People have asked us whether we've been busy. And while we haven't been drowning in busyness as we're used to in the classroom, we still reply that we have been. It's just the busyness here looks different. We are not running kids off to their next class, diffusing an argument between groupmates, or cramming down a lunch so we can discipline a student. Rather our days are packed with reading the Bible, meeting to talk about ministry, occasionally studying Chinese, and riding our bikes to the grocery store to pick up eggs and meat.
Time moves differently here. It's loosely governed and counted by chunks: appointments take up your morning and hanging out with kids could mean starting sometime around 5pm and just sitting around for the next 4 hours. To be honest, it's been a bit of a struggle getting used to the work output here.
So we've been adjusting to this new notion of time. Be flexible. Do what you can. Things may or may not happen at their proposed times. Sometimes they won't happen at all.
On a day off the Chen's took us out to Lugang, an old fishing village on the coast. |
Ministry has been interesting as well. Since school has started for the highschoolers, we've been figuring out how to provide a safe and productive afterschool hangout environment for the students here. Most students don't have much to do at home, no homework, no real hobbies or extra-curricular activities. Some head to tutorial classes. But most who don't will often spend their evenings playing with their phones. We've been brainstorming how we can give the students a place to learn, grow and develop better study habits. So on weekdays after school, kids are invited to come hang out. Some days they come, some days they don't.
On the days they do come though, it's usually pretty loud and happening!
Here are a couple pictures:
Last weekend: putting up some Mid-Autumn festival decorations for our BBQ. |
Mid-Autumn Festival BBQ (Kao Rou) is very popular here. |
Families gather outside their front door, squat, and then grill food together for the whole evening. |
Some of our girls being silly. |
The other ministry starting off are Champion classes at the local highschool. Champion classes are the equivalent to Health or CAPP classes back at home where students learn life skills to deal with stress and life problems. Wayne and Angela teach classes every week and have invited us to be their assistants in class. It was a neat gaze into schooling here in Puxin.
Pu-Hsin Junior High School |
Waiting for students to finish their after-lunch siesta. Too hot to learn! |
Ninth grade |
Learning about life! |
We all live in different places with different paces of time. What I've learned in my time here is that God doesn't measure based on the busyness of my calendar but rather how my heart will delight in being faithful to Him in every moment of my day. Whether life be quick or slow, may my heart rejoice in giving Him my very best even when it might not seem like a lot in my own eyes.
Even when it's mundane.
Even when it's plain.
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