Friday, July 31
Other Updates
Jory, Casey, and I are leaving about three hours before the kids so that we can set up a frisbee golf course at the camp! Somehow we have been dubbed "professional frisbeemen", so we will try to create a course very rapidly for the kids to enjoy throughout the week. For English lessons, I am working with the advanced group, Jory with the intermediate, and Casey with the false beginners. We have many fun and exciting games planned already, including an in-class snowball fight (because we're way cooler than your English teacher ever was).
An important update that I've been forgetting to give: I brought War and Peace to read on this trip because I only wanted to carry one book, and though Russian names can be difficult to distinguish, I have made progress. I am currently on page 525 of 1455! A short way into the read, however, I was incredibly disappointed to realize that pages 67-94 were missing - what a letdown! I pressed on, and surmised from the context that this section was completely filled with the description of a single dinner party. It is a great book though (great in the sense of it has colossal ambition and is capturing all these different aspects of life).
Not much else to write about at the moment. Everyone else is out on the town for the night, and I think I'll go lay down again. Have a good day everyone!
Wednesday, July 29
Good news.... Bad News... but there's pictures!
Casey made it!
At Prague Castle!
Some things to keep in mind for prayer:
- pray that camp goes well, everything runs smoothly and stress is minimal
- that jesus would be the center
- we as leaders would be intentional about being relational with the students
- patience as a team with one another, to work well together
- lastly,Chris, Casey and I be open to what God is speaking and showing into our lives at camp. We would respond. Be authentic with the students. Allow God to work in and through us at camp.
Sunday, July 26
OK, A Few More Pictures
Multikemp Has Ended
Thursday, July 23
A List Of Things I Did Today
2. Took a shower outside in a thunder and lightning storm.
3. Had a conversation with Jory in which I could not formulate or articulate my beliefs.
4. Thought a lot after that.
5. Tried to teach myself a new backwards throw in frisbee. Its crazy, but unfortunately it failed miserably when I tried it in the game.
čtvrtek
Wednesday, July 22
Discussion Groups
Anyways, I wish i could speak Czech also. There were some good things and questions asked tonight that i am sure somewhat got lost in translation. One question asked by Jirka in my group was clear
In response to the question "Why dont you believe in God or what is holding to back?"
If God is so righteous and good, then why is there so much unrighteousness in the world? Why are so many people dying of diseases around the world. Shouldnt God help them, they didnt do anything to get those diseases?
I was and am stumped. Good question from a czech student.
Post answers if you have any.
Středa - Wednesday
Camp today was great, we played frisbee for four hours in morning, then I was back out there again this afternoon with other kids, since they can sign up for any sport they want to try in the afternoons now. Jory had the afternoon off so he got to do airsoft! I think I am going to try on Friday. A Czech guy about my age showed up in the afternoon and joined the game. He was visiting a friend at the camp, but he was very good at ultimate! He plays on a club team in Prague, where there are five club teams, a very high level of play, and the world club championships will be held there soon. He was much better than me and it was really fun to play with him, since most everyone else cant throw or stay spread out very well. But it is so fun to play frisbee all day.
Each state is performing a dance or lip sync to an American pop song from the 1960s over the next two nights. Jorys did Stay by The Hollies tonight, and tomorrow night I will be a part of a one-night, crowd-awing performance of Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones. Pictures definitely to come.
Tomorrow brings seven plus more hours of ultimate, along with all the meals, hang out time, poorly translated jokes, and butchered pronunciation of language that that entails. Jory and I have been brightening each day with a trip to Penny Market or Interspar for a delicious foreign ice cream bar. It is such a good walk and relax and talk time that other leaders are starting to join in.
Tuesday, July 21
Ahoj!
Here is the coaches and staff singing Yellow Submarine in real Czech style on the first night of camp. The theme of the camp is the 1960s, including the Beatles, Forrest Gump, and Soviet style exercise regimens.
It is late here, and so goodnight!
Monday, July 20
Multisport kemp Day 1
As for Chris and I, it is somewhat more challenging than we had thought adjusting to the language barrier. Coming to this multisport camp first before english camp without knowing anyone here is hard but we are adjusting. Everyone speaks czech and english but unlike Martin, people are not used to having to translate into english so that has been testing our patience on multiple levels. There are a few people who have stepped up and helped translate meetings and such so it has been fun building those relationships. Honestly, I don't know what God is going to reveal to us at this camp but I think this language barrier might be involved. This trip is very different from the mission trips and cultures we have engaged where spanish has been the main language and we are with people who can help translate for us. Something that has amazing to see though is God's love transcend this language through these people and their heartfelt worship and desire to follow Jesus. We are connected through our desire to serve the Lord which is always really amazing to experience when you travel abroad.
Pray for strength and energy for us as Ultimate and dealing with the language can be draining physically, mentally and emotionally.
Pray for the relationships that we are beginning to build with the students.
Openness to what God is trying to reveal to us.
Pics to come later, time to go.
Sunday, July 19
Jabloneč
My life is amazing. These Czech men and women are like kinsmen my heart has dreamed of. They love to use their bodies at every possible moment. After returning from dinner at a pub and a walk through an incredible forest park with trails and fields interspersed, many of the people were already getting ready to "go swimming". Naturally - though it was nearing sunset and cool outside - I agreed. What going swimming meant was running on sidewalks and between concrete buildings until we ended up at a lake, stripping down, and swimming half the width of the lake to a plastic blue island. The water was cold but not frigid, brownish-tinged, and somehow comforting to my skin and muscles. On the way out I could flip over onto my back and look at the sun setting the waz I had come. Around the lake were a skinny dam, ducks, and the land covered with fir trees and great square apartment buildings. The Czechs were just dutifully loving being in the water and the motion of their bodies. By the time I got out, pink clouds on a navy blue sky above, I had this deep, irrepressible feeling that my life was complete. Not that I was done living, but that every facet of myself and the world had fit together perfectly. Now I have taken a shower in this gaping primarz school where we stay - I was naked in a rustz room tiled with orange and blue, unused showerheads all around while the basement air filled with steam - and I feel like my mind and body are used and content. I have written this in a dark locker room on a bench looking out of a bank of dark windows to a night so untouched by the streetlights that I can barely see the difference between hills and sky, I can hear the footsteps and phrases of the others in the halls in echoes that travel mysteriously far. I do not know what unfathomable convolutions of history have made these moments, but somehow they have created the perfect chord that is left resounding in my body.
Other comments/observations.
The keyboard is difficult here, it is easz to confuse y and z and impossible to find an apostrophe. So I do not use contractions.
We had a seven and a half hour layover in Rome airport which was trying on our patience but ultimately worked out all right. At one point we found a luggage cart abandoned on the back roads and it turned out to be one of the most energetic characters we have met yet. We named him Leonardo the Matador. It was great watching people get angry when they changed the gate at the last moment and yell in Italian at the ticket scanner ladies. But we got there, after an hour and a half drive to the camp from Prague to Jabloneč.
Like I said already, the people are great here, many have taken English in school so communication is not too much of a problem.
Now I am tired and I am heading the way of the buffalope, to sleep!
Saturday, July 18
Athletes in Action: Multisport camp
Let me remember-
His eagerness, not to be ministered unto, but to minister:
His sympathy with suffering from every kind:
His Bravery in the face of His own suffering:
His meekness of bearing so that, when reviled, He reviled not again:
His steadiness of purpose in keeping to His appointed task:
His simplicity:
His self-discipline:
His serenity of spirit:
His complete reliance upon You, His Father in Heaven
and in each of these ways give me grace to follow in His footsteps. Amen.
- An excerpt from a John Baillie prayer
A prayer I read this morning in preparation of our first camp.
Chris and I are leaving for the airport in a few minutes to begin our main journey and purpose for this trip. We have a had wonderful time exploring Barcelona and Rome and we are feeling rejuvenated and ready to begin this next phase in our trip.
Pray for us in next part of our journey. Little expectations exist which allows God to work and I am grateful for that but also somewhat nervous because the language barrier and the only thing we do know that we are doing is teaching Ultimate Frisbee, a bit scary I guess. Pray for the kids and that they would be receptive to the message of Jesus Christ as well as our hearts to be open to share and furthermore open to what God has to share and teach us while we are at camp. Pray for energy each day to wake up with fervor and excitement as well as strength to teach frisbee for 7 days!
More updates to come and thanks for following
Roma
Now the bow of our little ship points northeast to Prague and we stand with grim and sweaty brows, ready for another harrowing journey that will leave us at the multisport camp for the seven days.
More pictures:
Here we are on top of the cupula at St. Peter's Basilica, replete with new friends and worn-out calves from climbing 551 stairs. Probably the highest place we went, a great view of Rome all around and the church is magnificent. The Pope even came up to the cupula with us to share the view and offer us some refreshing water. OK, maybe that's not true.
The view from Katie's apartment, overlooking Campo di Fiori, which is just about the most thoroughly used plaza I've ever seen: Market in the morning, dining all evening, clubs until the wee-est hours of the morning.
Our shadows on the Colosseum. Pretty self-explanatory.
Wednesday, July 15
Gelatto Resistance
This is a view of the whole city from Parc Gual (a World Heritage Site, for all my fellow archaeology ihummers) where we walked around all this really cool terrain and pathways designed by Goudi.
No way a geology museum!
Tuesday, July 14
Barcelona
The hostel we are staying in is really cool, lots of young people around. We are sleeping in a room with ten other people, all of whom are really cool, and today we might wander the city with some of them or go on a bike tour. It is cloudy this morning, a nice change from the scorching weather yesterday.
This city is awesome!