Friday, June 27, 2008
new blog
Since I never use this blog anymore, I will direct all my incredibly dedicated readers (just kidding, I know no one ever reads this) to my current blog: a turkish delight
Saturday, February 23, 2008
Looking ahead
So I haven't blogged in ... forever. My apologies. I get busy. You know, with school, with church, with my friends, with life!
So I'm going to Turkey this summer...maybe I'll write about my experiences and you can read them, just like you read about Japan last summer. I'll be there for 5 weeks, learning about the culture, studying Turkish language and history. It's going to be a great, enriching, educational, culturally expanding time. I'm so excited. 81 days until I leave. :)
<---So I'll be going there...maybe I'll take my picture in front of it and post it up here. Maybe. :)
So I'm looking ahead to Turkey. Also looking ahead to graduation. Not just for the graduating side of things...but the triplets are coming up for it and my sister and my nephew, and my grandpa and his wife. So it's gonna be like a weeklong party with everyone here! I'm so excited, I just can't wait!
Friday, August 03, 2007
Japan Update 5
Six days left in the land of the rising sun...can't believe the summer has gone by so fast! The past couple of weeks have been spent doing "mountain evangelism" as Pastor Heath says...we've been canvassing Japanese neighborhoods, putting tracts in every mailbox, getting the Word out. Though the heat has been intense and the mountain roads and driveways sometimes steep, the Lord has been good. So far no fruit, but we are doing our job in planiting the seed. I know God will water and give the increase in His timing. I'm praying for five Japanese families. Join with me! The need is so great. I stand on the mountain top and almost feel like I'm on top of the world. But then I look down and in the distance see the sea...there are sailors out there that need to hear. I look a little closer and see the shoreline, the harbor, the city begins it's busy hustle, not realizing the One they search for is found in the stillness. There's not much land between the sea and the mountain top. But there's a whole lot of souls. The houses spring up in terraces to conserve space. A yard of any size is considered a luxury. Most houses almost touch their neighbors. The architecture of the landscape is amazingly beautiful. But it also reflects the generations-old dedication to a false religion giving out false hope. Prayers flutter in the breeze at the gateway to the Temples and rotten food and forgotten coins litter the "god shelves" by the side of the street. Students dressed alike in the same white blouses and blue pleated skirts crowd the narrow streets. Little children play by the side of the road, their old, bent, worn-out "obasans" keeping diligent watch from under a sun umbrella. A sailor and his family pass by, oblivious to the same need. One of salvation. One of love. One of hope. Japan may be a 1st world country. She may be a leader in technology and car production. She may be the neediest country in the world. Oh that my heart would not turn away from the distant outcry of the lost. Souls in danger must hear the glad tidings of great joy, which shall be to ALL people. Oh that my heart would be so broken.
Friday, July 13, 2007
Japan Update 4
We've been back in Sasebo since Saturday. The mainland was in the middle of the crux of rainy season when we returned. It poured the first two days we were back, and showers (heavy showers, I might add) after that. Today, thankfully there was no rain, and only a little this evening. There is a typhoon headed our way, though, so be praying!
Tract distribution went well on Tuesday. The rain held off until the afternoon, so our morning was not disturbed. Madelyn and Luke were my constant companions, though Luke was more interested in stepping on the baby frog than putting tracts in mailboxes. We were in an older neighborhood where the houses just sort of "sprung up" wherever they wanted. There is no rhyme or reason to the placement of houses or roads. It was a little confusing, but we got the job done.
Church tonight was a blessing. Kimberly (one of the kids in the church) and I played a violin-flute duet for the offertory. Kimberly's family is leaving on Saturday, so it was fun to do it together before they leave. Pastor preached out of Ps. 18 on "Who is YOUR God?" Our time of prayer afterward was sweet.
Tract distribution went well on Tuesday. The rain held off until the afternoon, so our morning was not disturbed. Madelyn and Luke were my constant companions, though Luke was more interested in stepping on the baby frog than putting tracts in mailboxes. We were in an older neighborhood where the houses just sort of "sprung up" wherever they wanted. There is no rhyme or reason to the placement of houses or roads. It was a little confusing, but we got the job done.
Church tonight was a blessing. Kimberly (one of the kids in the church) and I played a violin-flute duet for the offertory. Kimberly's family is leaving on Saturday, so it was fun to do it together before they leave. Pastor preached out of Ps. 18 on "Who is YOUR God?" Our time of prayer afterward was sweet.
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Japan Update 3
I am now into my second day of Field Conference in Okinawa. First a rundown of camp:The first week I had nine girls ages 12 through 17. They were a lot of fun. The second week I had five girls ages 9-12. Also a lot of fun. But I was sick most of the week. :( not so fun. Tuesday I had a pretty killer migraine again and I was nauseated the entire day, so I went to bed before the evening service and one of the other girls took my girls. Wednesday was a lot better, but still not a hundred percent. One of my girls, Hannah, kept saying *Miss Ali, I'm praying for you that you will feel better so you can be hyper with us!* :) She's cute. So I was feeling much better on Thursday and had a good time with them. They left Friday morning, and after a while of cleaning the camp, the camp staff went to the aquarium. It was pretty neat. We saw this sorry dolphin show, with a song that had bad words in it (although, I did not catch the bad words...one of the other girls that had known the song earlier in life was listening for them and noted that they played the unedited version of the song...) It was fun.Then we came back to camp and watched a movie (National Treasure) to which I fell asleep several times...and then we got up early Saturday to go Snorkling. It was SOOOO fun! At first it was hard to get the hang of it, but once Dan explained how to do it, it wasn't so bad! I found a starfish, and he stung my hand when I picked him up. But he:s dead now, so we're good. Joel found some really great shells and Dan picked up a bunch for whoever wanted them. The other girls found a ton of cowrie shells, but I only got one...I tried to pick up two others but the tide was coming in and it would knock me off balance as I was trying to get it. When we first got to the beach, we found this little black puppy that Alicia named Freckles and Amanda named Diamond all by herself. (The puppy was all by herself, not Amanda naming her.) Anyway, we begged Dan to take her with us but he said no. So she was waiting for us when we got back to the truck about four hours later, and we renamed her Snorkle with the nickname Snorkie and again begged Dan to let us bring her home but he held fast and wouldn:t let us. We gave her the last cheese crackers we had and left her at the beach, calling Dan a puppy killer and other such names. It was very emotional for us. ;) I taught Kierstyn, Ty and Cody SS on Sunday morning...well, Cody is only 9 months old, so I held him and fed him while I taught Ty and Kierstyn. It was so much fun. We sang and then I told the story of the little boy's lunch of 2 fish and 5 loaves of bread. I found some flannel graph in the closet, but no little boy and no lunch, so we pretended with an old guy. Then we made lunch boxes and lunches like the little boy out of paper...We went to Maranatha Sunday night for church, so I got to see a bunch of my campers again. That was fun. Afterward we went out for supper on base, and the WC girls were flirtin' with the GIs again! I tell ya what...Monday was the first day of Field conference. Lots of fun. Today (Tuesday) we went to the peace park with the Harris girls...so much fun. Jessica and I were bonding being nerds together. I:ll have to upload a picture later. Well, it is super late and I have to get to bed.
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Japan Update 2
Last Monday four teens from Lighthouse and I flew to Okinawa, Japan, for camp. I counseled nine girls (the entire blue team!) and we had a great time. I was sick the first day and threw up as the plane touched down, but after that I recovered and we had a good week of camp. Jim Ogle was the speaker and the Lord really worked in hearts. It was so neat to see the change in the kids from Monday throughout the week. One guy really seemed to change, Josh. He's about fourteen; he was the biggest camper on my team. By the middle of the week, he was making the other guys let the girls go first and just being a gentleman in general...hmm, I think some of the guys at school could take lessons! Anyway at the end of the week we had a bonfire and some testimonies and he gave a really sweet one. One of my girls also gave a testimony. She was so sweet and a blessing to have in the cabin. The Lord really worked in her heart.I'm loving Okinawa...swimming in the ocean, getting that tan! Once the rain finally stopped, the sun came out and we bonded! :) I'm kind of surprized that I haven't peeled...I think the burn is just going to turn to a tan! Yeah!Today after church (no evening service; we had an afternoon service instead), we went shopping at China Pete's...but I got no china! Some of the other girls got loads, but I just got an Okinawa banner. It's really cool. Then we went to this jade shop and I got a freshwater pearl ring (that fits!), two jade rings and a pair of freshwater pearl earrings...and also some little jade donut things that can be used for making jewelry. All of it was the real deal and I paid twelve dollars! Wow. The other girls all got some necklaces and other stuff too, but I didn't. Then we went to the 100\ store...love that store! Way better than the dollar store! I got a ton of stuff...and I'm slowly beginning to feel the haichu fetish hit. They're pretty good! (Chewy candy...flavored all different kinds).So I brought my flute to Japan and I think I'll return to the States having played it once...My last Sunday in Sasebo the Callahans (missionaries up north) were in town, and the oldest two are really musical, Nathan plays piano, Heather sings, and I played for a song she sang in church, and Nathan and I played the offertory...and haven't broken it out since. I was playing piano for the singing at camp this past week, and I forgot to bring my flute to church this morning...Kierstyn and Ty are playing silly with some strange glasses and fake teeth. They are so funny!
Monday, June 11, 2007
I made it to Japan!
So I finally made it to Japan! I missed my first flight out...so I stayed in WI an extra day, and my mom drove me to Chicago the next day. The flight to Japan was approximately 12 hours and 3 minutes long. The flight from Tokyo to Fukuoka was about an hour and a half, and I had a 5 hour layover in Tokyo.I spent the first two nights with Pete and Jean Heath, the missionaries I'm working with here. On Sunday, I jumped right in to play piano, as the church's pianist is in the States for the summer. They were glad to here some "live" music! So I played an impromptu offertory during the morning service as well as a prelude and congregational singing, and then I practiced up a song that I've played before for the Sunday evening offertory.Monday I packed a bag and came to Eric and Maran's house. Eric was a single guy in our church when I lived in Japan ten years ago. Since then he got married and had a kid, so I am staying with them for a week. Maran and Nathan are coming to the States in the next month, and Eric will be joining them as soon as he gets his orders.Today several families of the church started distributing Japanese gospel tracts in several neighborhoods. The church is doing a tract blitz all summer, trying to get a tract in each home in the area surrounding the church. The little kids were excited to help pass the tracts out, and I made a new friend, Luke. He is three, and I would open the mail box and he would put the tract in. Japanese mailboxes are not like ones you find in America. Most of the time, the mailbox is built into the outer stone gate that surrounds the house. It's a rectangle about six inches high and a foot wide. Sometimes they will have a flap at the top where the mail goes in, sometimes it is open; and there is a "catching box" on the other side of the fence that will have a cover so the mail won't get wet. On the mailbox is also a doorbell and intercom system to call to the house.After we blitzed two small neighborhoods it was time to eat, so we all went to CoCo Curry and had a good Japanese meal. I was so full after the Chicken Cutlet Curry!
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