One day, I joined Bill and Lois for lunch. While waiting to eat, I meditated on how it was possible to survive in such heat. I was glad that wearing sundresses didn’t offend anyone. Looking out the window, I saw one of the employees preparing to leave for the day. He pulled a wooly hat onto his head and rolled it up above his ears. After that he put on his lawø, the pink cloth, and adjusted it until it felt right. Finally, he took his green cardigan and threw it back over his shoulders, tying the arms together and draping them over his chest. He picked up his spear and started on his way home. I observed this procedure in amazement. I exclaimed to Lois, “How on earth can he stand to wear a wooly hat and that sweater?!?”
With years of experience behind her, she replied, “How will anyone know he has them if he doesn’t wear them?” What more can you say?
When she and Bill first arrived in Upper Nile province, most local people wore no clothes, just strings of beads. A well-meaning person sent a shipment of white T-shirts which were distributed to the local people. Many of the recipients turned up wearing the T-shirts, but nothing else. That white shirt ended at an awkward place and Lois said she had to take care where her eyes wandered.
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