Archive for the ‘Press’ Category

Coming Home …

coming-home

… while I’ll readily admit that “home” is a designation quickly becoming more and more muddy in my mind … and while I’ll also admit that calling a place like Kansas “home” still makes something deep inside me itch a little … the facts are that we’ll be in the U.S. for about 5 weeks this summer. Below is our travel itinerary:

Friday, June 19, 2009

American Airlines Flight #932
Departs QUITO 6:30 AM
Arrives MIAMI 11:35 AM

American Airlines Flight #2307
Departs MIAMI 1:40 PM
Arrives DALLAS 3:40 PM

American Airlines Flight #1862
Departs DALLAS 4:50 PM
Arrives KANSAS CITY 6:24 PM

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

American Airlines Flight #2023
Departs KANSAS CITY 1:15 PM
Arrives DALLAS 2:54 PM

American Airlines Flight #1564
Departs DALLAS 6:20 PM
Arrives TAMPA 9:40 PM

Friday, July 24, 2009

American Airlines Flight #478
Departs TAMPA 11:20 AM
Arrives MIAMI 12:23 PM

American Airlines Flight #931
Departs MIAMI 3:25 PM
Arrives QUITO 6:25 PM

It’s our plan to spend a couple weeks in KC, then a week and a half with my folks before heading to Tampa to spend a week and a half with Rachel’s folks. More details will be forthcoming soon. (Like which of you “gets to” host us!) Look forward to seein’ you soon!

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Weekly Updates

weekly-updates

Rachel has started writing a weekly update, which requires way more discipline than her slacker of a husband has.  Some of you have already been receiving them via email.  I’ve decided to start posting them here as well.  I’ve posted some “back issues” as well.

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

The Adventures of Rick and Rachel in Ecuador: 2008 Recap

the-adventures-of-rick-and-rachel-in-ecuador-2008-recap

We recently sent out a newsletter of sorts, recapping the year that was 2008.  Most of you will have read it somewhere else, but just in case we missed anyone, here ya go:

Rick and Rachel Sams moved to Quito in September of 2007.  Bless their hearts, they didn’t have a clue.

2008 was their first full year in South America.  (Well, I guess technically it was Rick’s first full year in South America.  Rachel has a bit of history there.)  Throughout the last 12 months, Ecuador has been (at varying moments) a dream come true, a crucible, a very honest mirror, fertile ground, and an absolute nightmare.  Probably in many of the same ways that the settings of any of their friends’ and families’ lives have been.  (Except perhaps with less learning of other languages, customs, cultural idiosyncrasies, and complete career changes.)  Otherwise, I’m sure it’s very similar.

With regard to language learning, Rick can now tell taxi drivers “Vamos a la Granda Centeno y Bobadilla, junto al Canal Cuatro. (We’re going to Granda Centeno and Bobadilla, near Channel Four.)“  If pressed for more info, he can also tell them that Bobadilla’s first name is Gregorio, and that the whole kit and kaboodle is “cerca de la intersección de América y Brasil (near the intersection of America and Brazil).“  He has also developed the ability to insert other street names and landmarks into the basic formula, on the off chance that he wants to go somewhere other than home.  Ordering food in restaurants was one of the first skills he developed, but the last year has seen him move into the uncharted waters of being able to ask them to upsize the drink, to please refrain from slathering anything with guacamole, and to kindly batter and deep fry the pork that’s going in his “chancho agridulce (sweet and sour pork)” instead of just using slices of pork roast.  On a side note, “kit and caboodle” doesn’t seem to have a direct Spanish equivalent.  Rachel has learned the appropriate conjugations of the verb ‘coger’ (to grab, pick up, or catch … but can mean something very different and very bad and very starting with the letter “f” in much of the rest of South America) and phrases such as ‘Hay, porfa’ (a whiney, Ecuadorian way to say “please”).  Rachel can also read complicated Spanish novels and newspapers, have conversations in Spanish about politics, religion, and all the other things you’re not supposed to talk about at parties, and never says she “did” something when she means “never will do.”  Rick tries not to resent her.

Back to 2008 … Rick started the year by entering the employ of Alliance Academy International.  The previous 3.5 months had been pretty scary, as he watched his three-year-old business dissolve.  The plan had been to continue to operate Elemental Design from Ecuador, but you know what they say about the quickest way to make God laugh.  Rick spent the second semester shadowing/assisting David Tieszen, the teacher that he would replace during the 2008-2009 school year.  In January, Rachel was already most of half a year into her position in the counseling department.  It was a definite shift from her previous job (less prostitutes, meth addicts, and sex offenders), but came with its own share of challenges (more middle-school girl meltdowns, more elementary girl meltdowns, etc.).  Rachel was one of two counselors, and the only full-time one.  She worked with Deb Anderson, the counseling department head, who despite not being there all the time, prepared Rachel pretty thoroughly to take over the position the following year.  Over the summer, Deb and her family returned to the States on furlough, and Rachel has taken over the department head position, managing three part-time counselors as well.

Rick’s uncle Robert Tate, from Alaska, visited Ecuador in January.  He was along for the ride with a group from the Wesleyan Church’s Kansas district who were working on a church plant just outside of Cuenca.  Rick and Rachel had visited Cuenca just about a month earlier with some friends, had loved the town, and jumped at the chance to visit the group.  (Particularly since his aunt in Alaska decided to pay for the plane tickets.)  What had been a 9 hour bus ride in December was only a 45 minute plane ride in January.  Rick still believes he’d move to Cuenca in a heartbeat.  It’s a beautiful place.

The big news from February was kidney stones.  After four hours in the emergency room, and another three days of sheer agony, it all “came to pass.”  Rick decided that he’d about had enough of peeing through a sieve, and promised to drink more water from here on out.  The entire medical bill for the incident was less than $140.  File that one under “reasons to live in Ecuador”.  (The medical costs, not the altitude/dehydration/kidney stones bit.)

March was a major milestone, in several ways.  Records say that Quito experiences several earthquakes a week, but March 20th was the first one the Sams’ actually felt.  It awakened them at about 1:00 a.m. and was over by the time they realized what was happening.  Rick got all giggly about it, but Rachel has slept through several earthquakes and didn’t seem quite as excited.  They also had their first visitors.  Brian Fischer and his daughter Brianna (aren’t they cute?) came down for a whirlwind, four-day tour of Quito.  Brianna says she now has the travel bug, and Rick and Rachel would like to think they had a little bit to do with that.  It really was a big, big deal to have visitors come specifically to see them.  That the first ones to do so were essentially family made it all the more special.  March was also a turning point in terms of the way that Rick and Rachel were thinking of their role in Ecuador.  Despite both being missionary kids, neither of them had been very comfortable with the title when it was applied to them.  “Missionaries” were people who were sent by agencies to plant churches, win souls, and generally build the Kingdom in huge ways.  Anyway, after months of chewing on it, the Sams’ started thinking differently.  They celebrated their new mindset by performing one of the quintessential functions of a missionary — they asked for money.  March of 2008 was the first month that Rick and Rachel received outside donations from supporters other than the stipend that the school gave them.  Since then, the support on an average has steadily increased.  The whole process was one that was a big step.  Admitting that working with the children of Ecuador’s elite in a setting where they were able to share the gospel, build relationships, and be hands and feet was really a calling worthy of their honor and diligence made Ecuador seem like less of a transient experience, and more of a destination.  Knowing that it was God’s will was one thing, knowing that what they were doing was really building Kingdom was another.  Additionally, the morale boost of having people partner with them financially went a long way toward making them feel like they weren’t really alone.

April and May were a blur of school-related activities.  Rick and Rachel got more involved with Peer Helpers, a group of high-schoolers that had joined up because they’d expressed a desire to pursue a career and/or lifestyle of helping or ministering.  The group turned out to be a great place for building friendships, exploring touchy (but vital) issues, and really knowing others.  Toward the end of the school year, the Sams’ had the “privilege” of tackling the subject of sex with the group.  It was a success, really, and a meaningful discussion ensued.  Both Rick and Rachel looked forward to the following year, when they would have more control over the group’s direction.

The beginning of May brought a four-day weekend, and the opportunity to travel with some friends.  Baños (kind of the Estes Park of the Andes) had been on the docket since arriving in Ecuador, and Rick and Rachel took it in.  It was a gorgeous trip, and full of relaxing fun.  Baños is famous for its taffy, its waterfalls, and its hot springs.  The Sams’ just loved the fact that they could walk the streets at 11pm with no fear of getting mugged.  It was a good time out of the big city.  On the last day of May, Rachel celebrated her first birthday in Ecuador by going out to eat with some friends at Mongo’s, a mongolian bbq in La Mariscal (the touristy district … think Westport with more attitude and culture).  Rick and Rachel both love the Mariscal.  Good food, which isn’t really a priority in much of Andean culture, is in no short supply there.  A wide variety of dining and entertainment options abound.  On the weekends the place really doesn’t get hoppin’ until about 11:00pm, and the crowds of people keep it at least moderately safe.  Though they love the apartment they’re in now, with its proximity to the school and friends, Rick thinks that if they ever do move within Quito, La Mariscal is where he’d like to end up.

June brought about the end of the school year and the second round of house guests.  Former youth group kid and seriously loyal friend Dan Audley came down for the better part of two weeks.  He got the typical tourist treatment: Otavalo (market town an hour or so to the north), Mitad del Mundo (middle of the world equator monument that’s actually several hundred yards off the equator because the French couldn’t get it quite right), and the Teleferiqo (cable car ride most of the way up the mountain around which Quito lies to the east).  Dan got into town just in time for Rick and the yearbook class to miss it’s completion deadline, and got to spend two days in the dungeon (a.k.a. “Rick’s classroom”) helping him finish it up.  After that, Rick and Rachel were better hosts.

From July 4th through July 16th, Rick’s family descended on the Sams’ place in a happy, buzzing horde.  For four of the nights, there were eight people sleeping on couches, inflatable mattresses, contrived mat-like beds and such.  The last time the whole bunch had spent the night at Rick and Rachel’s it had been at their duplex in Olathe.  The apartment in Quito, at three, had two more bathrooms than the Olathe duplex did, which greatly contributed to the emotional (and physical) well-being of all.  All the touristy/foody sites were visited.  Christmas in July was celebrated.  Having family visit was the highlight of the year for Rick, and by “family” he means his nephews and the other folk who came along with them.  Rachel’s folks have not been able to visit yet, but they’re hopeful that 2009 will see that happen.

Then came August.  It wasn’t a good month, really, for either of them, but Rick in particular found it excruciating.  All the house guests were gone.  Most everybody they knew from the school was back in the U.S.  A friendship in which Rick had (foolishly) placed a lot of stock went south in a dramatic fashion.  A trip that Rick took toward the coast with Samaritan’s Purse ended up being a hellish experience on several levels.  About a week into the month, he began (violently) coming to grips with the fact that he’d been suffering from a depression for the better part of a year that had been slowly growing.  Now that the buzz of early summer was over, and the quiet of impending autumn had fallen, the darkness began to grow more quickly.  Rachel didn’t really know what to do except for just be there.  This wasn’t something that could be “fixed.”  They had planned on painting the apartment after company left.  Rick spent most of the painting time holed up in the bedroom staring at the wall and sniffling, while Rachel made the place prettier.  Rick didn’t want to live in Ecuador, didn’t want to learn Spanish, didn’t want to do without Tea Garden, or Chipotle, or Brian, or Kurt, or Shawn, or Jon, or Chris and was sick and tired of pretending that everything was okay when it so obviously wasn’t.  Rick saw a psychiatrist.  He started taking anti-depressants.  He reached out to a local pastor acquaintance, looking for a shoulder to lean on.  He started spending a lot of time in the gym.  Slowly the darkness started to lift.  Once the medication leveled out, things started looking less bleak.  Ecuador began to seem like less of a sentence, more of an opportunity.  The pastor became a valued friend, and started meeting with him weekly.  (He continues to do so.)  Rick put 70# on his bench press by the end of the year.  Not a huge accomplishment in the greater scheme of things, but something he could hold onto.

School started.  Rachel was the counseling department head.  She’d never managed anything before.  Now she had three people under her.  Meetings and scheduling and administrative work took up much of the time she had for pursuing what she’d loved so much about the position the previous year.  Much was different.  Still fulfilling, but different.  Rick was teaching for the first time ever, and realizing that leading youth groups wasn’t adequate preparation.  He loved the kids, and even loved seeing them learn things he cares about.  But the mechanics of teaching wasn’t something he could honestly say he loved.  His additional responsibilities (graphic design, member of the public affairs team, webmaster, peer helpers, etc.) kept him busy as well, and provided some variety.

The 2008-2009 school year brought a lot of new people, and more affirmation that the AAI/Quito missionary community is highly transient.  This year, the nationality most represented in the Sams’ group of friends is, oddly enough, Canadian.  Next year will be different, likely  There’s a group of a dozen or so that make it a regular date to crash their place on Tuesday nights for 2-for-1 pizza night and occasionally a movie or two.  There’s no shortage right now, really, of people to hang out with.  Real engagement and authenticity are harder to come by, but are starting to make an occasional appearance.

September also brought a new ministry opportunity for the Sams’.  Alliance Academy has a program called CSO (Christian Service Outreach), where high-school students can get involved in ministries that range from mentoring middle-schoolers, to working with families that live at the city dump, and anywhere in between.  Rick and Rachel hooked up with one called Opción de Vida (Choice of Life), that ministers to homeless street boys in Quito.  It’s been remarkably rewarding for them to be out and about and be recognized by kids on the street, including one fire-eater who performs for commuters near the school.  Just a week or so ago, the OdVida group picked a bunch of the kids up on a Saturday and took them out to a property the school owns about thirty minutes north of the city.  The boys played games, rode horses, ate lunch and had a short devotional out in the country, far from the harsh reality of their city life.

Rick turned 39 in October.  He celebrated it with a large number of friends at his favorite restaurant in the Mariscal, the unfortunately (and highly intentionally) named “Uncle Ho’s”.  The owners created a special menu for the occasion, and gave him a t-shirt that says “I (heart) Ho’s” on the front.  He’s careful where he wears it.  Rick had been planning his 40th birthday for several years, but obviously had to readjust some of that since he now lives in another hemisphere.  The redux is coming right along.  Stay tuned.  Rick and Rachel started the process of getting their Ecuadorian drivers’ licenses in September, and finally got them in October.  There was a ridiculous amount of red-tape to navigate, and the process really underlined the degree of government corruption that exists in Quito.  They owe most of the credit to a friend, Doris Ruales, whose husband is high up in the police department.  In a city where clout and persistence pay off, Doris has both.  (You can’t tell her no, Rick has tried.)  She’s been a huge blessing on many occasions.

November meant the Thanksgiving holiday, which is a big deal at the school, but not really in Ecuador.  Thus, it’s a great time for the gringos to head to the beach.  Rick and Rachel visited La Mapara, just between Cojimies and Pedernales, for the second time.  This year the weather was much more cooperative, and nearly everyone came home with sunburns.  Incidentally, Rick got to prepare two turkeys for the holiday, and got to explain the brining process in Spanish several times.

The holiday season is always a busy one, especially in school life.  Everybody needed posters, brochures, flyers (etc.) from Rick, and there were concerts and performances and parties to attend.  For the Sams’ there was the growing anticipation of their first visit back to the U.S. since their arrival 15 months earlier.  Finally, December 20th arrived.  They visited three states in twelve days, and saw hundreds of people.  Their time in Kansas City was insane, packed full of parties, lunches, coffees, and late night runs to Buffalo Wild Wings.  The time with the respective parents was much more subdued, which was a different kind of fantastic.  Returning to Quito was rough, after just having been in the States long enough to see all the wonderful things, but not long enough to remember that paradise isn’t spelled “K-A-N-S-A-S”.  The adjustment is setting in, though, and the countdown is on for a possible (longer) trip back stateside in the summer.

Much has changed in the past 12 months.  Crime in Quito is on the rise.  Rick and Rachel know several people who have been mugged, many of them students, some at knife and gun-point.  Friends and co-workers have had cars stolen, their houses broken into, and in one case were attacked with screwdrivers.  The government is wandering into crazy mode again.  New legislation severely regulating imports is affecting the costs of nearly everything, including groceries.  Life is getting exponentially more expensive and less secure.  Some days it’s easy to look at it all as a lesson in where security really comes from.  Some days it’s easier to wonder how they’re going to eat.  Community has begun to solidify, but the intimacy that history provides remains rare.  Rick and Rachel have started attending the English Fellowship Church full-time, largely due to a desire to be able to participate in ministry opportunities.  Rick has started occasionally working with the worship team there, but wants more.  Keep them in your prayers.  Life is good in thousands of tiny ways, but the path is still sometimes hard.  They’re gonna make it, probably in spite of themselves.

Here’s some things you can be praying about during 2009:

Increase in giving - The support coming in is making a huge difference, but there is still a need.  Budgeting for 2009 is hard, considering the growing instability in the market.  Prices are literally climbing weekly.  Rent has gone up along with everything else.

Community - It’s difficult finding authentic engagement in a culture that’s defined by what everybody does, namely missionary work.  Pray for meaningful and real connections as Rick and Rachel seek out authenticity both within and outside of the missionary community.

Transportation - The Sams’ car in Olathe still hasn’t sold.  That’s nearly $400/ month that would be freed up.  Additionally, Rick and Rachel are starting to see how having their own transportation here would be a great benefit, both in personal and ministerial terms.  A goal for 2009 is to at least get closer to having their own wheels in Quito.  As vehicles cost almost twice as much in Ecuador, and usually have to be payed for in cash (credit options are minimal) this will require some effort.  The good news is that the resale value is also very good. 

Grace/Patience/Longsuffering -  As Rick takes on two new classes (four times a week each) and adds them to an already hectic schedule, and Rachel tackles an increasing amount of inter-student drama, the planning of seminars and such for students and parents,  and administrative hoopla, pray that their patience and emotional reserves are kept filled by something external.

Safety - Quito is quickly becoming a less safe place to live.  Rick doesn’t like to let Rachel go anywhere without him.  And while they know that “safety” is an illusion, and that their fate lies soley in the hands of God, some days it’s easy to fear.

Government - Ecuador’s president and government are facing some monumental challenges, and seem to be doing so in a fairly reactive manner rather than looking toward the country’s long-term well-being.  Pray for wisdom and guidance for those whose decisions so radically impact the least of these.

Opción de Vida - The kids of Opción de Vida really are, in so many ways, the most fundamental reason why the Sams’ are in Ecuador.  These kids juggle, eat fire, pick pockets, get high, don’t sleep all night because they’re afraid, smell bad, cuss a lot, beg, steal, lie, fight, and look at you with the eyes of those who have hope because there’s no farther down to fall.  It’s challenging, rewarding, heart-rending, and a total blast to work with them.  Please pray for the building of relationships, the filling of stomachs and hearts, and the changing of lives … both theirs and the ones who serve them.

EFC - The English Fellowship Church in Quito, Ecuador has got to be one of the weirdest churches in the world.  About 50% Ecuadorian national, 40% missionary community, and 10% everything else imaginable, it provides a challenge unprecedented to any who’d dare try to create a demographic needs profile.  Any given Sunday, anywhere from 5-50 people may be there for the first and last time, as they travel through Quito on business, with a short-term missions group, etc.  Pray for Len Kinzel and the elders as they lead and attempt to respond to a wild array of needs.  Pray for Rick and Rachel as they settle in there and look for ways to lighten loads.

If you’ve gotten this far, thanks for reading.

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

We’re Goin’ Home!

were-goin-home

… or at least back to the States.  I’ve long been confused as to where “home” is.  It’s only a 13 day-trip, but it’ll be the first time we’ve been back since September of 2007, and we’re pretty excited.  Here’s our itinerary, for those interested:

  • Depart Quito (Delta #330) at 9:00am on Saturday, December 20, 2008.
    Arrive Atlanta at 3:00pm on Saturday, December 20, 2008.
    Depart Atlanta (Delta #1587) at 6:35pm on Saturday, December 20, 2008.
    Arrive Kansas City at 7:50pm on Saturday, December 20, 2008.
  • We plan on being at Oak Hills for Sunday morning, December 21, and will be in the K.C. area until sometime later in the day on Christmas Eve, December 24.
  • We’ll travel to Springfield on December 24, and spend Christmas and the days following with my family.
  • We’ll travel back north to Ft. Scott on December 27 to spend time with my mom’s extended family, after which we’ll drive back to Kansas City.
  • We’ll spend the night back in K.C. on December 27, and will be at Oak Hills again Sunday morning, December 28
  • Depart Kansas City (AirTran #445) at 5:12pm on Sunday, December 28, 2008.
    Arrive Atlanta at 8:08pm on Sunday, December 28, 2008.
    Depart Atlanta (AirTran #131) at 10:05pm on Sunday, December 28, 2008.
    Arrive Tampa at 11:31pm on Sunday, December 28, 2008.
  • We’ll spend the next few days, including New Year’s, with Rachel’s folks.
  • Depart Tampa (Delta #888) at 9:00am on Friday, January 2, 2009.
    Arrive Atlanta at 10:34am on Friday, January 2, 2009.
    Depart Atlanta (Delta #331) at 5:30pm on Friday, January 2, 2009.
    Arrive Quito at 10:45pm on Friday, January 2, 2009.

We’ll want to see as many of you as possible, so get in touch with us and let us know what your plans are.  We can’t wait!  Thanks very very much to Russ Ramsey and Marsha Frazier for all their hard work toward making this happen.  Thanks especially to Oak Hill Presbyterian Church for their generous financial help toward the purchase of our tickets.

See you very soon!

Monday, October 27th, 2008

Bits and Pieces …

bits-and-pieces

Still don’t have our driver’s licenses. Everything from the driving school itself is finished, but we still have to go to the Ministerio de Transito for the actual license-getting part. Some have told us that we’ll have an additional test there, but I’m hearing from other sources that the test we “took” at the driving school may suffice since the school is run by the police department. Who knows? Last I heard, a group of us was headed to the Ministerio next Tuesday, which just happens to be my birthday. When I told Doris, the lady who’s been helping us through this process, she told me that the license would be her “regalo” to me.

School is going well. I’m lovin’ workin’ with the kids. It would still be a stretch to say that I love “teaching”. There’s a lot of prep work still, and my room still really looks like it’s in “first week/getting settled in” mode. I only average three periods of classes a day, but I stay really busy with graphic design work for pretty much the entire school, and trying to keep the new website rollover project on track.

Rachel and I have locked into a CSO (Christian Service Outreach) group. CSOs are groups of students that are involved different weekly ministries. Ours is called Opción de Vida. Every Wednesday, we head out right after school for a nearby park (about a 30 minute walk away), where a local church has built a facility for homeless street boys. The boys range in age from 12 to mid-20s, and have so many different stories. We’ve only been a couple of times so far, but I already feel my heart being owned by these kids. There’s a group of about 15 or so of the students from Alliance that go with us, and they’re a fantastic group of kids. I’m really excited about what this ministry is going to change in me.

The other student group that Rachel and I are working with is one that we’re actually leading this year. The group is called Peer Helpers, and comprises about 18 students who’ve expressed interest in engaging their peers in a meaningful and helpful manner.  I’m really excited about this group, too.  They seem to be interested in digging into deeper issues than just “what do I say to a friend who’s bulimic/depressed/hurting himself/experimenting with drugs/etc.”  With all due props to Scott Sauls, the question that we pose to them every time we meet is “how would a better understanding of the gospel help me know how to address (fill in the blank).”   We’re trying to do a bit of breaking down of the typical picture of “helping”, where the helper reaches down from a lofty position to minister to and try to pull less fortunate souls up to their level.  We’re trying to instill in the kids a sense that 90% of real “help” is just showing up and being engaged, which will always mean stepping down from your perceived lofty position, and getting involved in their mess.  Real support is more about pushing up than pulling up.

Tomorrow, I’ll be helping lead worship at church for the first time since we’ve been here.  It’s not our regular church, though I’m on the schedule to get involved there soon as well.  A good friend who lives just up the hill from us is the worship leader at the English Fellowship Church, and asked if I would help her.  She’s very talented, and I was delighted to respond in the affirmative.

Update on the driver’s licenses:  since I started writing this, it turns out that one of the higher-ups got concerned that the gringos were getting preferential treatment, and now we have to go back in and take a test on Monday that they’ve translated (poorly) into English for us.  I’ll keep you posted.

Saturday, October 11th, 2008

The Best Job In The World

the-best-job-in-the-world

I really thought my last job was the best job in the world.  I worked for myself for the three years before moving to Ecuador.  There were many nights that I was still working at 12:30 in the morning, but I could always sleep in until about 10:00 if I wanted.  I joked often that the dress code for my job was “boxers” and that while I thoroughly loathed my boss, my wife seemed to have a thing for him.  Many days I would take a shower as early as 3:00 p.m., whether I needed it or not. As most of you know, the plan was to continue on with the business once we moved to Ecuador.  Most of you also know that didn’t happen.  Most of you also know that I landed a job at the same school where Rachel is hired as school counselor.  I thought I’d tell you a little more about the job.

I teach three classes: Design and Digital Media (which covers design principles, digital photography, photoshop, basic html and other web-authoring applications), Video (digital video and editing), and Yearbook (which is a ton of work, but pretty self-explanatory).

I also serve as the school’s primary resource for graphic design needs.  In that capacity, I also am a part of the Public Affairs Team at Alliance, which is an oversight/planning committee for everything that the school puts out that ends up in the public eye.  One of the big projects for the coming semester is planning the school’s 80th anniversary celebration.

During the second semester of the coming year, it’s looking like I’ll have some additional teaching responsibilities.  One of the other teachers plans to be out due to pregnancy, and I’ll be covering a couple of middle school basic computer skills classes for her.

That’s all in addition to being recently named webmaster for a significant website changeover that AAI has planned for first semester.  Everything’s being changed over to a content management system that will allow for department heads and others with the need to access the site to be granted control over specific areas for editing.  I’m worried about what that will look like, as those who will be given access have skill levels that range from “I’m not sure where to plug my printer in” and up.

All that to say that this next year is going to be very, very busy for me.  The responsibilities are right down my alley, but there’s a fine line between knowing something well enough to do it and knowing it well enough to teach it.  I’m a little nervous, but am sure I’ll settle into a groove sooner or later.

Saturday, August 16th, 2008

First Visitors!

first-visitors

At approximately 9:00 p.m. this evening, Brian Fischer and his daughter Brianna touched down in Quito.  There aren’t words for how excited I am that they’re here.  The next four days are going to be a blur of activities.  Thanks so much to all of you who sent “goodies” down with them.  They now have one very empty bag to fill with souvenirs!

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008

Earthquake!

earthquake

At 1:10 this morning, we experienced our first one. I woke up to the sound of window panes rattling in the next room, while someone jumped up and down on the bottom of our waterbed, sending us sloshing around. Then I recalled that we don’t have a waterbed. We have a mattress that lies on the floor. “Earthquake!”, I said. Rachel, just coming to, agreed. By that time it was over.

I say we “experienced” our first one. According to official reports, there’ve been 7 of a magnitude of 4.0 or greater here just since the beginning of March. It’s just that we’ve never felt one. Well, now we have. It didn’t keep either of us up very long. Most people I’ve talked to this morning didn’t even notice it.

According to the Geophysics Institute, it was a 4.4, occurred at a depth of just over 8 miles, and the epicenter was about 29 miles west of Quito.

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Needful …

needful

It’s been a process for me, reaching a point where I really considered what we’re doing “missions”. Some have you have been privy to my internal backs and forths on the subject. What I’ve finally come down to is this: we’re 3,000+ miles away from what we’d called “home” because we believe God to say that’s where we should be. I guess that’s enough of a definition, regardless of what we’re doing.

But then there’s what we’re doing. Rachel and I both work at a school that’s in a huge transition right now. Two years ago, the Christian & Missionary Alliance decided to end its educational ministry in Quito, and the Alliance Academy International began operation as an independent, Christian mission. What had historically been a school catering primarily to children of missionaries, began to shift demographically. The 2007-2008 school year is the first year that the student body at AAI has had more national Ecuadorians than all other nationalities combined. The cost of a private education in Ecuador automatically precludes all but the wealthiest of the wealthy families. What that means is that the staff and faculty at Alliance are in a position where they are being entrusted with the future leaders of this country, and parents are paying us to train their children in a Christ-focused environment. It has been surprising to me to realize how many of the kids we deal with day in and day out are effectively unchurched. Not only are there cultural considerations due to countries of origin, but matters of worldview thrust us into situations that are completely new. This is a much different gig than working with a church youth group.

I’m not going to go on and on. Here’s the gist: We need help. Rachel and I get paid about $700/month each. It’s not enough. Things are cheaper in Ecuador, but the economy here is anything but stable. Food prices are rising steadily, and of course skyrocketing fuel costs end up affecting the cost of public transportation. Global concern about the U.S. economy affects markets everywhere, especially foreign countries like Ecuador, who use U.S. currency. The school is still figuring out the whole “independent” thing, and is in no position to increase its support. I was talking this out with Rachel recently and said “If 25 of our friends would send us $20/month, we’d be able to make it.” I was half-joking, but then I realized that I’d never really asked for help. So that’s what we’re doing.

We need about an additional $500/month, or $6,000 a year. I know there are many of you that are in similar situations where all of your resources are being spent exactly where God wants them. What I ask of you is that you would pray that we’d be able to raise the support that we need. If there are others of you that God has blessed so that you could afford to support us, we truly believe that the work we’re involved in here is worthy of Kingdom resources.

A week ago, we had no regular state-side supporters. Today we have two. Both of them have committed to sending us $100 a month. That’s a huge blessing, and we’re overwhelmed by their generosity. Please consider partnering with us in our ministry here, and please keep us in your prayers.

P.S. - For those who are interested in supporting us financially, you can do so through RCE. Resourcing Christian Education International is the agency that we work under here. Due to our visa status, we can’t technically make any money from Ecuadorian sources. What makes the lawyers happy is an arrangement where the school makes a donation to RCE and RCE deposits funds matching it in our account in the U.S. RCE does this with missionaries working at Christian schools world-wide. They do take an 8% cut of any donation that comes in, and the benefits we get from them make that more than worth it. They also send out annual statements of giving for tax purposes. You can contact RCE directly (our account is #3922), or you can find forms to print out here. RCE does not have an online donation option yet, but there is a form for either a one-time gift or one for ongoing donations that they will electronically transfer from a bank account. Please let us know if you have any questions.

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

And it came to pass …

and-it-came-to-pass

… at midnight last night.  The relief was immediate.  Enough so, actually, that I didn’t take my pain meds I was due for at 1:00 a.m.  The flu bug that I’ve been fighting concurrently with all the other drama has made it hard to eat and keep food down, and when I don’t have food in my, the pain meds don’t stay down.  It’s good to be past that.

I’d threatened to post a picture, but none of them are really turning out good.  So here’s a pic of the prescribed treatment Dr. Carlos Lopez gave me.  He actually told me that jumping would help.  (I didn’t do a lot of jumping.)

I didn’t sleep at all night before last.  The pain was simply unbelievable.  I sincerely hope I never have to go through that again.  I think I’m gonna put myself on a 5-gallon/day water regimen.  I’m stayin’ home another day from work, hoping that the flu is in it’s death throes as well.

Thanks much for all the prayers, emails, and calls.

Monday, March 3rd, 2008