October 30, 2009
Warp speed

Sunday, October 18, 2009
Preparations
