Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Sangkhlaburi Day 2


Day two started at 7:30am, and after coffee and breakfast we were on our way to Khun Dodo's house, and the Pahk 16 AIDS ministry that she runs.


Natalie and I at breakfast

At Pahk 16
Dodo and a few of the children
Singing Jesus Loves Me



The boys (and little girl, Poe Poe, in the green) singing for us




Helping Poe Poe trace her hand
Walkin to church!
After sitting with the kids and playing/coloring/singing/talking, we headed over to the little church on the property for Sunday morning service. The pastor preached in Karen (hilltribe language), another pastor translated what he was saying into Thai, and Ora sat next to me and translated the Thai into English for me. Lots of singing, and we all went up to introduce ourselves at one point, and all the while the children sat..or ran around..or played..or danced in the aisle, haha.
Me and Poe Poe 
Our group
All the children sang,



Then the women sang.



Lunch after church
Some of the women with the rice and cooking oil we brought for them
After lunch we said our goodbyes to Dodo and the women and children, and headed out to the Kwai River Christian Hospital. The hospital treats Karen and Burmese local residents, but not Thais (because Thais can receive free healthcare from the Thai hospitals). The hospital survives on donations and supporters such as ICB, and although their annual budget is only about 1 million baht (about $35,000), maintaining that is a struggle for them each year, and they are always in need of more doctors, especially surgeons.

Just..beautiful Thai countryside and mountains



Made a quick stop at the Bible school
Touring the hospital
More of the hospital
Pahk 16 Safe House
From the hospital we went down the road to the Pahk 16 Safe House, which helps those with mental disabilities learn skills like weaving, sewing, basket-making, and decorative flower-making.
From there we went to Candlelight, which works with and helps people in the surrounding communities with physical disabilities. Five of us went with Jan (in the pink) to visit the English-ish speaking families, while the other 5(all Thai-speaking) went with another Candlelight staff member to visit families who only spoke Thai.

Denise (L), Natalie, and Jan (pink) and I visiting the first family
Roy (stripes), who is a prof. Physical Therapist and part of our group from ICB, working with the Thai man, helping him to build strength in his legs and sides. 

At family number 2, helping their little girl with her balance and hip issues.
Entering the village where the 3 other families live
Natalie with the mother and her daughter of the first village home
Second village house, sweet little girl and her daddy
She was so funny! We gave her noodles, and she immediately marched over to her mommy and asked for hot water to eat them. I don't think they gave her the water, but they put the noodles in a bowl for her and she sat there munching away while we talked with her family. :)

The village
The little boy at the last house we visited. Grandma didn't speak Thai(I think she spoke Mong), so we had a neighbor translating from that into Thai, and then Jan the Thai into English :) None of the families in the village were Christian, but they were all happy to let us pray "to our God" for their children :D

Roy helping his work on balance and some minor knee issues
After we said our goodbyes to the families, we got our group back together and drove over to Jan's home for their weekly Sunday communal dinner. While cutting up the watermelon in the kitchen with Jan's husband, I happened to mention that my mom had worked at a missionary hospital up north in Mae Sariang about 30 years ago, and Jan came into the kitchen and said, "What's her name?" When I said Rosa, her face lit up and she said, "Rosa CrespoHarris?!" Surprised that she knew my mom's name, I laughed and said, "Um..yeah! Yeah, that's my mom. :D" She was so surprised and excited to realize the connection; apparently they had gone to language school together (35 years ago), and had (indirectly) worked on some of the same projects and things around that time. I was suddenly filled with an overwhelming sense of pride for not only what my mother did as a missionary, but that what she did made such an impact on those around her that they still remember her so many years later. Way to go, Mom. :)
Dinner at Jan's house with our group and some of the other local missionaries
Me with Jan and her husband (whose name unfortunately escapes me)
The evening view over the river from our room's balcony

Monday, May 13, 2013

Sangkhlaburi Day 1

ICB has 3 ministry partners up in the Sangkhlaburi area, so we try to have at least one, if not two, annual weekend trips out there to visit them and see more of the work that they're doing. I was unable to go on the last two trips, but was determined not to miss this one, so signed up as soon as I could. There were only ten spots available, as we were only taking one van and once it's full, that's it.



May 4-6 was a holiday weekend, so we left Saturday morning bright and early and were on our way. It's a long drive, about 6 hours, as the Sangkhlaburi area is up near the western border to Burma. We made a stop in Kanchanaburi to pick up some supplies, get lunch, and visit the JEATH Museum. I've already been through the museum a few times, so I sat by the river while the others toured through.

The view across the river from where I was sitting by the JEATH Museum

One of the bomb shells


Ora and her coconut ice cream...with corn, beans, and ....some other weird thing that shouldn't go with ice cream
 Arrived at our Guesthouse around 5pm, checked in and got settled, then headed out for dinner and a peruse of the night market.

Arriving at our guesthouse on the river

Welcome to Ponnatee Resort!

The view from check-in

Some of the rooms

The view from my and Natalie's room

Out to dinner with our team!

I love that the restaurant just gave us free fruit after our meal :)

Night Market
More of the market

Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Move

Just a few pictures of my last evening before moving out..


My pile of donation stuff to Second Chance Bangkok

Defrosting my freezer

Friday, May 10, 2013

Goodbye Dinner With The Neighbors

The Tuesday before I moved from my apt, my neighbors David and Muay invited me to join them and Martyn (my replacement at work) for dinner. There was wine, delicious food, Jenga, dominoes, and some hilarious conversation. I'm really going to miss them!

David's happy face 

Martyn (my replacement)

I totally won every game :D



Darika liked my plastic wine glass, so we washed it out and put juice in it for her lol

ahahaha I love this picture


Muay taking advantage of David falling asleep

Darika was brushing my hair haha

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Summer School 2013

Our theme this year was ASEAN without ASEAN countries. If that's confusing...the students just had to come up with their own countries - names, flags, maps, language, greetings, currency, costume, and national product. They did a great job, and although the little ones always look cuter, I was very proud of our 5th and 6th graders for the work they did. :)


























Thursday, April 25, 2013

What Happens When You Live Abroad

A very dependable feature of people who live abroad is finding them huddled together in bars and restaurants, talking not just about their homelands, but about the experience of leaving. And strangely enough, these groups of ex-pats aren’t necessarily all from the same home countries, often the mere experience of trading lands and cultures is enough to link them together and build the foundations of a friendship. I knew a decent amount of ex pats — of varying lengths of stay — back in America, and it’s reassuring to see that here in (Thailand), the “foreigner” bars are just as prevalent and filled with the same warm, nostalgic chatter.

But one thing that undoubtedly exists between all of us, something that lingers unspoken at all of our gatherings, is fear. There is a palpable fear to living in a new country, and though it is more acute in the first months, even year, of your stay, it never completely evaporates as time goes on. It simply changes. The anxiousness that was once concentrated on how you’re going to make new friends, adjust, and master the nuances of the language has become the repeated question “What am I missing?” As you settle into your new life and country, as time passes and becomes less a question of how long you’ve been here and more one of how long you’ve been gone, you realize that life back home has gone on without you. People have grown up, they’ve moved, they’ve married, they’ve become completely different people — and so have you.

It’s hard to deny that the act of living in another country, in another language, fundamentally changes you. Different parts of your personality sort of float to the top, and you take on qualities, mannerisms, and opinions that define the new people around you. And there’s nothing wrong with that; it’s often part of the reason you left in the first place. You wanted to evolve, to change something, to put yourself in an uncomfortable new situation that would force you to into a new phase of your life.

So many of us, when we leave our home countries, want to escape ourselves. We build up enormous webs of people, of bars and coffee shops, of arguments and exes and the same five places over and over again, from which we feel we can’t break free. There are just too many bridges that have been burned, or love that has turned sour and ugly, or restaurants at which you’ve eaten everything on the menu at least ten times — the only way to escape and to wipe your slate clean is to go somewhere where no one knows who you were, and no one is going to ask. And while it’s enormously refreshing and exhilarating to feel like you can be anyone you want to be and come without the baggage of your past, you realize just how much of “you” was based more on geographic location than anything else.

Walking streets alone and eating dinner at tables for one — maybe with a book, maybe not — you’re left alone for hours, days on end with nothing but your own thoughts. You start talking to yourself, asking yourself questions and answering them, and taking in the day’s activities with a slowness and an appreciation that you’ve never before even attempted. Even just going to the grocery store — when in an exciting new place, when all by yourself, when in a new language — is a thrilling activity. 

And having to start from zero and rebuild everything, having to re-learn how to live and carry out every day activities like a child, fundamentally alters you. Yes, the country and its people will have their own effect on who you are and what you think, but few things are more profound than just starting over with the basics and relying on yourself to build a life again. I have yet to meet a person who I didn’t find calmed by the experience. There is a certain amount of comfort and confidence that you gain with yourself when you go to this new place and start all over again, and a knowledge that — come what may in the rest of your life — you were capable of taking that leap and landing softly at least once.

But there are the fears. And yes, life has gone on without you. And the longer you stay in your new home, the more profound those changes will become. Holidays, birthdays, weddings, funerals, graduations — every event that you miss suddenly becomes a tick mark on an endless ream of paper. One day, you simply look back and realize that so much has happened in your absence, that so much has changed. You find it harder and harder to start conversations with people who used to be some of your best friends, and in-jokes become increasingly foreign — you have become an outsider. There are those who stay so long that they can never go back. We all meet the ex-pat who has been in his new home for 30 years and who seems to have almost replaced the missed years spent back in his homeland with full, passionate immersion into his new country. Yes, technically they are immigrants. Technically their birth certificate would place them in a different part of the world. But it’s undeniable that whatever life they left back home, they could never pick up all the pieces to. That old person is gone, and you realize that every day, you come a tiny bit closer to becoming that person yourself — even if you don’t want to.

So you look at your life, and the two countries that hold it, and realize that you are now two distinct people. As much as your countries represent and fulfill different parts of you and what you enjoy about life, as much as you have formed unbreakable bonds with people you love in both places, as much as you feel truly at home in either one, so you are divided in two. For the rest of your life, or at least it feels this way, you will spend your time in one naggingly longing for the other, and waiting until you can get back for at least a few weeks and dive back into the person you were back there. It takes so much to carve out a new life for yourself somewhere new, and it can’t die simply because you’ve moved over a few time zones. The people that took you into their country and became your new family, they aren’t going to mean any less to you when you’re far away.

When you live abroad, you realize that, no matter where you are, you will always be an ex-pat. There will always be a part of you that is far away from its home and is lying dormant until it can breathe and live in full color back in the country where it belongs. To live in a new place is a beautiful, thrilling thing, and it can show you that you can be whoever you want — on your own terms. It can give you the gift of freedom, of new beginnings, of curiosity and excitement. But to start over, to get on that plane, doesn’t come without a price. You cannot be in two places at once, and from now on, you will always lay awake on certain nights and think of all the things you’re missing out on back home. 



*Re-blogged from thoughtcatalog.com - Ms Chelsea Fagan hit the nail on the head with this one.*