Saturday, September 27, 2008

21 Rules


I was at the house of one of our local pastors recently and saw a sign posted on their fridge that said "The 21 Rules of This House." I wondered what that was, and as I looked closer I was very inpressed! I looked it up online and discovered that it is a book written by Greg Harris (Joshua's dad!) and many people are using it in their homeschooling! I am defintely going to be getting it as soon as I can. I am very intersted in reading through it. If you have read it, or know anything else about it, please let me know!! I am posting the rules below:




1. We obey our Lord Jesus Christ
2. We love, honor and pray for one another
3. We tell the truth
4. We consider one another's interests ahead of our own
5. We speak quietly and respectfully with one another
6. We do not hurt one another with unkind words or deeds
7. When someone needs correction, we correct them in love
8. When someone is sorry, we forgive them
9. When someone is sad, we comfort them
10. When someone is happy, we rejoice with them
11. When we have something nice to share, we share it
12. When we have work to do, we do it without complaining
13. We take well care of everything God has given us
14. We do not create unneccessary work for others
15. When we open something, we close it
16. When we turn something on, we turn it off
17. When we take something out, we put it away
18. When we make a mess, we clean it up
19. When we do not know what to do, we ask
20. When we go out, we act just as if we were in this house
21. When we disobey or forget any of the 21 Rules of This House, we accept the discipline and instruction of the Lord

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Wallace and Gromit!







Well, at least that what we would have named him if we had him since he was a puppy! We always thought Gromit would be a good name! BUT since we got him today and he is five years old, we decided to stick to the name Bailey! Yep - you read that right. We have a dog - again! I can't believe it myself, but the kids were really missing their dogs that we had to leave behind in Malawi! So when we were offered this dog for free we thought it was a good thing since he is already housebroken, neutered, and hypoallergenic! Whoo hoo!



Saturday, September 20, 2008

Our week in review!


We had another good week of school and many visits with people here! We went to a park yesterday with the kids (and today...we try to get outside where they can run at least once a day!) Anyway, it had a huge beach area that was, of course, closed for the winter. However, it was a whole 60 degrees out, and the kids decided they were sooooo hot! They initially were wading, with their jeans rolled up. Somehow they ended up full-out swimming i jeans and t-shirts! Even RJ and Andrew, who hardly touched the water this summer when we would go the a beach, were sitting in it and swimming! Crazy kids! By the time they got to the car they were freezing, so we took off their wet tops and wrapped them in dry coats.

We are starting to get to know our way around here a little better! Well, Shawn knows his way around pretty good already - but it will take me a long time! I am at least feeling like it is familiar when people mention a store or something! Wewent ot a little local dive today called "Gus'" for hotdogs! It is famous in this area, and it really cheap and good for a greasy spoon type place! Come visit and we can all go!

We went to a place called "Indian Ladder Farms" on Monday with my sister Somemr andher family! It was a lot of fun and we picked apples and played on the playground. There was a tiny little petting zoo area, and we fed some dirty looking sheep! They were gentle though!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

TGIF - almost!




We are almost through with our first week of homeschool this year and things are going really well! Though John in particular is still NOT a fan of doing school - we have had no major attitude problems, and I have even watched as John helped Andrew learn sounds by playing memory the other day! Aunt Lorraine was here today and gave Andrew some extra special attention (since she use to teach 1st grade) and he was in heaven! We have made 4 trips to the library in the last week, and that is awesome! I am glad that we went this direction with the curriculum! I have attached a few pics of Anna and Andrew doing work today!


We are getting settled and this apartment is starting to feel like home! It is really cozy! We are so thankful that God provided the way he did!


I am getting ready to host a crew of college kids on Saturday (I hope!) I look forward to being the one to be able to serve them good food away from home and provide a place of relaxation and fun! I love college age people!

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

you know you've lived in Africa when...

Found this online! Soooooo true!!

You know you're from Africa when......
it doesn't seem right to pay the asking price on anything in a store. If you can't barter for it, it's not worth having....
you're appalled that American grocery stores only sell one or two different types of bananas....
your parents yell at you for forgetting to use silverware in public....
(I did this recently with my kids!
you're going to visit your Grandparents and take you passport ~ just in case you have to evacuate....
you find all the non-white people on campus so you can be a minority again....
you can lead a 20 minute conversation starting with "walleponaua!!" (or Muli Bwanji)and keep it going by replying "ehh" in numerous different tone-levels for the next half an hour! (...and have the other person exactly understand what you are saying!!)...
you fear for you life while riding in a minibus....anywhere!...
you call everyone older then you uncle or aunt....
you'd rather be barefoot
you know that the bloody gooey mess they call beef jerky in the States would never pass for true biltong....
every toothpaste is colgate....
every soap is surf....
every softdrink is coca cola or fanta. (WARM)...
you have uncles and aunts who are younger than you....
black outs are nothing new to you....
no running water for a day is just another ordinary thing...
40 degrees is cold....
You can do your monthly shopping on the pavement....
four cars are driving parallel to each other on a one-lane road....
The smell of freshly rained on mud paths/tarmac is comforting....
being an hour late equals being "on time"...you get car sick cuz the roads just can't have enough potholes!...
you pass by someones house and you know what they gonna have for dinner cuz u can pretty much see and/or smell what's cooking...
you can bribe a cop and get away with it!...
you have an over whelming urge to wash all your salad in milton (baby bottle bleach, supposedly kills cholera) and add a bit of charcoal to your milk just to get the taste your used to....
You know that the police isn't always the safest place to go when you're in trouble....
Cramming 7 passangers in a 4 passenger taxi is really not a big deal....
you know never to question what you're eating (even if it does taste good), cuz sometimes you just don't want to know....
you invite people for a get together at 7 and they all come at 9....
football is played with some sort of ROUND ball and WITHOUT hands....
everyone in your country plays soccer....
you cram 24 people into a 14 passenger matuatu and have never felt closer to your African friends....
you make friends with the local shepherd and know the goats by name....
carry purell like it's your life supply....
you spent countless hours shining your shoes when u know very well that by the time you get to the taxi stop, they'll be covered in unbeleivable dirt!...
you keep converting the value of things in your home currency when u see the dollar value....
a plane flies by and you just cant help but look up!...
you have another name in your home language....
you hate American corn, because it's never hard enough....
you've drunk real chai, not this coffeeshop stuff. (AMEN!)...
you remember being so confused about how you could pay for something with a visa......
you expect people to tell you they're fine before you ask them...
you used to shower under the rain....
someone is riding their bike down the road with corrugated iron strapped width wise across the back of the bike and its taking up more than half of the road....
you miss rain on a corrugated iron roof; it's so loud you have to shout to be heard....
you've been proposed to while walking down the street (if you're a girl, that is, lol)..
.you know what true hospitality and generosity is...
when those who have almost nothing still welcome you in with open arms and are willing to share everything they have with you - even though they barely know you!...
someone asks you how much your sister costs
9or your daughter!)....
your brother tries to sell you to his college roommate for 36 cows or goats......
You unwrap all your gifts carefully, so that you can reuse the wrapper....
You call a person you've never met before uncle or aunt....
more than 90% of the music CD's and cassettes in your home are illegal copies....
you have almost always carry overweight baggage when traveling by plane....
Nobody in your family informs you that they are coming over for a visit....
You only make telephone calls at a cheaper rate at night...
You never have less than 20 people to meet you at the airport or see you off even if it is a local flight....
someone offers seven cows for your infant sisters future hand in marriage....you learn the native words for "white person" everywhere you go, because you hear it shouted everywhere you go (MZUNGU!)....
something that would normally take half an hour in the Western world takes a few days or weeks...and if it didn't it just wouldn't be fun....
you find it completely natural to have burglar-bars outside your windows...
you know the DSTV channels by heart..
.you known not to question the contents of your food when it tastes good...
you bought your cellphone through your car window...
chicken is a luxury...
you wonder why there aren't any herds of cows and goats walking down the street in North America...
you can smell the rain before it comes...
you can look up at the sky and see every star clearly...
the sunset is something to look forward to...
you miss the the sound of rain on your tin roof at night, the after-rain smell, and the spectacular lightning shows....
the only thing you throw away is avacado stones, and even then you wonder if you should save them and plant a tree..
.every white thing you own has permently turned a curious shade of orange...
everywhere you walk children run up to you shouting, 'how are you! how are you, how are you?' mzungu! mzungu!...
You spend as little time as possible in the toilet, and can hold your breath for amazing lengths of time....
you always drink your drink straight away in front of the shop, and give them the bottle back....
you spray 'Doom' in your tent before going to bed....
when americans tell you that the "chai" you're drinking isn't real because it's not indian, and they think it's tea with milk. it's milk with tea.
you´re NOT in Africa and you miss everything everybody else mentioned so much it hurts....
you dream about Africa - a lot. ....
you think of giving up trying to convince people of what it´s really like - even though they really do try, they often just don´t understand....
you expect to be able to buy roast corn, fried meat or fish, boiled yams or cassava etc whilst you are travelling on public transport....
having mud-orange feet is normal....
you get the songs from the celltel and pepsi baridi adverts stuck in your head...
you learn quickly that pedestrians DO NOT have the right-of-way...
you'd rather be barefoot ...
you realize that after leaving africa you can never have another piece of fruit that will ever taste as good as it does there...
you can buy anything you like at traffic lights, from fruit to hangers to kitchen knifes....
your 'guard dogs' were the most lovable pets ever...
you prefer music that's slightly out of tune...
b.o. is a comforting smell...
you reuse plastic throwaways...
$2 is too much for a t-shirt...
the smell of an old, smoky diesel engine makes you smile and long for 'home'...
pop comes in bottles...
you aren't surprised when you have to stop the car to let three giraffes finish crossing the highway in front of you...
you buy your milk in a triangular carboard container from a hut on the side of the road
...you know that an umbrella is useless during the rainy season and simply accept the fact that you'll be wet for 3 months... and really don't mind either....
you've seen a sky so blue you could cry, with thick, perfect white clouds you can almost taste..
.people bump into the car in front, check out the damage, hand over some money (maybe!) and then drive off! ...
you think nothing of driving down a road that has potholes bigger than anything!..
.you get culture shock in a grocery store, when you see the shelves completely stocked with 15 different kinds of whatever! ...
you're an expert at packing bags and people into cars . . . and making everything fit!!!...
When there's no electricity, you're in bed by dark and up at sunrise....
......you buy a movie on the street, get home and watch it, and realize that you can hear the person chomping on their popcorn in the theatre...only the best :)...
you're sure your going to die 9 times in a 5 minute minibus trip...
You remeber the smell of the first rain signaling the end of the dry season...
you hand in your glass bottle of fizzy soft drink back to the shop keeper for recycling just to get your deposit back...
you just can't explain the concept of snow....
your bed back in north america doesn't seem right without a mosquito net...
when you try to convince your friends and family that it actually is a lot more logical and easier to transport things on your head...
Milo is your favorite drink...
everyone is family...
you wonder where all the elephants, giraffes, buffalo, and other animals are while your driving down the high way...
pop a squat has a whole new meaning...
when a baboon has taken your food right out of your hand....\
.tears well up in your eyes as you read this list, either wishing that you were back in Africa or glad that you are still there...

He can move the mountains...



I love this song right now! I wake up singing it and go to bed with it in my mind still! God is soooooo mighty and amazing!


Mighty to Save


Everyone needs compassion

Love that’s never failing

Let mercy fall on me

Everyone needs forgiveness

The kindness of a Saviour

The hope of nations

My Saviour He can move the mountains

My God is mighty to save

He is mighty to save

Forever Author of salvation

He rose and conquered the grave

Jesus conquered the grave

So take me as You find me

All my fears and failures

Fill my life again

I give my life to follow

Everything I believe in

Now I surrender

Shine Your light and let the whole world see

We’re singing

For the glory of the risen King

Frank Maini


We just finished up our second day of school, adn today went much smoother than yesterday! You would think after homeschooling for 6 years already I would have this down! LOL! We are using a new curriculum for the older two and it is mostly on the computer, so that makes things a little complicated since we only have one computer - but I am very thankful for that one!!

It is rainy and grey here today - the kind of day that makes me want to make a crock pot of thick, heart soup and cuddle up under a comforter with a good book! (That's pretty much how I feel all winter!) ha!

We heard from one of the pastors that we worked with in Malawi (see pic!) and he has removed himself from Acts III and is doing some ministry on his own. He asked us to pray for him ans family, and I told him we would definitely do that. So I am passing that request on to you - his name is Frank Maini (pronounced "mine") and his wife is Esther. He has 4 kids that they care for. Thanks!

We are having a group of college students over for a big chili dinner on Saturday and I am excited about that! I have always loved this age! It is fun to be in a city with 3 colleges! I am also happy because this is a very multi cultural area. One of our guys at church works with international students, so I am hoping that we have many nations walking through our doors!

Well, school is over and it is spaghettio time --0 I know, so healthy!! talk to you later!

Friday, September 5, 2008

Brownstones and Books!


Well, we are moved in and almost settled! It's hard to believe the twists and turns our lives have taken in the past two years - but it has been a fun ride! Last year when we packed up, gave stuff away, burned stuff, and stored stuff to move to Africa, we felt it was a long term thing! Little did we expect that a year later we would be living on the top story of a beautiful brownstone in Troy, NY filled with wonderful furniture and other things from all of you! CRAZY!

We are feeling like this is starting to be home! We got library cards a few days ago - we can walk to the library, it is only a block or two away! We got TV, internet and phone hooked up today! And we are meeting neighbors and getting familiar with the area!

I am reading the newest "No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency" book! I love this series! (Have I mentioned that before? LOL!) The problem is, it is making me very homesick for Africa! There are so many stories and ways that the author says things that take me back to places in Malawi! I am going to love living here in Troy, but I do pray that God takes us ack to Africa someday! I always heard that Africa gets in your blood...and it definitely did mine!