About Us

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For the grands and some aunts and uncles too.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Monday, August 30, 2010

Bon Voyage, Lovelies




Friday, August 27, 2010

Still Worth It

Our sweet friends and teammates are leaving India. Sometimes you gotta just get out and they are. But, oh, we'll miss them. They've struggled, laughed, cried, and worshiped with us. Their kids are ours and ours are theirs. We spent our first (very hard) Christmas away from family with them. C came bearing gifts that day and cooked in my dingy kitchen. She wore a smile when I could not.

She is the most consistently encouraging person I think I've ever met. She believes that life will work out and she makes me believe it too. She's a girl's girl, a listener, and a gift-giver. On my 32nd birthday she made me a little poster and wrote out Psalm 32 in glitter glue. It was a psalm of hope, of love, and of a future and I loved it more than the store bought presents I received.

JM is a thinker and a doer. He believes in things passionately and he cares about people. He has laughed with my J, been a friend, accompanied and worked with him to do things that seem impossible. He stood in the gap for us here when we were away in the States. He's been an uncle to our boys. He's listened to them when they talk on and on about video games, and taught them lessons from the Bible as we all sat on the couch.

JM and C's little girls will leave a hole in my heart and in G's, especially. Those little imps are lit up from the inside, full of laughter, and mischief and emotion. How many times have we spent with all six kids around the table, watching them eat as they try to make each other laugh and spit out their juice?

Love is painful. But it is still worth it.

Go with God, friends. Thank you for making an imprint on our hearts and on the hearts of our Indian friends. We love you.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

A Day Like This

Today is a sad day. Some days just are. I want to cry, but no tears will come...

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Happy Birthday, Indian-Style

Around the birthday table.
Party game. Guess who the white kids are?
Three faiths represented in this photo.
The birthday boy, his brother, and his dad. We live with them.


Highlights of this one-year-old birthday party:
  • As all the kids passed a balloon around a circle, trying to not get stuck with it, I heard the song lyrics, 'Don't you wish your girlfriend was hot like me.' I'm not even kidding.
  • Our landlord introduced me to a woman whose daughter "lives in the States." When I asked her where in the US she's located, the woman answered, "Switzerland." Ah yes, I see...
  • When people were milling about, eating and making conversation, what was playing on the CD player? Shakira. Shakira, folks. I'm sure the one-year-old absolutely loves her.

Monday, August 23, 2010

An American Education

J had an unpleasant but necessary conversation with our landlords and their families the other night. See, they are in our business beyond anything we've ever experienced. They ask me a hundred questions--really, it's more like the Spanish Inquisition--every time J travels anywhere. I end up feeling like my back's against the wall and no answer that I give (i.e. He's working, he's with friends, he's got a meeting, he's doing business) is ever good enough for them.

They give their opinions about the wisdom of traveling to certain towns, traveling during monsoon, traveling with the friends we've chosen and trust. They ask us how much money we make, how much our driver charges us, whether our children miss their daddy when he's gone. They speak sternly, eyebrows knitted together, with an air of authority. They invoke their elder status. In short, they feel a great deal of ownership over us and our decision-making, and they try to exert their will.

I got to the point where I felt I could not stand it any longer. So J decided that it was time to gently inform them that this isn't acceptable. All things considered, the whole conversation went well. They back-pedaled some, said that they were only concerned for our safety, etc.. J was able to communicate that while he appreciates this, the third degree is still not ok. Our job will not change. We will take risks in our lives, and we have counted the cost of our profession. They seemed to hear it all, though I have no doubt we'll have a reprise of this conversation in the future if the past is any indication.

So today was about showing love, declaring that we have no hard feelings with actions because words are cheap. We spent the entire day decorating their front room for a birthday party they plan to have tomorrow. In fact, J is still working at the moment.

At midday, when our eldest landlord came home for lunch, we sat and made conversation with him. It was the first time I'd seen him since The Talk. He was slightly grumpy, baggy-eyed, short and terse. I knew he was nursing his wounded pride. After all, how dare we thirty-something, whippersnapper Americans set boundaries around our personal life with our elders? Who are we to talk with such confidence and optimism and look people in the eye as if the world belonged to us? We who neglect our offspring by allowing them to wear t-shirts and not woolen coats in 72 degree weather! We who drink cold juice in the winter and hot coffee in the summer! We who sometimes go without socks in the house!

It's sheer madness is what it is. Just who do we think we are?

Well, it shouldn't have come as a surprise, but it still stung a little when Eldest Landlord looked at all the decorations we'd spent the day putting on the walls--at the behest of the women of the family--and he muttered, "It should be more...colorful..." I wanted to look him in the eye and say, "You are totally welcome to climb on that rickety-crap ladder of yours and put up better decorations. But then, you'll have to find them in the market first, and I defy you to find ones that don't look like they're made from toilet paper."

But you know, I didn't say that.

I tried to let it roll off instead. I feel like we've tried to be as Indian as two white people can be. I dress like the locals, we eat Indian food, and we speak Hindi. But in the end, we're American. And I guess I'm starting to think that it's ok if our landlords try to understand us a little for a change. Goodness knows we've spent 17 months trying to understand their mindset and hearts and we don't regret it. As long as they look at us and see Him first and America a distant second...Well, I'm becoming more and more ok with that.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Twice As Good

I'm so glad to have J back. I'll steal an idea from my favorite singer/thinker/feeler, Sara Groves. With you everything's half as hard and twice as good, babe, and I love you.