Monday, March 13, 2017

3 Vacation Bilble Bootcamp Day 1



My main assignment in Ecuador was to help in Arts and Crafts, (so obviously my resume got to the right people). Since 500 people show up on the first day, there is a wait to see the doctors. The St A's team brilliantly organizes arts and crafts for the kids while they wait. 

And we ain't talking crayons and and a pair of scissors here.  No sirree.....2 days, 300 kids, and extravagant crafts that your average useless accountant can't do.  Imagine the entire contents of Hobby Lobby shipped to Ecuador and deployed with military precision:  Vacation Bible Bootcamp

The first session was making beaded bracelets. Judging by their excitement, you would have thought these kids were getting a Tiffany bracelet at the end of this session.  I was worried threading the wire through those tiny beads might be too tough for the little kids, but apparently it's a lot easier when you don't have to look through bifocals to do it. 

My assignment was to greet each kid and then start their bracelet for them. When they finished, I would then put on the crimper bead to secure the fastener. I started out asking their names, but I’m pretty sure the first little girl's name was Ayiyaiaiiia and so was the second girl's, so I quickly dispensed with the pleasantries. (It's not like my name was any easier for them....so whatever)

It took me a little while to get the hang of the crimping bead used to secure the fastener, especially when you are trying to push 200 kids through this process and Ayiyaiaiiia Is. Ready. For. Her. Bracelet. Dammit.   In fact, if you got your bracelet in the 8 o'clock hour, you were pretty much screwed. The plaza outside the school was probably strewn with the beads (and dreams) of the children from the first hour who were assigned to "Señora Alta".  (Actually, I scoped out the other gringos and I wasn't the only one having trouble applying all that higher education to the task at hand.)

I did note that there appears to be no universal symbol for "put out your wrist" (so I could try on the bracelet).  I spent many a precious minute trying to chase some kid's hand around the back of his body. (The personal connections I was making with these kids are truly the stuff of missionary lore). I'm not sure what he was afraid of....maybe that the tapping of the wrist is also the universal sign for handcuffs?

There were so many kids that every once in a while a niño would get on a roll before I could stop him and he would get halfway to a belt instead of a bracelet. Given the traffic we were trying to push through A&C, I had little choice but to wrap the beaded masterpiece around his wrist a few times, tell him he would grow into it, and send him on his way with a "que bueno!! adios!" 

As I sat there huddled next to a dozen 6 yr olds all tugging on my recently acquired REI camp shirt, I couldn’t help thinking there's something precious about close proximity to a child emerging from acute medical care.  It makes this assignment especially inspiring (and contagious, methinks).  And I know we're not supposed to drink the water, but what's the position on putting the bracelet liniment that's been sitting on the table with the six year olds in your mouth to get a fine point to thread through a bead?  But I will say this....I could debit and credit my way to eternity and ain't nobody gonna be as excited with my work product as that six year old boy was to get his properly finished bracelet. 

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