We have discovered that the re-entry and assimilation process back into the U.S. is more challenging than we anticipated! Disparities, little and big, keep popping up and making it
hard to process all that we've experienced. Both of us walked into the bathrooms in the Miami airport in amazement - Electricity! Flushing toilets! Water fountains! On the drive home, we looked around and wondered why there were no people on the side of the road -- where were all the people? The vendors squatting on the roadside? The hundreds of thousands who spend their days in the streets because homes aren't big enough to fit everyone? Haiti is a country where often people sleep in shifts, because there isn't room for everyone to lie down on the floor at the same time. To us, I-40 seemed immense, desolate, lonely, and strangely sanitized.
I tried to go grocery shopping yesterday afternoon for a few "basics." It took me over an hour just to get through the cereal and produce aisles. How to choose apples when 15 different varieties are available? Do I want "plain" granola, granola with nuts and no brown sugar, granola without nuts
but with fruit bits, all-natural granola with nuts and fruit bits AND brown sugar? The options were overwhelming. We are so accustomed to having twenty different kids of Ziploc bags that we forget how precious it is to be able to store food at all.
All that said, these small realities are looming large for us. As we continue to process, we'll be sharing with you and updating our site. For the moment, though, we've posted all our photos on a Shutterfly site which you can access at:
www.smithsinhaiti2009.shutterfly.com
We hope to post tags and descriptions of the photos (all 271 of them!) as soon as we can.
For now, we offer you our thanks for your prayers and our great joy at seeing a new side of God's good creation.
Peace, Bart & Katherine
