… and so it begins …

The first two suitcases — containing some things we won’t be needing until after we get resettled sometime next year — have made it safely to our home country, courtesy of two colleagues who were here last week for meetings.

I SO dislike this part of the moving process. Inevitable. Necessary. And yet another tug on my heart as reality hits home. Yes, this chapter of our lives is slowly closing. Another — yet unknown — chapter awaits us.

In going through stuff to send with our colleagues I came across a prayer I wrote and then shared at our local church several years ago. “Ironic” how apropos it is to us now …

Father, we come before You today
with grateful hearts …

Thank you …
– for these individuals we are honoring today
[those who were moving]
– for the many and varied ways they have served You
in this part of the world and here in our church
– for the lives that have been impacted by theirs
– for the relationships that have been forged
by doing life together
– that although this chapter of their life stories
is about to close
another is soon to be written …

During this time of transition …
give them grace
with others and with themselves
as they 
– face unknowns 
– make countless decisions 
– get overwhelmed
with the myriad of details
involved in change
– desire to leave here well
AND
enter this next phase of their lives well.

Help them as they re-settle
in their passport country
and deal with the ambiguity of
– knowing the language…
and yet feeling out of sync
– of not being sure where “home” is.

May this in-between time
remind them
that their true home is with You.

Provide friends for them
and a church home where they can belong
and build a new sense of community.

Give them safety in their travels
and good times reconnecting
with family and friends.

We also come before You
on behalf of those of us who remain here
and sometimes feel more acutely the absence
of those who have left.
– Help us, as well as those leaving,
as we grieve the emptiness
that results when transitions occur.
– Help us to acknowledge that no one
can ever replace those relationships.
– Help us to not build walls of protection
around our hearts —
but to be open to new people
You may be wanting us to get to know. 

May we not lose sight of who You are …
– Jehovah Jirah: the Lord will provide
– Jehovah Shalom: the Lord is peace
– Elohim: the Lord Most High,
stronger and mightier
than anyone or anything we may face
– El Roi: the strong One who sees,
which is a reminder that
we are never alone,
even when feeling lonely
– the Good Shepherd, the One who gently leads
– Abba Father

Thank you, Lord,
for how rich we are because of the people
You have brought into our lives!

Amen!

Yep. That prayer from seven years ago is still valid today … and even more so for my husband and myself now that we are the ones preparing to move in six months.

We are the ones needing to give each other — and ourselves — grace.

We are the ones making countless decisions and occasionally getting overwhelmed with the myriad of details.

We are the ones who want to leave here well… AND enter the next phase of our lives well.

And most importantly, we are the ones whose lives are richer because of all those who have come across our paths these past years.

It is because of God’s sustaining goodness and the countless people we’ve rubbed shoulders with that we’ve been able to have joy in the journey of this thing called “Life!” and will continue to do so as we face the future — whatever it may hold!

Retreat… necessary for survival!!!

photo credit: Cheryl Stinchcomb

Having grown up near the ocean, I LOVE all things related to the sea! Walking on the beach, swimming, sailing, water skiing (at least in my younger years) all have a way of refreshing my body and soul. So when a friend shared these incredible pictures earlier this week — and a life lesson learned from them — something resonated in my very core.

She and her family were at the beach here in Thailand (this is our hot season/summer, and so schools are on break). She shared…

I got to observe 15 species of crab this week…
Some were armoured and scary-looking, some looked soft and vulnerable, some preferred hiding in their shells to scuttling on the rocks, some colourful, some camouflaged.
All required some level of retreat for survival.

Life lesson from the rockpools —
there is space for all in this world and retreat is good!
The hermit crab should not try to live like the stone crab.
They are not made for it…
and yet still I push sometimes for the
hermit-crab people in my life to “come out” more…

Retreat is necessary for all of us,
but more for some species (people) than others.

Cheryl Stinchcomb
in “God’s Creatures in Thailand” Facebook post
April 18, 2024

The reason this resonated with me is because I sometimes find myself in a tizzy, anxious about one thing or the other; weary because of a busy schedule; becoming snippy, critical with those I’m closest to (translated: my husband!). What my soul is trying to tell my brain and my body is that I need to retreat… to take time to do something to nurture my soul. Something that can get my focus back on what is life-giving as opposed to feeling drained. Something that recharges me.

As a Christ follower, the primary way that happens is by spending time reading God’s love letter to me (aka the Bible). But in all honesty, the past few weeks I feel like what I’ve been reading has been going in one eye and out the other — completely missing my heart and soul. Instead of being recharged, my battery level has kept going down.

Cheryl’s “life lesson from the rockpools” reminded me of how Jesus — God Himself walking among man — sometimes felt the need to get away, to withdraw, to retreat.

And rising very early in the morning, while it was still dark, He departed and went out to a desolate place, and there He prayed. – Mark 1:35

Perceiving then that they were about to come and take Him by force to make Him king [after the feeding of the 5000], Jesus withdrew again to the mountain by Himself. – John 6:15

Hmm… if Jesus needed to do this, how much more do I!?!

My “life lesson from the rockpools” is that I need to MAKE time to do things that provide “retreat” from the busyness of life, things that recharge instead of drain my energy. This doesn’t mean to forego my daily times reading the Bible, but to be intentional in doing things like writing this blog — since it is life-giving for me! Another is getting together with a friend for a heart-to-heart/below-the-surface chat. I also need to recognize the importance of planning some down time, which has a way of refreshing and renewing. Proverbs 13:12 talks about this when it says, “Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a desire fulfilled is a tree of life.” In other words, having something to look forward to is also life-giving!

And that, my friends, is how I’m choosing to move forward so that I can have joy in the journey of this thing called “Life!”

By the way, if you would like to check out more of Cheryl’s adventures, go to https://www.facebook.com/groups/274029857018047/?ref=share