4:30 a.m. on Monday- drive out to the ATL airport for our
big month long Colorado adventure at Mission Training International. As we sat in the plane still on the
ground in Atlanta, my eye was
drawn to the air traffic control tower windows with taped in jumbo
letters. Our flight was delayed
for a mechanical check, and while waiting an extra 45 minutes to make sure all
engines were go, I knew we were going to miss our 45 min connection in Houston. But which would you prefer: fly
under mechanical uncertainty and depart on time, or wait for mechanical
clearance and run like the wind with small children through the terminal to
connect with a closed door and rebook in customer service? The window in Atlanta ATC tower was
prophetic. The sign says “OWN IT!”
Yes, I want the air traffic controllers and the mechanics and the pilot to “own
it” when I fly with them.
And after missing the connection in Houston by 30 seconds,
we rebooked to Denver instead of Colorado Springs, begged a merciful old friend
to drive us from Denver up to our destination at Mission Training
International. Inconvenient. Time to spare go by air. And yet alive because someone was doing
the job right.
The first 2 weeks here we did a program The main
idea behind language learning in a new culture will be: “OWN IT”! We have been equipped with tools for entering
a new language (for us it will be Kiswahili and Kipsigis) and the kids too have
a corresponding class every day that helps them prepare for cross cultural
living. While it takes extra
time and effort and unearthly amounts of energy, it will be important for our
new context that we enter well. Language
has an almost magical power to access people in their context. For example, does the name Pavlov ring
a bell with you?
called Principles in Language Acquisition Training.
While we may feel like a nursing home resident with no keys
to our name, (house and cars all
gone) language learning will be the symbol of responsibility in our
pocket. It will take more time
than we’d like if we choose to do it.
It will be frustrating too.
But no one else will own it for us.
Now a word from our children:
Man-Cub Josiah loves living in this
“hotel with a school inside it”.
We have a door that goes straight to the playground from our room! He has mastered the monkey bars in his
3 a day workouts and will soon be ripping out of his t-shirts. His class took a surprise field trip to
the Garden of the Gods in the first week to help them understand expectations
and surprises as a missionary kid.
He liked visiting the Manitou cliff dwellings of the ancient Anasazi
Indians. He liked it especially
because he got his first bow and arrow there.
Little Miss Annie has been the
most homesick one of us. She
transitioned into a big girl bed right out of her crib. When she cried for her old bed, I cried
too. When she said “I wanna go
hoooome” Josiah lovingly replied to her “Annie,
we don’t have a home. We just live
free in the wild now”. Annie does get to play with more friends here than she
ever did before. The older girls
dote over her and the little bitty ones provide companionship she has needed
for a long time. They make mulch
pies daily on the playground after class.
The children’s teachers here
really study our children and help us learn their strengths and
weaknesses. We are living in a
community of 30 adults and as many kids.
It’s a bit awkward at times. Our family is adjusting to a new way of living and preparing for an
even newer one. We have our ups
and downs with attitudes and with bodily function mal-functions (Daktari says
it’s because we all have immunities to bugs in our home state but not to each
other’s). I’ve been out of class a
few days when a child of ours needs to recover from something or another
grotesque. We like spending time
together though so I’m usually glad to do it.
The trainers and staff here also
comfort us with the stubborn fact that there is no perfect family. When we pretend to be that, we become
religious whitewash tombs full of dead men’s bones. Woah.
But if we learn to say “I’m
sorry” to one another, we learn to be forgiven people. And Jesus told us in Luke 7 that
whoever is forgiven little will love little. So we’ve been growing in love, you might say…








