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Too Many Coats
If you have 2 coats, you've stolen one from the poor. Dorothy Day

Figuring out how to live out all the gospel all the time...
Sunday, March 11, 2007
New Beginnings

Jet lag looms over us so that coherency is near impossible these days, but we're hoping to recover within the week. Other than that, life in Central Asia has been great! We've been exposed to a nice glimpse of the way things work here with regards to dining, transportation, religion, shopping, etc.

We went to church today that meets in a night club...talk about redeeming lost places! Coming from a church (Church Under the Bridge) that also seeks to bring light to dark places, we appreciated that this church serves as a beacon in an area that only hours earlier was a haven to sin.

On Monday we transition out of the city to the village where we'll be living for the next year. While there, we'll be in a temporary house that is already furnished until we can figure out what we want to put in our home.

I figured that these first few days will be a blur once the jet lag wears off, so I've been jotting down some initial observations while making sure to take plenty of photos:

1. It is custom here for everyone to take their shoes off when they go inside homes. Once they do, they're given slippers to wear. This is a custom all over the region. It kind of makes sense too because it's really muddy and sooty, and plus most folks use outhouses, so you don't want to track in whatever you step on out there.

2. Men greet each other with a hand shake and/or putting your hand over your heart and bowing your head. Women often kiss each other on the lips. Men and women never greet each other with anything other than a 'hello'.

3.That taxi system is pretty wild. Pretty much everyone who owns a car
can be a taxi driver. There are no taxi companies--rather, you just stand
out on the side of the roade with your arm out and if someone wants to
offer you a ride they pull over and you tell them where you want to go and
how much you'll pay. Then the driver either accepts the offer or drives
off without you. It's pretty funny. We had some interesting "taxi" rides
yesterday.

4. Lamb, lamb, lamb...I've fallen in love with eating lamb. :) Beef,
pork, chicken, horse, and lamb are all available (including all of their
heads, organs, tongues, and more) to eat. Of all of them, I like lamb
a lot. The chicken is the most expensive and isn't all that great.

Si sleeping in a bassinet on the plane ride over




Our day at the bazaar...
anyone want a sheep head or heart?


3 Comments:

At 2:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hello Faith, everyone here at the store wishes you and family well. Dolly said she is a terrible writer. She thinks of you often. Ellen says HELLO and wonders how you are doing. All of us pray you and family are settling in comfortably. We loved the story about the taxi service.

We will continue to keep you and your family in our prayers.
Michelle, Dolly, and Ellen

 
At 4:13 PM, Blogger Daryl said...

Hello Dowdy's! Daryl here. I'm glad to see/hear that you all arrived safe and are doing well. You'll get used to the whole taking your shoes off when you enter a dwelling thing. They do that in Japan too. My family has been there so long now that it's become our custom as well.

You're in my thoughts and prayers.

Daryl

 
At 4:33 PM, Blogger Adam said...

i'm collecting a list of cnc bloggers again (yours was featured last year). hop over to my blog and lemme know if you still want to be on it AND add any folks who you would like to see on the list this year.

here's the post

 

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