Before  you begin to read this booklet that I am writing, GO GET SOME CHEESE!  No... Really! Go get it!  I am bringing the whine! It has been a month  since I was last in touch with the world. We have a lot of CRAP to catch  up on. Literally, well... sort of.  
     
     
Where to begin? The  beginning of September we had a small team. With this team I met a  wonderful new friend who convinced me to join her church the following  week. They were doing a medical brigade in Copan. If you know me at all,  this took no work on her part. I love evangelism. I love medical out  reach. This is right up my alley! It is why I even fell in love with  this country! AND... Of course, I had to invite along the best dentist  (my sometimes better half) in the world. Why? Because I can't leave him  behind while I have all the fun. Or maybe it is because I love watching  him cringe as we send in one last patient to pull an additional 7 teeth  when he thought he was done for the day! ;) Really, it is because I love  doing  ministry with him. I love watching God move. I love serving together.  And I love him! This just presented one minor problem, what do we do  with the kid!?!  Oh, quick fix! Send him home with Mimi! That was easy.  She left the day before the brigade began! I was a free woman! Almost!       
    It  was a wonderful week. We had the best weather! We saw so many  conversions and got to plug people into COMMUNITY! And we didn't just  meet the spiritual needs. We met the physical needs too! We saw between  700 and 1,100 people each day! IT WAS INCREDIBLE! My heart was full! I  was getting rejuvinated. Partially because I didn't have to be a mom,  but part because I was able to be a part of what I love! Minus the  waking up at 5am each morning. 8 days away from Jayden flew by so  quickly! I left the team to catch a 1 am flight back to the USA so I  could get my little dude. I DECIDED, Nilsson needed to come along. His  birthday was the day I was leaving and I didn't want to see him alone.  Not to mention, he missed the Jaydi boy too! He already had a ticket  that he hadn't used so we just needed to change the dates. It was going  to be a wonderful 2 week vacation / babysitting. (My family needed a  live-in to make sure my 15 year old brother didn't blow up the house,  and still got to school each day while they went to a conference.) It  was good. Nilsson left us early because he needed to get back to work.  He had already missed way too much time in the clinic due to the  brigade.  We said goodbye and I waited another 7 days until my family  came back.
    I find out the day before I am supposed to be going  back home to Honduras that my e-ticket was one way, not round trip like I  thought. Normally, I could care less. I would just enjoy more time with  my family and try to see more friends that I never get to see. Not this  time. I had to be back by the 6th of October because we only had  temporary permission to have one of the ministry vehicles here. No big  deal. We just have to drive across the border for 72 hours and come back  with renewed permission. Upon return, we were going to try and pay the  introduction so we could register the suburban. This was just the plan!  We scrambled trying to find a cheap ticket for me to get back in time.  As I am confirming plans to make sure Nilsson comes to pick us up at the  airport I am hit with some crappy news. 
    1.) Dona Dora (The  mother of Jaydens aunt) has colon cancer. It looks like they caught it  in time, but she has to go in for emergency surgery. This woman is the  sweetest most devoted christian/catholic I know. She is full of wisdom  and patience. It isn't her I am worried about, but her kids and  grandkids. They are the ones that would be most hurt.  
    2.) This  is the worst news. Nilsson has not been able to work since he returned.  The air conditioner in his clinic went kurplunk. AND here is the  BIGGIE... His compressor isn't shooting out enough pressure. It all  looks fixable.  He thinks. Bad thing is unless someone needs teeth  whitening or some wisdom teeth removed he is out of business. He is  still waiting to see how the repair turns out.  
    I buy my ticket  hoping Nilsson will resolve his clinic mess in time to meet me so I do  not have to cross the border alone. It just isn't safe. Or smart. Not  that I think he would let me go alone. I just was hoping things would be  fixed first.
     
    I get into San Pedro and it is 10:30 am.  Nilsson doesn't answer my calls. Jayden has fallen asleep in my  arms. I have him and all our bags and I am pushing the luggage cart through the  airport trying to come up with a plan. I sit in the mini-food court. I  wait. I have now been waiting for 8 hours to use the rest room. I  thought I would find relief here, but now Jayden is asleep! He tortured  me through the flights, AND through the connection in Houston, and NOW  HE SLEEPS! AGH!! I was angry that I got stuck next to some old fart that  seemed to hate kids. I know Jayden isn't easy, but he can be really  sweet. He is wild, demanding, and makes a lot of noise, but he also  gives lots of hugs and kisses. Normally this happens right before or  immediately after commiting a big NO-NO! He is only 16 months.  This  vicious grand-dad didn't even want Jaydens blanket touching the arm  rest. I actually hope he has no kids. If he does, they are pretty messed  up people. I am sure of it. 
    As I am getting desperate, and  thinking I need to pee my pants or leave all of my things and lay Jayden  on top and pray nobody takes him, I see the airport janitor. I plead  for her assistance. As I walk away in a hurry for the bano my phone  jingles. Nilsson informs me he is still 3 hours away even if he was  ready to come get us, which he is not. It was followed with, "so what are you going to  do? Who is going to get you?" WHAT!?! I have the kid and I am just  finding all of this out and you think I have some plan? Like I knew I  needed a back up plan? I am dumbfounded, but don't really care because  at the same time my bladder has found relief and is singing  "HAa-LE-LU-JAH! HAaa-LE-LU-JAH!" I was distracted to say the least. The  call dropped. I think I heard him say let me see if a friend can come get you. I  don't care. I really didn't. I had food all around. Jayden was  sleeping. And I got to pee! Life was good! Sort of... I walk out and I  hand the girl 50 lempiras. She smiled and was grateful. This perked up  her day and made her think I was her best friend. I was exhausted! I  didn't want to talk, she did. Nilsson calls back, yes, he is sending his friend. I  don't know if it is male, female, the name, what car to look for,  nothing. He just decided this information was not important. But I will  be picked up by 1. At least they can take me to the suburban! I didn't  want to have to pay $30 for a taxi and have problems with luggage and  trying to get the vehicle out of where it was stored, and worry about Jayden runnin around. I am at ease  knowing that someone semi-familiar is going to help me. (NOTE: I have no  clue who this person is, nor have I ever met them!) Two hours later  Nilsson tells me to go outside and to walk towards the grey Toyota  Yaris. Seriously, this is kind of freaky. What do I find? This cutely  petite girl about my age. I am too ashamed to ask her name. She knows  mine. She knows Jayden. And we talk like we have been friends for years.  She was BELLA!!! (Beautiful) Inside and out. She watched Jayden while I  manuevered the semi out from its position and loaded up the bags. We  hug goodbye and talk about getting together for dinner when I am back  and we both head out on our ways. I call Nilsson. Still not done. He is  trying to catch a bus, but the next bus all the way to San Pedro is at  6. This puts us WAY behind on time. I start to spazz. He informs me of another  bus that is going to Tela at 2:30. This sounds good to me, but... My phone  dies. Totally dies. Not because of the battery. It had half of its life  left. It just died because... who knows? I scramble. I was also talking  to my dad about papers that needed scanned and emailed so I could cross  the border and extend permission. I go to the closest phone store to see  what I need. I enter in a frenzy trying to complete my conversations  and trying to see what I need to do next. And I have to wait. And wait. And  wait. This is common here. Employees like to play with phones and watch  television while one co-worker tries to pacify all of the clients. I  finally get someone to help me only because Jayden is screaming. I  told him no he couldn't climb the shelves like a monkey. (It got me  attention!) I ask for the cheapest phone that has a battery charge after  he said it would be an over night and a minimum 600 lmp fee to look at my  current phone. Five minutes later I am out the door making calls back to  the states and looking to see what plan Superman has derived. He is on a bus  already headed towards Tela and had the expectations I was going to  drive 30 minutes back the opposite direction of where we need to head to  pick him up. I am game because this still puts us back on track time  wise to cross the border in time before the permission expires. We meet  in Tela. He was waiting on me. I don't know how this happened, but I  guess I made too many stops along the way trying to kill time. We head  out towards Tegucigalpa. We got five minutes out of the city and the  police stop us. Yep... Asking for money. What for? Some random project  they are trying to complete. (You know, like eating dinner.) We give  them 50 lmps and are back on the road. 30 minutes later, another police  stop. Gah. This is INSANE!!! 100 lmps and we are on our way! Two hours  later, another police stop. This guy has a handbook with the new road  rules that he is trying to sell. We say we dont't have the 200 lmps that  he is asking for. He asks for any help we can give. We come up with 60  lmps, and we drive off. We make itand are backam getting desperate, and  thinking I need to pee my pants or leave all of my things and lay Jayden  on top and pray nobody takes him, I see the airport janitor. I plead  for her assistance. As I walk away in a hurry for the bano my phone  jingles. Nilsson informs me he is still 3 hours away even if he was  ready to come get us, which he is not. It was followed with, "so what are you going to  do? Who is going to get you?" WHAT!?! I have the kid and I am just  finding all of this out and you think I have some plan? Like I knew I  needed a back up plan? I am dumbfounded, but don't really care because  at the same time my bladder has found relief and is singing  "HAa-LE-LU-JAH! HAaa-LE-LU-JAH!" I was distracted to say the least. The  call dropped. I think I heard him say let me see if a friend can come get you. I  don't care. I really didn't. I had food all around. Jayden was  sleeping. And I got to pee! Life was good! Sort of... I walk out and I  hand the girl 50 lempiras. She smiled and was grateful. This perked up  her day and made her think I was her best friend. I was exhausted! I  didn't want to talk, she did. Nilsson calls back, yes, he is sending his friend. I  don't know if it is male, female, the name, what car to look for,  nothing. He just decided this information was not important. But I will  be picked up by 1. At least they can take me to the suburban! I didn't  want to have to pay $30 for a taxi and have problems with luggage and  trying to get the vehicle out of where it was stored, and worry about Jayden runnin around. I am at ease  knowing that someone semi-familiar is going to help me. (NOTE: I have no  clue who this person is, nor have I ever met them!) Two hours later  Nilsson tells me to go outside and to walk towards the grey Toyota  Yaris. Seriously, this is kind of freaky. What do I find? This cutely  petite girl about my age. I am too ashamed to ask her name. She knows  mine. She knows Jayden. And we talk like we have been friends for years.  She was BELLA!!! (Beautiful) Inside and out. She watched Jayden while I  manuevered the semi out from its position and loaded up the bags. We  hug goodbye and talk about getting together for dinner when I am back  and we both head out on our ways. I call Nilsson. Still not done. He is  trying to catch a bus, but the next bus all the way to San Pedro is at  6. This puts us WAY behind on time. I start to spazz. He informs me of another  bus that is going to Tela at 2:30. This sounds good to me, but... My phone  dies. Totally dies. Not because of the battery. It had half of its life  left. It just died because... who knows? I scramble. I was also talking  to my dad about papers that needed scanned and emailed so I could cross  the border and extend permission. I go to the closest phone store to see  what I need. I enter in a frenzy trying to complete my conversations  and trying to see what I need to do next. And I have to wait. And wait. And  wait. This is common here. Employees like to play with phones and watch  television while one co-worker tries to pacify all of the clients. I  finally get someone to help me only because Jayden is screaming. I  told him no he couldn't climb the shelves like a monkey. (It got me  attention!) I ask for the cheapest phone that has a battery charge after  he said it would be an over night and a minimum 600 lmp fee to look at my  current phone. Five minutes later I am out the door making calls back to  the states and looking to see what plan Superman has derived. He is on a bus  already headed towards Tela and had the expectations I was going to  drive 30 minutes back the opposite direction of where we need to head to  pick him up. I am game because this still puts us back on track time  wise to cross the border in time before the permission expires. We meet  in Tela. He was waiting on me. I don't know how this happened, but I  guess I made too many stops along the way trying to kill time. We head  out towards Tegucigalpa. We got five minutes out of the city and the  police stop us. Yep... Asking for money. What for? Some random project  they are trying to complete. (You know, like eating dinner.) We give  them 50 lmps and are back on the road. 30 minutes later, another police  stop. Gah. This is INSANE!!! 100 lmps and we are on our way! Two hours  later, another police stop. This guy has a handbook with the new road  rules that he is trying to sell. We say we dont't have the 200 lmps that  he is asking for. He asks for any help we can give. We come up with 60  lmps, and we drive off. We make itand are back on the road. 30 minutes later, another police  stop. Gah. This is INSANE!!! 100 lmps and we are on our way! Two hours  later, another police stop. This guy has a handbook with the new road  rules that he is trying to sell. We say we dont't have the 200 lmps that  he is asking for. He asks for any help we can give. We come up with 60  lmps, and we drive off. We make it to Tegucigalpa around 9 pm. It was a  LONG day of travel. We visit with the grandparents and my eyes are  shutting so I go to bed. Knowing we have to leave at the crack-of-dawn  so we can cross the border before the permission expires, I pray I can  get some sleep.
     
    Friday  morning, we scramble to load up and head out. We are focussed on our  journey that lies ahead. We had no major problems with police stops.  Just before we cross the border we are waved off to the side of the  road. They have us get out. Unload the car. Look through everything. As  one of the officers hands my passport back to me he tells me to be  careful. He then says, "Don't let ANYONE process your papers for you in  immigration. You do it ALONE!" I nod. I thank him. We load back up and head  torwards the border. We pull up and I don't know where to go. Nothing is  labeled. There is a mob of people inside a building.
      
There are people surrounding our vehicle. I get nervous. We park. I hop  out. I immediately have people pulling on me and grabbing my arms. It  is a shark feeding frenzy.My passport is ripped out of my hands. I  spazz looking to find where Nilsson is hiding. I can't even make it over  to his side of the car. I feel my face turning red with frustration,  fear, and my blood pressure rising. I try and grab onto the back of Supermans shirt as he is walking off to find the shark that just took my  papers. We move towards the middle of the building where the mob of  people are all working/waiting on the same thing. The shark appears with  my passport that is now stamped and his hand is out waiting for money.  We tell him we need papers for the vehicle. We head towards a different  office. We are then informed that El Salvador is considered a free  border. We do not need any additional permission. AND... Our vehicle  permission will not be renewed unless we enter through Guatamala. We are  bummed. This means we have to cut through El Salvador into Guatamala,  right? NOPE. Even upon re-entry through Guatamala nothing is going to be  resolved. They no longer allow you to pay introduction at the borders,  AND the VIN number is already in the transportation system with the  value of the vehicle. A value that is way to high and means we have to  pay $8,000 to import the car into this country. We walk out of the  office scratching our heads trying to decide what this means.  "God,  please tell me this trip wasn't made for nothing!"  Up walks shark boy.  He takes us to a "friend". We explain to him that our permission is  expiring the next morning. We explain that Honduras thinks the car is  worth over $16,000 and that they want us to pay $8,000 in taxes just to  register the vehicle here. He makes some calls. He tells us our option  and for time, I will just tell you the best one. We go back to  Tegucigalpa the next morning and submit papers in the main office to pay  taxes and try to prove the "real" value of the vehicle. This is good.  Now I just have to get my passport stamped so I can enter Honduras  again. I never really left so this should be easy. NOT!!! I have a  stamped passport that means I have to leave the country 72-hours. After  shedding a few beads of sweat, a tear drop or two, watching the sun set,  and losing $100 on the immigration offices desk I have a stamped  passport and can enter Honduras!      
    Saturday morning ~ We  wake up so we can head to Tegucigalpa. We sit in Aduana waiting for the  chief to decide to see us to hear our plead. This never happens. Our  papers are now officially expired. I feel screwed over, and we have to  leave because they close at 12 today and we had no "official pending"  business. My butt is grateful. I was tired of sitting on the floor.  There are no seats. Nor is there an official waiting area.  
    
Monday ~ It is 8 am and we get to head to Aduana again! We sit and wait  for three hours before we hear that the officials are in the office  today to make sure that everything is operating as should be. This also  means we are not a priority because the papers we want to submit are not  official. Do not have any seals. It is more of a he says - she says  battle. We get to wait. Just after lunch we are asked if we can located  pictures of the salvage vehicle or get a copy of the salvage title. I  call the states again. I will try to produce anything that I think will  help me give them what they are looking for. I am informed that we have  nothing. We continue to wait. I start to get concerned realizing how  much work Nilsson is missing because the clinic keeps calling. This  means patients go to a doctor "that cares." (You know, the guy that is  sitting and waiting in their clinic.) I feel frustrated and scared. It  is now 4:30 and the office is closing. They tell us to come back the  next day.     
Tuesday ~ Looks like another day is going to be spent sitting on the  steps. It is 9 and nobody has spoken to us. Around 11:30 they ask me for  a paper that they call a chiper document. I have no clue what this is,  but I try to locate one. No such thing exists in the file. I ask what it  looks like and where it comes from. It is issued at the border between  Mexico and Texas. I call my dad. He begins making calls looking for this  paper. It seems non-existent. We try and talk to one of the officials  to make an agreement on the price of the car. She tells us that for an  extra $500 on the side she will work with us. We have hope again. Today  it is too late to process so we have to come back in the morning.
    
Wednesday ~ I am starting to worry. Nilsson has now been out of work for  almost a month. His phone rings daily with patients he will not be able  to attend to. We are stuck here working on papers and for what? I start  to ask God why my family has to suffer and why my son has to pay  because we are trying to be faithful in the little things. If we were a  part of US Aid or World Vision they would have paid the $8,000 and not  cared. We don't want to do this because we know how  much can really be done with this money. I can't look at Nilsson. I see  his frustration as he hangs up his phone from another patient. I put my  head down while I try to hold back tears and send him the following  text: "I am scared and frustrated. I see the sacrifice that you are  making. It is appreciated. I don't know how it will ever be re-paid. I don't even know how  we will pay the bills right now. All I know to do is pray."  My phone  jingles, "lets pray then".  I feel someone playing with my hair, I look  up and now have a tear rolling down my cheek. He laughs at me. I cry. It is  all going to be okay. "God, this has to work out." One of the ladies  walks out of the office. She decides to make an attempt to process the  papers "as is" with our numbers. We think it is going through. The guy  over her rejects it. We sit in silence waiting. For another $500 on the  side we can get these papers pushed through and the vehicle can be  registered. We agree. They continue to process. It is now too late to  drive the car inside the gate so they can revise the information. We  have to wait until tomorrow. The good news is... It is going to be  processed!
     
Thursday ~ Today is the day. We will get the papers and be back on the  road heading home in no time! Sort of... 10 am and we still have NO  papers. The guy doesn't want to approve the file because he says there  is no way that his boss could see the documents and agree with the  approval. Crap. Now what? We wait. The two people being paid off argue  back and forth. They discuss getting more money on the side. That seems  to be the key. They take it. They sign off on the papers and we are good  to go. It is only 3 pm when we finally have everything done. BUT... for  85,000 lps we got this vehicle registered! Thank God. The difference in pricing  Nilsson could have paid with the work he just lost over the last week while we fought for a better price.  God is going to have to restore it!
    
We have made progress! It is a relief. The only problem is the suburban is now just sitting in the drive  way. We made it all the way home! No problems! The next morning when I  went to go submit the registration papers to get the license plates it  wouldn't start! Yep... We just paid all of that money to register a  vehicle that we can't drive! It is the strangest thing. We tried jumping  it. Nothing works. Just another trip to the mechanic... One day we will  have NO car problems, right God?
    
I love living in this country, but these issues are almost too much to  handle. You play by their rules. PERIOD! They have a law that makes no sense. You abide by the stupid law as written, or you pay people off. Both expensive, but one way is ALWAYS cheaper than the other. One way, although it may be wrong, is also the only "right" way. When the law asks for something insanely rediculous, what are you supposed to do? If both ways are wrong, which way is the right way? Do we just pack up, forget about the ministry and go home?
 Oh, and I forgot to tell you. Nilsson thought the compressor was  fixed right? His first morning back he went to drill a tooth and there  was no pressure. NOT FIXED! More like, NOT FIXABLE! He now needs a new  compressor. His air conditioning still isn't cooling and it is leaking  water EVERYWHERE. Oh, and the office computer wouldn't turn on. My  computer was cracked on the airplane. The LCD is split and I can't find a  screen here to replace it.
   
    Now everybody will know why we are not responding to you! Sorry guys! Pray for us!