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Health & Wellness Wednesdays

Experience & Adventure

Building Homes In Mexico

Many years ago when I was in my late teens, I took a trip to Mexico to build homes. It truly was an experience of a lifetime.

I went with a group of friends and we went to an organization just across the border in a suburb of Tijuana. This particular organization’s mission was to build small one bedroom homes for families in need. These families were so beyond grateful for the gift of a house! It was truly like nothing I’ve ever experienced before.

When we would arrive at the site for the build, we were able to see the conditions in which these families were living in. They often had no walls - just fabric hung around cardboard boxes or other such configurations. These “homes” would often house upwards of 8-10 people. 

While our one room homes seemed small and insignificant to those of us from my group, to these Mexican families it was an amazing gift. 

These houses were one large room with windows, a door and sloped roof that was shingled. We also had electricity hooked up. Once completed, these families could lock their house and they had true shelter from the outside for the first time in a long time.

Much of their life would still be done outside - cooking, for example was done on the front porch rather than indoors. The inside was for shelter and sleeping primarily.

I remember as a teenager the shock of seeing how other people lived in developing countries. More than anything I distinctly remember the gratitude and happiness that existed there. The Mexican people we met were the most gracious, beautiful and content people I had ever met…despite what they didn’t have.

It was such a learning experience for me to be grateful for what I have and to not take things for granted. To this day I still think about that trip and am reminded of what a true blessing it is to be able to do something for someone else.

Recommended Book

Serving with Eyes Wide Open

Dec 01, 2012
ISBN: 9781441241139

Interesting Fact #1

In 2019, ravaging wildfires in northwest Mexico destroyed and burned around 250 homes (including ones that Mission Discovery teams built) and burned through thousands of acres. The fires, visible from San Diego, caused significant damage in Tecate, Ensenada, and Tijuana, among many other surrounding areas.

SOURCE

Interesting Fact #2

It is up to us not to turn our eyes from this truth and become a part of the solution to build homes. Mission trips to Mexico are a blessing and the most humbling experience that you’ll ever encounter. Think about it. What is a home? It’s a safe haven, the place where one can roam freely. To build homes for families is to provide a basic need, a safe place, a sanctuary. It means security. To build a home is to serve, and to serve the needs of others breeds gratitude. To love is to serve.

SOURCE

Interesting Fact #3

Mission trips help you put life into perspective, and in this case, a mission trip to Mexico will influence a massive positive impact for the families that became homeless as a result of the wildfires.

SOURCE

Quote of the day

“Being on mission is not always about going to a specific place—it’s about being intentional where you are. That’s investment. And investment is always intentional. It’s a lifestyle choice.” ― Dustin Willis

Article of the day - Lessons learned in Mexico can be applied here

An Oak Bluff couple who builds homes in Mexico said they see parallels between poverty there and poverty here — and they realize that you don’t need to cross any borders to help out.

Melanie and Lyndon Peters recently returned from their third mission trip to Ensenada, Mexico in January.

The couple travelled with Oak Bluff Bible Church to build two houses in four days.
The first house was for a family of three. The mother is dying of cancer, and she has two daughters, 16 and 10. Her husband left when she was diagnosed.

Supplied photo
Oak Bluff Bible Church’s team stands outside Yugo Ministries in Ensenada, Mexico. Not all team members were from the church — family and friends also came along.

Supplied photo Oak Bluff Bible Church’s team stands outside Yugo Ministries in Ensenada, Mexico. Not all team members were from the church — family and friends also came along.

A family of five received the other home. A couple, plus the wife’s 30-year-old daughter from a previous marriage and her twins, moved in. The daughter had struggled with addictions in her teens and moved back with her mom.

Oak Bluff Bible Church partnered with Yugo Ministries for the short-term trip. The church crew’s job was to pay for supplies, build the homes efficiently, and pass the keys along to the families on their last day.

Lyndon and Melanie said the church partners with Yugo Ministries because the families they help are supported afterwards.

“(Yugo Ministries) works with local churches to find families that are really in need,” Lyndon said. “We know there’s people in the local churches involved with the families we build for, so we know there’s people that’ll take care of them.”

“The families help build their houses, and they seem to be doing much better in the years the church goes back to visit,” Lyndon said.

Lyndon recalled seeing a man two years after he’d helped build a house for him. The man had a better job, and he’d added more cabinets to his home and laid rugs out front.

“A lot of people do find it hard coming home because we have so much,” Melanie said. “They struggle with ‘How do I help here?’”

Often, people end up volunteering, or sometimes changing jobs, because of the experience, Melanie said.

“Yes, we did that in Mexico but we can do that here too,” she said. “Yes, they are there, but they’re also right here, and so are we, so why not help?”

Melanie has volunteered at Siloam Mission for six years.

“In a lot of ways, I find it exactly the same,” she said.

Helping others also helps yourself, she said. Both she and Lyndon said the bonding that happens within their mission group is one of the best parts of the trip.

“To see how it’s brought the whole team together, it’s really rewarding,” Lyndon said. “It’s kind of a lifetime experience.”

Gabrielle Piché is a community correspondent for Headingley and her.

Question of the day - What is the most memorable trip you have ever taken?

Experience & Adventure

What is the most memorable trip you have ever taken?