We’re back!
Lisa | September 20, 2009We have mostly recovered from our 7 week “tour” of America. We spent our summer visiting family and friends in various parts of the States. Some of our highlights include: meeting our new nephew (who came a month early just to meet us!), hiking with some of the Lobel clan in the White Mountains, sharing about BMA and other parts of our life in the Czech Republic with supporters and friends, going back to the place where we got married, Jonny speaking at Light of the World in Albany, NY and Main Street Ministries in Allegon, MI, being interviewed about BMA on WMBI, and spending quality time with both of our families.
We came back home with 10 days before the start of school… just enough time to get over jetlag, figure out the classes we will teach for the year, and start planning. It was the first time for me (Lisa) to go back to the States since moving here. By the end of the trip we were both ready to come back, but arriving brought mixed emotions for me. I was really glad to be back in our own apartment, not quite so excited to start again with language lessons, and melancholy about not seeing our families again for a long amount of time. Jonny, on the other hand, seems quite excited about his language lessons. He has even decided to work on his German by attending the first year German classes at BMA… in addition to Czech lessons.
We have finally settled into our new schedule and are looking forward to what the year will bring. So far, Jonny has already introduced the new first year students to BMA at the first year retreat, helped everyone work on their pirate speak during “Talk like a Pirate Day”, and has been working hard at some new technology for the school. I have mostly been working on my teaching and cooking. We also celebrated Jonny’s 26th birthday with a surprise (for him, not for me) dinner and game night with some friends, a lovely dinner of homemade, Chicago style stuffed pizza, and a weekend hiking trip to the Tatras. The hiking just about killed me, but I survived and Jonny very much enjoyed it. We are excited be be back in our normal routine and are looking forward to what they year might bring.
Enjoy a few pictures from our summer and early fall…

Chandler siblings

Our sister-in-law, Judy, interviewing Jonny at WMBI

Our new nephew, Truman

On our way to visit Opa

In the Tatras

Talk Like a Pirate Day 2009

It is the last month of school and everyone, students and teachers alike, are ready for the holidays. Grades are finished in some classes, leaving those remaining, government-required class hours entirely meaningless. Other teachers wait until the last week to give their most important exams and students are understandably frazzled after facing an exam each day. Next Friday is the deadline for finalized grades and class trips start the following day.
I have always wanted to live in the same building as my friends and near cafe where I can go and be pretty confident that I’ll see someone I know at some point during the visit… and now I have both! AND Jonny and I get to have a Bible study with the totally awesome couple that lives upstairs from us. I love being able to walk to the river with my husband on random Thursday evenings. And I just found out yesterday that we have a dry cleaners in town!! Frýdlant is a great town.
The pitch floated in right down the pipe and I hammered it to deep center field. While the students oooo-ed and aaah-ed at the high arc of my blast, I started a celebratory victory trot around the bases. Caleb, a first year BMA student, was still backpedalling and squinting into the sun. Much to my chagrin, he stuck his glove up, brought down my home run ball, and tossed it back to the infield. ”You were out anyway,” the catcher gleefully reminded me. ”You threw your bat.” I knew I would regret letting my wife play for the other team.
As the resident adult, I was invited to give introductory topics to spark a couple of the spiritual discussions. On Friday morning, I lectured on “Surviving a Zombie Attack” before getting more serious and discussing how our daily lives are full of zombie like tendencies. The students then broke into small groups to discuss what they think really gives life meaning. After a full day of sports, games and workshops, our local youth pastor, Boža Lach, spoke that evening about what a relationship with God means. Again, students got to discuss the topic together before enjoying a late night of tea, music, and Frisbee.
For the rest of the day we continued our workshops and played baseball again before heading home. The atmosphere was excited, sweet, and close. I think the whole weekend embodies our vision for BMA. It is a place where students are empowered to dream, achieve, and enjoy themselves in a close family atmosphere; where students are challenged to think about important things; where they will hear the message of hope in Jesus, and can feel free and valued as they respond in any way; a place where students are encouraged to run with crazy ideas and do new things. Though it is full of Czech students, BMA is quite unCzech in these ways.


