When packing up for this semester away from home, I took advantage of the opportunity to organize the bathroom closet the day before we left the United States. I brought over with us an assortment of small shampoo and conditioner bottles, half used lotion and unopened shower gels, and three small containers of perfume without much thinking about it. In my efforts to try to finally get through the small dispensers and avoid packing heavy full sized amounts of these toiletry items, I actually packed some pretty nostalgic scents!
In the last two weeks, there has been such a feeling of satisfaction of going through and using the small items that had moved around with me during the last couple moves (i.e., from NC to PA then to OH then from the house I rented my first year in Steubenville to the first home Adam and I shared as man and wife). It feels as if I'm purging and cleansing myself of "extras" even though it seems minor as they are just travel sized items from hotel stays, stocking stuffers from Christmas gifts over the years, and so forth. I can already feel the impact of living with a minimalist attitude and I hope to bring that back to the US with me when our time here is complete. There is no need to have three bottles of bubble bath in the closet or have five hair gels. The grocery store is one traffic light from our house and we make multiple runs in a month. Those items will always be within easy reach and I really want to try to reduce clutter which I would think will be easier to do after having had a semester of using the same things over and over...that is what I predict anyway!
No matter the time that goes by, some things don't leave you and for me in the last couple of weeks, this has taken on the form of scents and I'm grateful to have the sense of smell. You may be laughing but I dated a guy once who couldn't smell. He had never been able to smell, I kid you not! In thinking about the parts of our body and ripple effect strengths or weaknesses of our body parts can have, we heard in today's second reading from 1 Cor 12: 12-30:
As a body is on through it has many parts, and all the parts of the body, though many, are one Body, so also Christ......But as it is, God placed the parts, each one of them, in the body as he intended....Indeed, the parts of the body that seem to be weaker are all the more necessary, and those parts of the body that we consider less honorable we surround with greater honor, and our less presentable parts are treated with greater propriety, whereas our more presentable parts do not need this. But God has so constructed the body as to give greater honor to a part that is without it, so that there may be no division in the body, but that the parts may have the same concern for one another. If one part suffers, all the parts suffer with it; if one part is honored, all the parts share its joy.
So we hear that all parts of the body work together...where there is one lack or weakness, another helps to compensate for it perhaps or may also be weak. There are so many ways to interpret this and many usually think of how we all, collectively make up the Church. We all have unique callings and gifts to bring to the table. We should recognize the value in others and serve and help others who may be less fortunate and this is all true. However, I couldn't help but think of the above passage in a different way. Everything is placed within us for a reason...for a purpose...for an intention as God created us.
Yet I'm left wondering what does that mean when it comes to weaknesses, deformities, disabilities, missed pieces of the puzzle? Is it because I'm a special educator I'm wondering these? Is it due to personal lived experiences? Why would God intend for that weakness? Why would He design our bodies in that way? Why are some born with all and some born with less? Is it to recognize talents and gifts in other ways? Am I more of a visual person due to having hearing loss? Would I not have been in to detail as much as I am otherwise? Would someone who is nonverbal have more of an impact on others in his or her life as a result of living life in that way than had he/she been able to communicate via spoken language? Do others in the life of someone with paralysis appreciate their own mobility that much more due to being around the individual with paralysis? Perhaps eyes are opened more due to the influences of their own weaknesses or being around others with their weaknesses...
This section in particular resonated with me today: Indeed, the parts of the body that seem to be weaker are all the more necessary, and those parts of the body that we consider less honorable we surround with greater honor, and our less presentable parts are treated with greater propriety, whereas our more presentable parts do not need this.
What does this mean?? Looking at my body and thinking of weaknesses, I automatically default to the fact that I no longer have a womb...no longer have a uterus to be the weakest as it is nonexistent thanks to being taken away so suddenly after Charlotte's arrival into this world. Is the uterus all the more necessary because of our desire to want to have a large family? It can't physically happen through me as we had planned...am I surrounding that part of me that is no more with greater honor? One could say yes when considering how much grief and despair losing it has caused me. Is my staying stuck on this sad fact causing me to treat this weak part with being fixated on how it should have been...how the right thing would be to have things be the way they were when I could conceive and bear children?? These thoughts were swirling around in my head as we stood up to listen to the gospel. During the homily, Fr. Jonathan, who knows nothing of my story, uttered the following words:
"Some of us might be sad inside
but we are still called to celebrate/proclaim the Good News!
Today is a day to rejoice!
Allow joy to radiate from your life today.
There are so many reasons to be sad yet we are called to rejoice (anyway)!
Be filled with joy and strength. Let your face be formed by the joy of your heart. Ask the Lord to transform the obstacle or whatever is bringing you sadness in your life."
Well, if that isn't a charge to get up, brush the dust off, and keep moving forward in spite of weaker parts of you, or what you perceive to be weaker aspects to you, then I don't know what is. Sooo, it may seem trivial but back to the sense of smell...I have been extra thankful these last few days for it due to my quickly packing of three nostalgic scents without really meaning to when prepping for this semester!
I have been using a small bottle of my favorite perfume from when I was in 10th grade (no, the perfume was not that old but I had purchased it when I came across it recently). During my middle and high school years, when I had first switched to public school and no longer needed to wear school uniforms, I was an avid shopper at The Gap. The store had also sold perfume and one scent, in particular, was a favorite of mine. "Dream" is hard to describe but has a unique scent all its own. Here is a description of it that I found online: Launched in 1995, floral perfume of freesia and osmanthus.
Well, I just finished that small bottle the other day. So out came another tiny bottle of perfume left over from Adam's and my engagement. The tiny blue bottle of "Forever Midnight" from Bath and Body Works had been a by the cash register purchase as they were on sale at a $1 a pop when I was shopping for antibacterial handsoaps and small lotions to put in the wedding bags I made for family and friends who were part of the wedding party. I wound up using that small bottle of perfume when I flew back and forth from California during our engagement and during our first two Christmases out there when pregnant and when taking Charlotte out to meet her West Coast family for the first time. The perfume had been left behind in my suitcase so I stumbled upon it when unpacking the suitcase here in Austria. There was hardly any left but wearing it the last few days reminded me of those first couple flights to Adam's home. I used up the last of that perfume yesterday. It was a great scent as it lasted all day but was not overpowering at all! I think the best way to describe it is vanilla musk but not a strong sweet vanilla but more of a woodsy subtle scent of it. Amazon, however, describes it this way....and is selling a teeny tiny bottle of it for $48!?
Midnight: the hour of undeniable chemistry. A spark of sensual Plum Nectar ignites the thrilling heart of Midnight Jasmine and Vanilla Orchid, velvety florals that bloom sexiest after dark with a hint of seductive spice. The final rush of intoxicating Caramel Liqueur creates the ultimate collision of fragrance and passion.
This morning, I remembered that at the last minute, I had packed an oil that had been in the bathroom closet "just in case" I would run out of the perfume. Well, two weeks in, here are are! This particular scent goes all the way back to upper elementary school when I spent some time with Aunt Maureen in Provincetown and Cape Truro, MA which is part of Cape Cod. She and I stumbled upon an oil called, "Rain", that my Mom also grew to love. Off and on from the mid 90s throughout high school, Mom, Aunt Maureen, or I might have a roll on perfumed oil of that scent buried somewhere in a purse or a bookbag. Since it was an oil, it lasted forever since a little bit went a long way. This is a description I found online of it:
Rain Perfume Essence is a crystalline fragrance derived from nature itself with notes of green clover, lily of the valley and sheer musk create a sense of fresh, renewing clarity, and unity.
Once I didn't go back to Cape Cod for summer trips on a regular basis, I figured that the days of "Rain" were gone....until I found the scent at a small "hippie type" shop in Harrisburg! My friend, Nick, knew I liked the scent and ended up picking up a bottle for me once as a small gift after I had moved away from Harrisburg and that's what is now currently in Austria with me. So, each morning when I put a dab of that familiar scent in this new community and land, I am reminded of the kindness of friends and great memories with family at the beach.
I wonder if I will eventually associate a scent with where we are and decades later when I catch a whiff of it, if it will take me back to right now?!
Sunday, January 27, 2019
Tuesday, January 22, 2019
Our Semester Abroad = Austria in Spring 2019 = part 1 of ??
One of my goals for myself while in Austria is to get back to blogging on a somewhat regular basis. I relished this last week of being able to take the time to get settled in with Adam and Charlotte while getting acclimated to what life will look like for the next couple months. I just noticed the date and it is so odd to think that four months from today we will have woken up in our own home since we fly back on the 21st. I am most certainly not wishing away time at all...it just blows my mind to think of all that is going to occur between now and then...all the countries and cities we will hopefully visit....all the class discussions we will have...the relationships that will continue to grow and form...and no doubt, the impact that this place will have on us individually and as a family. I pray God will work on me and use me as He sees fit during my time here!
So without further ado, here is a day by day reaction to the first week of being here. Obviously, I won't be able to do this once life picks up and goes back to its regular speed with the start of the new semester but I hope to still carve out time each day to reflect, pray, and write as I intentionally did the last several days in the months to come...thanks for reading my rambling thoughts!
Tiny traveler the night before we departed the United States! |
January 13 and 14
Getting a lot of people watching done during our five hour layover in New Jersey! |
·
We had an uneventful trip to Austria leaving
around lunch time on Sunday and landing in Vienna on Monday morning. Perks of the trip were eating my first meal
on my first “fancy” plane and watching Charlotte’s joy as she watched a movie
in German. After watching it 2.5 times
during the 8 hour flight, she began telling us what the movie was about which
was cute to see. The dinner was a yummy
BBQ chicken and filling pasta with warm rolls, salad with a tangy vinaigrette
dressing, and strawberry yogurt with white chocolate shavings on top. Adam and I were pleasantly surprised to find
ourselves seated in the middle of the plan in the row with three seats so that
we could all stay together.
This was prior to taking off from Pittsburgh before settling in for a nap after take off during the first leg of the trip!
|
·
Charlotte slept through the first leg (1.5 hour)
of the flight from Pittsburgh to New Jersey.
In fact, she remained asleep even after we landed so we let the other
passengers leave the plane before us since we had a five or six hour layover
ahead of us. Many of the passengers
commented on how cute she was and how they wished they could fall asleep like
that. Then, as Adam pushed Charlotte out
in the stroller, she woke up and began enthusiastically blowing kisses and
waving bye bye to the others waiting for their luggage as if she were a
celebrity. One passenger even stopped as
he walked by us and said to her, “You made my day!” This was a fun way to start our day of
traveling!
Hard at work coloring using alllll the colored pencils from the airplane attendant. |
Look, Patrick! |
·
As we took off in the second plane, Charlotte
excitedly exclaimed, “Going to see Hershey & Dusty!” that immediately
brought tears to my eyes.
Taken the night before we left...I miss these pups soooo much! Charlotte asks for them every other day at this point. |
<3 |
We were less
than 12 hours from leaving home and she thought we were going home to her
puppies. *Sniff, sniff*
·
A fellow rotating faculty member greeted us at
the airport once we obtained our luggage.
It was so nice seeing a friendly face as we stepped foot on land so far
from home. Two hours later, we pulled
into a place that was new yet familiar thanks to the many pictures (and videos)
we had seen of the Gaming campus in the years leading up to this semester.
·
Within the first half hour of being brought to
our apartment, we met the director of the program, a professor, two
administrative assistants, and the dean of faculty who stopped by the door to
introduce themselves and say hello!
Then, the wife of the Student Life director brought us a warm lunch of rice,
mixed veggies, and pork stir fry. It was
so welcomed as we realized just how very hungry we were since we hadn’t eaten since the
hearty dinner served on the plane the previous night. Dessert of brownies AND milk chocolate
covered Oreos was enjoyed and gone by that night…too good not to save!
·
As I began to unpack and work to get settled in
the apartment that afternoon I realized I had left my cell phone in the
van! Yes, my brand new phone that was a Christmas gift that had been activated two days prior to flying to Austria was nowhere to be found! Two different people looked in the
van for it as the van had been taken to the mechanic’s after dropping us off
and the report came back that the phone was not in the van! All ended well though when the phone was, in
fact, found the next day by late afternoon.
I knew that I would have to make do without my cell in its usual
capacity given that we did not purchase an international plan and are just
keeping our phones on airplane mode to avoid charges but having to do without
the phone for the first 24 hours in a new country without having touched base
with loved ones back home was not quite the way I had envisioned starting our time abroad!
·
Liz, the wife of the fellow rotating professor
who is also here this semester, came by and helped me figure out how to work
the washer and dryer and decipher ingredients at the local supermarket
(everything is written in German!). Again,
it was so nice to see a familiar face in this new town and I appreciated her
kindness in showing me some of what she has already learned by being here for a
month already since she and her family came prior to Christmas.
We were SO thankful for the toys someone had thought to have at the house for Charlotte to play with and she wasted no time diving into them the first day we were here! |
This is the huge pile of snow just outside our front door from the snowplows clearing the parking lot in the courtyard. Apparently, it had snowed a lot a few days prior to our arrival!
|
Front door...Charlotte keeps calling this apartment her castle and I can see why she would think that with some of the features of the home! |
View from the kitchen window - - the entrance to church is to the right! |
Living room (and home of the toys!) |
Another view from the kitchen window. It was so neat to still see some of the Christmas decorations and lights around here! |
Cooking and baking have been a challenge using all new foreign appliances but we're getting there! |
Excuse the unmade bed but this surprised me! The beds are made up of smaller beds pushed together! |
January 15
·
Tonight marks the second day of being here but
we’ve already had a playdate with a family who lives in the same area of the
Kartause as we do. They have four young
boys and a beautiful home in which they hosted us for a delicious Thai lunch
with salad and ginger dressing! As we
wrapped up our meal, we received a report that Charlotte is “good at fighting”
from the boys as the children had excused themselves from the table and were
playing in the play room while we continued eating. After lunch, the family who is also here from
main campus stopped by for a play date at the neighbor's house where we had dined so Charlotte had three more little boys
to play with while the adults chatted.
Toward the end of our visit, Charlotte got a bloody nose…but not from
one of the seven boys! She wound up
smacking her face on the floor when tantruming thereby giving herself a bloody
nose.
·
This morning began with the dean of faculty
greeting me at the door this morning to give me the tour of the campus. It was really neat to hear some of the
stories about the history and how this campus came to be. More than once I thought, I wish Adam were
here to hear this as the history unfolded through the dean’s conversation. Hopefully when we have lunch with them
tomorrow he won’t mind repeating some of them for Adam! I am also excited to share an office with an
English professor I have not met yet and to get more familiar with the
classrooms in which I will teach in the upcoming days as I work to get settled
in work-wise.
Classes are held up and down this hallway. |
One of my classes will be taught in this space (see above and below)..it's such a big space for only six students! |
Entryway to the Library |
More of the library/study spaces |
Two of my classes will take place in this classroom (including the class where Adam will be my student!) |
January 16
·
I was able to unpack my 28 lbs. of schoolwork in
my office today! I will be sharing my
office with an English professor who works here year round and am excited to
get to know her. Here is another
perk! The office is literally upstairs
above the apartment where we are staying!
This is my shortest commute yet….Walk upstairs to my office and walk
across the courtyard to where we teach and to go to mass!
This photo is taken from the doorway of one of my classrooms looking out over the courtyard toward the office and home...what a loooong commute. ; )
|
·
Today’s lunch was held across the street in one
of the townhomes at the dean’s home. He
and his wife, along with their two elementary aged children, were very sweet
and welcoming. They served us salad,
rice, and chicken in a yummy pesto sauce….and lemon beer! It was sooo good!
Javier is from Columbia and Bea is from
Hungary. I still can’t get over how
welcoming and friendly everyone is here and am so appreciative of everyone’s
hospitality as we get settled. I’m also
extra grateful we came when we did so that we can get over jet lag, grow
accustomed to our surroundings, and become friends with one another before the
arrival of the students.
·
After lunch, we walked to the grocery store as a
family to pick up a few items. The
refrigerator in the apartment is small which means more frequent trips to the
grocery store but with the walk being a flat one, it is enjoyable and nice to
get fresh air as we do so.
This was the first time I saw this view of the Kartause! |
January 17
·
We had our first faculty/staff meeting today
during which I was able to meet most of the other faculty/staff. Everyone comes from so many different
backgrounds and countries so there is a lot of diversity to experience while
here! After hearing a little more about
what the others are involved with I’m even more excited to participate in
Women’s Ministry as a mentor, to assist with Ministry to Moms, and to get a
little more involved with the ELISA program with the education majors!
·
The day ended with a ladies’ night in one of the
townhouses across the street to celebrate a birthday coming up this
weekend! The women were so open and
inviting even though I am new. It must
be hard for them to open themselves up and be vulnerable with one another time
and again as new people enter their midst.
It would be so much easier to just stick with the “core” group of women
but I’m grateful that they didn’t and are open to having me join them for their
semester bible study!
·
I also bumped into a former student today! I had seen her during my tour of the campus
the other day but didn’t get the chance to speak with her until today. She is only here for a few days before going
to Slovakia to be a missionary.
January 18
·
This morning, I was able to join the coordinator
of the ELISA program at an open house that was held at one of the partner
schools.
It was wonderful to interact
with the teachers, students, director, and others who had made time to attend
the open house. The director even
thanked the university, secretary, and me by name which was completely
unexpected but neat! It was also the
only part of the presentation that I understood since it was spoken in English
and not German. ;) Oh, another highlight was when a woman came
up to me and asked what I was studying and if I was an undergraduate or masters
student. J Finally, I thoroughly enjoyed interacting
with the students as they communicated with me using the English they were
learning to speak in their classes. One
of the students even had hearing aids in both ears which prompted a
conversation with one of the teachers about what special education looks like in
the school (she said there was no need for it since the student did not need
accommodations as nothing was wrong with him….which reminded me of some of the
interview responses from my dissertation study).
·
After talking with one of the teachers, we brainstormed
some ideas to incorporate in the lessons the education majors will carry out
with the students at that school from the content area reading class I
teach. By the end of the conversation,
we were all excited by the possibilities that lay before us. We also spent a significant time meeting with
and talking with the religion teacher at the school (the school is a public
school) and the possibility of his coming to our campus to be a Teachable
Moments Workshop speaker later on this semester!! Teachable Moments is a series of workshops I
created on main campus that is held once a month and I’m thrilled by the
possibility of maybe having one here for the Austrian students!
This is a government building that used to have some sort of connection to the Kartause (can you see the resemblance in building design?) in the next town over from where we are. |
I want to go inside this church next time! It is supposedly a pretty light pink everywhere since it is called St. Mary Magdalen! |
·
After dinner, and a grocery run at a larger
grocery store (German form of Aldi) thanks to the generosity of the
coordinator’s car, Adam, Charlotte, and I took a walk to the shoe store in town
so I could buy fashionable but functional boots for work. My regular gray snow boots just weren’t
professional looking enough for me to feel comfortable wearing them to class
and I’ve been secretly wanting black booties for a while. So I purchased my first Austrian souvenir
from the shoe shop that doubles as a post office across from the grocery store that
is a five minute walk from us! The
coolest part of this little excursion is that the store workers had toys on
hand for Charlotte to play with when she grew fussy and the woman helping me
had a sparkly green bracelet on with a tiny cross and picture of Jesus &
Mary on it!!
January 19
·
This afternoon we were invited to join the
Director of Student Life and his family for a Mexican lunch of chicken tacos,
guacamole, and chips that was delicious!
Charlotte really liked playing with the fancy Barbie dollhouse the
oldest child, Ellie, shared with her and was particularly drawn to playing with
the baby once he woke from his nap. It
was wonderful getting to know this family and I look forward to returning for
the weekly women’s book study that will start there in early February and Adam
enjoyed talking about football while there.
·
Once we returned home, we were surprised to see
people gathering for a wedding at the church that is right next door to our
apartment. Charlotte and I enjoyed
peeking out the windows and ohhing and ahhing at the women in their long
dresses and fur stoles as the men carried the trains of the dresses so they
would not drag in the snow.
·
The rest of the day was spent using the oven for
the first time to prepare for when we’ll host ten RAs for lunch on Monday. The oven is smaller than I’m accustomed to
and only has one wire rack meaning I have to plan out when and what I’ll bake
when preparing multiple items. The knobs are in German but after consulting
family and friends and experimenting, I was able to successfully bake a Crazy
Chocolate Cake (for the gluten, dairy, and nut free folks), prepare some
Classic Buttercream Icing to spread on top of the cake pieces, prepare and
broil meatballs, and bake an Olivia’s Buttermilk Pie. The last item involved making my own
buttermilk, making my own Bisquick, and doing without baking powder. When I was at the store with the local
yesterday, she shared with me that there is no baking powder in Austria. I also learned that there is no vanilla
extract in liquid form but rather vanilla sugar in powder form so I’m extra
curious to taste the desserts with this different form of vanilla than I’m used
to on Monday! Additionally, there are no
frozen meatballs in the freezer section and of course no Bisquick as the
preferred way around here seems to be made fresh and from scratch. A couple hours later and two dishwasher
cycles later, I was able to pull out the second load of laundry and call it a
night just as the music from the reception next door began to die down from the
wedding.
·
Thanks to a friend loaning us a baby tub,
Charlotte was able to really enjoy her bath/shower (shath?) tonight! The previous two times I had given her a
shower, she cried her way through it.
Thankfully, tonight she was full of giggles and glee as she played with
her favorite bath ducky and bubbles!
January 20
·
This morning was the first time we went to mass
since arriving here. We literally live
right around the corner from the church.
Our kitchen and laundry room windows look out at the front door of the
church. This was Adam’s and Charlotte’s
first time in the church. Adam really
liked the style of it but we both agreed that it was a bit too echo-y or noise
reverberated throughout the church a bit too much. The music was lovely and I could have sat
there and listened to the singing all day.
After mass had ended, we were able to meet the RAs who had landed last
night. It will be fun to catch up with
them at lunch tomorrow as we host them!
·
I spent some time today meditating on the Gospel
in which Mary says, “Do whatever he tells you”.
I couldn’t help but think about how what we’re doing here in Austria is
a reflection of that. We are trusting in
God that we’re where we are supposed to be right now. Our needs are being met and we will hopefully
be able to act as instruments of God in ministering to and teaching others
during our time here. I hope that every
interaction with those I encounter here will be positive and that growth of
some kind will occur whether it be academic, spiritual, or personal. I am so excited for the students to arrive
and to experience this campus with both familiar and new faces from Ohio and
beyond! I will have at least one
transient student who will be here from good ol’ California! Who knows?!
Maybe by the end of the semester, he will opt to transfer and attend
Franciscan in Ohio!
Below are more snapshots from our first couple days here!
She found a new stage! |
Looking for Austrian clothing! |
Taking a break from looking for clothing! |
Throwing snowballs is fun! |
Future dancer?? |
January 21
·
These next few days have a certain air of
expectation and stillness to them.
Students will soon be milling about campus and weekends will be full
with trips and tourist activities as soon as classes begin by month’s end. However, before that happens, the RAs are in
the midst of training and orientation will follow for all the students next
week. We had the honor of hosting the
students for lunch today.
·
The RAs hailed from all over the US (TX, MD, MA,
AL, OH, MI, RI, and CO - - I can’t remember two other states - - and they loved
interacting with Charlotte who was eager to soak up the attention from
them.
·
One of my favorite parts of this afternoon’s
gathering with the nine guests was when we participated in something something
I do with my classes. Once a week, I
will pull out my prayer journal and reflect on a snippet of the Sunday gospel
with my students then ask them to apply it to the class content or education in
general. The RAs’ background and majors
ranged from Theology to Writing to Education to Business so I knew we would
have a variety of perspectives over the snippet from John 2:5 – Then she said
to them, “Do whatever He tells you” – which led to some great discussion on
control, letting go of it, and trusting in God.
·
The students seemed to really enjoy the food and
fellowship which made the work spent preparing for it all worth it! Some even went back for seconds which made me
feel really good! I told the students
that it was the first time we used the oven and that it was a test run to see
how my cooking would turn out using other ingredients or trying to make
something from scratch when I was accustomed to using frozen or premade
ingredients!
Charlotte giggled and giggled so much during their visit! |
January 22
·
I was able to connect my technology in the
classrooms where I will be teaching today so I feel a little more prepared for
the first day of classes. I was also
able to engage in some lovely conversation with the Spanish professor who is
interested in having an education student help her teach English in the local
Kindergarten class. I am excited by this
possibility to provide yet another embedded field experience for one of my
classes if this idea takes hold! The professor
is from Slovakia but knows Slovakian, Spanish, German, and English!! She has published research on teaching
methods and strategies when teaching students a second language so I’m very
interested in reading more about her work.
We engaged in discussions on Noam Chomsky, Nativist theory, language
acquisition devices, early childhood, and teaching this morning that was so
invigorating and affirming of the work we do!
I can’t wait to look at her research and to share some of her articles
and work with my students via a quick guest speaking presentation we are
planning for this semester now!
·
After this morning’s training, I was able to print
some papers for the first week before going back home to pick up Charlotte and
take her to a play date with Ellie, Francis, and Isaac. It was great chatting with Courtney while
Charlotte got some energy out of her system with her new friends!
As much as I'm enjoying being here, I'm grateful for the work that is keeping me busy since I
miss our family! However, advisees are emailing me, pairings for Students Serving Moms are
happening, and of course the usual beginning of the semester prepwork has me moving along
when not tending to family or home needs. It's hard when I think about the fact that we are in
an entirely different country than they are. Thankfully, video chats and online communication
through What's App (a free app that works on wifi for calls and texts), we can still "see" one
another!
So there it is…we’re
creating a new normal as we go and in a way, this is the calm before the storm….the
whirlwind of activity that is! Students
are arriving by the day, classes begin here next week, and soon we will be
traveling to new places when not busy with schoolwork! How exciting!!
As I think back over this first official week, I am
brought back to the readings from this past Sunday:
"There are
many different gifts, but it is always the same Spirit; there are many
different ways of serving, but it is always the same Lord." ~ To one is
given from the Spirit the gift of utterance expressing wisdom; to another the
gift of utterance expressing knowledge, in accordance with the same Spirit; to
another, faith, from the same Spirit; and to another, the gifts of healing,
through this one Spirit; to another, the working of miracles; to another,
prophecy; to another, the power of distinguishing spirits; to one, the gift of
different tongues and to another, the interpretation of tongues. But at work in all these is one and the same
Spirit, distributing them at will to each individual.
This passage always makes me think of how
unique we all are. We all have something
different to bring to the table and can serve in a way only we can. I have seen that time and again this past
week as new relationships are being formed and new connections are made. I can’t wait for the semester to get
underway!! :)