Friday, March 28, 2008

The Bayer Adoption Garage Sale

I know, I know...this is supposed to be about church. Well in this particular case it is about church, just not in the actual building.

Instead this story takes place at the home of our good friends, Zach & Holly Bayer. The reason this is about church is that a community of people gathered around this couple, to help them adopt a child from Ethiopia.

People have generously given them televisions, couches, fine china, and a kitchen sink (literally), for a garage sale, to raise money. Apparently when you adopt you have to pay thousands of dollars in fees to get a baby. This is not to be confused with buying a baby, which can only be done on the black market. I imagine this requires speaking to people who either have curly mustaches or wear eye patches (but are not pirates).

This morning, Zach called me over to help him move a TV they sold to a single woman, who did not have the means of teleporting the item to her home. I've moved furniture before, so I think this will be a piece of cake.

It was not. The TV wasn't huge, but it was awkward to move because it can't be removed from the wooden hutch it resides within. Add to that the brilliant idea from the manufacturer to put it on a swivel stand, and if that not enough, there are no wheels.

This unit, which remember does not come apart, is chest high, and must be carried from the bottom, as there is nowhere to grip it from the sides. Another defect I blame on the manufacturer.

In order to get this beastly object from point A to point B, we both had to overcome a serious obstacle for most men: Pride.

You see, with people watching us, we had to pick up the unit and get it as far as we could. Which on average was about three-and-a-half feet.

Internally, we are both thinking "I don't want to put this thing down, that would be admitting defeat, but I think I just cut my hand open. Is that blood? I think I'm gonna pass out."

Another time I thought "I can go another eight steps, no problem, oh no, my hand slipped and now I'm holding my end with one hand and my ear...PUT IT DOWN, PUT IT DOWN!"

We finally made it. All the way out of the garage and into the truck (about 15 feet). It took about a half hour.

We get to the ladies apartment complex, and park the truck. She tells us she is apartment 102. Which is about a hundred yards from where we parked. We start praying for God to give us super human strength. He sent us a maintenance worker with a hand dolly.

The Lord works in mysterious ways.

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