Monday, October 20, 2008

Happy Birthday Watchman!

Watchman turned four yesterday! It has been a joy to watch him grow.

At two years old he would count in Japanese for me. He would also recite verses and sing Neil Yong songs.

When Watchman was three, Vincent sat with him to eat cherry's one day. Vincent advised Watchman not to pull the stem off the cherry so that it will be easier to hold. Watchman ignored Vincent's advice, so Vincent advised him again, "Don't pull the stem off. It'll be easier for you to hold the cherry." Watchman responded, "I'm NOT pulling the stem off. I'm just pulling the Cherry off."

Watchman, I can't wait to see what you learn this year! Happy Birthday!

Here are some pictures from his Birthday Party at Coolidge:


Bronwyn


Brothers: Gabe and Isaac

More picture on Flickr

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Grey Vote No Longer Reliably Red


A view from Sun City.

It's an interesting read.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Sunday Rest



Kyrie and Eric came to visit for a long weekend. It was so great to see them and have them over at our house like they had never left. Eric and Micheal cooked us Spaghetti Lunch, which was delicious. Not only did we have great lunch and great company - but we got to have a Sunday Nap - which beats out most anything...

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Chucky Cheeze Shinanigans

This Sat. we went to celebrate Ella's 6ths Birthday.
Vincent and I enjoyed ourselves thoroughly - we fit right in with the kids.

Ella and Kristine

Ella and her cake

Ella and her peeps

My Ruby Cakes

Vincent and his new best friend, Olivia

Vincent had a fan base of little boys cheering him on while playing this game.
"Man, he's so cool!" says one little boy.
Another will state, "Dude! Did you see that! He just totally blew them up!"
They were maybe 7.
It pumped him up so much he kept popping in our tokens one game after another and I finally had to stop him so that I had some left.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

It's lunch break! Yeah!

It's time to catch up.

So, crazy weeks have past-thank goodness. Vincent and I are finally settling down. We still have lots to go (more painting, more unpacking, putting up curtains and frames), but for the most part we are getting more comfortable with our new home.

As mentioned before, my parents were in town the day after we moved in to our new place. Thanks to them; while Vincent and I were at work they cleaned our yard, our house, cooked and etc.! Even after they have left, I still notice the little things my parents did around the house to make this transition easier on us. Thank you Mom and Dad! I already miss them, but now I miss them more.

Not only did they help us out around the house, but my parents bought me and Vincent a camera!!! What? Snap! Yes! I now have a camera again!!! I'm super duper excited! I have gone a year with out a camera and I'm totally out of habit :). But, here are some experimental pics I took with my new Nikon Coolpix. Apparently the camera can take 16 consecutive shots in one....


It's fun but the only thing is you really can't see the images :).

Hopefully - more images will come!

Sunday, September 28, 2008

My Family!


My family came to visit....
and the last time the entire family was together was at our wedding, two years ago.

more to come later

Monday, September 22, 2008

Man...I hope Vincent won't kill me...

...for telling this story....
Caught on Camera

...but here is goes.

So, I'm a pretty lucky woman in that I am married to a man with no snoring problems. Maybe once in a blue moon I'll hear light snores, but never a big deal. I've probably been disturbed by Vincent's snoring once or twice since we've been married.

However, several nights ago, as I'm about to fall asleep Vincent fell asleep first and just went into a snoring frenzy. A little annoyed and a little humored I tried my best to ignore it...Then all the sudden he snorts twice, REALLY LOUD. Vincent snored so loud that he woke himself up and looked at me and asks, "What did you say babes?"

I laughed...maybe you had to be there...

Friday, September 19, 2008

Updates

I feel like every year around this time my life is going all different directions. There has been so many changes and adjustments that I have lacked in the friend department by not updating my friends and family in whats going on...so real quickly in the last few minutes of my lunch break:


Update 1: I have a new job. I've have been at Tandus as a Studio Assistant for exactly a month now and I finally feel like I can formally announce that I have a new job. It's a huge adjustment from social work to designing carpet and working with color all day. In a nutshell: I love it! I miss my kids but this is a new challenge God has put before me and I'm soaking it up. I'm learning from the best of the best in textile and carpet design.

Update 2: (Sorta goes with the first update)

I no longer have a work cell phone (which is AWESOME!!!). If you ever have a 24-7 work phone attached to you - you can agree to how liberating it is to get rid of it. For those who don't know: it may not seem like a big deal, but believe me, it is. It took me a week to get used to not checking to see if I had it. After I got rid of it, I heard a similar ring tone from another phone...my heart started beating real fast.

Furthermore, I really can't have my cell around on me at work - so, really I went to having two phones...to pretty much not having any during the work day. I love it...but I am sorry to my friend who have tried to get a hold of me. I guess that is what my update 2 is about: my phone access is limited. (Well, so is my e-mail access. I can only check my personal e-mails every so often...the company docs us for too much web surfing...and g-mail counts as web surfing.)

Update 3: I now wake up at 6:30 AM....to those who know me, this is unbelievable.

Update 4: Bigger then the updates mentioned above: Vincent and I have been married for two years now!!!

Update 5: We've been married two years; moved twice and about to move for the third time. Yes, we are moving again. First year, we lived in a one bedroom apt. Second year, we moved into a two bedroom house. As we go into our third year of marriage, we are moving into a three bedroom house. Lovin' it. We will be painting, packing and moving this weekend. Please keep us in your prayers.

Update 6: My parents are coming to visit for the first time since we have been married. I guess this is not an update, but just 'news'...

Update 7: Vincent is back in school (part-time) and working towards getting certified to teach. Please pray for him as he takes care of me (cooks and cleans), works part-time, student teaches once a week and goes to class. Pray that it is God's will to open doors for him to start teaching in January.

Okay - I think that is it for updates...

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

What?!?!

Another Japanese Prime Minister resigns?....

Check it. (an article for New York Times)

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

anniversary gifts


Okay, first of all, 'no', it's not our anniversary... yet. But it's coming up in two months and two days. So...today's distraction from work is to start figuring out what I'm going to get my husband of a year and 9 months and 29 days for our two year anniversary.

Last year we gave one another gifts off the 'traditional' list: paper. I thought it was a brilliant idea to go according to a list so I wouldn't have to go through the headache of deciding what to get Vincent every year. I also suggested this idea in hopes that it would eliminate both of us from wanting to overspend on our gifts...and to be creative. I sorta failed to follow my own guidelines last year, which I clearly laid out for Vincent and bought him an ipod. However, I got away with it by telling Vincent that the ipod followed our guidelines as it was 'thin as paper'...he didn't argue with me.

(I am realizing now that maybe I have set the gift buying standard a little too high for the first year.)

I was surfing the net for what the second anniversary gift was...and according to Chicago Public Library, if we go the 'traditional' route, something cotton is next on the list. If we go with the 'modern' list, then China is the next thing on the list. And did you know that cotton as an anniversary gift is suppose to represent great prosperity? And China represents love that is elegant and beautiful. Hmm~so do I give Vincent something that symbolizes elegance and beauty or do I give him something that supposedly characterizes the prosperity of our marriage.

Since we went with the 'traditional' list last year - it would make sense that we follow the same list for this year. Right? Not so. After carefully looking at the 'modern' list - the gifts are so much better. While the old list is: paper, cotton, leather, fruits, iron...the new list is: clocks, china, crystal, appliances....and according the the modern ways I would get a diamond jewel a lot quicker. If we followed the traditional list I would have to wait for our 60th anniversary before I get a diamond.

(Madonna is now coming to mind as I realize I am a material girl. ...Living in a material world, And I am a material girl, You know that we are living in a material world, And I am a material girl...)




Oh, what to do? What to do?

Well, I feel that I've now thought about it long enough that I don't have to buy him a gift anymore...it's the thought that matters right? Cool. Well...I've been distracted long enough from work. And the truth of the matter is I now probably won't think about our anniversary gift until two days prior.

Peace.


Saturday, June 14, 2008





Daddy - Happy Father's Day!!

....and a special picture for Mommy
(since I didn't post pictures for Mother's Day :)).

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

In the Jungle, the Mighty Jungle...

My dad just sent me some old pictures of me and my fam in the deep jungles of Indonesia. I thought I'll share them with some of you.

Oh, the memories of being miserable in the tribes with no luxuries.
No one can convince me that this is or was 'cool' or 'hip'...it's called 'being-dragged-out-to-the-mission-front'. That said, I don't regret God calling my parents out to the middle of no where. It's set a tone for the rest of my life, to know that being called by God doesn't mean my life would be easy peasy. *sigh* I hate being reminded of that sometimes...


This is our plane that flew us into the islands.


This is the inside of our hut. My mother is sitting on our bed. I am being home schooled. Nice bangs.

Yukari, Yuji and me...taking a walk in the tribe.

Helping my mom do the laundry at a near by well.

This is actually from when we were in Papua New Guinea.
Yuji in a dress.

Family picture for our annual Support Letters...
I believe that there is no such thing as a good looking Support Letter picture.
Can some one show me some one else's Support picture, where it turned out decent?!

Here is THE tribe.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Their First Dance...


...as Mr. and Mrs. Simpson.
(picture by Brian W.)

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Two disasters, contrasting reactions

For obvious reasons Asia is always in my heart. The two natural disasters that have occurred recently makes me want to go 'home'. Not that I could do anything, but I feel so far removed from these events and I feel sorta guilty for that. Please join me in prayer for these two nations.

I just came across this article from BBC News. I thought it was interesting...

By Bridget Kendall
Diplomatic correspondent, BBC News

Two powerful natural disasters, wreaking havoc through large swathes of territory.

Burmese children beg for food in Rangoon - 13/5/2008
Aid has been slow to reach Burmese due to restrictions on foreign help

Two Asian countries reeling from the horror of tens of thousands of people probably dead and hundreds of thousands more made destitute and homeless.

And two governments, one a military junta and the other a Communist oligarchy, both traditionally suspicious of outside intervention.

But what a contrast between the different ways they are handling their situations.

Since the cyclone that hit Burma on 3 May, the government there has been wary of giving access to outsiders, sluggish in its own response and reluctant to contemplate flexibility.

From the outset the military regime allowed in only a small percentage of the relief experts who were needed to assess the devastation and set up supply routes to reach survivors.

Journalists, usually welcomed in such circumstances so the world knows what is happening, have had to slip in incognito.

Immediate offers of airlifts and naval support from as far afield as the United States were greeted with hesitation.

And even when shipments were grudgingly accepted, government spokesmen tried to insist that while aid was welcome, foreign aid workers were not and the Burmese army could manage without them.

Burmese soldiers next to emergency shelters in Dedaya - 13/5/2008
The Burmese army was notably absent in the days following the cyclone

Yet the immensity of the tragedy seems to be far beyond the means of the Burmese themselves.

In some places lucky survivors appeared to have been the recipients of government dispersed tents.

But elsewhere snatched glimpses of bloated bodies left floating in flooded paddy fields, and pictures of soldiers at Rangoon airport unloading aid sacks by hand sent an eloquent signal that this inward-looking regime was ill-equipped to cope with the scale and urgency of such a monumental disaster.

People, it seems, are not the first priority.

A referendum to adapt the country's constitution went ahead as planned on Saturday, except in the inundated areas of the Irrawaddy Delta.

Maintaining a firm political grip on the country, it seems, is more important to the Burmese generals than meeting the desperate needs of some of their own citizens.

Swift action

Compare that to the response of the Communist government in China to this week's catastrophic earthquake, where the government has sent the message it is prepared to be swift, flexible and surprisingly open.

Within hours the prime minister was on a plane to the region, and Chinese state television, not known for its quick response to emergencies, was rolling with a special disaster programme.

China's Prime Minister Wen Jiabao (left, with megaphone) at a collapsed hospital in Dujiangyan - 12/5/2008
China's premier (left) flew to the scene within hours of the earthquake

Pictures of collapsed buildings and trapped survivors have sped around the world.

Some foreign journalists have been able to get to the region to send eyewitness reports.

In contrast to Burma's inflexibility over its referendum plans, in China a swift decision was taken to scale down ceremonies surrounding the once controversial Olympic torch relay and add a daily minute of silence, out of respect for the victims.

As for offers of outside help, there has been an official welcome for the pledges of relief that have been pouring in.

And even if, like Burma, the Chinese government has stopped short of accepting disaster relief workers, it has moved fast to announce it is mobilising its own considerable resources into what appears to be an impressive rescue mission.

Tens of thousands of Chinese police and soldiers have been making their way to the disaster zone by truck, plane, parachute and some even on foot.

How effective they will be in managing this disaster will no doubt emerge in the next few days and weeks.

Whether outsiders - journalists and aid workers - will continue to be allowed near the disaster area remains a question.

Already the Chinese foreign ministry is warning that foreign journalists may be kept away from the earthquake zone "for their own safety".

But at the very least, the Chinese government clearly wants to demonstrate to its own people - and to the outside world - that it can cope, and that it cares for its citizens' welfare.

Different pattern

To be fair, though the scale of the two disasters is perhaps comparable, the logistical problems thrown up by a cyclone and a tidal surge versus the upheaval caused by a major earthquake in heavily populated areas are difficult to equate.

And even if one could, the sheer size and wealth of China, and the resilience of its infrastructure in comparison to Burma meant it was always going to be in a better position to shoulder the burden locally.

But what is particularly striking is how different this week's reaction in China is from its own inadequate response to disasters in the past, and from the other ways in which it tries to hide sensitive political information.

Chinese soldiers help a civilian up a collapsed road in Beichuan county, Sichuan province - 13/5/2008
The Chinese army was quickly mobilised to help earthquake victims

Its slow and secretive handling of the outbreak of Sars (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) in 2003 led to accusations of a cover up, even though it claimed it was trying to avoid a mass panic about a medical outbreak.

In 2005 when an explosion at a petrochemical factory contaminated a river supplying the northern city of Harbin, the Chinese authorities were severely criticised for failing to own up to the disaster quickly enough.

Yet now it seems that a different pattern is emerging.

Earlier this year when millions of Chinese were stranded by ice and heavy snow in the worst winter storms in decades, the authorities again moved swiftly to try to get on top of the emergency.

Hundreds of thousands of troops were deployed and easing the crisis was declared a number one priority.

Whether because the eyes of the world are upon it in this Olympic year, or because the Chinese themselves, particularly the increasingly affluent and empowered urban middle class, demand more of their own government, these days in China - unlike in Burma - there seems to be a greater sense of the need to be accountable.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

So Tommy Galpin introduced us to this blog.

Check it!

Monday, March 24, 2008

Easter Feaster 2008


So...we have lots to blog about, especially about our trip to the Philippines. But that will have to wait as Vincent is still jotting down some notes from our vacation.

However, I wanted to pause from the topic of Philippines and wish everyone Happy Easter!

God blessed us with a beautiful Easter - Great Service and great time with our friends. Cooking and feasting with friends is most definitely a good way to be reminded of how much God loves me. And to be able to celebrate Christ's resurrection with our friends is definitely a blessing from God.

Thanks D and Brent for hosting Easter Feast 08...and Tommy and Ruth, it was so good to have you guys home for this celebration.

More pictures by Andy Monty.

Friday, March 07, 2008

The Full Tropical Experience

I feel sorta bad making a post about our time at the beach as Vincent is currently sick. Our days are full as I drag Vincent around showing him my old stompin` grounds...and I think it has finally caught up to him as he has the dreadful Filipino stomach bug. Bethany got something similar when she came with me to the Philippines, which makes me wonder if being sick is just part of the experience of being in the tropics...getting their nasty virus.

Other than experiencing the tropical virus, it hasn`t been a shabby experience. And couple days ago I was finally able to show Vincent one of my favorite places in the world.
Here are some picture!

...After a two hour bus ride and a two hour boat ride...


...in a Banca (pictured above)...

...and a Tricycle ride...

...we arrived to this beautiful beach at Peurto Gallera.

Here we are...doing the beach thing...

Here is Vincent getting a full body massage.
Here is the beautiful blue water...and healthy Vincent...
Wish you, our friends and family, were here!
And keep Vincent`s health in your prayers!

Sunday, March 02, 2008

First Days in Manila


The rooftop pool deck above sits outside the Takata's condo. Another series of pool decks thirty stories up, on the building's roof, affords a view of the downtown Manila skyline against the mountain range that borders the city. Yesterday Kiko and I decided to sit up there in the heat and wait for a gray blue storm system we saw approaching in the distance. Though we could see the rain spout moving closer through the sky, it held out longer than our patience. I guess this says something about the visibility from up there.



If you pull out a camera in the presence of the local children, be prepared to stop and shoot them posing. They rushed us before we could refuse.