… and Covid continues


School starts tomorrow and this is 110,000% not how it was supposed to look. It’s still March, isn’t it? We can’t possibly have been under quarantine for 162 days… it just doesn’t seem real. And yet, here we are just trying to find a rhythm, purpose, and joy in the endless monotony.

After so many weeks of not being able to do, it feels good to finally get back to work, albeit not at all what I had intended. There are students and staff scattered across multiple continents, countries, and timezones (and you thought it was bad that your local school would be some hybrid version of “remote”). It’s a lot, trying to prepare for classes that were not designed or intended to be taught online, but I’ve seen our staff come together in amazing ways over the last 2 weeks as we work on getting this school year off the ground.

90% of what I would normally do, remains on hiatus. I miss my work, my team, the kids, and the theater life. I could say “if only we’d known that this time last year we were starting the last production we’d stage for a very long time…”, but the truth is we didn’t take it for granted and I’m even more grateful now than when Curtains was canceled, that we didn’t. We knew it was special and that God was in control. And he still is. As a wise student recently said to me, I need to stop mourning the loss of what should have been and do whatever I can to make the most of what is.

So I will do my best to give the students a good experience with photography and oral interp, work with the student leaders to redefine what their leadership looks like in this insanity, play staff meeting videos on 2x speed, and send marco polos all over the world. (Those last two are just some of the benefits that have come along with all this, heh. )

In the words of the HSD bard, “Stay safe, stay sane.”

I don’t think of all the misery, but of the beauty that still remains. –Anne Frank

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Leaving on a helicopter

So we flew on a jet plane north to Tuguegarao (it’s just as much fun to say as it is to spell)

Commence Life Change

This is the face of how Hannah and I feel about May. It’s a no good terrible rotten time. Too much change, too many goodbyes, beginning a love hate/relationship with skype. But that is the life we lead, it is the nature of the expat/missionary life. When you venture to a place far away from the home and people you grew up with the world suddenly becomes a much bigger place. You can’t unmeet people and forget that life is going on without you in each new place anymore than you can forget that life goes on in the place you grew up, went to school, church etc. Sometimes I’m like whhhhy did I open that door? I cannot shove it shut! I cannot forget you people! But then I recognize that it’s only such a painful experience because it’s such a great experience. In the end, your world gets smaller because your friends begin to populate the areas between you and the people you love that are furthest from you. I could just play hopscotch across the globe and find pieces of my heart that were stolen from me (okay okay, I gave them willingly). Anyway, you get the idea.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream

This post is hard for me to write. Mostly because it’s hard to describe the experience with words. For those of you know the kind of experience I had with my senior theatre project at Cedarville then you understand exactly the kind of emotions, awe, and wonder that this production evoked. It truly was a midsummer night’s dream. NOT intentionally PUNNY! (The hot season in the Phils or summer is from from March to May. Our play was April 24-26. :o) The great thing about Shakespeare is that it a blank canvas, you can do whatever you want with it. But I’ve come to realize that the blank canvas can also be TOTALLY overwhelming when you aren’t an abstract thinker. Thankfully, I had willing people around me who stepped up to help brainstorm, design, choreograph, buy fabric, paint, sew, and tell me the ideas I did have weren’t crazy (even when they were). I felt like the luckiest director in the world as I sat in the audience and watched our creation come to life.

Corregidor

For those of you who do not know what or where Corregidor is (and there’s a good chance you don’t really know since history books

Blog Categories