Monday, August 31, 2020
First Day of School
Because a second ago I’d been staring at those same Rocky Mountains, thinking how they represented another layer of geographical barriers separating me from where I want to be. Over there. Across an ocean. And in a classroom with a herd of Middle Schoolers as today is the first day of school at BFA.
And I know I’m where I should be as I grab my journal and head into Day 3 of my Debrief Retreat. It’s been good to tell stories and reflect on questions of the heart; I trust the voices of these counselors who have known me for nearly 20 years. I can lay out all the options I’m considering for my future: sunrises in the Forest, birds in flight over the Steppe, or cohorts of school leaders eager to grow. In those places, this too is the day the Lord has made.
I’m grateful that the one who holds the mountains and oceans and rivers in between also holds my placement and timing as well. Pray for me as I make decisions about what is ahead. :-)
Saturday, August 15, 2020
Thick Skins, Soft Hearts
You can’t ignore it. People are closing garage doors and kids are summoned, told to grab bikes and skateboards on the way in. Laundry is torn off the lines as quickly as possible, and everyone comments on the storm, from little Sam’s “It raining hard” to my own “Oooh, did you see that lightning bolt!?”
And yet, as twin sister Georgia says, “We come inside. We safe” in her adorable 3-year-old accent, it’s just as true that we can shelter ourselves pretty well from the impact of most kinds of deluge these days. This particular storm can’t touch us, not really. Unless hail damages the borrowed car, the threat will eventually pass, and no one will think of it again.
Insulation from the happenings of “out there” can actually be fairly healthy. If we were to be constantly exposed and vulnerable to every harmful event that came to our lives, we’d collapse from exhaustion pretty quickly. And yet (you knew this was coming), I can’t help but question the extent to which our insulation turns into isolation and we no longer let any chaos in.
There’s a whole gamut between everything and nothing. I’m struggling to learn how to talk wisely and to be informed about injustice in my country. An old friend lost her roof in the Iowa storms this week. I’ve watched with tears the aftermath of the explosion in Beirut where two little girls, who once frolicked around my house, live. The stories just beginning to pour out of Belarus fill me with a sense of foreboding dread. There are nights (like Tuesday) where my mind just won’t stay quiet. And there’s good in that, too. Don't get me wrong; nobody likes sleepless nights. But while I don’t want to get into the habit of justifying all my decisions, declaring what I keep out and what I let in to be the right choices, I do want to be mindful to never veer too far to one side. I strive not to be easily shaken by the disruptions of this world while also acknowledging them as potential life-altering events. Just because it’s not my life doesn’t make it insignificant. Thick skins and soft hearts - that’s a plea I often make to my Middle School students and sometimes need to preach back to myself.
It’s starting to get lighter outside, and the cul-de-sac is filled with puddles that I’m thinking of inviting Thorsen and Eva to go splash in with me. Time to turn off the news for this day and relinquish all the stories - even mine - to God.
Friday, July 31, 2020
Death for the sake of Life
It’s been 6 years since my last post, but amazingly I’m right where I left off in 2014: at the start of a year-long Home Assignment in the states. A major transition, such as a move to another continent, can’t help but disrupt all semblance of normal life. Add to that a global pandemic and a 14-day quarantine upon arrival, and I’ve layered the feeling of lonely staleness on top of the chaos of a trans-Atlantic move. Instead of diving into family life and an instant schedule to keep me busy, I’ve been forced to sit still and deal with the rawness.
Stale and raw are both words I’ve used with God in the past two weeks as I try to work through my emotions. But really what I’m feeling is saturated. I had planned to use quarantine to read and write a ton, listen to podcasts, and accomplish a pile of work-related projects, and while a fair amount of that has happened, I’ve felt rather robotic. Nothing I hear or read sticks, almost as if I don’t have the capacity to take in new information right now. It remains on the surface of my brain, and all too often I’m turning back pages or starting podcasts over while asking: What is wrong with me?
Oh right. Transition. The capital-T word of the missions world. The thing that encompasses so very much death. I just said farewell to a season of life with certain groupings of friends that can never be recreated. My heart knows some good-byes were spoken that will end up being final, but my head doesn't know yet which ones. Not a single student will be where I left him or her when I return - if I return. Uncertainty reigns, and I haven’t even touched on the deaths inside me: to the confident, capable teacher in her own classroom; the rhythms of work, Tuesday night Small Group, Sunday morning crepes, and walks on Black Forest trails; to the calling and oversea-living I’ve come to cherish and love. With so much dying, it’s no wonder I can’t absorb anything. Dead things don’t take in living things.
Yet I believe in a sovereign God who uses death to pave the way for new life. In fact, sometimes he kills off some old habits, the pride of control, the obsessions with things I love, precisely because he wants to make room for new growth. Perhaps reaching the end of what I can take in is exactly where he wants me so that I’ll surrender some of what fills me too full. Surrender. The capital-S word of the missions world?
In her book Looming Transitions, Amy Young writes “I want a fertile soul. I want to be the kind of person who is able to let roles or locations or seasons of life die so there is space for the new to grow” (p. 11-12). She’s singing my song! There’s a healthy pruning that needs to take place so that fruit can grow - fruit that is needed and appropriate for the new place and season. What I’m learning is that the saturation by itself isn’t bad because it’s marking something important, but I cannot cling to what’s dead. If I ever want to feel vivacity again and enjoy learning and growth, I need to let some of the old things be siphoned off. And those deaths, for Jesus’ sake, can lead to life (2 Corinthians 4:11).
So, here I am: stale and raw, ending my quarantine and about to launch into Home Assignment, palms up and open in a posture of surrender, hoping my heart will follow my body soon. I need the pruning. I want the fruit. Have mercy on me Jesus, I am yours.
We always carry around in our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our body. For we who are alive are always being given over to death for Jesus' sake, so that his life may also be revealed in our mortal body. So then, death is at work in us, but life is at work in you.
2 Corinthians 4:10-12
Thursday, June 12, 2014
The End of an Era
I may have been joking about the end of the an era, but the end of every year at BFA sort of feels that way. As I watch the camaraderie and the hugs upon hugs, I remember the good times - the Annie Jr. play, the fun debates in class when EL finally found her voice, the success in Paris and Rome with the History team, DF's baptism just one month ago. Not that there were no struggles along the way either. Having to play peacekeeper between two feuding students, trying to get a new addition up to speed in the social studies when he didn't even want to be here, and walking through the receiving of bad news with friends are never easy tasks. But looking at the 8th graders today warms a little fuzzy spot in my heart.
IK isn't the same person he was three years ago. He even smiles at me when I hand him his popsicle. HG approaches her studies with a much cooler head. KP has grown into his own skin, and HK is still a quirky character but with a maturity that would have been hard to imagine 20 months ago. They change so much, and I mourn the loss of them as my students when things are just getting to be so good (as every year). This is the day when I have to face the fact that my time with them really is at an end. They will move on to high school, and it's good. It's time. But they definitely take a piece of my heart with them.
Monday, June 2, 2014
History Competition Part 2: Rome Edition





In our last few hours in Rome, we were able to take in a few sights, particularly the Colloseum, and eat some more pizza and gelato while collected the sun on our skin. The kids were great, and I along with my colleague Brittany Mann couldn't be more proud of their accomplishments and the humility with which they pulled it off. Perhaps next year, that gold plaque will be ours, and if not, then at least I hope our witness will leave an indelible mark.
Saturday, May 31, 2014
Newest Custer
My newest family member and first nephew: Baby Jake. I can't stop smiling!
Saturday, May 17, 2014
First End-of-Year Thoughts
"How preferable is the service of God to all other services! And in serving him, we are not called to live and die to ourselves, but unto Christ, whose we are, and whom we ought to serve."
We are hurtling toward the end of the year like a rocket into space, and sometimes it feels just as out of control and aimless as I imagine a rocket ride might. However, there is always a target, and the many months of preparation and teaching, chiseling and encouraging will come to fruition in the next four weeks. I hope.
Nerves are raw though, and emotions are running high, especially as I allow myself to recognize that I will be missing out on all "these wonderful things" next year. It's easy for me to slip into cynicism and to only see the sacrifice rather than the rewards. Rarely does my work here at BFA feel like the "dying" part of service but usually the "living" part. And yet, it is definitely service.
That is the part of the quote that struck a chord with me. I am not here merely because I love TCK's or love teaching or wanted to meet a need. I'm here because the one whom I serve placed me here. To be fully at his disposal is to allow him to move me around like a chess piece - if that would be his will. Thankfully, my Master is kind and knows my heart and has seen fit to place me in a work situation I adore, but what if that were to change? What if this next year holds more "death" than "life" (speaking very metaphorically)? That doesn't make him any less kind or sovereign. It means that I am still his and he is requesting my service to him take place on another continent (or two) for a while.
Today, this quote makes me rejoice. Because service outside my comfort zone done to him is still preferable to all other services! Joy in the Journey.