I have been overly impressed by all that Merida has to offer. I Like to refer to the Yucatan Peninsula as a hidden treasure. There is so much good here, so much to be seen. The first thing I've grown to love is the beautiful landscape. From the surreal blue oceans to the Mayan Pyramids, I could basically write an editorial on all the reasons to visit this beautiful place, but I may sound too much like an advertisement. Besides the physical beauties and the wonderfully rich culture, the city of Merida has specialties unlike any other major city in Mexico. There are programs here that I have been so impressed with. Unlike many other corrupt cities in Mexico, there is a lot of government funding that goes towards after school programs for the community teaching the all sorts of skills like dancing, sewing, cooking, and painting that helps people sell their products to support their families. likewise, many kids who's parent's work in the city market don't see a need for education because they expect their children to simply take over their shops when they are older. Again with government funds, a program was set up on the fourth floor of the market to educate the children during the day so they don't miss out on a formal learning experience. This program takes the children out of the streets and helps them be able learn valuable skills to help their parents progress in their shops and gives them further opportunity
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Thursday, August 2, 2018
Wednesday, August 1, 2018
Turning Enemies Into Friends. You are the Gift.
As I’ve been pondering on what Sharon
Eubank would want me to take away from her devotional entitled “Turning Enemies
into Friends” I have discovered a lot about myself and how I can make myself
the gift in all my service endeavors. If I have learned nothing else, it is
that people are important. People are more important than the service being performed,
more important than the money being raised, and more important than any of the
political factors that may separate people. There mustn’t be any strangers
among us.
This time here in Merida has been
interesting for me because I have had more free time than I am normally used
to. We work in the mornings but because of the extreme heat we have the
afternoons free. Sharon Eubank gives an excellent example of two animals that
spend their free time differently, one being an eagle, soaring high into the
sky, and the other a pig, rolling in the mud. I’d say that free time isn’t the
most common commodity now days and thinking about wasting it made me sick to in
the stomach. I have tried my hardest to use this time to make better habits
that would help me be successful in my internship and that would be sustainable
to make me better as I return home. I want so dearly to be as the eagle,
working hard in my free time to soar high in the sky. I want to be clean, pure,
and worthy of the atonement in my life. To do this, I have spent a lot of my time
trying to learn all I can about the topics we teach here in Mexico. I hope that
in doing so my conversations can be more uplifting and educational to all the
people I interact with here.
I’ve realized in doing so that it
isn’t always about what you know, but how you see people. We can know all the
latest health trends, teach people about nutrition, or even supply opportunity to
succeed and build new habits, but in the end, none of us know anything perfectly.
We may all be a little right, but we are all wrong in some respects. That may
only make sense to me, but I feel oddly okay with it. In the Book of Mormon we
read about Ammon, a true prince to the name, that while working with the
laminites, sees and refers to them as his brethren and nothing else. True
learning and loving don’t happen until we see everyone as our equals. We are
all brethren here, and there should be no more strangers among us.
Who are the strangers among us? Who
are the people who don’t feel like they fit in? It is because of what they wear?
The color of their skin? They way they talk? How do we get everyone on the same
playing field to start with? True questions to ponder. “AND IF A STRANGER
SOJOURN WITH THEE IN YOUR LAND, YE SHALL NOT VEX HIM.”
I believe that one of the biggest
parts of not “fitting” in or continuing to feel like a stranger has a lot to do
with the hunger for human contact. Not the kind of contact you get ordering food
through a drive through, or passing others on the sidewalk, but the kind that
makes you feel important, the kind that warms your heart and makes you want to smile,
the kind that makes you want to interact more. A very powerful quote from her
devotional reads “it’s not the clothing, not the hygiene kits, the school desks
or wells. It’s you.”
To be the gift, I have tried harder
to listen with patience, to speak with kindness, and to listen with real intent,
and this has made the world of difference in my project, and in my life.
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