Showering with a "Ducha"!
Showering
with a "Ducha"
This
morning I was reading Hebrews 11:13-16. It says:
All these people were
still living by faith when they died. They did not receive the things promised;
they only saw them and welcomed them from a distance, admitting that they were foreigners
and strangers on earth. People who say such things show that they are
looking for a country of their own. If they had been thinking of the country
they had left, they would have had opportunity to return. Instead, they
were longing for a better country—a heavenly one. Therefore God is not
ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared a city for them.
Having just returned from a trip to Honduras, I
could relate to being a “foreigner and a stranger.” I also will admit that by
the end of the week, I was ready to return to my home country. But as I
pondered the passage it didn’t take long for me to realize that as a believer I
really wasn’t home yet. Later, as I wound the old kitchen clock that had
been in my mother’s home and rearranged things on the mantel where my Dad’s
sepia colored photo sits, I felt a pang of nostalgia: Not only did I miss my
parents, but with all the craziness in the world, I really longed for my heavenly
home.
I’ve been to Honduras five times, so you think
I’d be used to it. But I could not get used to the shower contraption they
called a “Ducha.” In all the years I’ve traveled there, I was not able
to master the ducha. This year, I listened intently to the details of
adjusting the water to make it hot. Missionary-friend and man-in-the-know about
all things Honduran, Frank gave such clear instructions, I knew I could get it
to work! In past years I always had to ask for help.
A ducha is a “great idea” if you
don’t want to deal with a traditional water heater. With it water is heated
just as it comes out of the shower head. However, electricity is
provided in such a way that you can see the wiring as you stand below it,
inspiring fear and trepidation. “Don’t touch it!!” Frank admonished. “It is
nick-named ‘the widow-maker’”!
The best was to describe a ducha is to
imagine a boxy bell, but I also think it is shaped a lot like the toilet paper
roll covers that ladies used to knit to cover the spare roll of paper; the
slight curve at the bottom of the knit t.p cover is designed, perhaps, to look
like a hat. In addition, the ducha sports an upward plastic extension going
from the top side of it, like a feather stuck in a hat!
Here are the instructions I received to operate
the ducha successfully to get hot water: turn the singular shower handle
all the way to the left. This starts the heater, giving you the means to get
hot water, eventually. Next, carefully turn the handle back to the
right, (all the time praying for hot water as you do so). Only, be careful not
to turn it too far to the right, because if you do, the heater will turn off
and your hopes of hot water are gone. Remember: less water equals hot water;
too far to the right equals cold water. If at first you fail, “try, try again.”
Patience is definitely needed.
On this particular evening, when I understood
the clear instructions, I looked forward to mastering the art of hot water by ducha.
Everyone else on the trip had gone to the local gas station to get snacks.
However, with an unforeseen failure in the electricity, mastery would have to
wait. The electricity dimmed off and on, and then went out completely. No hot
water, but even worse, no light! I stood in the dark, thinking. I was thinking
a lot of things, none of them pleasant. Why did I come on this trip?? Where was
Bruce when I needed him?? Who was going to preach a sermon to me in the morning
and tell me you have to “go with the flow” down here?? All I wanted was a flow
of hot water. Was that too much to ask!?
In the dark I found where I had left my clothes,
got dressed, and found my phone. I went outside and carefully crossed the
cobblestoned paths of the courtyard, hoping to find someone in the
reception office. Asking for help was the last thing I wanted to do, especially
since I was in my pajamas and slippers.
Instead of finding the humor in it, I fumed. No
one was in the reception office, and not knowing the password for Finca el
Capitan, I couldn’t access the Wi-Fi with my phone. I was trying in vain to
reach someone else on the trip. I knew my fellow travelers would laugh to see
me out in my pink pjs, but going back in a dark room was not an option. Finally
a young man appeared and in my “best” spanish I said, “Tengo problemas con
la luz en mi cuarto, y no tengo agua caliente.” He disappeared without
saying a word!
Three minutes later he came back and showed me
his phone which said, “I will help you with your light and water.” I was
a foreigner ready to return to my own country! It did not help for Bruce to return
and remind me “we are in a third world country.” “Yes, I know. I’ve been
here before,” I whined. “Give me thirty seconds to be grouchy.” I
took longer than that.
After a relatively good nights’ sleep,
considering the windows had to be left open, I woke up and looked on the
“bright side”. Yes, I heard barking dogs, crowing roosters, periodic
firecrackers, which are used year round, and backfiring from many motorcycles!
But I thought, I will only be here for a week, and then I’ll go home.
It also helped me to remember that Jesus left
his heavenly home and became a man so that He could suffer and die in my place.
What little discomfort I endured could never compare. I reminded myself I was
here to love on friends from the little community in Cenicera, and that my
creaky bed in Gracias was far better than any they had up there on the
mountain.
The electricity was back
on that morning, and I am pleased to say I mastered the ducha. I got my
hot shower that day, and every day for the rest of the week. Great instructions
Frank! Yes, I’m happy to be “home”, but I still await being happier in
my heavenly home.
Love your sense of humor during trying times. Keep writing. You have a gift of sharing life's experiences!
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