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Author: Subject: Why does Baja like you?
Baja_Girl
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[*] posted on 5-23-2007 at 10:18 PM


Hi, Amir,
thank you for doing this posting...
a friend of mine is a chiropractor who flies a plane and travels with
Mexican Medical Ministries www.mexicanmedical.com - I think, anyway, he flies with other healers (doctors, nurses) to remote outposts throughout baja. He will be in Loreto this weekend.

I am not a religious sort of person, but I think it is important for all us who are able to make the human sojourn a little less painful...
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BAJACAT
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[*] posted on 5-23-2007 at 10:57 PM


Cause we keep it alive,and unforgaten.spread the word Baja Is great..

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BAJA IS WHAT YOU WANTED TO BE, FUN,DANGEROUS,INCREDIBLE, REMOTE, EXOTIC..JUST GO AND HAVE FUN.....
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amir
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[*] posted on 5-23-2007 at 11:07 PM


Thank you, BajaGirl. I looked up the Mexican Medical Ministries link and will research it further. There is a big difference between religiosity and spirituality. You might not be religious, but you care about the human condition - that makes you a spiritual being. I'd like to think that I am on some sort of a spiritual path but am not affiliated with any Church, and so I might have trouble with an evangelical group. It would be nice if we could keep religion and politics out of healing; however I must add in all fairness that it is wonderful and commendable for altruists to use the pulpit as a springboard for their services - as long as it comes from the heart and people get the help they need, and there are no strings attached...

Have fun on your own trip to Loreto, and a speedy health recovery.
Thanks again,
--Amir
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Capt. George
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 03:07 AM


we try to be a part of the community. a good place to be.



\"The penalty good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men\" Plato
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shari
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 08:35 AM


What a wonderful thread and so relevant...Baja gave me a miracle (mi Sirenita) and I strive to give back as much as humanly possible on a daily basis...I try to promote understanding between the races...bridge the gap on both sides and help others where I can. Part of joining this board was to foster goodwill and offer helpful information to baja travellers with ideas on how to treat the locals to make their trip even more enjoyable and satisfying. We talk ALOT about gringos and I attempt to explain the phenomenon to our mexican family and friends. I made SO many cultural boo boos when I first started coming here...and so maybe I can help others avoid these shameful blunders. I am dedicated to helping our village see it's way through the growth that will soon begin. I love this part of baja and it loves me back!



for info & pics of our little paradise & whale watching info
http://www.bahiaasuncion.com/
https://www.whalemagictours.com/
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 01:54 PM


Back in 1983 I was on a roadtrip with one of my buddies and we stopped at the lone fire station in La Paz. At the time the population in La Paz was about 300,000. They had 1 fire station, 1 1946 fire engine, no turnouts , no breathing apparatus, about 200' of leaky hose and 1 nozzle with a broken bail!!!!! They had large pictures on the walls of that tiny station of themselves fighting huge fires in flaps and tank tops.

Being firemen ourselves we hatched a plan to buy used fire engines for $1.00 from the city we worked for. We took them to Bob's house and he did most of the work repacking the pumps, scrounging tires etc. Then we would fill them up with all the hose, turnouts and equipment we could find and drive them to TJ.

The LaPaz fire chief would take the bus up and drive them back. In a couple of years we had sent enough supplies that they had 3 fire stations, an aerial ladder, and ambulance, scott packs, hose, turnouts and all kinds of equipment.

Eventually we were honored in an August ceremony celebrating the dead firemen in Mexico. We were given goatskin proclamations and rode the tailboards all over La Paz code 3 in a massive parade.

I still have the ring that one of the bomberos took off his finger (they didn't have badges back then...but handmade silver rings that signified they were "Bomberos") and gave to me. I am very proud of that.
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 02:32 PM


rdrrmBe ----

Great story as are all the others above.
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Capt. George
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 03:06 PM


kudos to you and our La Paz brothers from a retired FDNY Firefighter.
Engine Co. 42 Da Bronx!




\"The penalty good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men\" Plato
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fdt
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 09:36 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by DENNIS
What is it that you contribute to Baja, money excluded, that makes you part of the Baja community?

Baja California is "Grande Por Ti"
Baja California is "Great Because of You":tumble:

http://www.fabricadehits.com/pages/video.php?video=images/sp...
Speakers on please

[Edited on 5-25-2007 by fdt]




A well informed Baja California traveler is a smart Baja California traveler!
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Sharksbaja
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[*] posted on 5-24-2007 at 10:40 PM
Shall I toot my own horn now? Uh..........


Maybe in twenty years or so.:lol: I'll hang out with some locals and be myself for the time being.:cool: Till the next big one hits that is.;D

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Osprey
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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 06:28 AM


Baja hardly notices me. I leave a very small footprint. I even write stories about it.

THE COMMANDMENT
You wouldn't think it to look at me but I'm not really a world traveler. I guess I haven't rented a car more than two or three times. The occasions were memorable. One time that sticks in my mind was perhaps in the late 80's or early 90's. I'm almost sure it was Hertz. For the first time, when I checked the car out, a woman in a uniform came with me. She had a form on a clipboard; a diagram of the outline of a car was part of the form. The young woman insisted I inspect the car, taking particular note of any damage to the car -- together we walked around the car looking for cracked windows, dents, scratches, dings and ruined body paint. We found a small dent in the trunk. She made a note, marked the location on the form, tried to duplicate on paper just what we had found. The interior was next; a small rip in the covering of the rear seat (near the door), marked on the form.
I signed the form, she tore off one copy for me and wished me well. There had been little conversation but very little was needed. Hertz was going to have the same form I signed very handy when I turned the car in. They had my signature on the Mastercard receipt. The rental contract was airtight -- court-tested a million times with renters and their insurors in every state.
I've always been careful with the car when I needed a rental but this time I was extra careful; how and where I drove it, parked it, stored it. I even had the damned thing washed before I took it back -- watched every move of the guys at the car wash.
A simple, yet powerful concept and contract: Enforceable Stewardship. Screw it up, cough up. Take reasonable care of it, return to the freedom you enjoyed before the contract. The threat of Hertz charging huge auto repair bills to the bottomless pit of a hard-earned credit limit forced me to take better care of the car than I took of my own. Just for kicks I took the car rental papers out of my coat pocket, laid it on the bar at the hotel. I ordered another scotch, put on my cheaters and read "the fine print". There were 21 parts, all of them Greek to me. As to the vehicle, it all boiled down to the rock bottom basics of stewardship. They needed the form for legal reasons but I thought, after my third scotch, in the real world, all they really need is the one commandment, "DON'T CHANGE THINGS THAT DON'T BELONG TO YOU".

That's not all I was thinking. I was thinking "The Best Western chain can't buy a scotch/rocks after I've bought four of them at $5.50 a pop?" I was thinking that God could have used such a powerful injunction. The Ten Commandants are simple, they cover all the really bad things, but people forgot them, abused them, twisted them, found loopholes so their sins would be hidden, diminished or forgiven -- the Catholics have their Confessional; Methodists, Protestants, Baptists hire Jewish lawyers.. God is in control, he's in control of time. He could go back, back to the time of the Tablets. Maybe the whole earth would be better for it. After all, we don't really own the planet or any of the other things hanging (so tenuously) on to it. The imperialists, the conquerors, missionaries, usurpers, interlopers would be under very different orders. Just like with Hertz, if you change things that don't belong to you "You'll catch hell."
Maybe when Moses asked the Lord "Shall I go forth over the land, spread the gospel, read the tablets?"
Moses might hear God's Holy Reply, "Nah, use the Hertz thing."
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bajadock
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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 10:42 AM


Baja likes me because I provide community support, but, do not advertise my philanthropy.

Now that I have a real kitchen and deck view with the water 500m away, my giving back now includes theme parties. Next one is blind wine tasting in 2 weeks, fyi.




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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 10:43 AM


Hola Amir, We have established a Prosthetic/Orthotic clinic in La Paz with the help of the local Rotary Club (La Balandra) and "Mobilize Mankind". We hold 2 clinics per year and have seen about 4 or 5 dozen patients (I've lost count) who could not afford prostheses or orthoses. Perhaps you would be interested in attending our next clinic (scheduled around Oct/Nov.) and lending your expertise? I'll email a copy of this to my contact in La Paz, Dr. Alejandro Aguirre. His email is: aguirrechavez@yahoo.com Hope to hear from you soon. Paul Boe boe4fun@charter.net



Two dirt roads diverged in Baja and I, I took the one less graveled by......

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bajabound2005
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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 11:04 AM


We get so much from just living here! We do all we can to return what we get by supporting local businesses and tradepeople; we do volunteer work - teaching English in our local primary school. We help support the many folks who so much to care for the local street dogs. And we are learning Spanish to better communicate with the lovely people that are native to this country.
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biggrin.gif posted on 5-25-2007 at 01:19 PM
Giving Back/Why Baja Likes Me...


Why does Baja like me??? I'll never pass by a broken-down motorist without stopping to see if I can offer a hand, a little gas, or whatever's necessary to get them back on the road. Okay, maybe not on the Ensenada Cuota at 3 in the morning when I'm driving alone, but otherwise, just about anywhere or anytime.
Do I do this in the US? Nope. With few exceptions, I figure that with cell phones, AAA, State Troopers, etc., most US motorists will be just fine without me. In the middle of the desert, 100 miles from the nearest town, it's a whole different deal.
The one time I've been broken down myself (in Baja), it took all of 5 minutes before I had two different locals stop to help me. The first motorist pulled out a nylon tow strap, and after hooking his Nissan Pathfinder to my 3/4 ton pickup, towed me almost 25 miles to the nearest town. Once there, he unhooked me, and was gone before I had a chance to thank him, or to open the frosty cold Ballena his wife handed me from the back of their truck!
Viva Baja!!! :tumble::spingrin::yes:
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amir
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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 01:29 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by bajadock
Baja likes me because I provide community support, but, do not advertise my philanthropy.


Bajadock,
I wrestled in my head before I posted my story, whether it was righteous to advertise my philanthropy. I know that it has more merit to give anonymously. The highest form of charity is to give to anonymous recipients from anonymous sources. However, in this case, because of the nature of this forum, and because I wanted to spread the word that my chiropractic services are available for free to those who cannot pay, I decided to go ahead and "toot my own horn" a little. I saw it more as an opportunity to expand my goodwill rather than to advertise my giving. Sorry if it came across in a selfish way...

--Amir
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amir
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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 02:26 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by boe4fun

... Perhaps you would be interested in attending our next clinic (scheduled around Oct/Nov.) and lending your expertise? ...


Boe4Fun,

Ask and it shall be given! This contact is exactly why I've decided to post in this thread. I will gladly volunteer with your group. I'm composing an email that will send to you possibly tomorrow. Greg and Gayle Edwards, from Mobilize Mankind, are dear friends of mine from Eugene, Oregon, and they are partly instrumental for us being here now, and they have been sort of spiritual mentors for me. The work they do, bringing wheelchairs and all kinds of equipment, and bringing therapists, and training parents, and arranging for surgeries, and everything else they do, is wonderful. I am glad they are, and will be more, in my life. And what a gift for all the handicapped children of Baja they help!

--Amir
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thumbup.gif posted on 5-25-2007 at 04:15 PM
Bravo!


Quote:
Originally posted by bajadock
Baja likes me because I provide community support, but, do not advertise my philanthropy.





Maimonides' eight levels of charity:



1. The highest degree of all is one who supports another by providing a loan, or entering into a partnership, or finding work for him, so that the person can become self-sufficient.

2. Giving to another so that the donor does not know the recipient and the recipient does not know the donor.

3. Giving to another so that the donor knows the recipient, but the recipient does not know the donor.

4. Giving to another so that the recipient knows the donor, but the donor does not know the recipient.

5. Giving without being asked.

6. Giving after being asked.

7. Giving less than is proper, but in a friendly manner.

8. Giving in a grudging and unfriendly way.




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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 05:04 PM


Dave---

Giving is only part of it. You do that well.

The most important part of giving is, why you do it. You said it.

We dont come down here to give our life away. We dont come down here to buy friendship.
We come here to understand and be understood. We have reason to hope for and expect that.

I give, in a squandering way, to those in my life that need help.
They have my assistance. They have for years.
I repel from those, human or institution, that solicit my money for any reason that I find unfounded.

So, in your list of reasons, I am guilty of acting on points 2 - 5 - 6.

It's the best I can do.
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[*] posted on 5-25-2007 at 05:36 PM


I think baja likes me because of the way I was raised, I was raised by two hippies, who were firm belivers in punishment if you didn't take out more than what you came with.:D:D:D

To this day, I know my mom could & would kick my burro if I left even a cigarte behind on a camping trip. It is that fear that makes me the person I am today, and we always pick up everyone elses garbage up, even if just stopping for a pee on the side of the road.
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