Before we went back to Escobar I went to our cell phone provider to get a phone that I could use, as I was using our Motorola V3 before, to connect to the internet. The salesman talked me into buying a BlackBerry, saying not only could I get email and browse the web using the phone but I could also use the phone as a Bluetooth modem to connect my laptop to the internet as I had done with my other phone.
Lucas and Timmy are happy to be home |
Part of the problem is a very variable cell phone signal at our house. This aspect of the problem I'm hoping to remedy with a dual band cell phone repeater. But there also seems to be a problem with the phone itself as a modem--even when I have a good signal it only connects a fraction of the times I try.
Our neighbor "Abuela" (Grandma) Asunción's house |
Right now we have a couple of days in Asunción. We're celebrating Timmy's fourth birthday today, and tomorrow we'll go back to Escobar and take with us Lizet's mom who is here for a visit from Bolivia. We're staying at the mission guest house, where we have a wireless internet connection, so I'm trying to remember and catch up with all the things I need to do online.
I keep reminding myself that to get to live in such a wonderful place as Escobar, and be involved in the exciting ministry we get to have a part in, we have to make some sacrifices, and if one of them is a reliable internet connection, well, then, so be it! It's well worth it.
3 comments:
Welcome back friends! May God grant you grace as you transition back to the culture and its technological frustrations.
How can I learn Guaraní? I am a fluent Spanish speaker, so could use Spanish didactical materials if I knew where to get them. Thank you for your advice!
Hi there, Angela.
The truth is, there's not a great deal available that is really helpful. I just posted the following in answer to a similar request on another thread:
"There is a series available in Paraguay, but nowhere else as far as I can tell, called "Hablemos el Guaraní," by Diego Ortiz, et. al. It consists of four books. The organization leaves quite a bit to be desired, and the explanations are sketchy. But it's the best thing I've found.
"There are a couple of good dictionaries available, but the one I like the most for beginners is by Natalia Krivoshein de Canese. Though it is smaller than the very thorough volume by Antonio Guasch, it contains a higher percentage of vocabulary that is in current popular usage. This frees you from the blank looks resulting from choosing an obscure, obsolete, or invented word, of which there are many in Guasch."
I should mention, Angela, that the Ortiz series also has, I believe, recordings. Are you in Paraguay? If so, you should be able to find these in one of the larger bookstores.
I wish you well in your efforts to learn Guarani!
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