We’re at the station 1.5 hours early. One angkot takes 20 minutes from
the main neighborhood street to the train station: we have only two
carry-ons. W packs along the hand truck to help bring back our
dishes.
A security guard points the way across five tracks to our train.
We and others cross the open tracks, climb through another train standing
between the station and our platform, and settle into wide comfy seats. The
train moves 100 feet forward as people are still boarding to let another train
go by. “Look and live!” You learn that early here.
The train (kereta api)
is on its way to Jakarta by 8:30am. We arrive around noon after enjoying the
ride through beautiful countryside. The blue sky and high clouds shine above
the little dirt paths that lead up and down away from the tracks along the way.
Terraced farms in the mountains |
Once we get to the flat, W grades papers. He’s been
frustrated by the lack of an internet connection in the Bandung house, so he tackles
student grading and questions all evening. Meanwhile, it takes me a few hours
to repack 9 – yes, that’s NINE – boxes of dishes into 5. Not even one dish is
broken! We walk to Strawberry Sam’s a few blocks away for a supper of noodles
and chicken and W treats himself to a blackberry smoothie.
Saturday
We’re up before 7 but have misunderstood when the ride
leaves for church. We’re ready at 7:15 when the driver is long gone. Breakfast
is a pastry that we picked up last night. W has to be at church to do a video
for a series around “meals in Luke” – so we hail a taxi. I walk to the nearby mall for a
$10 massage. I have a “floor knot,” a cramp in my shoulder from scrubbing the
floor the other day. The masseuse barely touches my back but my feet feel
great afterwards!
At noon, there’s a new-attendees Connection Lunch with
pastoral staff on hand to eat together and introduce newbies to the church and
small groups. It’s good fun to meet Maureen, an early-20s professional who
works in investments and loves it. Of course, being IES, the food is great too.
Living near the tracks: people everywhere |
Again, God provided. The original person could not have
provided the official notice of employment and the bank was closing in an hour
by the time we arrived. Our friends take us to a traditional Indonesian
tea/coffee shop in the mall to celebrate. We try some regional desserts, from
sweet corn to coconut and cassava fritters. Of course Livia and I are tempted
by the fun clothing for little kids. Livia finds an adorable dress; I find a
cute batik shirt for our grandson: (Bramono’s daughter flies to Seattle next
Sunday to stay in our basement flat while her husband attends NU. We’ll send it
along.)
We continue to ask for a course in Manners 101. So far we’ve
learned:
- · Do not walk in front of a seat (or lower standing) person without bowing or nodding to indicate equality and respect.
- · Sit by a friend who’s driving. Staying in the back seat insults him/her by treating the friend like your servant-driver.
- · Point with the thumb not the index finger which looks prescriptive and demeaning.
- · Call people Ibu (Mrs) or Bapak (Mr) and (optionally) their name.
- · A tap on the horn can mean go ahead, I’m coming up beside, or I’m behind you as you merge into traffic (so watch for me).
- · Say hello in Indonesian to people looking your way. It shows them you’re making an effort as a bulĂ© (Western foreigner) in their country.
- · To cross the street in traffic (everywhere), you watch for a break in motorcycles. Wave with the palm down to ask cars to slow down to let you through. Then walk boldly but stay alert for motorcycles spurting between the cars and buses. Even drivers of 3-wheeled bhajaj-es stick their hands out the window and wave their way across 3-6 lanes of traffic to negotiate an intersection. There are few traffic lights – mostly, everyone gets to the crossing and somehow keeps going wherever they’re headed. It’s quite amazing to watch (or cross).
One of the must-dos is a visit to Bawean P7Rasa bakery. Ibu Avisha,
Pastor Dave’s admin, tells us about this bakery famous for its cakes, puff
pastry, chocolate and homemade ice cream. She’s tiny. She laughs when I ask how
she can love cakes and be so slim: “You can take my food. No problem. But if
you ask for my sweets, I will have to fast and pray about it.”
Sunday
We’re up before 6am and putter as we get ready. Breakfast is
another serving of “buggy granola” with not a single ant floating in it. Anyway,
it’s stored in the freezer so whatever got in a few weeks ago should be dead.
Tastes great, regardless.
The taxi driver doesn’t know that Sunday downtown streets
are closed to cars; it’s pedestrians only. He takes a half-hour, many-mile
detour to the train station. We follow another cab doing the same thing.
Jakarta gives new meaning to mixed-use zoning. Businesses
spring up in neighborhoods. There are moments of startling beauty – plants in
pots, set in colored “woven” patterns; the architecture is amazing. But there’s
the ordinary and the bane of Indonesia – plastic bags everywhere along the
roads.
Indonesians are the most helpful and courteous people we’ve
ever met (besides Canadians). Whether at church, in our neighborhood, in the
angkots, or if they’re taxi drivers, people willingly give directions, are open
to conversations, are curious and engaged – and just plain nice. Even school kids on the mini-vans ask where we’re from and try
their English on us. We feel at home.
In the train station, we talk to a Dutch couple spending
three weeks of vacation here. They’re taking a flight from Bandung to Bali
after taking in the regional sights for a few days.
The train ride is once
again a fine trip. I have to use the toilet. It’s stainless steel and clean at
the start of the journey. It is however “squat only,” a hole in the floor with
foot rests on each side. No worries, my knees are healthy enough to pull me up
again. At least there’s paper provided. At the seminary and other places, you
have to bring your own Kleenex pack. Enough said.
We arrive to the relatively cool fresh air of Bandung after
1pm. Unfortunately we go out the wrong exit. The security guard lets us back in
and W drags the heavy box of dishes and our luggage on the hand truck across all
six train tracks. We walk through the station parking lot and across the crush
of cars and motorbikes on the street.
The taxi drivers waiting outside the
station want $7 (a $3.50 trip) to take us home and refuse to set their meters.
An old parking attendant, a tiny, withered gentleman, wades into traffic and
flags down a taxi for us. {It sounds like a “company” car is coming our way in
the next while, which will make running errands and exploring the city much
easier and safer at night. We’ll probably still take the minivans and our early
morning walk to rouse our brains for school.}
Traffic is horrendous. Apparently Jakarta comes to town on
weekends to shop and eat the great food of Bandung. Many motorcycles carry
entire families, mother, father, children and occasionally babies in their
mom’s arms. A little girl snoozes with her head on the handlebars beside the
taxi window.
While I wash the new dishes (we left all but one box in
Jakarta for another trip), W tackles the living floor tiles again. Slowly but
surely the black grooves are turning stone-colored. [When the landlord comes in
Monday, he exclaims, “These are
dirty!” comparing the before-being-cleaned tiles with our hard work. Oh yes
they are.]
We bought huge towels (200X140cm or 6.5’X4.5’) at an outlet
store in Jakarta for mattress covers. ($13 each, instead of $50-100 for
mattress covers.) Little by little the house is turning into our home. It’s
great to be back!
Monday
We head for the classroom at 6:45, taking the bus and walking.
(We reach over 12,000 steps – over 5 miles – by the time we’re home.) During
morning break, Sumathi and I walk the neighborhood behind the seminary and find
a shop selling canaries. She tells me to disappear when I’m ready to buy;
she’ll negotiate or it will cost me double the amount.
Japanese food, Indonesian style |
The landlord, his helper, and the internet guy are here for
a few hours. We once had a dial tone in the phone. For whatever reason,
service is disconnected. They’ll be back tomorrow after the phone company
reconnects the line. The helper takes a handsaw and fits the slats to the beds
the landlord bought for us. He puts the mattresses on top. Need a good night’s rest,
anyone?
W scrubs away at the living room floor while I catch up on the blog. At
7:30, I heat up our lunch leftovers, crack in an egg, and supper is served.
A 3" roach crosses our bedroom floor while W is in the shower. (It's big enough that I first thought it was a lizard.) I'm not fast enough to catch it before it scuttles under the wardrobe. W puts chalk along the front edge of the furniture. Eeek. I knew those roaches were here somewhere. And now they've come to visit.
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