Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Eldama Ravine


This year, during Christmas Vacation, we girls from Kisumu and Nakuru got together at Eldama.  We Kisumu girls left Saturday afternoon and bumped over the treacherous roads for a few hours before finally arriving. :) It was so great to get settled in to our little red cabin and just RELAX.  Then, Sunday evening, the 3 girls from Nakuru joined us.  We had SO MUCH FUN together!!!  Laughing for hours on end, day after day... working together in the kitchen making food... great talks... many jokes... LAUGHING... swimming... hours of Rook... fires and hot drinks... and lots and lots of laughter!!! Since Proverbs reminds us that a merry heart doeth good like a medicine, surely our lives have been lengthened quite a bit!!
Charity and Stacy :) 
Shooting hoops with Stacy...

Tuesday morning, we hiked to a waterfall with Tommy and Marji's family.  It was great to spend a little time with their family..and it was so refreshing to be at the falls!! 
THE KISUMU GIRLS :) 
Logan...
This little guy is just great!  Hiking with him is the best!  
"Miss Carolyn, you might want to watch out because there is a deep crack there that you will have to step over." (as he waits in concern as I {quite easily} step across) :)
"Maybe we could write our names on this rock, if I could find a little rock that would write..."
"If you would like to sit here, I made a spot for you." (He had spread his little red jacket over a rock and was sweetly offering this special seat to me...)
"I can make a path through these bushes for you, Miss Carolyn.  Then if you want, you can just kinda follow me!"   As a seven year old, he surely has nailed down what it means to be a gentleman!
There were several monkeys at the falls..
... our small friend...


Kayla, one of the Nakuru girls...


Pictures just NEVER do justice...



Eldama was so beautiful!  I loved all of the flowers!!!  
Stacy and I left on Tuesday to head back to Kisumu...It was a little sad to have to leave, knowing that the Nakuru girls are staying until Friday, and Charity will be there until Saturday...(and come home with Tommy's family)
However, the reason that I left before the others is because MY BROTHERS ARE COMING!!!  
...TODAY!!!! 
... IN JUST A FEW HOURS!!!!!!!!!!!!!  




Wednesday, 23 December 2015

More Farewells

I just realized that I still haven't posted any "good-bye pictures" of Jason & Cynthia's family, "Grandma" Lois Weaver(who was here to help Jake and Janice settle in), or Rachel...Miss these folks... 

A picture of Jason's family singing together on their last Sunday at Lela:
Jason, Cynthia, Mauren, Elya, Isaiah, and Joseph
Mauren:
Joseph and Elya:

Isaiah was always my buddy... he sat with me every single Sunday...would come running for a hug if he met me in the lane...always on my lap when we traveled...kept me company at Bible Study or Thursday evening prayer meetings...I miss my little sidekick!!

....so many hours on the road!!!!!!!
 Joseph, drinking chai at Zilpah's:

GRANDMA LOIS... A sweet servant and a treasured friend!
 Dishon and Grandma:

Rachello, my friend, my nurse, my listening ear, my nutritionalist (lol), the wise lady who was bossy in a good kind of way, the big sister who would check in to be sure you were getting enough sleep... ;)   ... the list could go on and on and on...
MISS YOU, RACH!!!!
Rachel & Charity 

Saturday, 19 December 2015

In my last post, I mentioned being gone last week.  I spent the week at CBYC in Nakuru.  CBYC stands for Christian Believers’ Youth Conference.  There were 50-60  students, with approximately a dozen of them being mission youth.  We youth from Kisumu headed to Nakuru on Monday (the 7th) and came back Sunday (the 13th).  The week flew by like crazy!!  It ended up being even more fun than I possibly thought it would be! :) 

We had some great classes:  The Christian Home, Biblical Faith, Separation of Church and State, and The Gospel of Matthew.  These classes were all taught by national pastors, but it was all in English which was great for me…(and not so great for some of the students who didn’t know English so well…)  We had discussion periods after each lecture where we were divided up into smaller groups and given questions to think about and discuss.  Some of the questions were very thought-provoking.  Each day before lunch, we spent an hour practicing our chorus songs.  They were mostly Swahili, so that was fun!  The tunes were fairly simple to learn, but it took awhile for me to get all of the words memorized.  Chorus was definitely one of my favorite parts of each day!

Suddenly it was Friday, the last day of classes!  Unbelievable!!  Saturday, we spent the morning doing exams, which were mostly enjoyable, other than the frustration of having inadequate time to fill in all the answers.  Later in the afternoon, we hiked up to the top of the Menengai Crater (an extinct volcano) and spent a little bit of time at the top before heading back down.  Hiking in flip flops isn’t the easiest, but thankfully, the trek wasn’t too exhausting.  After sitting on hard, wooden benches ALL WEEK for many hours each day, it felt amazing to just be outside!!


Sunday morning, each teacher gave a summary of his topic from the week, and we shared our choir songs for the local congregation at Engashura.  After lunch, we hung around for awhile before heading back HOME.

I think the part I loved most this week was the opportunity to learn to know these youth.  Some of the girls were really quiet the first few days, but after they loosened up, we had so much fun together!  There were 18 of us girls who boarded (over 30 guys) and several day scholars who didn’t spend the night there at the compound.  All week, there were so many languages swirling around.  A few of the girls struggled with English, but in general it was fairly easy to communicate back and forth.  There was always a lot of Swahili and a little Luo and Kikuyu in addition to the English conversations. 

I also loved the food.  It was great!!  Breakfast wasn’t always my favorite, but it was always edible. :)  Some of our breakfast foods were uji (porridge made from millet)…Chai… mandazis (yay)…bread… sweet potatoes and hard boiled eggs…For lunch and supper, we had a lot of rice and beans… ugali, sukumu wiki, and cabbage… potatoes…chapatis… a little beef stew…mokimo(something new for me… I loved it… a unique twist on mashed potatoes)… and likely some other things I am forgetting…

I also really enjoyed the “primitive side of things” as well.  Sure, there were some chilly mornings where I inwardly felt like complaining instead of taking a sponge bath from a small basin of water or visiting the smelly choo… However, it really wasn’t so bad.  We had electricity most of the time, and used lanterns at night after the generator was turned off.  I actually kinda enjoyed scrubbing my laundry in a small tub and carefully hanging it on the barb-wire fence to dry.  :)  Our foam mats seemed to get a bit thinner each night, but I slept GREAT ALL WEEK!! In fact, even with all our exciting dorm moments and EARLY morning racket, I still got more sleep than I do at home. ;) :)  

I also really enjoyed our segregated talks in the evenings before lights out.  Mary Ellen did a phenomenal job sharing her topics.  It was also fun to spend time singing with the girls and praying together.  Often, in a small group, they would open up and share what was on their heart.  Some of them have such rough home lives and such negative peer pressure at school.  I am so blessed!!!!

In the afternoons and evenings, the youth would play volleyball.  Their skill was not so bad, but their knowledge of setting and rotating was a bit humorous, and could become exasperating if you let it bother you… so I would go hang out by the fire with the cooks.  These ladies were great!  I loved listening to them chatter away in Swahili, and they loved teaching me new words and songs.  Whenever I had a free moment or just felt bored, I would go spend time with them.  No matter what, they always made me laugh.  They were GREAT! 


Overall, it was just a wonderful week!  I’m so glad that I had the opportunity to go!  …and now it’s been awesome to be back home with internet again, a shower, real toilet, my own bed, my normal routine, and school!  :)

Mary kept me entertained day AND night...seriously, the night part is quite factual!   ...she slept beside me, and I didn't have many quiet (or lonely) moments... 

Monday, 14 December 2015

After being gone for an entire week, it was SO much fun to be back HOME in Kisumu,
and to be BACK AT SCHOOL.  My students are SO sweet!  I don’t think I realized how much I missed them until they came in this morning with their sparkling eyes and glowing faces!  They were all so eager to tell me stories and all of their welcome back notes and delightful little gifts (like freshly picked flowers and a tootsie roll that was likely a prized possession) totally made my day.  It was mind-bogglign to see how much the first graders had learned in just one week… the words that they can now read … and all of the new phonetic concepts that they have mastered… wow… seeing their progress is just amazing!

Today, the 1st graders were learning the word faith… As we talked about faith and trust, I was blown away by some of their definitions and explanations for what faith is!  I can’t even begin to explain all the thought-provoking ideas that they shared, but truly, their perspective is incredible!

It is just so enjoyable to teach them so many new things!  One thing that is definitely different than teaching 3rd and 4th graders is simply their lack of knowledge about many things.  Over and over again, I am amazed at their childish innocence.  They also are so expressive! 

Children in general are just highly entertaining… I am constantly amused by the humorous things that they say and do.  This evening, on my way home from school, one of my little two year old buddies grinned happily as I walked by and said, “Good MORNING, Miss Carolyn!”  I couldn’t help but laugh at his cheery little greeting, even though it was almost six o’clock. 

The other evening, out on the lane, three of the little boys were demonstrating their impressive biking skills to me as they were “teaching me” how to do all sorts of stunts, such as wheelies, etc.  They were also purposely “speeding,” so that they would get pulled over.  Soon, I realized that the little lady police officer was giving money (bougainvillea leaves) to each reckless driver rather than fining them. What a unique point of view.  Not very realistic, but definitely generous! ;)

One Monday morning at school, my first grader was telling the class how his dad had taken “eleven bread and uneleven bread to church yesterday for his sermon…" Their outlook on life…what can I say? … :)


Here are a few pictures from a few weeks ago...