Sunday, November 22, 2009
Thanksgiving in the Basque Country
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Long time....no update.
Ian and I are also progressing in our studies. We could both use more opportunities to speak but we do alright when we need to. Everyone keeps telling us that it will get better with time. We have started working some at our Txat Room and getting a chance to meet with clients. It is a lot of fun and we just want more opportunities- as soon as we get out of lang. school we will be working there more and be more valuable to our team. We are getting ready for a weekend event with a volunteer team from Texas this month as well as a team retreat.
I have invited one of my friends over for Thanksgiving. Her mother was an American and I thought she might like to experience this holiday with her American friends. My friend, Cristina, says she remembers how hard it was for her mother when she first came here and so she wants to be my friend and help me- I love that! Ian's mom is coming for Christmas so we are looking forward to having our first visitors. It is the rainy season right now so I hope it all stops before she gets here and we can get out without getting soaked.
Ian will be testing for his Spanish drivers license this week so you can think of him as he finishes studying and taking the exam on the 10th. I am also hoping for some changes in my learning situation so you can remember that also. I will let you know the specifics once I know something definite.
Thanks again for all your support-sorry the updates are so infrequent, but while we are busy, the days are fairly predictable and their isn't much new going on. Love you all!
Thursday, September 24, 2009
For our friends in Boca Raton!
The girls started school about 3 weeks ago and they are doing well. I think they are understanding more everyday. They are actually being taught in the Basque language (Euskera) and that has been...interesting. The public schools teach exclusively in Basque but the private school the girls go to teaches in Basque until the 5 yr. old school year and then they do a few subjects in each language. So right now the girls are learning Spanish on the playground and from their friends in class. The school day is pretty long and they are happy when the weekend comes and we all get to be home together.
Ian and I started back to school this week. It has been boring. They assigned us to a level 2 class and we are a bit higher than that. We are requesting a change for next week so we pray our request is granted. One of our teachers has spoken to the director and agrees we should be moved to the next level. I hope next week is more challenging. We need to move forward and get this language. I feel like we are in a bit of a valley with our speaking. It is so difficult and when we try to speak the words seem to get jumbled and just fall out of our heads. Or we know the words but can not get them in the proper tense or person. You should totally give grace to everyone you know who is not a native english speaker- it is very difficult to learn and live in a second language. I have meet one girl who is the mother of another set of twins in our girls class. She is half American and wants to practice her english. She was raised here so Spanish is her native language- we meet once a week for a language exchange and she has been great at helping me know what is going on! Sometimes I feel like I am walking around in a fog- I am hoping that the smoke clears soon.
This next week I would like to get the girls enrolled in some kind of extra- curricular. I am looking into swim for Bianca and dance or gymnastics for all three. Any way we can connect with people would be great. I am thinking about joining the gym right next door and I am sure Ian would like to get back into the gym as well. He has been running but has not been out on his bike yet. He finally got his surf board last week so I hope that he will get out and try in the next week or so. I also pray that for him it is "like riding a bike".
We have several events coming up that we would like you to remember: English chat weekend in October and a movie premier for surfers in October as well. Ian and our team mates are looking for a venue for the movie premier, we are hoping that this can be used as the catalyst for some other project in the surfing community.
Thanks to our friends in Boca Raton, Fl for keeping up with us and reminding us that there are people back in the states that love and care for us...even if we do not even know them personally!
PS-If you are on Facebook and we are not "friends" please add us and send us a message letting us know who you are and how you "know" us. This is a great place to see pictures and keep up with us day to day.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Why? Because it's better.
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Español Solo (3)
It was a fantastic weekend. We spent each meal with our new friends, and got a chance to eat a bunch of traditional Spanish foods. One of my favorites is morcilla, a type of blood sausage. For our Louisiana friends, it is not all that unlike boudin, except of course for the blood.
Everyone was very gracious, and they exhibited a great deal of patience as we fumbled through sentences and absolutely butchered their language. We attended four teaching sessions throughout the weekend as the pastor who led the retreat took us through the book of Ephesians. We did okay following along, as long as he stuck to the passage. As soon as he would follow a tangent, we would be completely lost. It is amazing how much more one can understand when he/she is aware of the context, in this case the biblical passage. Their were a couple of young teenage girls there who took to our girls. They kept an eye on our girls and let us participate in sessions and talk with people. We greatly appreciated their help in that.
Thanks for all of your prayers for us as we were gearing up for and participating in this weekend. It was a great learning experience, and our we were able to take alot (and not all of it language) away from the weekend).
Thursday, June 25, 2009
Español Solo (2)
So this weekend it is time for our Spanish only weekend. And this time there is no way to postpone it. The members of the church that we have been attending here invited us on a church retreat at a camp about two hours away. So Friday at six we will load up in the car and head out for a true Spanish only weekend, and we won't be returning until Sunday evening. Two of the members of the church speak English fluently, but they, along with everyone else, are only going to communicate with us in Spanish. I am sure that some of our conversations are going to look more like a game of charades than anything else, but we anticipate that this weekend will be a great opportunity to learn.
During the retreat we are going to be studying the book of Ephesians. I look forward to God using our time of study to show us something new in His Word as well. How amazing that it does not matter the language; God's Word transcends all cultural differences. God can do incredible things.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
update!
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Espanol solo!
Saturday, June 6, 2009
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes
Monday, May 18, 2009
People, People Everywhere
The last three cities we have lived in are Youngsville, LA; Sugar Hill, GA; and New Orleans, LA. Youngsville is a suburb of Lafayette, LA, and has a population density of approximately 597.3 people/square mile. Hence, we had a nice, big yard and a neighborhood surrounded by sugar cane fields. Sugar Hill is a suburb of Atlanta and has a population density of approximately 1239/sq mi. Before Sugar Hill, we were in New Orleans, which has about 2518/sq mi.
About two months ago we moved into an apartment in Portugalete, Spain. Portugalete is very small in terms of land area. It's total area is only 1.24 square miles, but the population is 51,066. That translates to a population density of 41,202.6/sq mi. Here there is high rise apartment building after high rise apartment building. There are people everywhere. For perspective, New York City, one of the most densely populated US cities, has a density of 27,147/sq mi, significantly less than what we have here.
Being around that many people is a lot different than living in the suburbs in the US. We have always thought of ourselves as city people, but we have not ever experienced anything like this. Living in an apartment rather than in a house with yard is different as well. Not better or worse, just different.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Nothing new to report
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Eat, sleep, drink....Spanish
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
For Real!
Monday, April 20, 2009
What's cookin'
Nanny Update!
Sunday, April 12, 2009
Thursday, April 9, 2009
And the skies went dark
But the days of being vagabonds is over. Yesterday we got into a great apartment in Portugalete. It has really been a relief to finally have a place of our own. Today we spent the whole day just hanging around the place, except for the hour we spent on Katie's first driving excursion on European roads (I don't know if it was more stressful for the driver or the passengers; I will let her tell about it). Bianca, Eliana, and Giada are excited to have a place to call home again. Giada even said she that she doesn't live in the "helltel" any more. I promise she came up with that on her own, and did not pick it up from her parents.
We have a few things about which you can pray. I am leaving Saturday morning for New Orleans to pick up or visas (we are approved!), but I will be there for several days, and Katie will be here with the girls by herself. We also start language school on April 20, and we have not yet secured childcare. Pray that we will get that settled soon. We will post more and maybe even some pictures later.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
And so it begins!
We spent that afternoon with some of our team members who are already here, and it was great to get to talk to them face-to-face after having only communicated with them via email, phone, or Skype for nearly a year. I anticipate great things in our work together.
We don't have an apartment yet, so we are staying in a hotel right on the coast (apparently it had the best rate for a family room in the city). This evening I was able to watch people walking along the boardwalk that runs along the coast while waves from the Bay of Biscay broke along the shore. It was the first time I had the opportunity to pray for these people while living amongst them rather than from afar. God is good. May he bless our work here.
Monday, March 23, 2009
So long...
We are doing well otherwise, just trying to get organized and all packed up. If you would like to pray specifically for our travels here are the details:
Leaving Richmond Friday at 5:10p -( please pray for my parents and younger sister, they are coming this way tomorrow to help us get ourselves together and to bring us to the airport on Fri.)
We stop over in ATL , then to Paris, and finally to Bilbao. All flights are on Air France.
Please keep the children in your prayers as they will be starting school soon in a new place where no one speaks English! We are praying for just one teacher who understands English and can help them out their first few days.
Pray for speedy language acquisition for us all!!
Thanks for checking in-hoping to get some new posts up this weekend to tell you all about our travels!
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Basque Music - Kepa Junkera
A video clip of musician Kepa Junkera and some others playing basque instruments.
19 days and counting...
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Nothing New
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
No clever title
Sunday, February 8, 2009
Two Weeks Down
Tonight we had participated in a cross-cultural worship experience. Our evening service was completely in Spanish. We sang some Latin American worship songs, and the children got to lead in a special time of singing. The preaching was in Spanish with an interpreter, and we heard an encouraging and powerful message. We are looking forward to more of these experiences.
Please continue to pray for our visa process. This week our applications should be sent to Madrid for processing, so be praying that the processing happens in a timely fashion. Thanks so much for your prayers.
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
TCK
What is the Origin of term "Third Culture Kid"?
Sociologist Ruth Hill Useem coined the term "Third Culture Kids" after spending a year on two separate occasions in India with her three children, in the early fifties. Initially they used the term "third culture" to refer to the process of learning how to relate to another culture; in time they started to refer to children who accompany their parents into a different culture as "Third Culture Kids." Useem used the term "Third Culture Kids" because TCKs integrate aspects of their birth culture (the first culture) and the new culture (the second culture), creating a unique "third culture"
Missionary Kids (MKs) typically spend the most time overseas in one country. 85% of MKs spend more than 10 years in foreign countries and 72% lived in only one foreign country. MKs generally have the most interaction with the local populace and the least interaction with people from their passport country. They are the most likely to integrate themselves into the local culture. 83% of missionary kids have at least one parent with an advanced degree.What are the Characteristics of TCKs?
There are different characteristics that impact the typical Third Culture Kid:
- TCKs are 4 times as likely as non-TCKs to earn a bachelor's degree (81% vs 21%)
- 40% earn an advanced degree (as compared to 5% of the non-TCK population.)
- 45% of TCKs attended 3 universities before earning a degree.
- 44% earned undergraduate degree after the age of 22.
- Educators, medicine, professional positions, and self employment are the most common professions for TCKs.
- TCKs are unlikely to work for big business, government, or follow their parents' career choices. "One won't find many TCKs in large corporations. Nor are there many in government ... they have not followed in parental footsteps".
- 90% feel "out of sync" with their peers.
- 90% report feeling as if they understand other cultures/peoples better than the average American.
- 80% believe they can get along with anybody.
- Divorce rates among TCKs are lower than the general population, but they marry older (25+).
- Military brats, however, tend to marry earlier.
- Linguistically adept (not as true for military ATCKs.)
- A study whose subjects were all "career military brats"—those who had a parent in the military from birth through high school—shows that brats are linguistically adept.
- Teenage TCKs are more mature than non-TCKs, but ironically take longer to "grow up" in their 20s.
- More welcoming of others into their community.
- Lack a sense of "where home is" but often nationalistic.
- Some studies show a desire to "settle down" others a "restlessness to move".