Like many of my co-missioners, I have jumped back into daily life with both feet. It's hard to leave a more peaceful, slower-paced environment for a life that is constantly plugged-in and engaged with work, family, church and the other demands on our time that we face. While for some of the adults it was an inconvenience to have no cell phone coverage, our younger people seemed to enjoy life without constant texting and contact.
I have pondered a lot about the isolation we felt in West Virginia. A couple of mission-trippers remarked that they had travelled as far as Sinai recently and were still able to be in touch, by phone, with their office or colleagues. Yet here we were, in a neighboring state, unable to use our modern gadgets to phone home. I can't help wondering if that kind of isolation inhibits economic development in the Appalachian region. It's tempting to see the upside of a more calm, slower-paced life, but I'm pretty sure the downside is a drag on regional progress that might help lift residents out of such pervasive poverty. (Of course, I'm no economist, so don't take my word for that.)
I've also been somewhat haunted by the memory of the older women we met outside of Walmart one day, selling hot dogs and peanut butter fudge in order to pay off the funeral for one's husband. Every day after hearing this story, we would pull into the parking lot on our way back to S.W.A.P. headquarters to see if they were there again so that we could pay an inflated price rather than the $1 they charged, but they never returned. To be burdened with grief is tortuous enough. The inability to pay for the funeral must be devastating. Yet there they were, selling their goodies, raising money, $1 at a time. God love them.
West Virginia is a state of beautful mountains and abundant opportunities for enjoyment of the great outdoors. The roadways wind around what appear to be pristine creeks, streams and rivers. It was distressing to discover that 70% of household sewage goes into these waterways. This was a rather stunning realization and further emphasized the isolation and lack of development in what is, by all accounts, the wealthiest country on the planet. Things that we take for granted like public sewers and cell phone service are non-existent in areas of Appalachia. There's no need to travel around the world to do development work. We can find plenty of opportunities in our own backyard.
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Thank you all for sharing this mission trip journey with us. It has been a blessing to know that your prayers and support were watching over us. Please keep the people of Elkhorn, WV and S.W.A.P. in your prayers moving forward. There is much work yet to be done.
"The harvest is plentiful but the laborers are few." (Luke 10:2)