Showing posts with label laundry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laundry. Show all posts

Monday, September 30, 2013

birthday adventure

An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered.
Read more at http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/keywords/adventure.html#sDWRKrKF32wCwPbh.99
"I am looking for someone to share in an adventure that I am arranging,
 and it's very difficult to find anyone."
- J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit

It was my birthday; a day for adventure.
And though it may not have been everyone's first choice for a relaxing Saturday,
we all squeezed into a taxi, and headed for Samal Island.

The taxi driver left us at a little alley-way along the main road,
and we followed a narrow path through an ocean-side market area.
Clockwise from Top L: sorting tomatoes/ cart full of spare parts/ the butcher/ neon fish
 This man (above) pulled a huge chunk of ice through the market
using a metal vise-like tool.

We passed children playing, ocean-front homes, and a family hanging out the Saturday wash.

At the end of the path, Mark bought 40-cent tickets for each of us, 
and we boarded the passenger ferry.

Boys toting tiny packs of peanuts and squid crackers vended their wares to ferry passengers,
and the man in the seat beside Mark instigated a deep discussion about the persons of the Godhead.

But this was just the beginning.
The real adventure was yet to come.

An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered. 
-G.K. Chesterton

Stay tuned for more of our adventure next time!

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

grateful


You'll remember that we asked you to join us in praying for Mark 
as he took on a job requiring lots of time, energy and grace.

Thank you so very much for your prayers!  Mark is done with the assignment,
and we are delighted to have him back home again safely 
after his time in a remote village in another SE Asian country for the past 3 weeks!

Thank you for your prayers for the rest of us here at home, too.
God has faithfully answered your prayers, and we are grateful.

 I can't tell you much about Mark's work,
but during those three weeks, he ate rice and fish
for pretty much every single meal,



he took lots of cold bucket showers and 
hand-washed his clothes in a tub,
yes, this is the sort of bathroom Mark used for 3 weeks...
 he had lots of time to practice a little of the local language,


 and time to work and fellowship together with fellow-believers, 
all laboring together for the glory of God!


 We give thanks for the opportunity he had to go,
and we give thanks to be all together again!

Where thou art,
 that is Home.  
~Emily Dickinson

Thursday, February 2, 2012

a greater poverty



I stand next to my sister at the sink.  She may not look like my sister, with her long black hair and brown skin.  But in all essentials, in Christ, she is my sister.   It’s a companionable task; she washes the dishes and I rinse them off, and we talk as we work together.  She tells me of what it was like to spend the night of the flood last July perched on the roof of their home while the waters reached to the door frames and her brother swam to rescue his elderly mother-in-law, and I tell her about the cold Canadian snowdrifts that rose to the door frames in my childhood.  We talk of her desire to learn dress making, and we laugh over my failure to sew zippers. 

Then we talk of housework, and she tells me that she loves to wash dishes, and I silently remember how nice it was to wash dishes in the hot soapy suds of my American sink.  I tell her that I like to see dishes come clean, too.  She then admits with an embarrassed shake of her black hair that ‘I don’t really like to wash clothes though.’  I quickly try to encourage her, saying that I like washing clothes, and that to make the drying and folding more enjoyable, I try to pray for the family members whose clothes I’m handling as I work.  

It’s then I’m bowled over by my lack of cultural sensitivity.  You’d think I’d be just a little more aware after 2½ years in this country.  She sweetly turns to me in reply and says that ‘it’s just such tiring work, scrubbing the clothes, and trying to get the stains out.’  I have a sudden mental picture of her, my sister, squatting at a tub of sudsy cold water, scrubbing between raw knuckles the family’s clothing.  In stark contrast, I envision myself effortlessly tossing dirty laundry into our automatic washing machine, spoiled beyond belief.

How is it that my sister in Christ toils hard over the washing while I push a few buttons? 

How is it that she should perch on a roof in a flood, wondering if they would survive the night, while I am cozy in my house, safe from all the elements? 

How can it be that learning dressmaking might mean the difference between not enough and subsistence for her, while failure to master sewing in a zipper is just a laughing matter for me? 

I have no answer.  
It was the life that God gave to each of us.   
He ordained, and here we are, next-door to one another in vastly different spheres.

And somehow this sister of mine, who labors long and arduous, who faces peril with no financial buffers, is infused with a joy that I don’t see all that often in my own life.  Somehow her radiant smile of contentment and trust in God outshines the smiles of many of her affluent western counterparts.   

How in the world could that be? 

Is it just possible that in a life jam-packed with challenges, her daily desperate dependence on the faithfulness of God has cultivated beauty of character that is worth far more than the luxuries of a washing machine and flood insurance and running hot water? 

God has lavished me with incredible luxuries.
Has He lavished you with luxury too?
But I wonder… have those luxuries done anything to cultivate fruit for His glory in my character? 
Have they increased my thankfulness, my contentment, my faith? 

Or…am I the one struggling with the greater poverty? 
For you say, I am rich,
I have prospered,
and I need nothing,
not realizing that you are wretched, pitiable, poor, blind, and naked. 
Revelation 3:17

Thursday, March 3, 2011

muddiest shirt


Anyone recognize this child?


A face only a mother could love.

These photos are just in case anyone doubted
that our children actually get dirty.

I heard rumors that there was some
competition between Michael and Mr. B.,
the band teacher, to see who had the muddiest shirt
after Ultimate Frisbee.


But we all know Mr. B. would never do such a thing.


Wednesday, March 2, 2011

tide rolls on


The laundry never ends.
But the other day as I was opening a fresh bag of Tide detergent,
the picture on the back struck me for the first time.
(Yes, I'm a little slow.)



These are no ordinary laundry instructions.
This bag is for the average Filipino.
The one who scrubs laundry in a round tub at the back sink
or takes in a neighbor's laundry on the street side for a little extra cash.

Then Amy pointed out another unique aspect.
The instructions are written in a mix of Cebuano and English.

"Kusutin ang mga puti nang at least 20 minuto..."

****************

Filipinos use another laundry product also that is fabulous.
They use detergent bars -
produced specifically for people who do their laundry by hand.
Hard bars of laundry soap that take stains out miraculously.
Believe me.
I'm a soccer mom.
I buy the Tide bars that are the size of a normal bar of soap,
moisten the clothing, rub the stain with the bar,
scrub with a brush for a minute, and the stains are GONE.

Others use the foot-long size of detergent bar, (above)

One side of the bar is ridged,
something like the washboard my mother used when she was first married!


*******************

Maybe you remember this post about how thankful we were for the rain last spring, after a very hot and dry season? Well, this year we've been blessed with lots of cooler, rainy weather. The bigger struggle has been to get our clothes to dry before they mold!

Never dried socks in my kitchen before.


As I do all this laundry,
I find myself so thankful for God's good gifts...

for the luxury of a washing machine...
for sunshine to dry these clothes...
(most of the time!)
for these 4 precious people I get to serve by washing their clothes...
for all of these changes of clothing!...
for health and strength to be able to do this job myself...
for the smell of clean clothes...
for the reminders of His blood that cleanses me from all sin!