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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!

The Salamander and the Sparrows

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Well, our trip back to the village was a very successful one, in many ways it felt like we had never been gone at all. Sure, some things have changed, like little baby Ma-Li taking her first steps, three new homes being built and many relatives returning from their jobs around Thailand for Chinese new year, but for the most part the village was just as we remember - full of people we love and who love us.

There is a really bad cough/cold/fever that is going around the village - one mother has a baby girl whose temperature is hovering around 104. We were able to get medicine to all of them, but please join us in praying for their safety and recovery as we are back in the city over this next week.

Our biggest fear going back to our village home was that it would be infested with families of rats and monstrous spiders. When you leave an empty structure that is open to the elements this tends to happen. We didn't need to worry, however, as we came into a dusty house without the telltale droppings of either of these scary little beasties (on a side note, that should show you how big these spiders are - you can actually see their droppings).

We hope that we have finally learned how to seal everything up well enough to not attract the rats into our home, but the lack of spiders is directly related to our two newest house guests: Ricky and Lucy.
Our Guests: Ricky and Lucy Sparrow

These two little birds have taken up residence in our roof, and we are happy to have them. The Akha like it when birds nest in their homes, and they build little platforms under the nests to keep things clean. The birds keep the bug levels down and provide a much more pleasant alarm clock than the standard village roosters.

Lucy and Ricky are a young couple, and have not yet decided if they are going to live in our home long term as they are currently just perching in our loft. Our hope is that they get the baby itch soon and decide to build a more permanent nest. Currently they spend all their time in playful flirtations as all newlyweds should.

We also had a slightly less welcome guest: a thirsty lizard made his way into our toilet and could not get himself out. Lori found him and scooped him out, hopefully a litter wiser for the experience, but not before taking this frightening footage...

...actually, he's kind of cute. if he sticks around we might have to come up with a name for him too.

For those of you who have been to our village: No, we did not take the rough 4-wheel drive road to get there. Instead, we took the long, curvy route. This way Lori didn't get bumped around - just a little carsick. No, the shortcut is off the route list until sometime after the baby arrives. Lori did really well all three days in the village, eating Akha meals and not getting morning sick at all. She did smell fish during our after-church lunch meal and lost it, but sensitivity to smells is still better than the misery of morning sickness. Thanks for all of your prayers!

We will be heading back up again this weekend and hope to have more news from our prospective helper/language teacher. We'll keep you all informed.

On the Road Again

Friday, February 16, 2007

We have not mentioned it very much in our blogs, probably because it is not very pleasant to write about unhappy things, but there have been about 163 people that we have been missing a whole lot over these last 3 months...
Our Village.
However, after a long first trimester, a reasonably successful practice outing to Chiang Mai, and a surprise day off from working on the dissertation, we going home to our village for the weekend, armed with belated Christmas gifts for our village, and the permission of our baby doctor.

We can only stay for the weekend, as responsibilities surrounding the dissertation, teaching at the Bible institute and events at Akha Outreach Foundation require us to be back in the city for much of the next two months. However, we do hope to spend many of our off-weekends in the village over that span.

As mentioned, our schedule is very busy these next two months. The remainder of February will be spent working full-time writing and editing the dissertation, in early March we will have the graduation celebration from Akha Bible Institute, and during the second half of March we are scheduled to format and lay out the tables and figures to complete the dissertation, as well as taking part in some exciting events surrounding the sending out of a young Akha leader as he begins a new ministry.

We hope to be back in the village full-time for much of April and May (the Thai summer break) and are likely to spend most of June and July back in the city to help out with visiting teams from America, take birthing classes and give Lori some much needed air-conditioning before she has the baby somewhere around August 13th!

Despite the busy schedule, we are incredibly blessed that the responsibilities on Lori are relatively light in this season, enabling her to work when she can and rest when she needs to. Her health and the health of the baby is a high priority, and our AOF directors and Foursquare supervisors have really encouraged us to make this our priority. One way we hope to help Lori through this season is by taking on a helper.

Taking on a helper in the Akha cultural context is much different than hiring a nanny, a house cleaner or an assistant. Often, when a new baby is born to an Akha family, a cousin or relative comes to live with them. The family becomes responsible for the well-being of the helper and the helper basically becomes a member of the family.

We are a little apprehensive about taking on this responsibility, but feel that it will be a tremendous blessing. We have heard that one of the girls from our village is finishing school this term and wants to go to work, probably in Chiang Rai or Bangkok. We are hoping that she might be willing to come and live with us full time, helping out with the house, the baby, the Akha clinic and with our Akha language. She is bold enough to correct our Akha and to hold her own as an Akha in Thai society, so we think she would be a perfect fit for us.

We are going to talk with our village about it this weekend and will keep you informed as anything develops. Please join us in praying that the right situation works out.

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