Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Just a Blurb...

Nothing has happened.

I am only posting to note my progress: I still have one box I must sift through. :0)

hahahaha

I leave for the airport in 2.5 hours.

Hope it's all packed in an adequate manner! :0)

I figure what I don't have, oh well -- maybe China has something I will enjoy even more.

(I am hearing good things about China from new friends who are already there.)

I hope to use some plane time to write notes and start brainstorming about my...

CLASSROOM!!! :0)

Monday, July 25, 2011

What is to Come

Here's the plain run down:

I am moving to Tianjin, China where I will be teaching kindergarten!!
Many of my students will be Korean.
I will have some American students and a few from various other countries.
I have signed a two year contract.
I get to have two hours of tutoring in Mandarin every week!

Tianjin is about a 40 minute bullet train ride from Beijing, China. Take a car from Beijing to my new home city and you will be traveling for two hours, southeast.

This school has been around since 1986.
It's a nice sized school going from preschool to high school.
My class will probably have between 11-16 students. (So cute!)

Some of my students will be able to speak English fluently and some won't know any.
They git ter learn how ter speak English right good from me. (BAhahahaha!)

I have plans for lots of singing, moving, pictures, smelling, tasting, touching, and smiling.
We'll have a good time...and they will speak beautiful English at the end of the year.

Outside of school I have hopes to help with "English Corner" where Chinese (college?) students come to learn English (and I may be able to practice some Mandarin!), I also hope to visit the orphanage in the city once a week, and then I would like to get to know the junior high/high schoolers and have adventures biking around my neighborhood.
(We'll see how overwhelmed I am when I get there. I must take it SLOW!)
I am excited for the gatherings together outside of the school. I hear it's very international!

I have already been talking with my roommate. Her name is Bethany. She seems very lovely.

Our apartment sounds HUGE. Bethany has her own room. I have the master bedroom (because she is so generous) with a king-sized bed and my own bathroom. (!!!!!)

It has been YEARS since I have had my own bedroom or bathroom.

We have a kitchen, an office, and I would assume a smaller living area. (Maybe I can take pictures when I get there.)

So, there's the run down.
This is what I am EXPECTING will happen. We'll see how far from reality I am.

I'll seek to keep you posted as I can!
--Thanks for THINKING of me.--

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Stay and Go

I have always wanted to see and experience the world's cultures.
I want to smell them, observe customs, interact in the marketplace, visit homes, taste their delicacies, and feel the textures of their lives.

While at teacher training in New York, I learned about Third Culture Kids (TCKs). They have a hard time identifying to one culture. They may have a passport from Germany, speak Portugese, and live in Thailand. (They don't belong in any ONE place.)
They are unified with the TCK culture because of their shared cross-cultural experiences.
These are the kids with a true "global perspective."
These are the kids I will be teaching.

I am thankful for them and I am excited to see how their different perspectives can be used in the artist's great canvas -- especially as our world morphs into a larger "global economy."

Humorously, I once had a conversation with someone about their children traveling overseas, if the parents would encourage it, etc.
The reply came that we (21st century America) have such an ability to see and experience things through DVDs and the internet, why travel? Why not just stay and serve where you're at? Why do we need to go anywhere else?

(Even as I reflect on those words...I am saddened.)

After that conversation I began to question my motives for wanting to go TOUCH the children in Uganda, to SEE the filth in India, and SMELL the heavy air in China. I wondered if it was evil or wrong -- something I needed to chuck aside, but couldn't.

I later found that it WAS an idol I needed to give up as a consuming desire, but I now realize that neither perspective is inherently wrong. They're two perspectives that CAN be and SHOULD be lived out -- if done with caution and wisdom.

It's foolish to say we should never go.
We MUST have the TCKs who KNOW the culture.
(How can you know another culture or even another person without personal interaction? Even dating couples are surprised to find how much more there is to know about the person after they are married.)

And yet, it's not for EVERYONE to go.
(And why should everyone go when there are so many people groups in the United States?!)

We can't just think we know or understand someone else by watching them alone.
Have you traded your life for theirs?
Have you asked them questions?
Have you sought their perspective?
Have you been challenged to edit and change your way of thinking?

This must be done no matter where you are living. If you want to KNOW people -- KNOW them. Don't just "associate." Bleh.

I am thankful that the artist moves his models around.
The potter smashes and builds up, shapes and moves, preparing the clay pot to carry whatever items will bring him the greatest fame.

May the clay pots be faithful vessels, joyfully sitting wherever the potter puts them; never knowing when the arrangement might change.