Thursday, February 9, 2012

I am enough.


I was reading an article today in Relevant Magazine’s other publication called Reject Apathy.  It’s all about social justice causes and non-profits and government organizations that tackle those various issues.  The article was an interview with someone at Compassion U.S. and was discussing their child sponsorship programs.  At the end of the article he gave a quote that he says is well known around the Compassion organization:

“The opposite of poverty isn’t wealth – the opposite of poverty is enough.”

I quickly posted the quote as a Facebook status and got a few “likes”.  Usually it would end there.  Later however, as I re-read the quote I was reminded of a Malawian phrase.  Here, when someone has eaten their share at a meal, they don’t use the western expression of, “I’m full”.  They say the phrase, “Ndakhuta”.  The English translation of this phrase is, “I am enough.”

At first glance it doesn’t seem all that different: “I’m full” versus “I am enough”.  It got me thinking though; it’s a very different and perhaps profound statement.  Our western culture seems to have the goal of always getting more, bigger, and better things.  When we eat, we don’t just eat enough, we eat until we’re literally full.  When we consume other goods and products, we don’t just consume enough-we consume until our closets, garages, houses, and rented storage spaces are full.  Try to explain that one to a Malawian.  Having so much stuff that your huge house can’t even fit it all; you have to pay someone to store it for you!

During my time spent living in Malawi I have learned, less out of choice and more out of necessity, to simply live with a lot less.  As I type this blog I’m sitting in the dark using battery power because of the regular power outages that occur here.  If the battery were dead, I would probably be reading by the light of a book light.  That’s the typical entertainment for me for the evening.  If I were an average Malawian living out in a village I would be finishing dinner and chatting with family and friends by candlelight until it was time to go to sleep.  Choices at restaurants and in stores are a lot fewer than in the U.S.  Cheese, for example, pretty much comes in one standard cheddar form and it costs at least 5 times the price it costs in the U.S.  I don’t even know how many types of cheeses are available at an average supermarket in the States.

While Madalo was visiting me in Seattle, she was amazed and at times perplexed by all of the choices she was given about everything.  We went out to The Cheesecake Factory one night for her birthday.  If you’ve ever been there you know that their menu is pretty much a book of choices splattered with random advertisements.  It was a bit overwhelming for her.  After you’ve read though the book and you are finally ready to order you can choose between at least 5 different side options, whether to have soup or salad or both before the meal and which salad dressing you prefer, which of an endless list of drink options you would like, how you would like your meat cooked, and on and on it goes.  Don’t even get me started on the different number of cheesecakes!  Not only can we consume as much as we want; we have endless choices as to what exact item, color, flavor, temperature, country of origin, etc. we would like those items to be.

Malawi is a much more communal culture than the United States.  Almost everything is shared.  Individual ownership doesn’t have as much meaning as it does in the West.  Food, clothing, tools, land, housing, etc…there’s a lot less of it to go around so sharing is a must for people to live and for the society to endure; especially for those who live out in villages.  Because of this, people don’t always eat until “full”.  They eat until they are “enough”.  This leaves room for others to also be “enough”.  I can’t count how many times I’ve sat down to eat with obviously poor Malawians watching them eating less so that they could offer me more.  Out of respect, I know that I can’t refuse, but I do try to only eat just enough to make them happy so that there is plenty for everyone else to get a healthy amount.

As I have experienced both ways of living, I am continually amazed at how much more I enjoy, how much more fulfilling it is for me to live not with everything I may want, not with everything I can afford or everything I can fit into my house, but simply living with “enough.”  Ndakhuta.  I am enough.

“When you reap the harvest of your land, you shall not reap your field right up to its edge, neither shall you gather the gleanings after your harvest.  And you shall not strip your vineyard bare, neither shall you gather the fallen grapes of your vineyard.  You shall leave them for the poor and for the sojourner: I am the Lord your God.” –Leviticus 19:9-10