Friday, November 30, 2012

Stories

A relatively spacious ride on Quito's Ecovia Bus Line.

For the first time in my life, I’ve had to use public transportation for something other than getting to a Rams game. I know, I know, it’s pretty pathetic, but better late than never, right? I had to become a big boy someday. 

And in my big-boy experience of taking the bus every day, my stereotypes before arriving have changed to real stories about real people. Instead of meeting pick-pocket masters, I’ve begun to get to know the average Quiteño.

Each day, I ride at least two buses, and on each bus ride, I sit and observe these Ecuadorian people. I listen to them. I empathize with them. I put myself in their shoes. And in the process, we become a part of each other’s story. 

So, I invite you. Hop on the bus with me for a few minutes. Come meet the beautiful people of Quito, Ecuador.  

Experience 1: Life Through His Eyes

Messi and Ronaldo. Xavi and Xabi Alonso. Tarzan Puyol and the murderer Pepe. 

The names raced through my head - I was ready to get home. I was ready for the world to pause with me for the next two hours and embrace what is undoubtedly the biggest soccer rivalry in the world, Barcelona vs. Real Madrid. 

Nothing, absolutely nothing, could distract me from this game.....except...maybe....

A person.

He wore weird, dark shades and sang poorly. Very poorly. I wasn’t too interested in really paying attention to this young man . . . so I tuned him out, and I entered my own world again . . . until . . . 

Click. Clack. Click. Clack. 

He was done singing. He shuffled his feet slowly and approached my end of the bus, bumping into seats and rails as if he were drunk. 

It all seemed very weird to me. I thought to myself, “What is this man’s deal?” I couldn’t quite understand how this guy could possibly think that his atrocious singing and drunken trotting could possibly warrant any donation.

But things became clear as he methodically got nearer and nearer. With every step he took, I stared more intently. I completely forgot about the soccer game and became completely focused on this man. What’s he doing? Why does he have a walking stick?

And then it hit me. This man is blind.  
People give you new perspectives.

Yet the blind man didn’t wait for me to understand. No, he was busy surviving. He was busy begging for his lunch. Some people gave him a few cents. Some didn’t. He continued on. He drew near. He walked right towards me.

And the next few seconds seemed to last an eternity.

Though blind, he knew I was standing right in front of him. I don’t know how, but he sensed that I was there, standing in his presence. And he looked at me. Even though he couldn’t see, he looked right at me.

Then he said it - “por favor.” 

And that’s all that he said - “por favor.”  His please left me paralyzed. My eyes locked with his sunglasses. He waited. I hesitated. And our encounter was over.

As I walked home that day, I was shaken and confused.  Why didn't I give him money? Where is his family? Who abandoned this man?

I didn't have any answers - I just knew that I was going home to watch a soccer game...and that he would never watch a soccer game in his life.


Experience 2: Beating the system
The Ecuadorian youth are wonderful.
But they are sneaky too..

He was only 11, but he knew exactly what he was doing. With a deep breath and a small smirk, the young boy began to allure his audience..

“Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen,” the boy squeaked in his high-pitched 11-year old voice. “Unfortunately, I can’t be in school at this point in my life, so I’m here with you today. I don’t want to bother you, so please excuse me - I am going to sing a little song for you. If you enjoy it and can spare a little change, I would really appreciate it. God will pay you back.”

The kids here really know how to tug on your heart strings. He played the God card. He wore raggedy old clothes. He had a little dirt on his face. But his teeth were pretty white. I wasn’t sure if he was really poor or not . . . after all, he had enough money to buy a little speaker to play his beat. 

It was a “50 Cent” instrumental; he was one of the many rappers that I adored in grade school with my best friend Zak Caldwell. I got sentimental for a second and smirked as well. 50 Cent in Ecuador? I don’t mind. 

Of course, 50 Cent didn’t start rapping; the little kid did. And he was simply incredible. It seemed like the most unchallenging thing he had ever done. It came naturally, effortlessly, intuitively. After three minutes of listening to this little boy, I was thoroughly impressed. . . 

But something seemed very odd about his demeanor. He rapped well, but he didn’t even look at his audience. He was good, but he wasn’t even trying. 

He stared out the window, looking for something or someone. It was like the kid thought that the taxi driver in the next lane was going to be the one dropping a coin in his hand.  

But I was that person. I was the one with his money. I was the one digging through my pocked for a 50 cent coin in gratitude for his 50 Cent rap, not the taxi driver! 

What in the world is he looking at?

But his rap then ended, and he went about collecting his money. Now I’ve seen guitar players, singers, and heck, even bands that have tried their trade on the buses...but this little man was the one that took the prize. 

Finally, he got to the back of the bus. He grabbed my 50 cents, muttered a small gracias, and stepped off with a handful of coins. 

And waiting for him near the bus behind me was his 11 year old friend. They embraced, with mini-stereos in one hand and a stockpile of nickels, dimes, and quarters in the other. 

At only the age of 11, they were probably the most crafty bus performers that I had seen in all of Quito. They were skilled. They were smart. They were savvy.

And they knew how to work the system, 50 Cent at a time...

Experience 3: A Mother’s Life

I remember her eyes more than anything. She stared bleakly out of the window into the dimly lit streets of Quito that are so often unfair to the people that walk them. Her eyes told a story that must have been painful. Perhaps it was marked by injustice. Maybe abandonment. Possibly rape. I have no idea what her experience is, but I do know that she was suffering in that moment.

She looked hopeless.

"A mother who is really a mother is never free."
- Honore de Balzac

This woman that I encountered, she sucked the joy right out of me. It was so weird...but so contagious. Like a young boy that is paralyzed at his grandfather’s funeral, I was mesmerized by this woman’s quiet despair. In contrast to all the bored, tired people that surrounded us, this woman was absolutely demoralized.

But blessed are those who mourn. I repeated it to myself over and over - Blessed are those who mourn. Blessed are those mourn. I whispered it unceasingly. It seemed like the most pertinent sentence that I could think of. You made a promise, God. Keep it.  

I continued to stare at her, and she continued to stare into the darkness of the night. In that moment, it seemed like that’s how the rest of the bus ride would go, with both of us wondering about the depth of life’s pain. 

However, that’s not how it went, not at all. Our eyes were gently pulled away by the sound of a hiccup.  It was the sound of a content baby. Her baby. Her content, hiccuping baby.

I smiled. 

But she didn’t. 

And so I was left to wonder. I wondered if the baby might be part of the pain in her life, if maybe she was struggling to make ends meet, if perhaps breastfeeding in public was just too embarrassing...

As the lonely mother pulled down her shirt to cover her breast, the world smacked me in the face. It can be so cruel. But it undoubtedly had already beaten her down with a cruelty that I simply do not know. All I knew in that moment was that her pain was real. 

Who will meet this woman in her pain? Who will incarnate in her life? Who will weep with her? Will anyone have the guts to come sit by her during the lonely bus rides?

She needs an answer today. 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Comfortable


Smack dab in the middle of Quito, Ecuador, there is a small hill, and on top of that hill, there is a not so small statue of The Virgin of Quito

She faces the North side of Quito - the good side, the rich side, the nicer side of this divided city. And she extends her right hand over that sector of the city, almost as if to give it her blessing. From the South, however, all you see is the Virgin’s back. There is no right hand. No blessing. No nothing.

The Virgin of Quito from the North.

In Northern Quito, you don’t pay attention to the poor. You pay tribute to the powerful. 
Here, money is God and comfort is supreme. 

And unfortunately, Northern Quito and Sito Sasieta have something in common - I really like to be comfortable too. Bruno Mars sings “the lazy song,” and I sing right along with him. Kanye West  “welcomes me to the good life,” and I walk right in. 

It's foolish.

I’ve been too comfortable. And if Northern Quito is comfortable at the expense of Southern Quito, who or what is at the expense of my cushy life?

----------

According to a survey done by ex-NFL lineman, Joe Erhmann, there are three particular things that the elderly regret not doing, things they wish they had done but never did.

1: Not leaving a legacy
2: Not taking time for reflection
3: Not taking more risks

Ladies and gentlemen, 90 year-olds are begging for you to take more risks! The elderly don’t wish they had a safer, easier life where they spent more time watching The Wizard of Oz with a bag of potato chips. Just the opposite, they said life was too comfortable. 

Just consider the people that we look up to. Martin Luther King Jr. was thrown in jail for insisting on justice. Mother Teresa lived in dirty slums and insisted on feeding the poor. Simon Peter got crucified upside down for insisting on following Christ.

Mother Teresa wasn't concerned about pedicures or Nike sneakers.

Clearly they didn’t get the memo. Misunderstood, they marched on. Persecuted, they pressed on. Hated, they held nothing back. And even though they weren’t comfortable, they are some of the most optimistic, joyful people we have ever known. 

No regret here.

----------

A 6th grade teacher once told his students, “All around you, people will be tiptoeing through life, just to arrive at death safely. But dear children, do not tiptoe. Run, hop, skip, or dance, just don't tiptoe.”

The quote makes me chuckle because it is so true. I’ve done so much tiptoeing and not enough dancing. I’ve been busy doing "service hours" without serving people. It's time to wake up before I'm 90 and writing my own list of regrets. 

I’ll probably never leave a legacy like Martin Luther King Jr. or be as selfless as Mother Teresa or be as bold as Simon Peter, and that's okay.

The point is to be bold and selfless today. The point is to reflect now. The point is that I have a life in front of me, and I'm ready to live it.

So join me. I'm ready to see Southern Quito.






Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Minority


This history of Latin America is filled
 with pain and misunderstanding.

Today in Ecuador, there are a lot guys that think they are conquistadores, out to conquer their girlfriends like Henan Cortez conquered the Aztecs. Such was the mentality of “la conquista,” and such was the experience of millions of indigenous women - relentless rape. 

Unfortunately, a white girl in Latin America sticks out just like an Indigenous woman. Different, sexy - there to be conquered . . . and so the typical Ecuadorian dude often asks me, “Alfonso, ¿cómo conquistas a una gringa?”  Or in English, “how do you conquer a gringa?” How do you subdue her? How do you overcome her, overwhelm her, overpower her?

Think I’m exaggerating? Ask an American girl that’s been to Latin America. They have 60 year-old guys approaching them to flirt every single day. Policemen stare at them as they walk by. Everybody whistles at them. They step on the bus, and this is how they are greeted by complete strangers.

“Hey baby.” 
“Hey beautiful.”
“Hey blondey.”

Being a minority is hard. Damn hard. 

The realization that you are strikingly different isn’t always pretty. Rapper Lil’ Wayne wrote a song a few years back called “misunderstood”  in which he sings for 3 minutes and then rants for 7 minutes. He cusses. He yells. He laughs sarcastically, but he definitely isn’t kidding around. Heck, he even got the word “misunderstood” tattooed on his face. 

"But you don't understand me so let me explain."
- Lil wayne

Now, I haven’t gotten any tattoos on my face (or anywhere else, Mom) during my stay in Ecuador, but misunderstood is exactly how I feel. My skin color is an attraction for eyeballs on the streets; my basketball shorts look silly in a world full of jeans; my desire to be a pastor is incredibly strange, at best. 

And on top of it all, it’s easy to feel dumb when you can’t even string a few sentences together. I’m sure you can think of an immigrant in the States that struggles to talk. Their accent is thick, and they sound somewhat goofy. 

Put yourselves in the shoes of a minority just for a second. Picture the Obama supporter at a republican convention or the black student in a classroom full of white kids. Imagine the homosexual person hanging out with 50 straight people or the Muslim girl that has to explain why she wears a veil every single day. Right now, that’s me! I’m that one guy, that one guy that’s different.

And gosh, it’s tough because you become a word or a label instead of a person. You have to live with the assumptions that other people have about you. You anticipate judgment. Worst of all, nobody, literally nobody, knows you.

When all this happens and you realize that you are a minority, you have one of the three options:
  1. Blend in - You can sacrifice authenticity for blending in, but with this option your identity withers away. You dilute yourself, and you try to fit in to every situation with every group of people.
  2. Be you - You can live in the uncomfortable world with authenticity, fully accepting that you might be weird to others, and though a weirdo, you know who you are and what you stand for.
  3. Flee - You can sometimes just avoid the situation all-together. 

But here’s the thing - option 3 is out of the question for me. I didn’t come to Ecuador just to leave when it got uncomfortable. I asked for the discomfort.  I asked for the experience of my Father.

His name is Alfonso Ernesto Sasieta Li, and he was a minority with broken English, a Peruvian with a thick accent, a Latino that decided to move to a little town full of white people. He made the conscious decision to go where he had to go all the while knowing that he would be the foreigner, the outsider, and the stranger.  

But he’s not a conquistador. He’s different. He’s a man with guts. 

And I pray for these guts daily. The guts to be authentic and the guts to be like my Father, a man sure of his identity, a man willing to leave his bubble. He is humble but not haughty. He is bizarre but not boastful. He is my Father, and it is a privilege to be a minority with him.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Tired


It's time to slow down.

Yellow watermelon, mountains upon mountains of rice, and very big breakfasts. Salsa moves. Nuns who want to learn English. Dudes who rap on public buses for a living. Catholics who speak in tongues. Blind beggars. The Andes. The Amazon. Pollution. Political tension. Talking to girls in Spanglish. Reading novels in Spanish. Skyping you. Watching the St. Louis Cardinals do their thing on any internet stream I can find..

I have spent 12 incredibly weird weeks in Ecuador. But now, it’s time for me to give in and admit it.

I’m tired. 

And worn. 

And fatigued.


And the hardest part is that I feel stuck in my tired state, like I’m unable to change. It’s really a strange feeling. Perhaps you know what I’m talking about? You feel tired, down, and worn, but you can’t really explain why.

----------

Studying abroad is all about what you want it to be, and I want it to be everything. 

I want to know all of Ecuador, in all of its pride and in all of its shame.

I want to know the uncomfortable feeling of being a minority. I want to embrace a love for dance, for fiesta, for celebration... I want to understand the Ecuadorian’s survival instinct, their fight, their struggle. What is this zest for life? Who are these mestizos? What are they about? 

How can I appreciate a country if I don’t know it? How can I love a people if I don’t understand them? Can you really dance salsa without recognizing its rhythm? 

----------

Do you see the complexity of my situation? 

It was already beautifully complicated at SLU, with challenging professors and life-giving relationships, but now, now I’m living on the Equator.

Literally on the Equator...

And let me tell you, Ecuador and gringo just don’t mix very well. It’s basic chemistry, oil and water in the same bowl. They are so foreign to each other that one has a hard time getting to know the other. Yeah, we connect on soccer. But come on, isn’t their more to the experience?

I want to know this country so badly. Yet after 12 full weeks, I’ve learned that it takes energy. Lots of energy.   

----------

My time in Ecuador has filled me with a new exuberance, but at the same time a distinct tiredness too. I have a longing for home, for SLU, for the people I love, for the comfort of Carrollton, for a ham and broccoli calzone from Alfonso’s Pizza!

Though tired, I’m thankful for the new people and the new yellow watermelon. I miss home, but one day, I know that I will miss here too. So in the midst of my tiredness, I keep dancing Salsa, and I call to mind a God who loves his tired, worn children.

Hasta luego, amigos.