Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Can Ya Dig It?

Marhaba!

Hey all, its time for another update. What have I been up to... well, I've found an archeological dig called Tell el-Hammam, and they are digging up the location believed by Dr. Collins to be the location of Sodom. Its amazing, it truly is! The dig site is just enormous, with such a large location. If this isn't Sodom, then as Dr. Collins says, "What is it?" because this is the largest location and we would have totally missed everything else. I'm impressed by the richness of the site, and it has just been rewarding.

Day One:

Dr. Collins located an early bronze age shaft tomb that had been robbed in modern times (1-2 years prior us getting there). Initially we didn't know what to think of it. Inside contained bones and broken pottery shards. Well on day one, I volunteered to go over there, with a tiny pick (piteat) and hoe (terea) we uncovered pottery pieces.

I found
  • bones
  • broken pottery shards
  • and an oil burning lamp base

We also found:

  • early and late bronze pottery
  • the grave robbers pick. Haha!
  • And about 20 different types of pottery

Day Two:

Today, we fully excavated the tomb. I got in it with Steve and dug out all the trash. The robbers dug into the tomb horizontally, but that wasn't it's actual entrance. We climbed ontop, probed around a bit, and finally broke through - locating the vertical entrance.

Inside I found bones, nothing significant, but I though I found a skull until it was realized, it was only a rock (bummer!).

The others found a scarab, egyptian which is amazing. The Jews when they were waiting to cross over the Jordan River, burried much of their dead in Shittim (they waited until everyone from the old generation died), which is where this site is. So, this tomb could have been reused and remember, the Jews "plundered Egypt" during the Exodus.

Day Three:

I worked moving dirt from one of the squares in Sodom. Moved a ton of dirt, trying to follow a stone wall. We believe that there were two Sodoms, an early bronze age one, and a middle bronze age one (everything is missing from late bronze and a gap of about 500 years exists before anything was rebuilt). Also, many of the locals believe this was Sodom.

I found a few pottery pieces, nothing significant, but it was great experience. Later, I helped to quickly remove dirt from the gate entrance. It wasn't straight, but more like a funnel. I was working so hard, i didn't realize that the car I was to ride back to Amman in had left without me. (THEY FORGOT!!! So they had to turn around, and come back for me.)

Day Four:

Been square hopping, and gaining experience, but I was drafted into the a dig square 30 meters to the north. Dr. David Graves and Dr. Scott Stripling have uncovered a Roman city, believed to be Livious (Livias) on the Sodom site. Its large, also the largest one in the area. The walls extend 35 meters wide, with four corners. This would make it the largest place here. Eye witness acounts and other texts have located this site near Sodom and Shittim and we believe its here.

Not all archeologists agree with our findings, but its very impressive and the community is looking at this site with great interest (though initially they believe Dr. Collins to having an agenda).

Another dig site on an adjacent tell (hill) a Greek team, has found the same things but on a smaller scale. We think they found Gomorrah. Its a hilltop away, and its a little smaller. Really fascinating. I'll post pictures later on facebook. Check em' out!

Later!

Friday, December 11, 2009

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly


It has been a week, so I suppose it is time for another update.


I have had several positive and negative interactions here in Jordan. Most of my positive interactions revolve around taxi drivers and every day normal people.


Most of my negative ones revolve around interactions with government officials, institutions, and neighborhood urchins (or children as most would call them).


But I will describe this in further detail later on.


The Weather Outside is....


Cold, very cold. I didn’t think I would believe my colleagues when they said this about the middle east, but the weather has turned very chilly. This has caught me by surprise for 3 fundamental reasons. First, living through 2 Hong Kong “winters” has stunted my perception of what cold ought to be. In a city that has seen snow... well never, I found that winter was only a few weeks, perhaps 8-10, and then that was all. Furthermore, the last two winters there had been mild, though each one has become colder. So when I got to Amman, a region that did not significantly border any temperate bodies of water, I found it to be quite cold.


The second reason is seems so cold to me, is because the houses are just made of slabs of poured concrete. There is no insulation. To translate, it takes very little time to heat, or cool the house due to outside weather. In short, it can get very cold in my apartment very quickly.


Finally, while I am thankful for an apartment, and one that is as inexpensive as it is - I basically live in a glorified “hole in the wall.” Now, its not as miserable as that description makes it out to be, but one friend once remarked, “You live in alleys.” Which could accurately depict the process of getting to my place. To make it less comfortable, I live on the bottom floor, and the backside is a against a sloping hill. So, when it rains everything in the apartment feels damp... making it seem colder than it ought to feel.


How damp? Well, I have the rare luxury of watching paint bubble on the wall, as water seeks to seep inward. Yes, it is that exciting.


Mew Mew, let me in!


In addition to my experiences with people, I have had a unique experience with a cat here. I found her in her teenage “years” really, months -- she was in the stage of kittyhood not quite a kitten, not quite a cat. She seemed nice enough. After showing her affection for a few minutes, she quite decided that I was her human and she followed me home. She hasn’t stopped following me since.


Cats are treated well in Amman, the city is full of them. Though neighborhood children can be quite cruel. Anyway, I made a home for her, it sits outside my window sill. The house, I believe, is comfortable. Its a box inside another box, with its own little door flap (I made the cardboard to swing freely). And there is two towels inside. As the weather turns even colder, I’ll replace the towels with a fleece blanket. It should be adequate living conditions -- though she is quite adamant, she should come inside.


I named her Honey Comb. A name for three part reasons. 1.) To remind me to memorize the Word. Psalms 19 declares God’s judgement to be sweeter than honey in the honey comb, and Psalms 119:103 declares his words sweeter than honey. 2.) I named her such as a shout-out to Honey, my neighbor in Hong Kong that took care of cats. Finally, 3.) Melissa’s name gave me the idea from her name in Greek -- it means “Honey Bee.” So that set the wheels in motion.


Well I believe that all names have significance and meaning... but so far Honey Comb hasn’t quite lived up to it yet. She is a very friendly cat, but has become quite crafty in opening up my screen windows, and racing inside when I open up the door.


The biggest reasons I don’t let her in, is because she has fleas AND I am leaving in March. If she gets too accustomed to me, she starve when I leave.


The Process (The Bad)


As I alluded to previously, I’ve had several pleasant experiences with government institutions. From the multiple trips to police stations, to the post office. It’s difficult to adjust. *Edit before I even post this... i did make 3 friends in the police force today... so not everyone is bad, mind you, just the Process is frustrating!*


Here in Jordan, the Americans call the post office here the “foreigner tax”, I call it a “colossal rip-off!” Anything you import here to Jordan will be taxed the estimated price of purchase elsewhere. So if you import, for example a crock-pot, and it costs $60 dollars in the state, and $100 dollars to ship, here in Jordan they will charge you at least $80 to collect it. It’s absurd, and I’ve never heard of this being done anywhere else in the world.


I’ve tried to keep a pleasant demeanor about it, yet I haven’t quite mastered complete control over the place in my brain that says “lets make a moody, scowling face at them!”


My own mother, shipped up some protein powder for me, some Christmas cookies, and a first aid kit, and a few warmer clothes. I was charged $20 JD (or $30 US) to pick it up. I didn’t want to pay, but I felt like I ought to, since she went through all the trouble of shipping it to me.


Eventually, I'll get used to this.


Am I a good man? (The Good)


This question has actually taken me by surprise. If you would have asked me this question a few years earlier in my life, I would have answered with a convincing “YES”. But I’ve lately begun to question this.


Taxi-drivers, in particular, have responded that they believe I’m a good person. I’m here in Jordan, not making money volunteering my time and money to be here. Last night, I had been waiting to grab a taxi and two women were in front of me. I spotted a taxi on the other side of this little street, and I motioned to them to take it. They walked over, and the taxi soon departed without taking them.


They stayed on that side. A little later, another taxi approached from my direction. He stopped to pick me up, but I motioned for him to pick them up. I don’t think he understood me... so reluctantly I got in. I felt bad for those two women. And I really thought not very highly of myself.


The taxi driver surprised me, by speaking in good english. He asked me if I knew those two women, and why I wanted him to pick them up. After explaining, he said, “You’re a good man.”


I then explained that I’m not really a good man, but God in me is good. This also surprised him and he agreed.


He then explained the reason he didn’t pick them up is because he doesn’t like women. (A few minutes later, he was worried that I’d jump to the conclusion that he was a homosexual, he emphatically explained that this was not the case, he just didn’t like haggling over the set prices with women and so he preferred driving me.)


Well, I got to share a little about myself. And before I knew it, he was at my street. I wanted to pay the full share, but he only allowed me to pay 1 JD. I tried three times the full amount, but he said “You’re a good man.” So I thanked him, and was on my way.


Street Urchins - (And The Ugly)


Now, I’ve taken to calling them street urchins, but they are truly not that. The kids here, for whatever reason, just seem unruly (with the exception of about 4 junior high aged girls who think I’m the coolest person ever... I really don’t know why, I don’t even talk to them but they think I’m awesome and say hi to me whenever I pass by).


As I was walking home last night, my little cat came running out to great me. She had been waiting on the corner for me to return. Yes, that is how sad and pathetic she truly is. Mew Mew! (She follows me out when I leave, and follows me home when I come back). As we were walking back to my apartment, about six neighborhood boys came running over to her. Bissa! The shouted (Cat). Well, I didn’t trust them (I had seen two of them being mean to her when she was a kitten), so I stopped them in their tracks, held out my hand and shouted “HEY!” This startled them and got their attention, so they turned to leave. As they left, one of them threw a rock at me.


(They must have been Palestinian eh? Haha, oh, that really shouldn’t be funny, but I laughed about it later. I could get in trouble for that joke... I’ve heard, and told, and laughed at enough jokes about Jews and Israel to be off the hook).


Well, I had my gym bag and my briefcase in either hand, but then I dropped both. Spun around and began quickly walking towards them, with my hands outstretched on either side. This got their attention quite quickly again, and they took off running. I had no trouble with them later on. Some kids are just stupid.


(A friend of mine told a story, that a few kids had been throwing rocks at cars and when he glared at them, they thew rocks at him. So he chased them... he chased them all the way back to their home. They ran inside and locked the door. So he patiently knocked and their mother opened up the door. He told her what they had been doing... though he’s American, he could speak some arabic at this point. I’m guessing they got whipped by their father when he came home later that day.)


I have my own little street urchins who live in the house over from mine. They scream all day long. I can hear their mother and those three kids screaming until 11:00 - 12:00 o'clock. It gnaws away at my spirit. They used to throw rocks at my door, until I complained to my landlord, who told their landlord. They don’t come around anymore.... but I can still hear them every night.


It’s hard to get sleep... fireworks go off until 11:00 - 12:00 at night. They scream until that long. Then the call to prayer is blasted at 4:30, the actual prayer goes off at 5:10ish, my cat starts meowing at 6:00-7:00 ish for food. So in a given night, I’m woken up 4-5 times a night. Its unpleasant to say the least.


... in case you’re wondering, the last three titles was in the order of the closing scene from the movie (The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly).


Yes, I bought that movie here in Jordan... good quality too for $1.42 US (1 JD); though don’t ask me about the legality of it. Errr... if you want legal, you pay triple the actual price in just one location that I know of.



Tuesday, December 1, 2009

NEW PASSPORT - OLD PASSPORT

What Has Happened Since...


I apologize for nearly a month long since an update. In all actuality, I’ve been quite busy. What has happened since losing my passport?


  • There was semester finals at the center -- much fun!
  • I have replaced my passport.
  • (Skip the next section if you don’t want to read the process)


The process for doing that involved a lot. Let me give you a quick rundown.


  • Went to renew my VISA... they sent me to get blood work done (no mention in my passport or anything).
  • Went to get my blood samples had to wait three days for them
  • In three days, I lost my passport
  • Went to the US embassy... at 12:10, they weren’t open, because they close at 12:30 except on the last day before the end of the month (not on a friday or weekend), and then on those days they close at 12:00
  • Went back, they sent me to the police station
  • My VISA expired
  • They sent me to their headquarters
  • They sent me to another police station (where I had to go to multiple windows).
  • Now I have a form to take back to the Embassy to report it missing
  • I put in a request for a new passport
  • 2 weeks later, I’m told to go into pick my new passport up.
  • I go in on Nov. 11th... bad mistake, its Armistice Day (or Veterans Day)
  • I have to go in the next day!
  • Have my Passport now, gotta go back to the first police station --> they sent me to another station
  • Here they send me to 8 different windows... only to find out they wrote the WRONG entry date on my passport... would have been $40 dollars more expensive.
  • So I have to go to all the windows over again --> they send me back to the original police station, which tells me to get my blood-work done again (I DIDN’T but found the original blood-work) went back to the station, only to find out it was CLOSED!
  • Two days later, I paid another fine, and now I’m a citizen again.


MY OLD PASSPORT WAS FOUND!!


  • It was in a taxi all along, it fell out of my pocket. Just like I had suspected.
  • But what did I learn? Lessons on God’s Faithfulness. (Well, I might not have “learned” lessons of patience, but I now feel more equipped.


Old Holidays, and New Holidays!


  • Over the last weekend, we had two holidays: 3id (eed) and Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving here was celebrated among friends. Had chicken, mashed potatoes (AND REAL GRAVY), stuffing, sweet potato casserole, and pumpkin pie.
  • 3id on the other hand was interesting. Here in Jordan they import thousands of lambs and slaughter them (to commemorate when Abraham almost sacrificed Ishmael... to them). To me, the sacrificial day just felt.... well, I didn’t want to leave my house. So I just stayed home.


Anyway, Again I apologize for the Long Delay...


  • By the way Christmas is around the corner... and because it isn’t celebrated here... there isn’t much commercialism (except in the 1 or 2 malls...), so.....
  • For the first time in over 10 years, I might actually celebrate it (or rather... “observe it” with passivity, rather than my usual hostility).


Take Care All!

Thursday, October 29, 2009

I'm An Illegal Alien

My Passport is gone! It's Missing!!!

I've retraced every step I've taken in Jordan in the last five days. It's gone!

To make make matters worse, I was supposed to renew my VISA 5 days ago. I went in to do this and then they sent me to get unexpected blood work done. So somehow in the span of three days... It disappeared. Vanished.

Lost. Without a Trace. I'm wondering where the Law and Order is, I've already been to the COPS. Criminal Minds might be at work out there with my Alias. The passport wasn't in my House, it wasn't at The Office, and I've searched all over The Community. I've worked the Numb3rs, and it just doesn't add up. I haven't had many Happy Days, with too many Late Nights - there's been no Glee, even with my Friends.

Send out the Heroes, my very own A-team, someone's gotta pay, I need some Avengers. Please if any of you have been Touched By An Angel, let me know and get out solve these X-Files. I would even settle if you are a Dark Angel or one of Charlie's Angels. From the Desperate Housewives, to the American Dad's, Journeyman, or any Fugitive from the law, answer this call, your very own Mission Impossible, and I know America's Got Talent. Start the Sunday Countdown, I won't stop, I'll be sleepless with Insomnia until the day I shout "Eureka, So You Think You Can Dance?"

And just for the record straight, (one last one I promise) I didn't lose it Accidently on Purpose. No, it just went missing.

So this makes me an illegal alien in Jordan. I went to the US Embassy today, but you what... they close at 12:10 today... because its the end of the month (even though its the 29th, and a Thursday). They don't open again until Sunday.

But that was the end of this day, no it got worse.

I went over for a piece of Chocolate cake... I needed something. When I left the restaurant, it started raining... actually pouring on me. I was soaking wet. I jumped a taxi, but because of the strong rains and some Stock Rally Car thing going on in Abdoun, most of the roads were blocked off.

I get the bank on foot, I have 1 dollar left in my wallet. I go inside to check my statements, but what do you know, I cannot do that because my statements are in Hong Kong... and their systems are not wired together in Jordan. So I walk downstairs to pull out money.

The receipt pops out, but I'm waiting for my card, and waiting and waiting. The problem, it had popped out, but because of a plastic guard over it, that covered the card, I didn't know I could pull it out. So, now I'm in trouble because the bank machine gobbles up my card AND I still don't have any money.

I walk back upstairs. "Sorry, we cannot take out the card until.... Sunday." NOOOOOOOOOO!
Can you just give me money from my account then? No, I'm sorry, we cannot do that either. This is a bank isn't it? Don't you have money?

Finally, the manager calls up and gets approval... and pulls the card out. I ask if I can just try to get the money again... he said, "Don't do that, I think its broken." You need to go over to the international branch. "But hurry up, they close in 45 minutes. "

Remember that Stock Car Rally? Well all the roads were well blocked off for a few blocks. I walk and walk. And I cannot find a taxi. 20 minutes left. Finally I find a taxi. We race off to the HSBC bank. I get their within 10 minutes......

Finally I got money... but I do have to check in a few days my online statements... to see if they took charged me an extra $200 dollars. Life has been frustrating to me. And I still don't have my passport. But Hahmdellah (?sp), Praise be to God... He hasn't abandoned me yet!!!! (Even though it seems so chaotic and complex).

Ma Salam,
Greg

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

All in One Day

9.13.09.01

I have just been woken up AGAIN by the loudspeaker (for the call to prayer) ... its 5AM!!!

Its a new sound speaker, it sound likes its coming from outside my window.

9.13.09.02

5:20, I wonder if this is a sanctioned speaker... I have begun plotting ways to destroy this sound system. Can we not have the first call to prayer at a more reasonable hour, lets say 10:00 AM?

9.13.09.03

With the morning distractions, I have been unable to get much additional sleep

9.13.09.04

Its now day four in the same socks, all of my other socks are being washed at a friends house (thankfully I have clean undergarments)

9.13.09.05

We are driving towards Macoure -- where John the Baptist was beheaded, I just passed the plains where King David and his men fought against the Moabites.

9.13.09.06

Just passed Kings Academy, school where King Abdullah founded. If I enjoy teaching here, I will apply to teach there.

9.13.09.07

We are now driving down the The King's Highway the oldest road in the world .

9.13.09.08

Just saw where John the Baptist was imprisoned by King Herod, and later was executed. Only the ruins still remain.

9.13.09.09

We have just stopped to eat an authentic meal, there is a large tour bus of loud Americans near by. I'm very conscious of my own identity right now.

Americans are loud and annoying, and either overly friendly, or overly rude. As a nationality we know very little of humility, (except for the simple hard working folks, little of this breed still remain), or the culturally aware traveler - a stark contrast to the eye agape tourist, who travels to a new area for a week and automatically assumes they know everything about that location.

Nothing is clearer than the ignorant American who drinks alcohol in a culture in which this act was forbidden at one point and is still frowned upon.

9.13.09.10

Just the oldest map in the world, it was a Mosaic located on the floor of a church. It was in another church, but it was destroyed, when the roof fell down it perfectly preserved much of the ruins.

9.13.09.11

Finally onto Mt. Nebo... the promise land is in sight. However, I wont have a chance to visit this location until my passport is near to expiring (for reasons I cannot explain here)... or I might never be able to see it in person though.

Still it was quite amazing to stand in the very place where Moses stood.

9.13.09.12

Parts of Moses are still evident... the place where he struck the rock to create a stream, is STILL HERE! Yes, you could see the green of bushes and trees against the desert backdrop.

9.13.09.13

Final entry: I just swam in the Dead Sea again... this time I put the mud on my fact, I really did look like the swamp monster this time!

Salam!




Wednesday, October 7, 2009

A Few Frustrations

A Few Frustrations:


This next post will mainly tell of some of my initial frustrations living in Jordan. From panic attacks, to irate taxi drivers, diving into a new culture is not met without difficulties.


Happy Trails to You (until I’m safe again)


My first adventure to a Wadi was enthralling and ever-bit fascinating. Where else can you hike through a river, with steep rock cliffs on both sides? When faced with a second opportunity to go Wadi hiking (with the spoken guarantee that it would be easier than wading through a river), I jumped at it.


The day started off well, we climbed up several hills, found the trickling stream, and I had ample time to take pictures: from an obstinate crab, to a curious frog... all seemed to be going well. This of course all changed when I was informed of the plans to climb up one of the steep cliff walls. Being afraid of heights, I mumbled my misgivings about this new turn in the adventure (there was some talk of this before, but I thought that it had been laid to rest when we started to run out of time).


I was told not to worry, and that we were going to meet up with a road at the top of the cliff walls and the trek down through the canyon would be easier than the ascent.


We began deliberately climbing, inching our way ever-skyward. At the crest of each hill, was more rock to be conquered. After 15 minutes, I realized that we were still going up. With each rock I passed, I became more alarmed. Suddenly, I bolted up the cliffs, nearly running on all fours up the ascent. I’m actually a decent climber, and I can certainly hoist my own weight, I just don’t like heights... so in doing this I was trying to reach the top as quickly as I could.


One Person’s Road, Another’s Goat Trail


With each scoop of gravel and rocks that I scooped past my hands, the more alarmed I became. I was full on my way to a full-blown panic attack (my first one, so this was new territory for me: literally and figuratively speaking). I had gone on so far ahead, it took about 20 minutes for the rest of the group to catch up. By the time they got up to me, I was gripping ahold of a rock, with my body dangling on the 45 degree slope (that might not seem very steep, but there were no solid rocks at this point and I was wearing running shoes with almost zero traction).


Once Dan got up to me, I was stuck in this massive panic attack. Ironically, the rock that I was gripping onto so pervasively, came loose the moment Dan arrived. (I realized this then, but was still panicking that I didn’t stop to Praise God for it, but I don’t think that rock was solid to begin with. He made that rock freeze in the gravel to give me security when I needed it most.)


Once the rest of the group caught up, it was then, and only then that both Dan and I realized that this “road” our fearless group leader was describing was not a road, but in fact a goat trail-- which at times was only 4-6 inches wide of packed dirt.


What Comes Up, Must Come Down... (but its the Down that Worries me the Most)


It was at this moment that I faced a dilemma: either go back down via way of the boulders (steep climbing), or traverse along the side of the cliffs, hugging the cliff walls.


I was terrified of both of these options. Watching our group leader from across the gorge wasn’t any easier. While it didn’t look like she had much room, the only thing that I saw was that she had 10 feet of rock slope, until it dropped off for hundreds of feet. *Translation* If you slip, you have 10 feet to stop your descent, until you die a horrible and gruesome death.


After much trepidation, I finally chose to go the way of goat trails. While normally I would protest, Dan (father of four, who at this point was treating me like a son), took my hand and I was too afraid of my own footing to dissuade him.


Did I learn any great revelations from this experience? I will always trust my own judgement and never go up a cliff. But also, I can believe his promises in His word, that in Psalms 18, that He is a rock, and a fortress firm beneath our feet. The next morning I was reading in Isaiah for my devotions and came across the passage, that we will go through fires and not get burnt and walk through rivers and not drown. I took this into a new meaning, I walked through a Wadi, and did not fall down, the Lord Saves!


Men And Women Have Different Hours


Finding a gym here in Jordan, was proving to be a difficult experience. I for one, do not lift weights to impress, rather, I lift because I have weak shoulders from playing American football. Feeling fat and weak, it was time for me to get back into the gym.


One that I tried out was called “VIP” but it was anything but this. When I arrived, I simply went inside. I’m waiting in the reception area, there was no one at the front desk. There was however a woman vacuuming the floor. So I politely hollered, “hello”.


She freaked out and started yelling at me in Arabic. She wasn’t wearing anything “inappropriate” and she did have clothes on, but for a Jordanian woman, she wasn’t wearing much. She ran behind a wall, while I turned and faced the door, figuring she was embarrassed. She continued to yell in Arabic, and I just wanted to know what was going on. Finally she was able to form the words in English “come back have past six”.


What I finally figured out, was that men and women work out at different times at this gym. I didn’t know this, and there was not a sign on the door informing any hapless American of the different gym hours.


Forty minutes later, she came out in a full burqa covering (covered from head to toe). She was a very traditional Muslim, and I was too embarrassed to look at her in the eye.


So Where Is All the Equipment?


I was in such a need for a workout, that at this point I didn’t care where I got it. The gym was falling apart. Most of the equipment had been heavily “modified”. Meaning the cables had snapped, and they had been tied together, etc. The crossover machine was such that the weights on one side were 5 inches higher than the ones on the other side.


I was scared working out here. All the while I could hear the voice of Adam Laforrest whispering in my ear, GET OUT OF HERE! (Adam wasn’t there, but he would have never worked out in this gym).


Even the simplest items, like the bench press was dangerous. You had to bang the bar to get it to rest on the uprights. Its not fun having to save energy, struggling to keep it from killing me.


Thankfully, I found a new gym, Sports City, an amazing complex with new equipment. The only thing that is odd, is that women work out with men at this gym (like any other gym I’ve been to), but somehow it feels especially weird now that I’m in Jordan.


Is My Driver A Jew???


Most taxi drivers have been especially curious and quizzative since I’ve arrived in Jordan. They want to talk to you, know where you are from, and what you are doing. On my way over to Sport City (which is aptly named as it comprises of tennis courts, a stadium, indoor and outdoor swimming pools, and of course a nice gym), I found a taxi driver who knew no English.


I had to call a friend and have him give the driver instructions. Once he got there, he tried to make me pay double! The outrage! After I had seen the taxi meter before he turned it off. I said no, this is two dollars you owe me a half dinar. He was upset and threw the money back into my lap. (There was no way that I was going to leave without paying).


I called up my friend who does speak Arabic, and the guy said that he felt that he should get paid more because he was following special instructions. Finally, he gave me the half dinar and I got out the car. To which my friend replied, “the driver went all Jewish on you.” (I don’t mean to slam Jews of course, but rather point out how they are perceived in Jordan, and how this drivers actions were that odious).


One final item, drivers here are very particular. They often wont pick you up unless you are going their way. Quite opposite to that in Hong Kong. It is against the law to refuse a person there. After having no less that 10 drivers refuse me today, I wish that was the case here in Jordan!


Anyway, have a wonderful day, as tomorrow is always a new day!


Salam (Peace)!

Greg

Friday, October 2, 2009

Swimming in the Dead Sea

Swimming in the Dead Sea:


This will not be the longest message, as I am a little pressed for time, but I did want to give you guys somewhat of an update. My journey here in Jordan has now lasted about 5 days, and I am loving it!


One of the very neat things that I’ve been able to do is to visit

the Dead Sea and go river hiking in a stream flowing into the dead sea.


River Hiking:

I went up this stream, there was amazing pictures and sights to see. I made this trip with Dan (not his real name) who is living here, and Andrew (not his real name) who is currently eliminating drugs from Afghanistan. The whole trip was somewhat of a challenge, as we had to go up some waterfalls that were steep.


In fact, one waterfall that I was going up, I lost my footing (they were swept under me), and I went careening down the waterfall certain to be smashed upon the rocks below me (I most likely would have broken a few bones). Luckily with my right arm, I managed to grab ahold of a rope that was dangling, and with my left hand I snagged my baseball cap that was most certainly going to swept away by the current.


While we were there Dan told a story about how Elijah hid on the brook of Cherith, (location uncertain) to be fed by ravens. While it is uncertain where this brook is, one could certainly see how easy it would be to hide there for years.


One last object lesson, as we floated closer to the dead sea, we could see all of these fresh water fish swimming, edging closer to their impending doom. The Dead sea is almost 80% salt, and 20% water. Nothing is alive in it at all. These fish would die within minutes once they reached the waters-- spiritual application, it doesn’t pay to swim and float with the herd.


Dead Sea:

Also there, we swam in the Dead Sea. It

’s fantastic because you cannot actually swim, but really just float. Its nearly impossible to sink in the sea because your body is so buoyant. There I had my first mud bath, with the famous Dead Sea mud.



Well, true to promise, I didn’t have much time to discuss in fantastic details all that is going on, but instead I hope you enjoy a few of these pictures. Check out my facebook for pictures in fuller detail.





Salem (Peace),

Greg