When we arrived at the mission home on January 3, 2016, we found the same two sister missionaries that we had met a few days before (and hundreds of miles before we had made our grand circle of Chiapas). It was also great to see President and Sister George again. Sister George was so nice! She said, "Well, we need to use these mangos," so Linette and the sisters peeled and chopped them, added water and sugar, and made some nice liquados.
Later the A.P.s (Assistants to the President) arrived, and Sister George said, "Anyone want some quesadillas?" and she went to town whipping up a pile of them. We hadn't really eaten much after fasting, so that really hit the spot. President George asked one of the A.P.s to say a blessing on the food, and I was surprised to feel the spirit so strongly from something as simple as that. It made me believe that the president and his wife and these missionaries were all powerful servants of God.
The president's daughter and her family were in the mission home that night, too. The gals had fun playing the piano and singing with her (she has an incredible voice).
Then suddenly Sister George was asking Kelsi, "Do you want me to make you a skirt? These things are so easy, and they fit great. Here, let me make one for you." And suddenly there was fabric and patterns and needles and thread flying all over the kitchen, and then a trip upstairs to the sewing machine, and before you knew it, Kelsi was wearing a new skirt. Sister George also whipped one up for her daughter while she was at it.
Between the liquados, quesadillas and skirt, I just sort of fell in love with Sister George. It was like having a really great grandma there to take care of everyone.
We spent the night there (Linette and I had "Mr. and Mrs. Beaver" separate twin beds), and then began the long road home. We were all supposed to fly out at 12:30pm, but I just happened to notice the night before that Erika's flight had been changed to 9am. (What? When were you going to let us know?) So we had to get up early and go to the airport.
We tried switching Erika to our flight (Nope), or us to hers (Don't even think about it), or at least swap Kelsi and Erika ("I'm sorry, but that's impossible") since Erika doesn't speak Spanish and we didn't want her off by herself. But, as Kelsi's "meme" captured it, every request was met by this response:
The rental car place wasn't open yet when I tried to drop off the van. Good thing we didn't make it on the earlier flight, or we wouldn't have known what to do with it. Kelsi complimented us on getting the van, because it totally worked out great to have it the whole time. It allowed us to see and do much more than we would have been able to otherwise, and we didn't get a ticket or wreck it, either, so it worked out splendidly. It had 288km on it when we got it, and we added a little over 1000km to before we returned it.
We had a little box the elders in Tapachula had given us to hand over to Rubén in Mexico City on our way through (he was the guy whose family we stayed with on the way down). So we gave it to Erika to give to him instead. It seemed strange for her to carry a cereal box, so we gave Erika a small black plastic shopping bag to put it in. Here are the two girls busting up over imagining Erika walking around telling people, "¡Es mi bolsa!" ("It is my bag!") I think we were just giddy from exhaustion and the stress of flight changes.
I thought I would take one last picture of Erika as she went through security by herself, in case we never saw her again. :/
Then we settled down to wait for our own flight, which was several hours later. We were worried about the short connection we would end up making.
Meanwhile, we were worried about whether Erika was ok in Mexico City. We also realized that we had sent the bulk of our remaining pesos with her, so we texted and encouraged her to spend them on her and Rubén.
Then we got this picture from her and felt better when we saw that she and Rubén were having sandwiches, french fries and lemonades. "Yeah, she's good." Apparently Rubén stayed with her the whole time until it was time for her to board her next flight.
Just as our plane touched down (and our phones were on again), we started getting text messages from Erika saying, "Where's my family?" and "The plane is moving!" At that point, we knew we were hosed.
Then we got this poignant and hilarious picture from her, with the message, "I will miss you, Mexico."
We were bummed to have missed our flight after all of that, but were glad that at least Erika was making it home all right.
Someone sat us down while they figured out what to do with us. They came back and said that there were no more flights to Salt Lake City, so they could reroute us to Los Angeles and then get us home at 9 a.m. the next day. That wasn't as bad as it could have been, but was still a pretty big bummer, especially since the same thing had happened on the way down. And because we asked to swap flights. And because they could have held it. But whatever.
While in Mexico City we bumped into these three elders on their way home from the Tampico Mexico mission. We have a nephew Kyle Weekes in that mission, and when we asked if they knew him, they did, and in fact the one in the middle had been his companion a year before!
We made it to Los Angeles at 11pm without much trouble, but then our luggage didn't arrive, and neither Delta (who we booked the flights through) nor their partner AeroMexico (who actually ran the flights) would do anything in the way of a hotel or anything, so we had to spend the night in LAX. Which stunk. (Karen was willing to have us stay with her, but by the time we found out we were hosed it was so late, and we had to leave early enough that it wouldn't have been worth the drive).
Airports are of course designed to be purposely uncomfortable and impossible to sleep in. They make sure there are bars between each seat; that the floors are cold and hard; that the lights never dim; and that there are all manner of vacuums and polishing machines that run all night. They also hire a guy to tell someone next to him his life story all night long.
That's all well and good for keeping people from purposely planning to spend the night there to save a few bucks on a hotel. But when the airlines hoses you, you'd think they could offer a $1 air mattress or something.
Here Kelsi demonstrates how one can use two benches to pretend to sleep.
And here is where Kelsi and Linette actually ended up. Kelsi slept well. Linette, not so much. Me, even less. (This setup doesn't work when you're a lot taller, heavier and older than Kelsi). I tried not to be grumpy about it, but it didn't work.
In the morning, another unfortunate passenger came stumbling out with a knowing smile and said, "That was so bad!" (Delta eventually coughed up $100 to each of us for our troubles. It would have been cheaper for them to get us a hotel).
Finally we arrived in Salt Lake City, where we had to face snow and real life again. But it was nice to be home.
The flight problems put a bit of a damper on the end of the trip, but overall, it was a grand adventure. It was great to meet all of these great people that Kelsi had written home about. In fact, when I went back after our trip and browsed through her missionary letters, it was really fun to see those people again after having now met them!
One of the interesting observations from this trip was that there were people at all different levels of how much money they had, and how much of it they spent on making things look a certain way in their house. But the happiness they experienced had so much more to do with who and how they loved. We saw families living in very humble circumstances who you could tell just loved each other and were happy. I could also see the foundation of peace and happiness that came to families as they lived the gospel of Jesus Christ. Each person, family and area had their own challenges, but I could tell that they were also blessed for each principal of the gospel they were following.
We also had a lot of fun enjoying each others company as we drove all over Chiapas. On the long and winding road from San to Tapa, for example, we passed some of the time by Kelsi teaching us the words to Las Mañanitas. Then I had her teach us something nerdy from her college class--in this case, how flowers opened and closed their petals (apparently, they push water into our pull it out of cells that expand and thus cause the petals to move). Then Erika taught us how ants make trails. It started with something like, "They walk along and shoot chemicals out their butt...." For some reason this struck me as so funny (especially after Kesi's more technical explanations) that I went into conniptions, laughing so hard that I could barely see, and had to slow way down so I didn't crash on that winding road. Anyway, we really had fun together.
Thanks for sticking with this write-up. I hear that Craig & Andrea are taking a similar trip with Andrew after BYU lets out in a couple of weeks. I look forward to seeing their pictures of the amazing ruins at Palenque, which we didn't have time for.
¡Adios!
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