Great Moments in Bad
Acting: The Eighth Grade Attacks a Play
March 12, 2004
Nancy
had this conversation with one of our dorm guys the night before the big
play:
Nancy:
Do you feel ready?
Them: I’ve memorized all my lines. I just haven’t
figured out when I say them.
And so it was, a glorious night of missed cues,
mumbling, and acting so bad it made you feel good about yourself. It was like a
night in the states when you can’t sleep and turn on the TV and get to watch a really really bad
Japanese monster movie; so bad it is good, and you are so glad it’s not you up
on the stage that the world somehow seems brighter. And it was like my golf
game, average with glimpses of brilliance.
*
Nancy and I went to make another attempt at getting the
travel papers for the twins. We arrived at the immigration building at
9:00am.
9:00am: We wait in
line to submit our paperwork.
9:30 am: Our turn
in the lines arrives. The government official looks at our paperwork and informs
us that we need dependent’s passes for the twins. This is a new one for us, and
we are directed to another line.
9:45 am: Another
government official tells us it will take months to process the paperwork. We
ask if there is any way to expedite the process. She tells us to go to the fifth
floor and ask them if they will help us.
!0:00 am: We leave the building
and walk around to another side and get on the elevator. We jump off when we
realize that there is no fifth floor that it stops on. After several attempts
with several elevators, we realize that we should go to the sixth floor and walk
down.
10:15 am: We knock
on several doors, and are finally directed to a room where an official tells us
that she will do the paperwork. We should just go back downstairs and request
that the paperwork be brought upstairs.
10:20 am: We walk
down the stairs and wait in line to request the paperwork be brought upstairs.
We wait in line.
10:45 am: We are
invited to go back upstairs with the paperwork.
10:50 am: The
government official tells us she will be done at 3. We explain that we have an
appointment at the US Embassy at 1:30
that we cannot miss. She tells us to come back at noon.
10:50 am: We walk
downstairs and wait.
11:45 am: We walk
up five floors. The government official tells us we must downstairs to pay our
fees. Mindful that the offices close at 12:30 for lunch, we run down five flights of stairs and
wait in line.
11:55 am: We pay
our fees and run up five flights of stairs. We wait outside the
office.
12:10 pm: The
government official informs us that she is done, and that we should go to
another office to retrieve it.
12:20 pm: The new
government official tells us it will not be ready until the
afternoon.
There is someone at RVA that does this kind of work full
time. He refers to it as human Pac-Man.
After 9/11 and the recent attacks in
Madrid, you
understand why a government wants to be careful. But it is hard to understand
this, and the waste of time and resources days like
this consume. And we are not much closer to getting the paperwork we must have
to leave with the twins.
*
We went to a school we had never visited today; Umhatru. It is the most remote school I’ve ever been to
since I have been going to schools. The children were not used to white faces,
and one little girl cried whenever I looked at her. (Note to friends especially
from Kansas: no
comments necessary here)
It was desperately poor. And there was a sign on the
door that would just break your heart.

What we saw was so
sobering:


But the longer we were there, the children warmed up to
us. The food helps.





And at the end, the little girl who had cried gave me a
little hug.
It looked like a small victory, but it felt like so much
more.
Your pal
Steve
http://www.yourpal-steve.org/
http://peifer.kijabe.org
Steve
and Nancy Peifer
Kenya
Address: PO
Box 80
Kijabe
Kenya
00220
Stateside
Address: PO
Box 178
Pearl
River,
NY
10965
Phone:
011-254-20-32046-252
peifer@kijabe.net
http://peifer.kijabe.org