Today I had an appointment with the otorrinolaringologo.  That is how you say ENT (ear, nose, and throat doctor) in spanish.  Wow, enough learning for one day!
Anyways, that went well... hopefully I won't have to have sinus surgery anytime soon, but there's always that possiblity.  But that wasn't the delightful surprise.  Nor was it delightful (although it was a surprise) that the computer system fell right as I was finishing up and therefore they weren't able to print off my prescription and order to get another x-ray.
After waiting in lines of people with the same problem, and watching the poor receptionist get more and more distressed, I decided to go out for a while and hope that the system came back up while I was gone.  So I started walking along Avenida 19, which is lined with brick sidewalks and evenly-spaced maple trees, expensive car dealerships, kitchenware stores, and spas.  I was thinking about getting my nails done, but didn't want to pay the prices of the high-end salons around there, so kept walking until I saw a promising side street.  
Halfway up that block, the  ornate facade of Jacques' tea room juts out.  It is... luxurious... and cute... and inviting.  Above and a bit behind the facade, enormous brass letters read "JESUS."  Jazz music drifts out from the glassed-in front sitting area. I walk in and immediately like the place.  Small tables, walls lined with Mucha prints so close together that their frames are nearly touching... a little further in there is beautiful bread, scrumptious pastries, heavenly merengues, and red velvet carpet going up some stairs to another sitting area.  
I stop, in awe of the delectable sight.  
Then continue upstairs and choose a seat at the counter, where I can take it all in.  A kind-faced, gray-haired man is at the other end of the dark wooden counter.  He asks if I wouldn't like to sit at a table.  No, I prefer to look down at the rest of the tea room.  He has an accent.  I ask where he is from.  France.  He is Jacques, the owner of the establishment.  I am from the U.S.  His colombian wife studied in Charleston, South Carolina.  I'm from North Carolina!  I meet his wife.  They find out I'm a missionary.  They are Christians, their children go to the same (american) school as some kids I know, they go to the same church as some friends of mine.  Jacques invites me to follow him outside to meet a friend of his from their church and to see the name "JESUS" hanging above his bakery.
Once back inside, upstairs, I eat a delicious -- DELICIOUS -- cinnamon roll and drink a fruity tea, read some, and go downstairs to pay.  Jacques tells me that God paid for me today, and they give me a little card with a Bible verse on it.  
After this delightful surprise, I felt very blessed and walked back to the clinic smiling.  There I turned in my forms to the now-calm receptionist, waited half an hour (reading), then was called up to the desk to learn that the system fell again!  Oh well, some things shouldn't be surprising...
 
 
3 comments:
Marvelous!!! :-) The enTIRE story.
I love this! He gives us those moments as gifts... what a treasure.
This story makes me smile. God is cool like that. :)
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