
Today was by far, one of my favorites... EVER. We had breakfast like usual and then left around 10 am for El Rio (the river). El Rio is a squatters village along a river on the outskirts of Monterrey, Mexico. The people who live there have next to nothing. Everything that they do have is either stolen, found, or pirated. It
is not uncommon to see houses made of cardboard and plastic. Last year, I was able to serve the people in the
Cadareta, which is just an extension from El Rio. The government forced people to move off of the river so that they could use the land for commercial purposes, promising the people cinder blocks and food. But when everyone finally got to the place the government wanted them to move, they received nothing.
El Rio is a special place. At one point, while walking down the
cliff side by the homes I turned to Jenna and said, "You don't really believe it, 'til you see it." However cliche that statement is, it's very true. You don't really believe the amount of poverty until you truly are immersed in it. This part of the river is call
MeMe's Rio.
MeMe is a little Mexican woman who has been working with Back2Back for years. She left the property a few years ago to live full-time with the people at El Rio. She and her husband had been ministering to the people there and had built a small
pavilion to house a soup kitchen and eventually a church. Back in May,
MeMe's husband died in a horseback riding accident and left
MeMe alone to continue their ministry. Even through her hardship, she has not quit. She wants to build on to the
pavilion and have a kitchen, bathroom, and church. Her dreams are huge, as well as her heart, and God will see that her vision is made into reality.

We knew we would be serving lunch to the people, working on some labor projects, and praying over the whole area. First things first, we were able to walk out through the village and personally invite the people out to lunch and to receive donations. Most of the people we saw were women and children, and many welcomed us each individually with smiling faces and gracious handshakes. If there are men around they are very standoffish or actually have jobs that do not end until the sun goes down. One woman in particular was very bubbly and her daughter was actually deaf. She kept making sure to sign and interpret things for her daughter while in conversation with us. Her devotion was amazing.
After calling the people out, it was time to serve food and pass out donations. Bef

ore we started lunch though, I was able to share part of my testimony to the people!! I have never told my testimony in under 2 hours - but God willing I only talked for 5 minutes. You can tell that someone has nothing when a bag of beans makes them happy. We served a lunch of tamales and nachos and then passed out laundry
detergent, beans, and some fun donations our group had brought. All the families ended up with two or three t-shirts, and all the children ended up with 8 bracelets and 5 pieces of candy. Before we knew it, some of the mothers were asking for bracelets. I felt like God had blessed our donations like the loaves and fishes - it just kept giving. For another day I was humbled at the sight of a grown woman getting excited about simple bracelets made by the hands of American college students.
After lunch and donations it was time to start the projects. We really had no idea what to expect. Ends up we are going to extend the roof and also prepare the ground for cement pouring by moving stone. We were helping add on to the
pavilion that will eventually be a church and a soup kitchen. Somehow I always find myself doing the hardest labor... I was on stone moving duty. The people cannot afford to use
rebar, so the stone was going to be laid out to become the foundation to the cement. We all made a great team!! There were wheelbarrows going, people on roofs, wood staining, and praying walking. Side note - I found a wild tarantula... it was AWESOME.

At all times, Cathy
Huffer, one of our Back2Back leaders, was taking people out into the village to pray. Selfishly, I wanted to stay with my
pickax and keep working, but I decided that God wanted me to go out on the last prayer walk. Cathy,
Tama, and I were able to pray with a woman who practices witchcraft. We began by just saying hello and asking if we could pray for her. We asked for prayer requests and before you knew it, we were invited inside her home to look at pictures. We spent about 20 minutes just focusing on her personally, and while inside her home asked to pray with her. Kimberly, one of her granddaughters was there, and we were able to pray with her as well. At one point, she grabbed my hand in response to our prayer.
It was powerful.
Tama was able to translate my prayers for China - the woman we were praying for. Even with the language barrier, thanks to our translators, we could communicate our hopes and prayers for the people. With a tearful last prayer by China, we returned to help clean and hang out with some of the residents of El Rio before we had to leave. We had made so much progress on the projects and the people, it was astounding. Even with the loss of her husband,
MeMe has all the faith in the world. We were able to pray for her and her ministry right before we left for dinner at El
Pollo Loco.
Caroline met us for dinner, and Jessie and I were able to ride in her car back to the

property. We made a quick gas station trip, because no one should go to Mexico and not set foot in a Mexican gas station. Once back at the property, I led worship for the group and then we had debriefing. It was an amazing day to talk and think about... I had a few epiphanies about my current situations. First, the crap going on in my life does not even compare to the lives of the people at El Rio - broken car, broken computer, broken phone, whatever. It clearly could be worse. Second, learned helplessness is rampant in El Rio. People fail and fail again, and eventually they give up trying. I have the same
attitude in my own lives. I make up excuses for why I shouldn't do something based off of past failures. That is no way to live my life, though. God called me to so much more!! He called me to be faithful, and trust that even when I fail, He will succeed.
I'm the
lucky one.
-k10
PS - Betsy and I got to play speed scrabble with Greg Huffer... just like last year... and I WON!! Haven't played in one year, and I beat the pro.
Wiz is a word.