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Showing posts from 2018

The week that was: retreat and ropes course

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I think I may have already mentioned this, but the school I am at has around 2500-3000 students, I'm not sure of the exact numbers, but it's a lot of people. Somehow, they manage an organised chaos over "Retreat week" where all the students take turns going away on retreat for two nights out of the week at different campgrounds in the surrounding area of Redding. By campgrounds, I mean pretty fancy summer camp locations which are almost their own mini-communities: pools, ponds, waterslides, high ropes, games rooms, a cafe, a shop, bush walks - like I say, pretty fancy! Anyway it was amazing to get out in nature and have a chance to get to know my RG people better. So good! When we first arrived, they had booths set up where you could go and get prophetic words or people would draw prophetic art or do prophetic dances, all kinds of things and run by the second year students. I got one word which had me in tears by the end. The guy, who I'd never met before,...

Back to school

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I recently had a Facebook memory come up on my page from three years ago when my submitted dissertation commemorated the end of 19 years of being a student. I laugh at my 23 year old self thinking I would be quite happy if I never studied anything ever again. So naive! The truth is, I never really thought of Bible college as study, but the reality is starting to set in of what life as a student is. Not that I'm complaining, there are things in this season I'm so grateful for - time to reflect, recharge, no responsibility for anyone but myself, freedom to make friends and have meaningful discussions. Yet also living from savings, watching that bank balance go down and not being allowed to get a job, relying on hourly buses and kind people to give me rides to things as well as the odd Uber, all those little luxuries you get used to as a full time employee that a student life just doesn't have room for! But anyway, a quick recap of my first month here: The smoke is int...

BSSM: He korero mai i te ngakau

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When I told people I was planning on leaving teaching to study at a Bible college, the two main questions I got were, "So what is the qualification for?" and, "What do you plan to do with your studies?" When the answer to the first was, "I don't end up with a qualification" and the second, "Probably go back to teaching", a lot of people were understandably confused. Yet not a single person has tried to talk me out of it or has shown anything but support towards me. I'm not sure if it's because you all know me well enough that I'd be too stubborn to back out and arguing with me would make me all the more determined, but I just want to say it has made me appreciate in a deeper way the people in my life. That they would support a decision I've made, while themselves not understanding why I would choose as I have but trusting me enough to see this is a good thing for me, leaves me with an appreciation beyond words. There are man...

My American adventure: First impressions

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I arrived into San Francisco airport in the early afternoon to a nice, mild, low-twenties temperature, and after spending over an hour on the runway waiting for the plane at our gate to depart, we were able to get off at last. Border patrol, although not as friendly as some, was less scary than I was anticipating (turns out the school I'm at has been working pretty hard together with the airport to make things fairly effortless for us internationals), and I made it through unscathed. Everyone else in the airport was super friendly and helpful, and before long I was sitting in my rental car trying to adjust my brain to driving from the passenger side.  After a few close calls and providing some mild entertainment for onlookers from my epic driving skills, I found a McDonald's I could scab WiFi from to load Google directions and off I went on my merry way. San Francisco, I've decided, is not much fun to drive through, particularly in their five hour long "rush hour...

Turkey Part II: The fun stuff

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As beautiful and sobering as my experience of Gallipoli was, I was excited to get on the road and see some of the history and landscapes of Turkey. Our first stop was Troy. My favourite part was the Trojan horse in its unashamedly obvious touristic nature, even with little windows! But the actual ruins of the city of Troy were pretty awesome.  Troy had been destroyed and rebuilt so many times, that the ruins had been identified as originating from several different eras of Troy built in the same spot. They had little markers to represent which of the cities of Troy the ruins came from. Some of the mud bricks remaining were about 5000 years old, which was mind blowing!           We then headed to Pergamum and Asklepion, the oldest hospital in the world, where there were some beautiful Corinthian style pillars still remaining. Most of my prior interactions with historical sites in Europe had been from the Roman era, and Turkey was my first real en...