Friday, October 21, 2011

I'm back

So after a few months, many questions and a few scoldings, I am back on my blog.  I apologize for the delayed absence.  Over the summer I just got out of the habit of updating my blog and as with most things it was difficult to get back in the habit. 

So over the last three months, what are the most important things to update you on? Well, a brief overview of what has been happening since I last wrote back in July.  I took a vacation to Greece, which was amazing. Then I had some visitors, including my parents, come out at pther times in the summer.  Much of summer was devoted to planning for the coming school year.  I do not like planning, which might be a major understatement, so it was not what I would consider a fun part of the job.  We tried to get as much planning done as we could, club talks, games, special events, trips, small groups, etc so we would not need to spend a lot of time each week on planning. 

It is nice to be back in the swing of things with Clubs going again and school well underway.  Life here right now is busy. It might be the busiest I have ever been.  If I work less than 10 hours in a given day it is a bonus.  One reason things are so busy is I am coaching football at the high school. I am the offensive and defensive line coach for the varsity team. I will devote a blog in the next few days to that subject. 

I think thats enough for now. I will start posting much more frequently to try and catch you up on how things are out here. 

Monday, July 4, 2011

Back, but now leaving again.

We have returned safely from a great week in Romania. We took 8 students from our community, 4 boys, 4 girls, and along with a couple hundred students from other military installations in Europe went to work in Romania.  Our site was at a school.  We built a playground, did VBS style relational ministry, and also did a sports ministry for a week.  Seeing a hundred Romanian children running around and playing on the playground at the end of the week when we had completed it was an amazing thing to see.  But more than the labor, the relational ministry is what I believed left the biggest impression. A Romanian Mom was talking to Aretta, and their conversation went along the lines of the Mom asking if we would return next year. Aretta said she hoped so and if we came back we could build some other things and do more construction. The Mom then said that this ws not the reason she hoped we would return.  She said they really appreciated the playground and it will be really great to have, but it was our interactions with the children that make the biggest difference. She said people in that area, they don't smile a lot. After the first day when her kids came and played with the Americans, they went home and couldn't stop smiling and being excited.  She said we had brought some joy to them.  That was pretty cool to hear.

Sorry, no time to write more. I am leaving fro Greece in about 10 minutes.  21 hour bus ride back from Romania got us here at 7 a.m., now I am making a 20 plus hour car ride leaving at 1030 a.m. the very next day.  Not sure if that is smart, but it will be well worth it. This trip is just vacation, and I will be officially using my first vacation days ever as a "professional". Fun stuff. I am hoping to get a few more passport stamps, I added two last week, we'll see which borders will do it now.  I will write again when I get back. 

Friday, June 24, 2011

Romania

Just a quick note.  We are headed out soon for Romania. Please keep us in your prayers, that we have a safe trip, that we get a lot accomplished in the projects we are doing, that we have good interactions with the Romanians, and that the students learn more about God and having faith in Him through this project.  I will update you on when we get back, but please keep us in your prayers until then. This is the type of trip that can change lives, and therefore is one I fully expect spritual warfare to be raging during.  Help us fight the good fight with your prayers. Thanks.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

First School Year = Over

So I have now completed my first school year w/ Club beyond.  HS graduation is tonight, last night was MS graduation, the night before was HS Baccalaureate, so fairly busy week with stuff to go to.  Last week we had our end of the semester clubs for both HS and MS. We had mid 60 hs students show up and a number of family members, so it was a good way to end the year.  We grilled, played some games, and spent some time saying good bye to those who will PCS this summer and to our graduates.  We did something similar for the MS. 

So now we are on to summer.  The biggest thing immediately is the service project to Romania. We will be gone for about a week and a half early on in the summer (can't get more specific than that in a public forum).  We have been doing a lot of prep work for this project, collecting supplies and taking donations and doing training with the students we are taking. We did an overnighter last weekend where we did team building exercises, did a Bible study on being a servant, spent time in prayer, and talked about expectations and what we all felt we needed to be successful. This will not be an easy trip. It is going to be long days and hours of tough work in extremely poor areas. This trip  has the potential to push some of the participants to the end of their rope.  But as I like to say being at the end of your rope is a bad place to be but a good place to have been. It is not fun in the moment, and very tough, but those are the times we see the most growth and development.  Those are the moments when God does amazing things and changes lives.  So please pray that we are challenged and pushed in such a way that it is only through God that we accomplish anything. 

Back to the end of the year thing. This is something I am slightly torn about. I am really looking forward to summer and a change in routine.  But I am torn about PCS season.  We have a lot of students who are moving, and it will be really sad to see some of them go.  It has already been sad saying good bye to some who have left already.  But at the same time it is exciting to think about the new students who will be here.  Part of this is out of selfish thought.  With this last years group of students, I have felt more like "the NEW club guy", which is true and what I have been.  Now, I will just be "the club guy." I am not new, and will have been here longer than a third of our kids.  It will just be a different dynamic that I am looking forward to.        

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Pep assembly

For blog post 2 this week I want to tell you about last friday.  As I had mentioned before I was asked to lead the Pep assembly at the middle school.  Now, I have led a lot of games, activities, events, etc. in my not very long life, but I have never led something for over 500 middle schoolers.  This was a bit of a challenge and I was fairly nervous about it.  I got things all prepared and had activities planned out, but the morning of, I get there and realize, this is not going to work as planned.  One activity in particular was not going to work.  I had a quiz show type thing set up where incorrect answers resulted in getting a pie to the face, and correct answers allowing you to pie a fellow contestant.  The problem was we were outside (which I knew in advance) and had no microphone. I had been told i would have a wireless mic, but when it was set up, there was no mic to be found. So the whole assembly I had to yell loud enough that 500 plus energetic middle schoolers could hear me.  This meant any type of game that involved talking was out.  So that game was scratched.  On the plus side, it will work great as a club game so it will not have been a waste of time planning the game.  The competitions I ended up running were a walk off contest, where students and teachers from each grade acted as models and had to strike poses, which the other contestants would need to copy and elaborate on, then a relay race where a runner carries someone on their back and sprints, and then a big tug of war contest.  All in all, I think it went pretty well.  I was told by a lot of people how much fun it was, and the school already asked me to come back next year, so it must have been good enough.  After the assembly, I ran dodgeball tournaments for the rest of the day and helped out w/ various other activities they were running. 

As I said, I was not originally thrilled by this idea.  It was a bit overwhelming, and I doubted that I could do it well.  Was it the best assembly ever? Not even close.  Will the students remember it for the rest of their lives? Probably not.  But what it did was help me get more involved at the school and get the Club Beyond name and my face out there. Throughout the day, I interacted with hundreds of middle schoolers. I am guessing I talked to 100 kids who I had not had any contact with all year.  It won me some brownie points with school administrators for spending a whole day there and helping out.  I didn't mention God or Jesus once during the day (big no-no at school), but things like this help me get my foot in the door w/ students. It opens up communication, where I can say hi to more kids now and interact w/ them, and then down the road I am inviting them to Club and talking about what we do, and from those conversations I get to share the love of God with them. It is a process, and this is a really good first step to be able to take w/ some of the students.  Sometimes, I just need to get out of my own way and let God work through me in ways that I might be too scared to try, but through him all things are possible.