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Yay!

October 13, 2011

On Tuesday our house was officially sold, closed, and recorded! We are one huge step closer to Kinshasa…

Stay tuned to hear about our next steps!

Just the facts…

October 6, 2011

Dinner is almost ready, but we’ve had an exciting couple of weeks…so I simply am sharing facts tonight:

  • Amelia is one month old today already!  How time flies.  She’s doing great and growing and growing.
  • We have our first real ministry partnership presentation on Sunday at our home church (where we were married).  It would be great if you could come!  We have made several other connections and are excited to see the Lord working with people around us in regards to our ministry.
  • And, just arrived in our email inbox, are the closing documents for our house.  Simply sign and overnight back to Fairbanks and our house is SOLD!

We are praising the Lord for His provisions and blessings in our journey!

Website Updated!

September 21, 2011

If you haven’t been to our website recently, check out the latest updates!
www.lindfamily.org

It’s a Girl!

September 12, 2011

Last Tuesday, at 6:15am, we welcomed Amelia Margaret Lind into our lives.  She was born after just five hours of labor and came in weighing 7lb 10oz and 19 inches long.  She has been an absolute delight in our family – so delightful, actually, that I complete spaced on updating our blog!  Levi is warming up to her and loves to gaze at her while holding her hand.  We are resting and recovering well – thanks for all of your prayers!

Daddy and one-day-old Amelia
Proud big brother, Levi
Amelia and Mommy ready for our first Sunday at church, September 11

Together Again!

August 28, 2011

Matthew and his brother decided to make a huge final effort and drove for 24 hours straight, from Dawson Creek to Tacoma, WA, surprising us with an early return on Wednesday.  It was a very exciting day to have husband/Daddy home unexpectedly and we were very grateful for their efforts and their safety.  The truck did amazingly well, needing only minor tune-ups after such a strong push.  Thursday and Friday Matthew was able to help his dad with a home emergency and yesterday was spent unloading and sorting the contents of the truck.  While most of it went into our long term storage unit, set until our return from Africa, some of it came back to my parents’ house to be unpacked and settled here.  Obviously, most of that is baby stuff.  Today we are resting but tomorrow will be unpacking…and nesting!  Something I’m really ready to do.  I have been having regular Braxton-Hicks (“practice”) contractions for the past few days and, once things are put away, we will be ready for baby’s arrival.  I’m just hoping Baby is okay with waiting another day or two!

In other exciting news, we got an offer on our house!  After a back-and-forth, we’ve accepted the offer and now the sale process begins.  Please pray that the next steps go smoothly and we close at the end of September, as planned.  It would be a huge relief to sell our house, especially before winter!

Our cats also made the drive down the AlCan and have safely arrived at their new home at Matthew’s sister’s house.  We are grateful to her and her family for taking them in; we know they will be loved and appreciated there.  We are excited for the opportunity to visit them occasionally and hear how they’re doing while we’re overseas.

I imagine the next post will be something about having a new baby, but I suppose that’s not really up to me.  In the meantime, please pray for all to go well with our house, that we can quickly unpack and be ready for Baby’s arrival, and that Baby will come safely!

Random Update

August 22, 2011

After over a week without a showing on our house I was starting to think the streak was over.  However, I just got a call that there is a showing tomorrow!  Please be praying that this is it!  It only takes one!  And a huge thank you to friends in the area who have offered to clean our house in preparation for showings – it makes all the difference in the world to us!

Matthew and his brother, Andrew, are somewhere in Northern British Columbia, though I can’t say specifically where.  That area is not exactly known for its high connectivity.  They last updated from Whitehorse, in Yukon, yesterday around noon.  The truck is running well and they were able to get a full night of rest after a long stretch of intense work packing up the house.  The planned/expected date of arrival is Friday, give or take.  That also happens to be the day I “turn” 37 weeks pregnant and can deliver safely with my midwife…it’s a good day for Matthew to be here!  (Literally as I was finishing this post I got a text from the boys: they are in Fort Nelson, BC and doing well!)

Levi and I are doing well on the homefront here…just waiting for Matthew/Daddy to come home.

Training and Our Summer

August 11, 2011

Training lasted another week and a half in Idaho.  We covered more ground with regards to life as a missionary, including learning all about diseases, cooking, culture, culture clashing, safety, and traveling.  It was mentally exhausting, but so enriching.  We were encouraged by the other candidates and shared in their joy as they were officially accepted with MAF and found out where they would serve.

At the end of our time, we were sad to leave our new friends and head back to WA where the work was waiting for us.  We have officially entered into our time called Deputation.  Deputation is where our full time job is to raise knowledge and support (both prayer and financial) for our mission work.  It will be an extremely tough time, living and working in close quarters all of the time.  It will be busy visitng churches and developing those relationships.  Overall, though, we are excited to see what God will show us and how He will lead those already called to support us who just don’t know it yet!

Once returning from Idaho to Washington, Matthew got to work around my parents’ house (where we will be living until Africa) with some chores while Levi and I helped Grandma clean the house for company.  My aunt and uncle from Kentucky came to visit for the past week and we were busy playing tourists.  We had a grand time and Levi was certainly a champ – being out all day, without a nap, and not getting much at home/alone time that he usually enjoys.

Sadly, Matthew flew back to Alaska Tuesday night and my aunt and uncle left yesterday.  So, Levi and I are back to waiting during Phase 2 of the moving process.  Currently, Matthew is working non-stop to get the house cleared out, things wrapped up, and the truck ready for the big drive down the AlCan.  His brother, Andrew, is there and will make the drive with him.  The hope is to leave early next week and take about eight days for the drive.

The goal is to be back before Baby arrives, of course.  Hopefully a few days to spare for unpacking will be available as well.  I think I can hold out until then…even though you wouldn’t think so in looking at my profile.  Baby gets carried entirely out front, making me look more uncomfortable than I really am, but I am finally at the stage where I can say that I am done being pregnant for now.  And I am getting anxious to meet this little person…is it a boy or a girl?  Only about five weeks to go!

In other news, we have found a wonderful home for both cats where they will be loved and cared for and, even better, stay in the family!  Due to the cost of shipping, Matthew and Andrew will have feline companions on their drive down to WA, so please be praying that all goes well.

On the house-selling front, no, we haven’t sold it, or even gotten an offer.  BUT, we have weekly showings and nearly every buyer and realtor has loved it.  Most buyers find it too small, so we know the right buyer is out there and we are waiting for God’s timing.  Actually, there is a showing RIGHT NOW…perhaps I will have to update sooner rather than later?  I can certainly hope and pray!

Levi is loving his big boy bed and the summer weather (I hear it’s been nothing but rain in our hometown in Alaska).  He is such a talker…if you spend more than 15 minutes with him, you’ll soon notice that nothing goes UNnoticed by that kid.  And he remembers everything.  Sometimes, his intelligence scares me…but he’s truly a delight.  At my midwife appointment this morning he remembered that he would get to “hear the baby” and couldn’t stop talking about it with Grandma, who was also with me.

I also enjoyed my 27th (gulp!) birthday yesterday.  Since we celebrated Tuesday, before Matthew and relatives left town, I got to have downtime and take a nap…yay!

Now that things are more calm and focused on our mission work, with one exception (baby), I do plan to update more often.  Thanks to those of you who reminded me that I posted hadn’t in a while.  Please pray that soon we will sell our house, that Matthew and his brother will have a safe drive and that Baby will STAY PUT until September.

Training: Week One

July 17, 2011

Our journey to Africa is full of steps and right now we are completing a very important step…training.  We have spent the last week in Nampa, Idaho, just outside Boise, and will be here until the 28th.  This training is generic “how to be a missionary” training that we thought would be a lovely experience.  It has been so much more than that!  Mission Aviation Fellowship is the most organized and thorough organization we’ve ever encountered and we’re glad to be working with them.  The training thus far has been invaluable.  I wish I would’ve had the energy to blog about each day, but the days have been so full and my super-pregnant body has not the energy by the end to do anything but sleep.  So, I will try to give a summary of what we’ve learned and encountered each day to give you an idea about the life of a missionary from a new perspective.  It is so much more complex than I’ve ever known.

Sunday: We flew in very late Sunday night, arriving in Boise just before 11pm.  So, we didn’t get to our temporary home until nearly midnight.  We were pleasantly surprised to find a beautiful one bedroom apartment, fully furnished with every detail covered.  Everything from baby supplies (even baby hangers in the closet), dishes, food in the cupboards, washer/dryer, and some basic necessities.  Even a flat panel TV above the fire place.  It feels like a home.  Maybe it’s not so important for us, only staying two and a half weeks, but for missionaries home on furlough or for others in our class who are here as career missionaries and will be staying nearly six weeks, the feeling of home is so much more important.  We are so grateful for the warm welcome after such a late night.  On the table was a binder full of information about the class, our names on the front, and a detailed schedule first-thing on the inside.  We reviewed it as best we could and fell promptly asleep.

Monday: Class begins at 8am each day and today started with the customary “what to expect” and logistics of the next few weeks.  Each day has been broken up with different speakers and topics so as to make the days not only more informative, but also more interesting.  There is nothing worse than “training” simply being an 8 hour lecture that you tune out within the first five minutes.

Oh, perhaps you are wondering about Levi?  Well, we were provided with sitters.  Two sisters (well, there are three and they take turns in pairs each day) come to our apartment just as we are leaving and hang out with him.  He is having a great time with them and the other kids here at the apartments.

Anyway, back to training…we played a game to get to know the other nine couples in our class.  Like I said, most are here because they’ve been led to be missionaries for their career.  Most are pilots and have already completed technical evaluations.  Next week they will each learn where they are headed to serve.  As one of the ladies put it to me: “Next week, I learn where I will raise my children.”  Isn’t that amazing?  I have such respect for each of our classmates and the dedication of their lives.  They are all about our age, most have children younger than Levi, so it’s a fun bunch of people for us to be around.

The CEO of MAF, John Boyd, came in to tell us about his vision for MAF and the mission statement.  I could write a whole paragraph on this amazing guy.  He did not become a Christian until he was 38 and here he is!  Amazing story…you can ask us about it.  We learned about the history of MAF through a great video, and then about the organization itself, the structure, strategy, and philosophy of their ministry.

The last part of the day was spent with the head of the Africa program, via Skype, who is on furlough in Michigan.  I suppose you could technically think of him as our “boss” somewhere in the chain.  He talked about each of the regions on Africa where MAF serves and what each place is doing.

Tuesday: We started with another Skype session, this time with the direction of the Eurasia program.  Since this program works in the Middle East, most of what we got to hear was incredible…and highly sensitive.  So, sadly, I cannot share it.  But trust me, it’s incredible and could use lots of prayer.  We did find it humorous that the Skype connection from the Middle East was better than with Michigan.  We heard from the director of the Indonesian program, who happened to be in Nampa for business.  Although he is currently the program director for MAF’s biggest program, he started out as a Base Maintainer there – the same job Matthew will be doing!

We learned about MAF’s other focus – technology.  Specifically in using appropriate technology in third world countries to spread the gospel where it is not welcome.  Again, I could write an entire blog post on this topic…but some of it is sensitive and this post is long enough already.

Wednesday: Each Wednesday MAF has company-wide chapel.  Our class will have the privilege (I think that’s how we look at it) of “hosting” the chapel this coming week…I’ll let you know how it goes.  We learned more about the direction MAF is taking as the world changes and globalizes.  We heard from the program directors in Latin America (via Skype from Ecuador) and Haiti (again, via Skype).  While the career candidates did their interviews in the afternoon, we other three families took a class on spiritual warfare in the mission field.  I do not look forward to encountering that.

Thursday: Thursday morning brought our first of three, hour-long, French lessons while the career candidates continued with interviews.  Our “teacher” is an MAF employee who is French born and raised.  Very exciting!  Matthew has experience with French, but I do not.  And, wow…it’s not going to be pretty.  While French is the official language in the DRC, Lingala is the most commonly spoken language by the nationals.

We took a class on conflict resolution, and discussed what travel planning looked like with the travel coordinator.  Passports, visas, shot records, plane tickets…that process will give each of us a headache, I think!

That afternoon we heard from a native Indonesian, who worked with MAF and now does consulting work out of California (MAF’s old home base).  He taught us all about crossing cultures.  Obviously, this is a huge topic for foreign missionaries.  He blended humor, Biblical truths, and his own experiences from around the world to tell us what to expect and how to deal with differences.  I am excited and prayerful about the culture clashes we will experience in the DRC.  I will post on the major cultural differences at another time.

Friday: Yay Friday!  The days are so full and mentally exhausting that by now, we are tired.  We began the morning with a Bible study that we will do each morning the rest of this coming week.  We heard more about their IT programs, disaster relief program (the story of MAF’s involvement after Haiti’s earthquake last year is at least one long blog post – they provided tower support for the air force and satellite connection for the UN, just to scratch the surface), and member care – the process MAF uses to take care of their missionaries.

Normally lunch is an hour break back at the apartment (across the parking lot) with Levi.  This particular lunch was for all of the MAF staff in the building to get to know us, Levi included.

That afternoon we met again with our French tutor to go over lists we had made of words we wanted to be able to use.  Matthew listed many words for fixing things: tools, parts, materials, while I listed household words that I use commonly throughout my day.  She explained that instead of trying to speak French…sentences, grammar, etc…we should be more like two-year-olds.  Using single words and pointing.  It gets our point across and is less stressful.  I like her philosophy!

We ended the week by meeting with a couple who both work for the home office now, but spent 18 years in the DRC, including during a few wars and when the country went from Zaire to the DRC.  We had spent a little time with them when we were here in January, but this time we grilled them with questions and they told us stories as well as about some major cultural differences.

On our own time, we had dinner Monday with the other families to celebrate a birthday.  Tuesday we had pizza with friends who lived in Fairbanks and moved to Boise in 2008.  Wednesday we celebrated Levi’s 2nd birthday by having some fries and cake at Applebee’s.  Thursday and Friday I think we were too tired to think about going anywhere.

Yesterday we had dinner with a family who just left Kinshasa and will be here in Nampa for a year working on an IT project for MAF.  It was fun to get yet another perspective on life there.  They were wonderfully honest and told us about the specific challenges ahead, but it really only encouraged us and made us even more anxious to get there and start work!

Today we attended a reformed church a few blocks away that was very friendly.  If you’re one of our friends from our church, Faith Pres, in Tacoma – the pastor did his undergrad at Covenant College.  What a small world!

This week promises just as much learning and mental exhaustion as well as a few surprises.  I look forward most to finding out where the career staff will be living.  I feel their excitement as if it were my own.

I will hopefully do a few posts expounding on a few of the topics that we heard about and what we’ve learned specifically about Kinshasa.  I also promise pictures soon too.  Now to get my sweet two-year-old to bed!

July Happenings

July 8, 2011

Levi and I (Lisa) have been in Western Washington for nearly two weeks now.  We’ve been taking it easy as I am trying to make Levi feel as comfortable as possible with all of the changes going on around him.  Plus, I’ve enjoyed getting some rest as I enter my third trimester of this pregnancy.  Tomorrow evening Matthew will fly in from Fairbanks.  Sunday evening all three of us will fly over to Boise, Idaho for our missionary training with Mission Aviation Fellowship.  This training will last until July 27th.  We will then fly back to Seattle/Tacoma and Matthew will spend a few weeks here before flying back to Fairbanks on August 10.  He will have just a few days to wrap up life in Alaska before driving down the AlCan (Alaska-Canadian Highway) with all of our worldly possessions.  We are hoping he makes it back with just enough time to spare to unpack the essentials (i.e., baby stuff!) before baby arrives.  Baby is “due” mid-September, but Levi was two weeks early and so I’m keeping all of September open, because perhaps this baby will decide to take his/her time.

Whew!  Please pray for us as we will be quite busy and taking in a lot of information while in Boise.  And the busy-ness will just snowball into fall with new baby’s arrival…it’s going to be one exciting summer!

Mud!

June 30, 2011

Such a boy!  This was taken by a friend in Alaska during one of our last days there…

Levi and I (Lisa) have arrived in Washington safely.  We are easing into life here.  I am getting caught up on some rest and Levi is getting used to his new surroundings.  Just over a week until we head to Idaho for our MAF training, which will last for two and a half weeks!  Matthew will join me at that point, so I am looking forward to seeing him soon, too.

Our prayer letters are out…have you received yours?