Julie Gumm - Author

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Ethiopian Sales Techniques

12.18.2008 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

We ended our 1st day in Ethiopia rather early with me finally crawling in bed around 2:30. Dustin and Jen woke up for dinner and said they knocked on our door several times but with the combination of ear plugs and fatigue we were OUT.

Mark woke me up at one point to ask me something, I have no idea what, and the next thing I remember it was 9 p.m. While still tired I was worried I wouldn’t sleep very much longer so Mark and I both took a sleeping pill. I remember waking up around 2 and then I think I fell back asleep. The next time I looked at the clock it was 2:40 a.m. I felt rested and actually had a “I slept too long” headache. When I got up to use the bathroom Mark was in the living room and he asked me if I had reset the bedside clock because his watch actually said 5:30. We realized that the power must have gone off at some point and it was actually 5:30 in the morning which was a great relief. With 15 hours of sleep we were feeling pretty good.

Dustin and Jen were up and actually on the computer downstairs. Later we came back up and had a great time of just devotionals and prayer together before breakfast. Breakfast was something like Cream of Wheat which has to be one of my least favorite things so when I saw it I was not jazzed. But, with some sugar it was actually not bad. One of the other families also had some peanut butter and jelly which we put on the bread provided.

At about 9:30 Akki, our driver arrived and we headed out for a morning of shopping in the area by the post office. For transportation we have a driver and another man (not sure what his job is besides helping the driver park) and Akki, who acts as translator. Either the driver or the other man stays with the vehicle at all times so you can leave your packages inside if you want. We went in four or five shops and bought several things. Some of the shop owners spoke English (everyone understood “How much?”) and Akki helped with any translations. You can bargain a bit and they will usually come down a couple of dollars. Dustin got his shoes shined and they tried to convince Mark to get his sneakers shined but he decided to pass. However after about an hour or so Jen started to not feel well at all and so we headed back to the guest house. We suspect that it was a combination of the side effects of her medicine (dizziness), travel and perhaps some altitude adjustment. While driving you’re also getting exposed to a lot of exhaust which I know made me nauseous as well.

We had lunch and then adjusted our plans a bit. We had originally planned to go to Hope for the Hopeless this afternoon but with Jen not feeling well we decided to postpone a day and instead went out to finish some shopping with one of the other adoptive couples at the guest house. We were able to cross much of our shopping list off including coffee and a mesob. When we were finished at the coffee shop we got back in the van but then Akki said the driver wasn’t back yet because he was having a cup of coffee. While we were waiting a man came up to Mark’s window and he was selling small traditional coffee pots. He started at 20 birr (about $2) and finally came down to 10. I decided why not. I gave him the money and he handed us the coffee pot. Then he said “do you want the stand? – 5 birr” which was a round flat piece (sort of like an ashtray size/shape). I kind of waved him off and then he said “It will not stand up without it.” Ha! Ethiopian sales technique. So he got my extra 5 birr and we got a good laugh. Still only $1.50 for the coffee pot – which will be mostly decorative.

The other adoptive couple we were with asked about seeing Akki’s church on the way back to the guest house so we stopped there as well. Akki is Protestant and attends Gospel Light Church. We had no idea what to expect and were really amazed at his church. It is a long building made out of aluminum siding (green). Inside are rows and rows of wood benches – probably seats about 2,000 people. The have some sort of fabric padding on the ceiling for acoustical purposes and speakers set up. He showed us outside a grassy area that is their “overflow” area. Next door is some more land were they have a small cafe, a bookstore and then a four story building that is going to be a Bible college. I was amazed in that the idea of it is so similar to what our church in Phoenix plans but yet it looks so different.

We asked if we could accompany him to church on Sunday and he said we could – they even provide English translation through headphones.

While we were there we got a call that Dustin had decided to take Jen to see a doctor because she was feeling worse. We met them at the Korean hospital but they did not have a cardiologist there and so they sent us to the Addis Heart Hospital. We stayed with them there while they did an EKG and ran some blood work. They told her that she was okay and that it was probably just a combination of her already known heart issue, traveling and adjusting to the altitude. She was feeling much better by the time we left.

The guest house staff had saved some dinner for us – chicken soup and bread – which we ate and then headed up to our rooms.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mark, Akki and I in front of his church.

 

This was going to be the end of my post but since internet wasn’t working yesterday I did not get this posted. I have much to write about today’s activities (Thurs) but they will take some more time to process. We spent most of the day with Fekadu and the Hope for the Hopeless kids – they are incredible. Look for more, hopefully tomorrow. (Jen is feeling MUCH better today and was out all day with us.)

Categories // Family Matters Tags // Red Letters Campaign - Adoption Journal (Julie)

We have arrived!

12.16.2008 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

We have safely arrived in Addis Ababa and boy are we wiped!

We had to do some minor shuffling of weight in our baggage, mostly to get our backpacks to weigh less. In the end the gal at the airline desk was very nice and got us on the plane without having to leave anything behind.

As we were boarding the flight we quickly realized that while we were sitting right behind Dustin and Jen, unfortunately we were in a non-reclining row. That was not going to be fun. Yet God decided to bless us with about a half full flight and so when everyone was on we quickly snagged an exit row. So we had two seats together (and just to) with more leg room than we could ever need. Mark and I were both able to get about 2-3 hours of sleep. Dustin and Jen, despite being able to spread out in two seats each, were not so lucky. We kept the seats us from Washington D.C. until the stop in Rome when we had to return to our original seats because of new passengers getting on board. We traded around and Jen and I sat together and watched a movie while the guys yaked behind us.

We were about an hour late coming in and by the time we got our entry visas, claimed our bags and exchanged some money we were exhausted. I have never been so glad to see my name on a sheet of paper. Our translator Aki met us with flowers and steered us toward the van (think VW bus) where they loaded our 10+ bags and then drove us to the guest house.

So many wonderful sights to see as we drove through the city. Overall very clean.

It was about 11:30 when we arrived – we got shown to our rooms, given a huge bottle of water and just had to wait a bit before lunch, which was pizza.

Jen is already out like a light…the rest of us are waiting turns to shower. The big debate is whether or not to try and stay awake till dinner or just to go to sleep now.

day1_1

“Get me off this plane”

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From our cab

day1_3

 

 

 

 

 

 

Arriving at the guest house. The guy in blue is Aki, our translator.

Categories // Family Matters Tags // Red Letters Campaign - Adoption Journal (Julie)

Layover night

12.14.2008 by juliegumm@yahoo.com //

We arrived safely in Washington D.C. this afternoon. We had a little bit of reshifting of the baggage when we arrived at the counter this morning. We got a stickler on the weight limit. One bag was over 1 lb, one by .5 lb and one by 2 lbs. We shifted some weight to the carry ons which was fine for United but we’re praying that Ethiopian doesn’t weigh them tomorrow because they are over by a couple pounds. Otherwise we’ll have to dump some snacks. Or Mark offered to tie his shoes together and wear them around his neck 🙂

We didn’t get to sit near Dustin and Jen on the plane but met them for dinner at Chili’s near their hotel. We decided against trying to get into the city so that Jen wasn’t overdoing it. Instead we had a really LONG dinner and just had a great time visiting. There were many discussions that revolved around sleep and when we should sleep and whether we should take the sleeping pills we have and if so, what time, etc.

We got back to our hotel room just in time for the cowboys game so Mark is a happy camper.

dc1

This really doesn’t seem to do our luggage pile justice, but here it is.

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Dinner at Chili’s.

Categories // Family Matters Tags // Red Letters Campaign - Adoption Journal (Julie)

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About Me

Writer. Wife. Mother. Traveler. Coffee-addict. Book-lover. Television-Junkie. I love stories. Hearing them, watching them, telling them, living them.

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