Tuesday, August 10, 2010

More Pictures.....

One of our students came to the airport and gave every american a (buddhist) prayer shawl for "good luck and good fortune."
Speaking of buddism, there was a large Tibetan population in our area and there were monks everywhere - these were begging $$ (in English) at the market. We have an entire soundtrack of monk songs if you are interested .....
Jason in his ZONE - heading up all the large group activities for our camp. Here he was at the luau -he was amazing and the kids loved him!!
Jason (since every boy at camp was named Jason/Jordan/Justin....) we called Jason "Pauff Daddy" or JP or JJ or some other form of Jason. He innocently ordered soup for lunch one day (60 cents I believe) and first of all, they brought him a giant VAT of soup in a bowl that looked like it cane from Genghis Khan, and THEN, in the bottom, was the MOST giant chicken foot in all of China. I think that was THE funniest moment of our trip when he hauled that chicken foot out of that soup!! So0ooooo funny!
Justin and Sonny, our Chinese helper, in the grass skirt, manning the Limbo dance at the luau - Justin was also quite the jump roper, tug-of-war-warrior, and Hokey Pokey dancer - a man of many talents, and many names, since I called him Jason/Jordan/Justin for 3 weeks!

More Photos from Camp X!!

Gigantic noodles for lunch - super yummy. Several feet long- try to eat THAT with chopsticks!
My kids after graduation- I bribed them with ice cream to pronounce the words "thanks" and "month". I treated the whole class to ice cream for about $2 - each ice cream was 15 cents apiece, including the favorites, CORN, SOYBEAN, mung bean, rosewater, and unidentifiable fruit.
NLG Team in front of a sculpture by our dining hall - it seems there is a monument on most every corner!
"hot-pot" - muslim dish of boiling broth, the outer ring super spicy, the inner bowl plain - dunk meats and vegetables into the broth until they cook then fish them out with a chopstick. Delicious - unless the students picked very weird meats, ummm, which they did.
This is the now famous HOLE in my classroom - unmarked, uncovered, a tiny boy FELL IN during class and Laura had to pull him out. We were terrified but he only had a few scratches. Only in craft class can you fall down a giant hole. Stabbed with scissors, sure. Glue your fingers together. Okay. Swipe paint on a friend. Yep. BUT FALL DOWN A GIANT HOLE?? I also had a matching hole in the FRONT of my room and there were holes, open manholes, construction sites, and uneven pavement EVERYWHERE. WOW.

Back in C-Bus!!

Restaurant Dialog
NLG Team at a camp wide luau!
Laura using her vast chinese skills to talk to the craft neighbors on the street! The little man with the beard was delighted to have his picture taken with the young blonde american lady!
Justin and Angie with our DELICIOUS daily breakfast- stale white bread with expired jam, a boiled egg, and our choice of lukewarm water or lukewarm Tang! MMMMM - made us really want to get up early, walk 4 blocks, and enjoy such a treat every.single.day!
The Cheshires gave us some chinese money which allowed us to buy a cold drink in the airport - these are our very happy and thankful faces after being in transit for 36 hours! Thanks friends!!

We made it home, almost effortlessly, about 9 pm Monday night after about 31 hours of travel. When we first left Beijing we encountered the WORST turbulence I have ever felt on a giant super jet - awful!! I was ready to have a melt-down until my very smart daughter gave me a lecture and told me to get a grip! PTL it passed within an hour but it was pretty scary. After that is was just long, long, long, full of particularly bad food, hot (the a/c was off and on - not good!) and LONG.

Overall we had a great trip. Our camp was soooo good - sometimes they are filled with drama or the kids are too young or the campus is bad, etc but overall, despite the slightly filthy accommodations, the whole camp experience was good. Being in a city allowed us to visit with the kids at night and enjoy some of the local cuisine, activities, etc. Really gave us more of a picture of life in China, not just 24/7 on a campus surrounded by barbed wire and glass shards. The history in Beijing really reminded us of the beauty of this land as well as the political unrest that has been the norm - seeing as many as 10,000 people in line in the blistering heat to visit Chairman Mao's crystal coffin with his body inside was unnerving to say the least.

Here are some pictures of our camp - enjoy. Pray for G, S, S, all the kids in our classes, the "C" in China, the families of those in prison, the need for workers and trainers, the purity of the Gospel and the rejection of cults of every description - on, and the M and the K families who work full time to bring the G to the people of C! (I was glad to get back to the US so I could actually speak a full sentence - sigh...) If you are interested in the work in China, you might enjoy a few books, particularly "Safely Home" by Randy Alcorn and "Jesus in Beijing." Thanks for following along with us and I have many GREAT stories I will share as I am able! Have no fear, the Gospel is alive and well and moving through this great land - PTL!!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

On the Road Again!

We are packing yet again! After an awesome morning (vague alert!!) where we heard a speaker who found "new life" at one of our camps and now works to spread the word around this region, we left really encouraged! We have been blessed with many similar students from current and past camps. One student took a 24-hour train ride to spend two days with us. Amazing. Such love. Who would you take a train to visit? Today as I mentioned earlier we toured all over the city in the blistering heat. We were caught up in such a mob of people today that it was almost scary. We had Peking Duck for dinner- quite a sight as the chef carves each duck into 131 pieces for the diners. The fact that he was wearing a surgical mask did ruin the moment. Oh, and another hilarious moment was when, right in the middle of dinner, a rat ran across the next room! I could not make this stuff up! Our team is well-we met up with 2 other teams so we have about 60+ americans touring with us. We have seen many old friends. Imagine seeing a friend every 6 years- that is Angie and her friend from camp. Or visiting with Smile- pure joy! So much I can't share but good visits all around. So much good work on every corner! Sometimes we only see the hard things- and right now, many of "our" works have been shut down, people arrested, buildings closed, people in hiding- very scary times for many! But... The Light cannot be hidden. A famous saying is "the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church." And that is true here- as the persecution continues, the workers just multiply. Many take joy in prison as they have a built in audience for their message! Do WE rejoice in persecution? I can't say that I do.This is my last posting until we reach Home Sweet Home, which should be Monday night. When I get home I will finally add some photos. What to pick? Chicken feet? Pedi-cabs? Sobbing students? Party in the USA? The Hoe-Down? The now-famous HOLE in my classroom? The funny food? The beautiful mountains? Jason at the Forbidden City? Angie bartering with a salesgirl at the market? Jason and Laura playing a very gross game with Smile? Me with yet another yak at the lake? Justin doing the hokey pokey? So many choices!Keep lifting us up- the college kids on our team have to leave for school literally the second our plane lands so we CANNOT afford any delays or storms or weird airline nonsense! Ask for safe travel and a fruitful camp as the seeds we scattered are allowed to grow. Lift up a friend who is carrying the light to a dark and dangerous place. Also lift up a leader from the US - he is legally blind and close to 70 yet he travels to teach the workers here. Who ARE these people? Wow... We have 12 year olds and 70 year olds on our team-anyone can be a servant if they choose to obey! Hugs from the other side of the wold! CJJJLA

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Late post - I was late with this post from Cindy (DON)

We leave tomorrow am about 11 am- some chinese flight,
we don't have tickets or ibfo. We get into BJ about noon
or so. We are checking into our extravagant holiday inn
and calling some of our friends- well. Once we go to
starbucks I mean! Here is a bloggy blog:

Whew! Another camp for the history books. Foreign
teachers are VERY (VERY!) important in this culture and
the kids feted us with gifts and hugs and tears and at
least 600,000 pictures. We will miss them greatly- so
earnest and always looking towards success in the future.
We are asking that we made a greater impact than just
pronunciation. We made some awesome discoveries and many
things were clearly planned for us here!

Tonight we are packing, cleaning, packing-if anything
(cup, towel,pillow, etc) is missing or broken they charge
an exhorbitant fee. Since my carpet hasn't been swept
since Y2K, I've used the same towel for 2 weeks, my
toilet/faucet/lamp/and electric outlet have been broken
since day one, there is a giant splatter on the wall
that looks something like blood and/or red pepper noodles
and there has been standing water in my bathroom floor
the entire trip, I can't imagine how they would charge us
for damages. I will have you know, though, it is 3000
yuan if you steal the peephole from the door :) Consider
yourself warned!

Our NLG team has been awesome. Through every struggle
they have maintained a good attitude and a helpful,
flexible spirit. Our team of 6 provided 4 of the 8 lead
teachers as well as 5 of the 8 extra-curriculars (music,
crafts, etc) so we have been a blessing to the larger
team. Each one has been fun, friendly, competent,
responsible, encouraging, helpful and more-we have had
a great time together. We are off to Beijing eaaaaarly
in the morning for a few days of de-briefing, meetings,
learning, and a bit of sight-seeing.

The first sight I am seeing is an ice cold caramel
Frappucino from the Starbucks on our block. After weeks
of warm water, hot water, warm pepsi, warm tea, hot tea
and even warm Tang, we are looking, begging for a cold
drink. Speaking of cold drinks, Laura, our resident
chinese tutor, taught us the word for cold water, always
a rare treasure to find. Being very cocky in my language
skills, I asked my students last night for "cold
toothpaste" instead of cold water- lol!!

Sitting in An Airport

"We're Sitting In An Airport, Don't Know When
We'll Take Off Again....." Sing it with me...

We left X today on a sunny cool morning and
arrived at the airport at 8am. After a wild
check-in and paying for extra luggage-and receiving
prayer shawls for good luck and good fortune (!)
from one of our students-we waited for our plane.
Then waited. And waited. And waited. Our flight
was cancelled and we saw our dreams of Beijing
slipping away....in a cloud of smoke, since we were
stuck between the toilets and the smoking room. We
closed the door 600 times so we could breathe.

At one point they gave us some tea and then later
a little box of rice, grape tomatoes, and a roll.
We had missed breakfast and lunch so we were hungry,
tired, and most of us were out of chinese money so
we couldn't buy any yak jerky or fake pringles to
tide us over. Our team played cards, slept on the
plastic chairs, read, sang and passed the time,
unlike the chinese who mobbed the one airline attendant
with a barrage of screaming and yelling and gesturing
that did not look encouraging!

PTL we are on the plane-everyone got a seat, we hope
our bags follow us, and we will STILL get our hot
shower and Frappucino before the day is out. Thanks
for all the time you have invested in thinking of us
and encouraging us. Our camp was great and our team
has grown very close-truly some of the best people
ever thi year. So much love and energy and encouragement!
I will keep in touch- hoping for an awesome few days
in Beijing then an uneventful trip home next week! Hugs
from the X- airport-Cindy and the Xteam!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Blog

The last day of camp was a flurry of activity with an under-current
of sadness. It seems just as the students and the Americans gel as
a camp and as a team it is time to shut it down and leave. Our
campers are very emotional as a rule anyway so graduation day is
always FULL of tears-knowing we may never see these kids again adds
a good dose of sobriety to the event. We had planned all week to jump
in the fountain after graduation but since the temps are now in the
60's we decided that would be a bad idea!

Tonight was filled with dinners out with students and the realization
that we have to actually pack up everything in our rooms into one
44lb suitcase. Yikes! We have made a lot of awesome connections,
learned a lot, grown a lot- we've been humbled. We have learned to
work together under one banner- a young woman from Armenia, a pair of
70 year olds, a couple of teenagers, some random Buckeyes, leaders and
followers, world travellers and fearful beginners, college kids, moms,
teachers- all here to love and to serve. What a privelege! Tonight
Angie and Jane were treated to a heaping platter of chicken feet and
I got a plate of bloody fish, newly freed from his tank in the lobby
and destined for the HotPot on my table! Because of love, we grabbed
our chopsticks and jumped right in! Were we out of our comfort zone?
You bet! Jane is a 63 year old lady from NJ, who came to serve- and
serve she did, one crusty chicken foot at a time!

It is wellllll past my bedtime so I'll sign off! Please remember our
graduation Thurs at 10 am which is Weds night at 10 pm for you! Also,
ask for efficient packing and travel and a blessed time of rest in
BJ. This is when we do a lot of wrapping up the pieces and processing
all we've seen. We also meet with some Very Special Guests who never
fail to bless and amaze us. Tell you more later (wink). Nighty night
from a chilly mountain on the other side of the globe! CALJJJ

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Last Event, Last Day of Class

Sometimes it feels like we have been here for 6 months, other times 5 minutes. Tonight was our last event- a camp-wide carnival full of games and balloons and prizes! The community gathers around and joins the fun-people everywhere. Tomorrow is our last official day of class- graduation is Thursday morning. The kids are getting sentimental, taking pictures and bringing gifts. So sweet. We bring the light, we invest as we can-up front and behind the scenes, we lift up this city and these dear people. We laugh, we cry, we take emails and vow to keep in touch. And when we get home our in-boxes are filled with awkward little notes from our students, missing us and telling us the news. Technology has become a ministry tool-amazing.

The H/S is moving in many ways, we are all being stretched and changed- remember us for these next 6 days or so. Angie and Justin have to go straight to college literally the day we return so we can't afford any flight delays or missed flights or crazy weather. And, of course, the rest of us have to get back to work and life so we need good travel as well.

Hang on- there is currently a mob of crazed college kids trampling into our room looking for water ballons and other pranking material. I better go before I wind up taped to my bed or something worse. As you can tell, CampX is a wild place- one minute you are trying to tell the Christmas story and the next someone is making a yarn maze in your bedroom! Good night from the other side of the world. (Did I mention the heat has turned into a chilly breeze with highs in the 70's. Sorry about the current heat wave in OH! I know, I know- it is even worse in Beijing, let me gloat while I can! )

Monday, August 2, 2010

Hot-Pot!

Today we returned more rested and ready to finish out the
week. The kids came back more familiar with us, they are
rowdier-haha- but more lovey-dovey and huggy- very sweet.
Even the teenagers -boys/boys and girls/girls-hold hands
and hang all over each other in a very "old-fashioned" way.
Precious. They just fall in love with us so fast- they
have fun, they loosen up and turn off some of the daily
pressure to excel scholastically - they actually have fun
for 2 weeks! It is great!

Tonight MY class :) took all the American teachers out for
"hot-pot." This is a Muslim dish with a huge boiling pot
of broth filled with peppers and spices and ginger and you
toss in meats and vegetables and cook it then fish it out
with your chopsticks. Soooo fun. Now- what you need to know
is that this event was orchestrated by two 14-year old
kids. Two kids who took 25 people by bus and taxi to a
fancy restaurant, ordered all the food, rushed around from
table to table making sure we had all we needed- then paid
for the whole thing!! How many 14-year-olds in the US
entertain foreigners? So cute! They are so mature in some
ways and yet so innocent and sweet!

We have been incredibly healthy- PTL! A few coughs and
allergies and some "mao's revenge" but nothing serious. Angie
woke up today with a red, swollen finger. It could have
been anything from staph to scurvy to a snake bite so we took
a chance and started with Benadryl and it seems to be
improving. We figure she got some kind of bug-bite at the
lake- let's hope it continues to improve. Thanks for thinking
of her!

Here's where the whole security thing comes in to play. I
have some great stories that will have to wait. I could tell
you that **** is a * and * meets with other * and they *** and
one plans to go to ** to ** other ***.... But that wouldn't
tell you much! Let me just say the Kingdom, though small and
restricted, is alive and well in this part of the world and we
were able to encourage THEM and vice-versa! Many happy little
surprises here and there- candles in the darkness!!

Tomorrow night is our last event - a camp-wide carnival -and
we are busily getting ready for graduation on Thursday morning.
The Americans are learning a song in our host language- always
a treat! The kids love it even though they probably can't
understand one word of our poor pronunciation! Ask Carol M to
sing a verse for you all :)

Here is some news from our team: Justin is practically Chinese
now! He speaks more words than I have ever learned and he will
try anything -today was black fungus, squid, and curly tofu.
What a joy to travel with him! So helpful and sweet! Angie is
great- the students love her as do the adults. Her assistant
is a 63 year old lady from NJ who marvels at her ability to pull
activities out of the air! Jason P is "JJ" at camp since every
boy here has a J name- the students love him and he has had a
ball seeing all that Chinese culture has to offer- and he video
tapes most of it so you might see it someday! Jason, of course,
is a kid magnet. He leads dance each day- ask him for a sample
of the gummi bear dance- and the Chinese assistants are
particularly close to him. What a role-model for the young guys
on our team. And Laura- one of the two worst craft ladies ever,
along with me, but the kids love her. Today a boy proposed to
her. She is the Queen of "Bing Schway" - phonetically that is
"cold water." Just like I have an uncanny knack to find a western
toilet as needed, she can find cold water hidden in back rooms.
I love love LOVE my class and I just love these people. From the
little beggar lady to the college students and the vendors on the
street there is such a kindness and sincerity among the people.
They love their families, they enjoy life, they are so friendly
and welcoming- so many valuable things. They need to hear. We
need to remember them and send the Light as we can!

Off to bed-6 am comes waaaay to early. We "hear" it is supposed
to rain which would cool us off. Wow- I'll believe it when I see
it- ha! Love to all back home- remember us! Hugs from the Xteam!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Sunday at the Lake

Today was our only day off from teaching so the school took us to Quinhai Lake, the largest salt water lake in China. We were squashed into vans for a 2-hour van ride that included, in no particular order of fright/amusement: trucks passing each other on curvy mountain roads, yaks, buddhist temples, tibetan horses, spectacular mountains, baby yaks, a man walking a huge sheep on a rope down the highway -destined to be "mutton" on the menu later that day, fields of yellow flowers, more temples, shrines, prayer flags and statues dotting the mountain-tops, shepherds "keeping watch over their flocks" - we saw one herd his yaks with, yes, a sling and a stone, herds of sheep and goats, more mountains, tibetans selling gasoline in jerry cans by the road-side, women in high heels strolling the rocky "beach"- and I use that term very loosely! Seeing Jason P under his umbrella lounging on the rocks was awesome! The young'uns on our team went swimming in their clothes or otherwise played in the water. Amazing day- many of us are sun-burned, all are in awe of this beautiful land, humbled by the MEAGER life many lead just to survive, and the spiritual darkness that blankets this region. There are not enough flags or banners or big gold statues to bring hope to these dear people. Ask for workers and a movement of the H/S to bring LIGHT to this area of the world! On the ride home we stopped at a grasslands area where, again, the young'uns, and Jason P!, climbed a gigantic mountain then ran back down it- the scenery was just breath-taking. Lest this sounds too extravagant, please know that our vans were full, ours had no a/c and the windows didn't open, the driver tried to smoke in the van until we let him know that wasn't a good idea, the traffic was horrible-like, valium-worthy horrible, we had KFC for lunch, which was picked up at 8am and hauled around in the vans until lunch time- and, we ate huddled around the KFC bags on the rocky beach, standing up, lol! Not very glamorous but the cool breeze and "day-of-rest" was worth it! It is sobering to see our days ending here- 3 more days of class then graduation. We have fallen in love with our kids-and they all feel so loved and special. Their teachers are so harsh and their lives so full of pressure to succed that this camp time is a joy to them! We are planting seeds in each life and asking that those seeds bring fruit. We had a sweet time of singing last night in our hotel- we are under so many restrictions that we have to be so cautious all the time. If that environment is hard for us for 3 weeks, imagine how our brothers and sisters who live here must feel! Lift them up that they would find ways to shine- to "bloom where they are planted" despite the hardships! Remember G and S and H and J and probably many others I don't know about- those who are family and those who could be soon! I am meeting with my students from 2008 weds night- it will be great to re-connect with them. So many of us have long-term relationships with kids here- what a joy to see them summer after summer! Continue to think of us-the darkness has been oppressive now and again but we are counting on our "warriors" back home to see us through! This camp has been trouble-free in many ways and we'd like to keep it that way. We also have a million more plane rides and a trip to BJ and another week before we'll be home- lift us up for good health and team unity and effective work, that we would, again, be a sweet aroma wafting through these mountains! Love you all- miss you! C-A-J-J-J-L * the Xteam

Day 6 - Time is Flying!

Today (sat) was day 6 in the classroom- we have had christmas carolers and baseball games and lots of excited kids. Now that the days are passing, everyone wants to take us places. We are very popular with the 14-year-olds! They give a little awkward invite and you never know what you are in for. Today we were driven-in a private car- to a tibetan restaurant for mutton, which actually meant an air-conditioned private room with the best meal I have ever had in china! Tomorrow it might be chicken feet in a sweaty little shack! But overall it is very sweet and the kids are delighted to wine and dine us - and we are building pivotal relationships with them.Overall, it is still unseasonably hot but we have been incredibly healthy. Our team ranges in age from 15-72 and everyone is doing great! Well, we are exhausted but fine! Jason P just got moved into our team dorm/hotel so that is great news. Tonight was our Hoe-Down, led expertly by Shep- an hour of the macarena, the chicken dance, and the crowd favorite, the Cotton-Eyed Joe! Very fun- we had a huge crowd of parents and neighbors joining in! Even our little beggar-lady was there- she grabs all of our empty (or almost empty!) bottles to recycle for cash. We gave her birthday cake last night- she's a regular!Lift up many students and helpers who are very curious - and anything else in the plan! We are trusting that we are doing our part and the Father will take care of the rest! Exhaustedly, Cindy and all!