Thursday, April 28, 2011


The 7 hour layover in Mumbai, India went pretty quickly as we visited and ate samosas (a deep fried pastry thing stuffed with potatoes, carrots, peas and spices).  I NEVER would have found my way from the international arrival area of the airport to the domestic departure area.  You had to walk a long ways and go through several checkpoints and ride a bus for 15 minutes... as we rode to the domestic departure airport I caught my first glimpse of the shanty style houses that many city dwellers live in - nothing more than scraps of sheet metal or plastic with some plaster here and there.  It looked like a junkyard, not a neighborhood.  The few “streetlights” (and some red lights in windows) were all that kept the darkness at bay.  Another flight (2-3hours?).

In ridiculous contrast, the airport here in Hyderabad, India looked very much like a western-styled mall.  Bright lights, plants, modern architecture, marble floors and escalators... one whole side of the building was open to the outside.  It was weird to go down an escalator and feel the breeze of “outside.”  But I guess walls are not a necessity in a place that is always warm.  




The guys on the team commented, “Smell it?  The smell of India.”  It was a curious smell indeed.  Anyone who has traveled knows that each place has its own smell.  The type of dirt probably has a lot to do with the smell of most countries.  But in this case there was that curry smell again, and... well... the smell of trash.  Everything is nicely baked in the warm sunshine.  I’ll leave it up to your imagination.

The trees, flowers, birds and other creatures of India are beautiful!  There was a black bird flying around in the airport rafters that had white patches on its shoulder and resembled a jay of some kind.  Locust trees with clusters of orange-red flowers - pretty!

We loaded up into three vehicles and drove for quite a while to the conference office.  The car I rode in was made in India.  They have made the same model for 50 years now.  The traffic was WAY scarier than Ukraine.  There are no lines in the road to divide it into lanes, no traffic lights (we actually saw a few somewhere), no rules it seemed.  But there had to be some sort of rules.  By the time we left, I had figured it out: You drive only where there is room for your vehicle.  If there is no room in the direction you want to go, you honk incessantly until some little space appears. Then you lurch forward into that space and start honking again.  And all this usually happens at around 40mph.  


Locksmaya's car: the India produced body style.

A typical one-way highway in the city.
A view of the traffic from my hotel room -  an intersection.

Most of the vehicles are auto-rickshaws - a three wheeled, diesel powered, floor and seats with a little bit of roof over it (note there are no doors or seat belts).  These vehicles are taxis, mostly.  Not many people actually own their own car.  Business men use mopeds or bicycles.  And people from the villages bring their oxen-pulled carts into town.  Incredibly, you will see people in their most common form of transportation (i.e. sandals) walking among the traffic jams of auto-rickshaws, oxen, bicycles and buses as if “close calls” were nothing to raise the adrenaline.

At the church conference office we cleaned up a little and slept for 2-4 hours.  Then we visited a school run by the Adventists there in Hyderabad.  The teachers write their own textbooks each year which get approved by the headmaster.  The children each receive a blank copybook, and they copy the lesson into it each day as the teacher puts it on the chalkboard.  That is it!  No other books, pictures, or anything in the classroom.  At this location, 90% of the students are not Christian.  But all students who choose to come to the school must take and pass the Bible classes in order to graduate.  Quite a number of the Muslim and Hindu families have converted to Christianity as they learn from their children about Jesus.

While we were there, a Muslim lady and her son came to visit the boy’s teacher.  The little boy had a serious illness and was prescribed a medicine that caused him to break out in hives which left him partially blind.  He wore sunglasses and tried to hide his face the whole time.  Such handicaps are looked at as a judgement of the gods by the Hindus or as an “uncleanness” by the Muslims.  The Christian teacher has been encouraging the family that their boy can still live a purpose-filled life and may yet heal completely.  The mother brings the boy frequently and frantically to be prayed over.


The Muslim lady taking her boy (blue shirt at right) back home from the school visit for prayer.

We exchanged our money (1 dollar = 44 rupees); ate at a restaurant - various types of curry and rice; and went back to the conference office to sleep a little more.  It was too hot to travel in the cars until the sun went down.  The drive to Kurnool was something like 5 hours long.  Having the windows down and the night air blowing on me that whole time - I actually got cold.  That was the last time I was cold while outside in India! : )

The hotel we were staying at as “home base” was really nice.  It had A/C (to some degree... in one of the guy’s rooms the lowest degree was probably around 85F), running water, toilets, and wood box beds with 4 inch mattresses on them.  Our hotel was actually better than the Taj Mahal, because the Taj doesn’t have A/C or any of those other things!  The most interesting thing to me was that the shower had no curtain or anything around it; the shower head was on the wall just three feet from the toilet and four feet from the sink in a completely tiled room.  Once you got used to the fact that the only other person in there was the “you” in the wall-sized mirror, it was OK.


Our bathroom (picture taken looking into the mirror) shower is just above the bucket.

Lisa and I shared this nice room.  Those 4 inch mattresses weren't that bad.
Some friends who hung out with us every night on the outside of the hotel as we waited for our taxis.

I was so tired after these three days of travel that I fell asleep immediately. 

Wednesday, April 27, 2011


Morning came as we arrived in Amsterdam.  Now another 8-9 hour flight to Mumbai, India.  I finally slept some.  A lot of Indian people were on this flight.  The air smelled like curry or something.  My ears kept being drawn to the mumbled, sing-song language.


Waiting in the Mumbai Airport: Lisa, Pr. Kelly, Steve, Pr. Clark.  Already ate samosas.
   

Tuesday, April 26, 2011


Five of us met at the church and rode in the van 3 1/2 hours to the airport in Chicago.  Pastor Kelly, the associate Pastor Clark, and Steve Picket have all been to India before.  Lisa Odenthal and I had been on mission trips before, but not to India.  Four college students would come two days later when they finished their final exams.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

The Tenacity of Life

Mom and Dad saw this in the yard a few weeks ago. This piece of grass did not just happen to grow up where there was a hole in the leaf for it to go through. It actually made a hole in the leaf to grow through it!

The lesson Dad got from it is in quotes below, and the title is my Mom's.

And I think it is neat that my parents are the kind of people that take the time to notice the fascinating things about nature and think of what we can learn from them.


"Even though God's truth is soft and tender, it is able to penetrate the most dry, crusty heart."


Sunday, April 10, 2011

St Lucia Mission

I was blessed to be able to go on a mission trip to help with the building of a much needed school on the Caribbean island of St. Lucia. It is down at the end of all those little islands way south of Florida and not so far from Venezuela.

The pictures will give you an idea of the flora, fauna, and friends we met there. The video was created for a get together of the folks who went on the trip, so it is not narrated. I'll give a brief description of what we did there and you'll just have to guess as to the meaning behind the pictures:

Over 85 people from the church I am working with in Indiana (and a few from South Dakota, Minnesota, and Michigan jumped on board too) went down to lay tile for the new school. About 11,000 sq. ft of tile was laid! And a little room for a music building was started. Vacation Bible schools were held in 4 elementary schools. Health/hygiene talks were given at several schools. The Pastor was asked to come to two public schools to give out free Bibles and talk to the 7th graders about how to get to know God. Our medical teams went to villages and treated 460 people. And we all lived in two "houses" and kept up a family atmosphere by having worship together every morning and night and eating meals together as the various teams came back from their work sights. We made a lot of good friends and learned many precious lessons.

Enjoy a bit of St. Lucia!








The Work Sight: 10,000 sq. ft. of tile was laid in this new , much needed, elementary school.




While some worked, others visited schools in other villages and spoke to the kids about health.


One of the patients who came to the medical clinics.

The Grand Piton

A flying fish.



Lizard fighting to see who gets the female.

Fruits of St. Lucia

Our team (most of us anyway).


Thursday, March 24, 2011

A New Mission and Recalibration


It is hard to believe that I have been in Indiana for two months already. I came here on the terms of at least a three year commitment (the longest I have ever been in one place), and I thought that it would feel like a VERY long time to be in one place. But if the rest of that time goes as quickly as these two months, it won't seem like long at all!

This is a picture of the church; and below it, the house I will move into eventually.



My first assignment here has been to visit all the church members (about 260 attending). It has been so much fun to get to know everyone. I have especially enjoyed visiting all the retired pastors, teachers, colporters, and missionaries; they have so many experiences to share and have gained so much wisdom!

I had the opportunity to help out with a Purity Retreat for the girls at the Christian Highschool connected with the church. And, so far, my favorite part of the job is joining the Pastoral staff as they lead out in Friday morning worship with the elementary school students - the little kids are so full of life and joy.

This past week 85 of the church members went to St. Lucia for a mission trip. I really enjoyed getting to know everyone on our team and the St. Lucian Christians we met. I will post a separate article on that so I can show you a lot of pictures.

Right now I am living with a dear couple who have taken me in as their daughter. They already feel like family to me, and I appreciate their generosity. [Mr. Teeter is even letting me use half of his garden this summer!] Eventually I will move into my own house right next to the church! I am excited to have my own home where I can have my family come stay with me and invite people over for meals, etc. Right now the house is nearly "gutted" for remodeling; but I can picture how cute it will be with Grandma's furniture and my plants...

The last few months have been a sort of transition for me. I've been recognizing my need to prioritize and keep a tighter focus on life. There is so much to keep one busy and so many good things to do that it is too easy to get caught in the "rip-tides" and never get where you want to go. (Since I can't swim this has double meaning for me!)

Trying to set a schedule and prioritizing life is difficult to say the least! I really appreciated a sermon that the Pastor I work for here in Cicero, Indiana, gave a month ago. He called it "Re-Calibrating for Rendezvous." The sermon strengthened my convictions that I need to really think about where my life is headed and what needs recalibrating in order to meet the destination I desire. Below is a list of some of the things I wrote in my journal after much thinking on the subject. Maybe you would like to make your own list?

~ spend more time with all of my family
~ keep in better contact with the people I have met everywhere
~ less chit-chat and more eternal-reality conversations
~ more intentional in caring for my health (may need it!)
~ pay more attention to the Holy Spirit's convictions
~ spend as little time as possible on "everyday life" (simplify)
~ think more about how to best use my resources
~ repent sooner/let God change me quicker
~ take time every day to remember how good God is and the Hope we have
~ keep my eyes and ears open (to "take in" the things that are happening all around us) and appreciate the wise and wonderful things God is doing to prepare us all for transition from this mess of a world to Heavenly love and rightness for all eternity. I want to capture the moments in as much detail as possible, so I can share it with the whole universe someday.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Back to Blogging


Hello everyone! (although I do not know how many “everyone” is anymore - I haven’t written for so long people probably don’t bother to check it out!)


The transition from Iowa to Indiana has been relatively easy. Now that I am starting to get into the swing of things here, I hope to write more regularly. My goal for this year is to write out a series of mini Bible studies on the first six chapters of Daniel. And I will have other interesting things to write about and pictures to show from mission trips to St. Lucia and... I’ll let the rest unfold as time goes by.


I wanted to show some of the pictures from my time at home. It was such a blessing to get to spend 7 weeks with family. I’m feeling kinda far away at the moment, so I hope to keep this light and not get melancholy.


I got to go home for Thanksgiving again this year!!! I was the only kid who made it home this year and Dad's side didn't come either, so it was a quiet holiday. Thanksgiving morning while Mom was on the phone talking to Grandpa (who we thought was coming over) I was peeling the potatoes Mom had in the sink. I saw that Mom had about 5 pounds more sitting in a basket on the floor. Obviously, she wasn't planning to use them. I decided to peel those too, since we always seemed to run out of mashed potatoes before we ran out of the other leftovers... well, as I said Grandpa and the others decided not to come. So we had PLENTY of mashed potatoes! Like two gallons of them!! Mom and Dad teased me all weekend over that. (and you know what? none of them went to waste!)



Pretty Indian corn that Mom got from the place where she works.



On December 21 my Dad got a special birthday present - the lunar eclipse. It won't happen again like it did that night for another 175 years, or something like that. Dad and I got up in the middle of the night to watch it fully eclipse. It was SO pretty! The picture (at half eclipse) doesn't do it justice... I should have gotten out my tripod.



This actually happened before Thanksgiving... Bogie ran through a barbed-wire fence and cut himself very, very badly on his tummy. The vet had to put in fifteen or so stitches, which he promptly pulled out with his teeth when he got home the next day. So the vet stapled him together the second time and gave him "the cone of shame" to keep him from trying his talent on the staples. Bogie HATED the collar. But I thought it was so cute! He looked like a flower, so I kept calling him "Bogie Begonia" which he didn't think was very funny!



At Christmas time Bogie was constantly begging to go outside to chew on the dead deer in the neighbor's pasture... I won't tell you any more details about that.


Roxie was cute as ever and tried to appear innocent of the "deer offense" but she got her share of it too. Gus (the cat) stayed out of trouble the whole seven weeks I was home.

Genesis has some sort of attack while I was home that resembled a seizure or stroke. But she came out of it in about five hours. She was sleeping peacefully here, by the way.


Charity (one of the "Texas Long-Legs" as Mom calls the kittens) couldn't keep his paws off the tree ornaments. It was like having kids around again for Christmas.



Hope (one of the kittens rescued from Texas) is still skittish, but very beautiful.


Christmas Eve was spent at my Grandpa Minikus' as tradition has always had it. I really enjoyed seeing my Grampa, all my Aunts and Uncles together, and most of my cousins. This is a picture of my Dad (2nd from right) and Grampa (in the middle), and my Aunts and Uncles.


Matt taught me some new chords and picking patterns on the guitar (my Christmas present from Mom and Dad). It was so much fun!



As usual, Mom cooked way too much good food! This is a very yummy pumpkin pie in progress.

And these are some happy people ready to eat our belated Christmas Dinner (we waited for Matt and Josie to get home).


Gretchen and Joe and the boys put on an amazing spread too. Grandma Schorsch would have been impressed with the pretty table setting.


Some of my family are not crazy about me putting their pictures on my blog sight. I promised them that I would only use their best glamour shots...



While at home at Mom and Dad's I looked down at the floor and laughed to see another good "feet picture." This was Bogie's stuffed toy called Bandy Bird.



My sister got me two hermit crabs for Christmas! I used to have crabs as pets when I was younger. It has been fun to have them again. And they are pets that can travel (reasonably well). This is Amerigo (who must be a female because she changes shells about every three days). Picket was too shy to get his picture taken clearly.