Posts Tagged ‘laughter’

God is Doing Good Things in Romania – Part 2

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Homemade rocket launchers and two-liter soda bottles make for a ton of fun.

Before we left home, Gene made a gizmo designed to send water-filled soda bottles soaring for about 300 feet. He packed the launcher in a suitcase and brought it along (Canadian airport security searched that suitcase after we checked it at the Vancouver airport. Thankfully Gene had placed a note of explanation inside saying it was a child’s science experiment from NASA’s website). When we arrived at the camp venue, he collected bottles by searching the ditches for throwaways and having the kids drink a few bottles dry.

On Thursday morning, the kids cut triangular-shaped fins from lightweight cardboard and then used duct tape to hold them in place on the soda bottles. After lunch we walked to a nearby soccer field to launch them. What fun! The kids loved it. The delight on their faces made an unforgettable memory.

Launching bottle rockets

These young adults face such huge challenges in life. Their health is marginalized and some suffer from depression. Many are from families where alcoholism is a problem. Some are from broken families. One young man’s dad was murdered; others’ parents have died in car accidents or are working in countries such as Italy to earn income and they rarely visit home. Their stories break our hearts, and yet they laugh. Something as simple as shooting off bottle rockets brings sunshine to their lives. Loving these kids is so easy.

I’ve been especially delighted to see my cousin’s two teenage daughters mix and mingle with the campers. The 14-year-old taught a craft lesson about making wallets from bright-colored duct tape. The 17-year-old has been teaching kids how to play drums and guitar. Together they taught the girls how make friendship bracelets from embroidery floss. And then there was the soccer game between the guys while the girls enjoyed a spa afternoon.

Spa day at camp

Again, lots of laughter and good times building relationships.

Who wants to join us next year?

Laughter — A Missionary’s Must-Have

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Nativity scene outside our hotel

Our train rocks and rolls as we travel from Krakow to Warsaw on Tuesday evening. Darkness has fallen and we’ve settled in for a three-hour ride. We’ll spend the night at the home of an IM couple – he’s a pastor and she’s a renowned Polish artist. I’m looking forward to seeing some of her paintings. On Wednesday morning we’ll fly to Odessa for the next and final leg of this trip.

During our singles’ retreat, several of the young women shared stories about their cross-cultural experiences. One told of having her hair cut and colored. All went according to plan until the electricity blacked out minutes after the hair stylist applied the color solution.

“Oh-oh,” said the stylist. “We have no water now. I cannot rinse your hair.”

You’ve gotta be kidding, thought our missionary gal. Visions of bright orange locks popped into her head.

The stylist must have sensed my friend’s apprehension, so she turned to another customer and asked her to walk to a nearby store and buy bottled water. Before that woman returned, however, the stylist remembered that the shop’s water supply was not affected by a power outage as she’d originally thought. She told my friend to lean over a sink and then she proceeded to rinse her hair.

At this point in the story, my friend burst into laughter. “The water was frigid,” she said. “My teeth chattered. Goosebumps stood a mile high. Thankfully we got the color rinsed out. Then came the haircut – in the dark, guided only by the glow of the lamp post across the street.”

Others told accounts of traveling on the wrong trains because their language skills weren’t adequate to understand the loudspeaker announcements at the station, or of living in flats plagued by mildew. One gal told about meeting the requirements necessary to acquire a visa for her host country. We didn’t know whether to laugh or cry on her behalf.

“A chest x-ray is needed to get a visa,” she said. “And so, I reported to the appropriate office for my appointment. The technician – a man – told me to strip to the waist. I waited for him to give me a gown, but none came.” Several of us listening to her story gasped in disbelief. In North American hospitals or clinics, a gown would be a given. Obviously that’s not the rule everywhere.

“What did you do?” we asked.

“Tried to act natural,” she said. “What else could I do? Granted, it was a little awkward when he led me to a different room where another male technician waited for us.”

And so the stories continued. We shared laughter, and we agreed that a sense of humor is essential for living in a foreign country. Perhaps the man who said that laughter works like a medicine had missionaries in mind.  

Easter decorations inside our hotel