Thursday, August 31, 2006

Countdown


The last bastion has fallen . . . the house is all packed up and everything moved to storage. We're now at less than 48 hours before the journey begins.

As usual for us, we have "packed" the last few days with so many activities and things to be done that we continue to put off the epiphanic moment when we realize that we're actually travelling halfway across the world and beginning a new life in a new culture. We've had glimpses, such as when we slept last night in a house completely empty of all our belongings and any vestigial signs of life: as the house shifted and echoed, the blank walls and dark rooms felt foreign and distant, and we woke up feeling as though these remaining days in California are the stirrings of a new volume of life for us. That's an exciting and terrifying thought.

Another thought that we are even less prepared for is how to satisfyingly express gratitude for the outpouring of support from you--our friends and our family. As letters continue to come in from all over Texas and California, we are overwhelmed with the sense that we are not going the 6,000 miles to Moscow alone . . . we carry your inspiration and encouragement. It's sobering to recognize one's place in something bigger, and we have been assured in the past few months that while our feet will be in Russia, the impetus for movement originates in what God is already doing in that country and in the world at large. Watch and be amazed, He says.

Thank you for your faithful responses.

Breakup

Just kidding. We're still together and closer than ever.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Breakdown

Below is a rough map of Moscow with the most important points of interest marked. Actually, these are the only four places we really know in Moscow, which by default make them the most important.

If you want to follow along on our travels, you can download a simple Moscow map program that allows you to search the streets in Moscow. Also, if you plan to come visit us while we're there, this would be a handy utility to have. Here's the download for the link: http://www.mom.ru/Engl/Download.htm You'll have to run the program once you download it, but it doesn't install anything, so you can just delete it when needed. As we know more about Moscow, we'll add other points of interest to our map. I'm holding out for an "Ono's Hawaiian Barbecue", but Kinzie tells me not to get my hopes up. There is a "Sbarro's" in the airport we're flying into, though.

I spent all day Friday going over notes on T.S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf for my next few weeks of class. At the end of the day, walking home from the campus library, I was thinking about what I could use from that information to create a good post for this site. Something really deep and thought provoking. But for some reason my thoughts kept being interrupted by the refrain of Jack Johnson's "Breakdown," the lines of which recurred in my head incessantly throughout the day. "I need this old train to breakdown." (full lyrics here: http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/jackjohnson/breakdown.html) The song describes a scene as viewed from a moving train, carrying the speaker past all the people that he'll "never get to meet" towards a place where he "don't need to be". I don't know how you feel about Jack Johnson, but you have to admit that central metaphor of this song is well-chosen. The machinery that propels life forward for many of us too often makes other people, other lives, merely part of the scenery, glimpsed for a moment and then lost in the rush to move on. I guess that these past few years we have experienced this momentum acutely, with pressures to establish the right path and lay the right tracks towards a future destination where we'll finally rest and be comfortable. In the process, we haven't always been able to "just roll through town" and leave the vehicle of progress behind for awhile (although Makinzie is much better at this than I am). Sadly, the more we get accustomed to the motion of the social engine the less likely we are to jump off and try out our own feet.

I don't intend to be brooding here; this isn't a melancholy observation but an enabling one. I think that God has chosen to put Russia into our lives right now with the intention of "breaking down" our dependence on habit, custom, and comfort. I think we really do need this "old train" to break down, even though I'm not sure where that will leave us. Ironically, in Moscow we'll be riding more trains than ever, and moving past a great many people that we'll never meet. We'll also be fueling the social machine by filling out job search letters for the MLA conference in December. But I'm also looking forward to slowing down the machine as much as possible, so that we can involve ourselves in the lives of people around us and maybe even "stroll through town" on occasion. I think that new paths will open up that we didn't even see before. And of course, the train will always be there when we come back.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Coming off of a weekend of work! Makinzie spent all weekend helping build a house in Tijuana, while I stayed at home by myself and prepped for my Literature course the next few weeks. I also packed up our dishes and some of my books in preparation for the move, which is in (*panicked tone*) less than a month! I'm wondering how Kinzie will take the fact that I packed up all of our dishes and glasses this weekend. I didn't really realize I had done that until all said items were safely wrapped in several layers of tape. I'm not sure what we'll eat on for four weeks. I'll keep you updated.

Oh, I just looked at the clock and realized that I have to go pick up Makinzie at the church. I'll try to post again in a little while. I had some "techie" stuff to put on the site.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006


Russia or bust! Here begins the great climactic account of our impending stay in Moscow, Russia and the many adventures to be found thereof!

Unfortunately, I only have time today to post a few comments. Anticlimactic, I know. Anyway, the pictures posted are of our apartment in Moscow; it belongs to a couple who has been teaching at RACU and who is going back to the States during the fall. I don't know how we are going to adjust to such austere surroundings, but we'll try!

I also wanted to give everyone the link for RACU's website, which is at http://racu.org Try browsing some of the information and viewing some of the pictures on the site--it's very well done!

We'll add more as time allows--for now I have to go work on my syllabus for my second day of my first-ever literature course!