I’m sitting across from my missionary brother. He tells me
stories of his life balancing two worlds, a home that’s not quite home in
either place—details of the other world lingering, from cars, to dog, to how to
keep the house safe. This type of information isn’t new for me. I watched Dad deal
with it all the time. A call from Alberto about the ministry. Me asking if my
golden retriever lemon lover was being fed. But now, a new question lingered as
I sat in American restaurant, middle class with a fireplace and view over a
field or water that’s been covered in the blanket of snow, this is my world now.
These stressors my brother describes are almost foreign to me, a memory of a
child hood left behind.
And yet, middle class America isn’t my world. I am still the
outsider, looking in. I am the one shaking my head at a culture of “busy is
better” and rushing from sports to work to church…I am the one who feels like
she almost belongs, but never quite will. Never will have that family of Mom
and Dad to spend the weekend, type of world. That is not my story. My story is airplanes
and long trips across the country. My story is watching my siblings follow in
my parent’s footsteps, painfully aware that I was taken off the ministry
playing field by force—I would have lost myself there, my stories gone to waste.
I would have never made it on the field, I barely have energy to handle the
American work day, never mind disinfecting every vegetable I eat, boiling the
water to drink, washing laundry using a hose to fill the washer, boiling water as
a constant just for daily cleaning needs. I would never have been the woman who
could raise children away from friends, survive away from a community who
understood her own culture. Not me. I want to be made that way, but I’m not.
I was taken off the playing field because I couldn’t handle
it. In my teenage years I invested everything I had into my parent’s ministry.
From doing kids ministry with a fellow church in Latacunga to Sunday school in
a church plant that never made it. I worked in an orphanage and tasted ministry
not theirs. I was often the one to climb in the car alone with Daddy, or with Daddy
and Anita and ride up into the mountains…and yet….that life isn’t mine now.
I have looked poverty in the face, both financial and now
spiritual. And I do not belong. Still.
I had this odd idea that when I moved to the USA and stayed
I’d be planting roots. But in a sense in that attempt, I left the roots I had.
I no longer belong to the missionary community and culture.
But I don’t belong to USA, quite. I still have the foreign eyes looking in, a
hidden immigrant with white skin, privileged because I have the ethnicity of
respect with a knowledge to communicate out.
But I don’t belong, and in that I am not privileged. And though I’ve
heard calls for Missionary Kids to become the next generatioin of Missionary, I
can’t just go back, I don’t think. My mental health struggles won’t just pass
like I want them to. If nothing else, I’m probably stuck with some kind of
fatigue my whole life. I’ve tried taking the pills. I am excerising. I got a
dog who helps so so much. But still my energy does not match my age.
So I do what I can.
I’ve joined the other side of the missionary table. I’ll pay
for the meals, listen to the stories, pray, help be the funding. I DO CARE.
But I can’t go.
Maybe some day I’ll figure out what it means to be the one
that stayed in the home country, the one that’s not my passport I mean, not the
one that has mountains reaching to the sky and settles me the minute I step
into the thin air. To be missionary in the same place I’m paid. To love on the
one percent, to see the needs and suffering hidden under social norms and
knowledge without experience of relationship. It’s not the same. And we would
be cruel to say it was. But for now, for now I will name what has eched a
stress in me the minute I started adult life. My heart will never fully be home.
Even not travelling, a piece of me was left somewhere else. Another taken by a
brother to Costa Rica, a sister to the Chicago’s inner city. I am the
missionary’s family. The child who did not play sports or learn to dance. The
adult who will work a “paying” job and never raise support, never trek across the
country for a livelihood, nor spend half of my work week on what it takes to
live in a country “not your own.”
And yet, I stubbornly refuse to leave Grand Rapids. I WILL
make a home here. Fight in a country that believes in dog coats and abortion. I
will never belong to everyone. But to quote a wall decoration “To the world you
may be just one person…but to that one person, you are the world.” I will never
belong in a way some will never understand. But if nothing else, I get stories
from that. Lots of novel inspiration and fodder for non-fiction. And my loved
ones, that family spread across the world, well, maybe just maybe I’m starting
to believe that the straggler Hunter is a needed piece of the picture. I have a
sister who’s making my puppy mittens. A brother who wanted to have lunch. And parents
who would do just about anything to know I’m safe.
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