Our apartment has been dreadfully bare in its decor, let alone Christmas decorations. I´ve been wanting to get a nativity set that exudes the Peruvian culture and this week settled on the one below. The hats worn are particularly Peruvian (even baby Jesus has a typical hat on), the items held and the fact that you have a llama instead of a camel just says Peru.
We also found a street vendor selling the cutest little nativity scene made out of a gourd. Open it looks like this below.
But closed you see two owls. So very cool and very detailed in the depicting of the owls.
We had to deliver one of our Christmas present early, to Natan. We found the little Santa hat in the market the other day and had to get it for him. Doesn´t he look cute? With his Christmas sweater and everything.
We've been busy in the center with PEF inquiries. We have had some good classes with those looking to apply. Next month is when we will probably seen many people come in as the university semester starts in March.
This week we met with all of our families we are working with. We spoke with Sister Cuadros finally. She is not using the sales book we had taught her to use, but has continued using her old method that is minimally adequate, but not nearly as detailled or helpful to her. But I knew it would be a challenge for her and when I got sick and we weren´t able to follow up with her, I was pretty certain the switch wasn´t happening. Plus she is not always the one at the shop. Her husband and daughter help do sales and we never gave them the training on this new bookkeeping method.
The Ponce family continues attending our pilot group on self-employment. Hopefully they will find it useful. We taught our second class and we learned that they don't always look at things in the way we do. We were talking about competition and how when coming up with a business idea you need to consider how many other business identical to theirs is in their area. If there is a lot, we would see that as detrimental. In the class, Brother Ponce said he finds it useful to have competitors nearby as it helps him see what they are doing and know how he can improve his business. He also said it makes him work harder. I wonder how many other concepts we will teach that they will not agree with.
When we visited Nilda we were thrilled to see that her laundry shop had a number of suitcoats hanging up waiting for pick up along with other bundles of clothing neatly folded. She was just finishing up with a customer when we walked up. We mentioned this to her and congratulated her on improving the work load. We asked her if any hotels had called from the flyers we had passed out. She told us one had. Score! We were excited. We encouraged her to continue handing out flyers and to follow up with the ones she had already visited so they didn't forget about her. She asked us to help her make a few signs for her business showing pricing etc. We told her to write something up and come see us in the center and we would definitely help her out with that.
Our English classes finished up for the year. We did a lesson on Christmas vocabulary and talking about Christmas traditions. We did a lot of singing of Christmas carols. Our member classes will be taking a two week break. But we will continue with the missionaries as it is business as usual for them.
Most of the week I was sneakily planning a birthday party for David. Something a bit tough to do as we are together a lot these days, but Dave helped by doing some errands on his own so I was then able to sneak out and make arrangements for a special cake to be made by the Ponces, and a fire truck pinata
First I offered to take Dave out to the lunch of his choice (lunch is the main meal here). However, Javier invited us to lunch at his favorite polleria, so we took him up on his offer. Below you will see what Dave chose for his dinner option.
Burger King has been running a 2 for 1 deal on Whopper combo meals and for about $5.50 we could both eat a combo meal. And the hamburgers actually taste like hamburgers.
We then headed over to our English class at Inti Raymi and we experienced deja vu. Remember last week at the end of the lesson we had a rain storm that turned the main street into a river and left snow laying around? Well another storm hit and the street was a river once again. This time I got photos.
You can see the gutter system just couldn't handle as much rain as was coming down and the Cusquenos told us it really wasn't that big of a rain storm.
Try crossing this intersection.
I had asked Brother & Sister Ponce to make a special cake for Elder Rhoades. That is the business they would like to open and be successful at. I told her I wanted it to have a llama theme as Dave had gotten such a kick out of being a llama in the folk dance we did back in July. Here is what she came up with. The cake looked like ruins. Dave said Sacsayhuaman, I said Machupicchu, but it was very realistic looking as you can see in the close up below.
After getting pretty well soaked and having plenty of taxis pass us up, we finally got over to the chapel, probably about 45 minutes after I thought we would. I guess we are now acclimatized, because that is how punctual most Peruvians are. There were only a few members who stuck it out and waited for us. I'm sure the rains put a damper on things. We are learning that people just stay home when it rains really hard.
That is not Sister Ponce holding the cake, however, that is Sister Garcia, wife of the stake president and a faithful English class attendee. She is a lot of fun.
Below is a photo showing all the people who stuck it out, except for Javier who is taking the photo. Left back is Olga Espejo, wife of our ward bishop, Marcia Garcia, and her two sons are on the right. Brigham just got back from his mission recently and Alan her oldest son. Then in front are the Ponces, Atitlano and Nidia, the aspiring cake artists.
The cake was fabulous, but pretty pricey by Peru's standards so they are going to have to cater to the upper crust of Cusco society I think to be successful.
Here is the birthday boy and the birthday wish they had written on the board. They wrote it in English and did pretty good, all except for one word. Can you spot the error?
When the pinata finally broke and the candy came down, you would not have know everyone in attendance were adults. They all acted just like little kids. We laughed a lot and had a good time.
So look below to see what I came across on one of our shopping trips. It is a kilo (2.2 lbs) of a solid semisweet chocolate bar. What? That means chocolate chip cookies or even better with Christmas near, fudge!
Saturday I tried it out and it turned out perfectly the first time I tried it. The altitude didn't seem to make a difference with this recipe.
Dave didn't want to stick around the house while I experimented with some cooking so he took off to his favorite market, Barrattio. I made him swear not to spend too much money. He was gone for 4 hours and I was sure he had broken his promise, but nope. The reason for his delay? He was doing missionary work.
One of the old book dealers saw his name plaque and asked him if he was a Mormon missionary. He told him yes and then proceeded to talk to him for more than an hour. Dave learned that he had only one child, a son, that had died at the age of 10 of lukemia. It had broken his and his wife's heart. He had been so traumatized by it, he had left his profession in the tourism industry and had struggled to deal with his grief. About two years ago, he walked into one of our Mormon chapels and asked to speak to the bishop. The ward members befriended him and he begun to attend the meetings and take the missionary discussions. He said he had been invited to be baptized and then had a job transfer out into the countryside and lost track of the church. His wife had never been interested in changing her Catholic religion, but now that he is back in Cusco, he had been looking for the missionaries as he has an interest in finding that peace and comfort he had felt while attending the church two years ago. Dave got his name and number and is anxious to find out which set of missionaries he can refer this man to.
Saturday night we attended the Cusco stake Christmas Recital. It was a pretty big deal. They had this Christmas tree decorated in the cultural hall.
The choir members all wore matching outfits. The women in red blouses and black skirts and the men all had dark suits and matching red ties.
I snuck into the practice room and took a few shots as they were preparing themselves to perform.
(l to r) Calif Munoz, Jeremiah Reyes, Jaime Reyes, Paola's brother who has been attending the PEF classes, Alan Garcia
And of course, Elder Munoz, the full time missionary who is a genius when it comes to piano playing. He can sit down and play almost any song and vary the accompaniment so that it sounds professional. They used him to accompany a lot of the ward primary groups.
Here is the full choir performing. They sounded much better than we expected. Hispanics are not well known for their singing abilities, but they had worked hard and you could tell. As I looked at the choir as they performed, I couldn't help but notice how many of them we now know. Of all the men, there was only one that we didn't know and many of the women we were familiar with. What a difference six months can make. I can still remember the first Sunday here and how awkward it felt to not know anyone.It was a very nice evening and helped fill a void I was feeling. Now that I am older, one of the things I looked forward to the most about Christmas is not the presents, but the special programs you can attended that help bring the Christmas spirit and help you focus on the true meaning of Christmas
Spiritual Thought of the Week: Jeffrey R Holland - "You can't separate Bethlehem from Gethsemane or the hasty flight into Egypt from the slow journey to the summit of Calvary. It's of one piece. It is a single plan. It considers 'the fall and rising again of many in Israel' [Luke 2:34], but always in that order. Christmas is joyful not because it is a season or decade or lifetime without pain and privation, but precisely because life does hold those moments for us." "Shepherds, Why This Jubilee?" 2000