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Journey Notes

News, notes and anecdotes about our life with the Akha hilltribe

Thank you for taking the time to view Journey Notes - our online journal. In this Journal you can read about Paul and Lori's experiences living in Northern Thailand as we work with the Akha Hilltribe.

Please also take a look at our prayer and praise reports and our personal blogs from the links on top of this page for more updates from us in this adventure. You can also visit our homepage at to view our bios, photo galleries, newsletters and a little information about the Akha hilltribe (more to come the more we learn - we're still new at all this).

Now... on to the posts!

Late but still Thankful

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Thai Turkey : Khao Mun Gai
Through October and the beginning of November we were in villages attending Akha new-rice festivals, celebrating the harvest and remembering in thanks all of our blessings. So, when the American thanksgiving rolled around Lori and I smiled at each other and said Happy Thanksgiving and then enjoyed our staple city lunch of khao mun gai (Thai style chicken, soup and rice).

The Real Thing : Thanksgiving Dinner

Tomorrow, however, we are going to do the "real thing" with a big American-style Thanksgiving (just a few days late) with our American friends here in Chiang Rai. Like last year, this means lots of work for the ladies as they prepare the turkey and mashed potatoes and casseroles and pies. Unlike last year, however, this year Lori has a can of pumpkin pie filling, so she won't have to mince a pumpkin by hand again.

The thanksgiving season reminds us of two things: first, how thankful we are to live in Thailand and work with the Akha mountain people and second, how thankful we are for all of you, our friends and family and partners in our ministry.

We hope you all have had a wonderful Thanksgiving!

Topless in Bangkok

Sunday, November 20, 2005

Pastors, leaders missionaries and delegates from countries all over Asia and the Pacific gathered to Bangkok for the Eastern Council of Foursquare Churches conference last week. Nearly 700 men and women came to fellowship and join in a community of faith.
Thai Girls wearing Traditional Dress
Pastor Jack was there.
Our supervisors were there.
Our supervisor's supervisors were there.
National church leaders from around the world were there.
This was a big deal - and I started the conference off wearing nothing but a sheet tied around my waist.

I didn't plan it that way.

We took an early flight from Chiang Rai with Pastor Timothy and his wife and arrived to find out that the conference didn't begin until 7:00 that evening. After a nice lunch and a little exploring of the area around the hotel we decided to take an afternoon nap to get ready for the conference that night.

Around 4:00 I found myself waking up halfway through a telephone conversation... I can answer the phone while sleeping and sound awake and coherent. Do any of you have this skill? I learned it in college and it has gotten me in so much trouble. I've had entire conversations while sleeping where I have committed to things I don't remember when I actually wake up... anyway, I slowly realized that I had just committed to do something to help the Bangkok team for the opening ceremony of the ECFC conference.

Voice on the line : "So, can you come down to the business center right now?"
Me (sounding alert) : "Sure, where is it?"
Voice on the line : "Third floor"
Me (still sounding alert) : "When do you need me there"
Voice on the line : "... um, right now"
Me (slowly becoming alert) : "Uh, yeah, sure... do I need to bring anything?"
Voice on the line : "No, they have everything you will need down there."
Me (actually awake now) : "They have everything I need, great... OK, I'll see you in a minute."
Voice on the line : "Um, one more thing... You are going to be topless"
Me (wondering if I'm awake) : "... "
Voice on the line : "Is that OK?"
Me (wondering what I committed to) : "I guess so. I'll be right down"

Topless in Bangkok
A few minutes later I was in a room full of the young leaders from Bangkok dressing up in very ornate traditional Thai dress - and discovered that I was going to be dressed as a traditional Thai slave who carried royalty on a litter. Apparently they couldn't get many volunteers for that role. So, while everyone else was dressing up in ornate costumes and jewelery and while the dignitaries from around Asia were dressing for dinner and the evening conference, I was having a sheet tied around my waist and a turban tied around my head. Finally with a slap on the back and an admonition of "Don't drop her" I was off to attend my first Foursquare conference.

Lori, of course, got a kick out of the whole thing, merrily snapping pictures of the scene. All joking aside, the Thai staff in Bangkok were incredible. They worked long hours, entertaining and helping everyone around the conference and Bangkok with great care. It was an honor to help them in even the smallest of ways.

The conference (and the subsequent meeting of missionaries from throughout Asia) was an incredible blessing and a rousing success. We met amazing men and women, heard insightful teaching (in English!) and received ministry where we are hurting. We will continue to share more about the entire experience through this next week and will hopefully have some links to Pastor Jack's talks from the conference.

We had hoped to share updates last week but did not have internet access while at the hotel (which was as much blessing as inconvenience), but are now back in Chiang Rai. We will be sharing at the Akha Bible Institute tomorrow and will spend the rest of this week in the city to celebrate Thanksgiving with our friends here. Tags:

Some Commercials

Monday, November 14, 2005

Hi everyone, I just wanted to let any of you who are downloading podcasts through your iPods or through iTunes there is an amazing ministry that has made its sermons available - Ravi Zacharias International Ministries. You can search for him on iTunes or you can go to his web page at http://rzim.org and go to the radio archives where you can download mp3's of his talks. We have really been enjoying his teaching (hearing any English is nice) and would like to encourage any of you who might be interested to check him out.

Also, because I have liberally abused links to definitions from this site, I highly recommend using Wikipedia when searching for definitions on the web.

We're doing great here, the sponsor team has been here the last week or so and we have been running around with them. We are heading back to House of Joy now for the farewell evening with the orphans and sponsors, more updates to come.

A Good Hair Day

Wednesday, November 9, 2005

This last month has been school break for many of the schools in Thailand. It's always fun for us to have all the kids around. During this break all the teenagers went to a camp run by Akha Christian Youth (ACY). When most of the adults had left for the fields we found ourselves with a large group of 8-12 year old kids. So all day long, while Paul played various games (mostly soccer and football) Lori took on the incredible effort of "doing hair" for all of the girls in our village.

Akha women are amazing, they are incredibly strong and their daughters learn quickly how to work hard. But on this one occasion we were able to give them a chance to feel beautiful. Half way through all the hair-dos one little girl came up to the group. She is a particularly tough case, and lives in a difficult home in our village. We never see her smile and although she is intrigued by us "pala" she usually observes us from a distance. Like many children in Akha villages she has very short hair (lice & scabies). She was watching all the girls and their fancy hair braids and was just stoic in her observations. Our hearts were broken and we knew we had to do something for her. Lori remembered she had a handkerchief in our house that she might be able to use. We pulled her aside and made a big deal out of her new "hair". Once it sunk in that we really thought she was a beautiful little girl, she ran off. When she came back she had cleaned herself all up and had put on a dress! This little girl who never smiled was grinning from ear to ear for days - knowing that she truly is lovely.

In the end, all the girls took their new hair-dos and made them Akha. Picking flowers from all around our village they made themselves laurels and - of course - wanted their pictures taken.

Ask... and you shall receive

Tuesday, November 8, 2005

Well, you guys must be praying for us! Even in the simplest of things our needs are being met. However, maybe this post should be entitled "be careful what you ask for".

We have been in the city for the last week (my dad is coming with the sponsor team this afternoon) and have had a nice time catching up on some business and going to a Haw Shui Dza (New Rice Festival). It also has admittedly been nice staying in a home where the rats don't keep you awake. However, last night we heard some strange sounds emanating from our storage room. We dug around in there and found the source of the noise - 4 baby kittens! Apparently we had left the door open one night and mom came in and brought her new babies in "out of the cold". However, our storage room is not the best place for hungry babies - especially when mom is locked outside, so we made a bed for them and put them back outside where mom came back and claimed them last night. Now they are living underneath our hedge - whining right outside of our office.

Assuming they survive to adulthood, one of these little guys might have to accompany us up to the village to take care of our house guests up there. Thanks for the prayers!

We never thought we'd want a cat!

Thursday, November 3, 2005

Paul & I have always been dog people, but recent events have made us seriously consider our preconceived notions regarding the appeal of the common cat...

We've known for some months that we had a rat sharing our village home with us. Although the thought of rats is rather unsettling, we've gotten used to sharing our dwelling with a multitude of little creatures... geckos, spiders even the occasional chicken. So it was not too much of a stretch to simply accept that he was there. At nights we could hear him scurrying through the rafters, but unless we left food readily accessible, he didn't seem to be too much of a bother.

Little did we know that "he" was really a "she" and she was pregnant with a litter of baby rats...

About two weeks ago we left the village to spend a week at the Foursquare Thailand National convention in the southern part of Thailand. As usual, we piled all our belongings (bed mats, pillows, and a few plastic bins of food, books & clothes) on the bamboo platform in our room & covered it with a tarp to keep the dust off.

It seems that the common English phrase "nesting tendency" which is so often used of pregnant women is also applicable (in a more literal sense) to pregnant rats. When we returned from our travels, we found that Mama Rat had decided that our tarp covered pile was the perfect place to set up home. She had chewed gaping holes in our bed mats and created a snug nest amount the inner stuffing of our beds. She sampled nearly every thing we had. Luckily most everything was in plastic storage boxes, so although our boxes are now scarred with tiny teeth marks, there was not too much damage.

Unfortunately, there was one thing which was not in a plastic box. One of our favorite snacks in the village is chocolate milk. Here in Thailand you can buy shelf-ready milk called UHT which comes in boxes (like juice-boxes in America), and we had a large box of 48 milks under that tarp. As it turns out, chocolate milk is also a favorite snack of rats. The rat chewed a hole in the top of the outer box, and then proceeded to chew holes in nearly every individual box of milk! Needless to say, by the time we found it, it was a horrid stinking mess of rotten milk, maggots & rat droppings! YUCK!

Obviously, it was a pretty tough evening. But we didn't realize what an emotional expenditure we had made until the next morning when we both woke up feeling like we had been hit by a bus! After everything, we've decided that we need a cat!
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