Friday, December 10, 2010

The Wilderness

"Our spiritual journey must lead through the desert or else our healing will be the product of our own will and wisdom. It is in the silence of the desert that we hear our dependence on noise. It is in the poverty of the desert that we see clearly our attachments to the trinkets and baubles we cling to for security and pleasure. The desert shatters the soul's arrogance and leaves body and soul crying out in thirst and hunger. In the desert we trust God or die."

Dan Allender in The Healing Path
I'm beginning my journey through the wilderness, fearing it and yet craving to hear God in the silence that follows the chaos. He has been prompting me for some time - "Be still and know that I am God." I hate being still. I'm facing all kinds of things about myself that I hate to see. But I need this time. I need Him.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Little things that made me smile

Today is a good day...I have little bubbles of joy inside...and they come from such little things...
  • Being able to see my old children's class. They were having an end-of-term party today and were making chocolate cake with their teacher. When I came into the kitchen to get some water and say hi, they were all really happy to see me, and took pictures with me and delightedly fed me cake from their forks...
  • Yummy food for lunch (I'm blessed to have a team mate who always seems to turn out amazing food)...
  • Seeing a stunning sunset view from my classroom window. Wish I could have taken a photograph - the palm trees and city roofs were silhoutted in pitch black against a red-pink sky. I could have stood there for ages just looking :)
  • Bible study with some of the ladies on the team after school - we're going through the books "Seven Lies Women Believe and the Truth That Sets Them Free" by Nancy Demoss. I never realised just how many lies I swallowed, and I'm excited to be going through this book...it's provided a lot of food for thought, painful at times, to be sure...but I recommend it!
  • Learning more of the local language. I was a bit discouraged with that - being an English teacher, I'm speaking English all the time and don't get much chance to use what I learn. But today class was fun - I just spoke with my teacher, about all kinds of things, and learned some useful vocabulary that I think I will use.
  • Quicker internet - yay! ^_^

Monday, March 22, 2010

Aaahh!!

I'm stressed. I'm tense. I hate being like this! It's strange, the ambivalence that I feel towards my classes at the moment.

I've just started teaching an extra class, which means another 6 hours of teaching each week plus all the extra time that goes into planning and grading. But as well as feeling a little overwhelmed, I'm excited, because I get to meet many great people and teach old students who I view more as friends now.

But, really, right now it doesn't matter how many people I get to befriend - I just want to fall into bed and not have to think about all the stuff I have to do. Arrgh!

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

An experiment with time...

I closed my eyes briefly as the school bell clanged outside my classroom, signaling the end of another day of teaching. I opened my eyes and quickly pasted a smile on my face as my students filed past. “Goodbye, Teacher,” they called on their way out the door. “See you next week!”
“Have a good weekend!” I replied, my voice cheerful, but inside I felt drained.
I had recently had my teaching assignment changed from teaching a regular ESL class to focusing specifically on writing, and although I enjoyed it, I was having some growing pains getting into the new system of things. I felt as though I needed to spend every possible moment lesson planning, and with much more grading to do than before, plus other responsibilities such as learning the local language, cooking, cleaning my house, and keeping in touch with people back in the West, I was beginning to feel overwhelmed. “All I need to do is manage my time better,” I thought…and proceeded to “manage” it… yet my to-do list still seemed to be as long at the end of the day as when I started. My time with God started decreasing as I kept one eye on the clock, ever mindful of all the things I had to cram into my day. Eventually my devotional life fizzled out altogether. I was so tired in the morning that I didn’t get up until the last minute, my day would race away from there, and then at night I’d be so tired again that all I wanted to do was eat and go to bed! I actually felt guilty if I left my office at school to have some quiet time, read a book for a little while, or play the piano in my house – it was a waste of time when I had so much to do. Yet at the end of the day, there was still so much left undone…and time seemed to be racing by so fast that it almost scared me sometimes. One week slipped into another, hastened on by the fact that I always seemed to be anticipating something just ahead or worrying about something else in the future. “I’m not doing this time management thing very well, God,” I almost cried one night, stressed and exhausted. “I can’t go on like this any more.”
Over the next few days, it seemed like God kept telling me, “You need to surrender your time to me. Stop trying to do it yourself. Seek first the kingdom of God, and all these things will be added unto you…” The thought ran repeatedly through my head. Then the topic of time management and what is really important kept coming up in the group devotions for the team that I work with, and with individual team members as they shared what God had been teaching them. Still, I argued: “God, what you’re asking is impossible. If I take time out of my day for devotions and other stuff, there’s no way I’ll get all my work done!”
Later that day, as one of my housemates stood at the kitchen sink washing dishes and humming happily, I asked her, “How’s you day going?” “Wonderful!” she replied. “I’m doing an experiment. I gave all my time to God today, and decided to let him show me what to do with it, even if I didn’t get everything on my to-do list done. So far, it’s going great! I got all my grading done (and that’s never happened before), I spent time in prayer, I did some stuff for the other team mates…and I feel so…so unstressed! You know, it’s important not to be so busy that you don’t have time to stop and smell the roses along the way.” It was a rebuke to me. What things have I been missing out on because I’ve been so intent on watching the clock and getting everything done? I thought. OK, God, I’ll try this experiment.
So this past week has been my experiment in giving my time to God. I haven’t always got everything I planned accomplished – but that’s OK, because at the same time I’m beginning to learn what is really important. I’ve been taking time out with God, time to listen to and hang out with other people and encourage them, time to play the piano and read a good book and write in my journal, time to enjoy the beauty and quiet of nature. Somehow, in spite of the fact that I’m not constantly slaving away in my office, my classes seem to be going well and my grading is up to date. And I’m a lot less stressed and a lot more happy!
It’s not an easy thing for me to learn to live more in the day…but I am learning… I’m learning in the little experiences of today that God is big enough to handle my worries for tomorrow. I’m learning that the moments truly are beautiful.
“To get all there is out of living, we must employ our time wisely, never being in too much of a hurry to stop and sip life, but never losing our sense of the enormous value of a minute.”
Robert Updegraff

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