Showing posts with label Happiness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Happiness. Show all posts

Monday, 21 April 2014

Glass Half Empty


A glass would be anything but half empty if you left it outside these days. The rainy season has arrived and everyone knows it, each of the last 7 days has had it's share of precipitation, deluge even, and it looks to continue that way.



Recently it has become more obvious to me how deep the wounds are here. The British are famed for their stiff upper lip. That ability to grin and bear it and avoid conflict, emotions or generally anything sensitive at all costs. Yet I find here something that goes far beyond that but it is very hard to place. Perhaps it is just a complete de-sensitisation because the people here have seen so much that they have become numb. Maybe it is the ostrich move of sticking ones head in the sand and pretending that it never happened. Or somehow they have just learned to live with the loss of so much, knowing that all is not lost. For they still have their lives, if not their family, if not their dignity, if not their limbs, if not their pride, if not their happiness, they yet have life in them.
Who knows, perhaps no one, but all the same Rwanda still lives in the ashes of its past, limps on with the scars of yesteryear.

For our team to get anywhere in town we have to get a bus. 20p will get you anywhere in the city. This process involves a 15 minute walk down our local high street to the local bus station which consist of a dirt courtyard packed with people and various buses. You wait on the bus until its full and then hop off at your destination. Simple enough.

However, in the 15 minutes it takes to walk to the station you will pass people who are simply lying in the street in 30 degree heat, sometimes half on the pavement half in the road with a hand stretched out.

When you get to the bus station you have to push through the swarm of street vendors who flock to the white people. You learn the word for 'no' pretty quickly. Occasionally you will actually be grabbed (it is quite a tactile culture) by someone begging for money, though it is closer to demanding than begging really.

Once you have figured out which bus you need and get on the blind man will have managed to find his way on to the bus and will do the rounds as the bus fills up. If you turn your face from him to look out the window you will likely see more vendors trying to sell you anything from bread to USB sticks through the window. Occasionally they will disperse as though someone just started shooting at them. They don't pay taxes because none of their sales are recorded so their practice is illegal and they would rather not be caught by the heavily armed police. In their place you will find at your window a woman waving the stump of an arm that used to have a hand on the end of it gently thudding against your window, demanding your attention, your pity, your money. Eventually the bus fills and you pull away, the conductor will at some point ask for your 20p and you will place it into a scarred hand full of tattered cash. Then you arrive at your destination and start your day. There were many survivors of the genocide but none got through unscathed.

Despite all of this life goes on. They press on and most seem unaffected by what they see. In fairness most have seen far worse and the fact that the country is at peace is a blessing that outshines the scars of the past.

My Grandmother had a heart attack this week. She is several thousand miles away and I am at least 6 weeks away from being able to see her again. I am a very long way from home.

The longest Saturday of all time was probably the Saturday between good Friday and Easter Sunday. The one in whom the disciples had placed all of their hope, whom they had lived with for the past 3 years and who they believed to be the one who would win the victory of victories was brutally and publicly tortured and executed.

But Sunday came.



When all hope was lost and everything was at its darkest. After all the commotion and chaos and fireworks the ashes rested and there was the cold bitter taste of grief without a mote of hope to carry them.



Yet the tomb was empty. The resurrection, so far beyond expectation that even its evidence was met with scepticism but slowly it dawned. There was not just some hope remaining. There was the most secure, the most unwaveringly sure hope ever to have graced the face of this earth.
There is a resurrection.



There is hope like African rain that will fill your glass to overflowing. A hope in the new life, a new, unbroken body, a new heavens and a new earth. A hope that we go on beyond the veil.




Not an empty star gazing hope but a living, active and life changing hope that the glass is not half empty but filled to capacity. 


Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Cider


There are a few avenues that can be used to justify the brewing of cider... The fact that the colleges alcohol ban has just been lifted, I come from the west country so it's almost mandatory, we were given a crate of pairs for free or the fact that brewing alcohol has been a tradition within Christian institutes  for centuries. But the fact that it is just an interesting/amusing thing to do was probably a more significant factor in this evenings activities.


It takes a surprisingly short amount of time to conceptualise, plan and execute the production of cider. From the discovery that a crate of pears was up for grabs to sealed jars of pear juice waiting to ferment was no more than an hour. Tidy work for a Wednesday evening.


While making cider is an art form; developed, tweaked and perfected by professionals (monks) over the years it is actually very simple to make a plain old brew. With a 5 minute google search it is easy to find a recipe that involves less than 3 ingredients (results may vary)


Of course when a whole crate of fruit presents itself, it comes with the opportunity to experiment! For the first batch we decided to go purist - no added yeast, nothing fancy just pear juice and touch of sugar... okay a fist full of sugar.


Things seemed to go our way, we happened upon an old juicer (it required a thorough cleaning) which saved us the curfuffle of pressing the pears by hand. In hindsight it would have probably been a pretty spectacular fail if we hadn't found the juicer.



Juicing pretty much anything tends to leave one in possession of rather a lot of pulp, we have thought about it a bit and a few ideas have been banded about including pear flavored home made sausages, pear jam, pear cake?! Anyway if you have a good idea for what to do with it and better still if you can provide proper instructions/ recipe then maybe we will make it ... maybe.


Until then David is going to have to figure out a green solution for disposing of it.


This is the slightly disgusting-looking result of 'juicing' the pairs... then just to sieve and store it


In other news our South African got bored of waiting and raided our warm dry cupboard full of meat ... the results were rather enjoyable...


So now you can know that the instructions in my previous post do actually result in delicious biltong. We now have room to experiment with some more exotic recipes.

Title font used: 'Lost Highway' 

Saturday, 18 February 2012

Friends#1


A closer look at some of the amazing people that I am sharing the next 6 months with, I have only been here 2 weeks and I am already know as the 'camera guy' which I am quite happy about, people are getting used to the fact that it is not in my interest to take bad photos of them and as a result tend to freak out less when a large lens is pointed their way.



It is amazing how quickly it is possible to get to know quite a few people - and of course make friends - when you spend a lot of time with them, sharing a room and every meal time with other people takes me back to my boarding school days which are very fond memories.


I have heard more life stories since being here than in any other 3 week period of my life and it is amazing to hear how vastly different our backgrounds are and how phenomenally consistent God is to all of us.




We are currently doing 6 weeks of training called 'inside out' the idea being that we deal with that which we have kept inside, and bring it out into the open in order that transformation might take place. As you might imagine it is pretty intense. It is so amazing to watch people going through this process and seeing their whole demeanour change as deep healing takes place - it is one of the most profound miracles I have witnessed and those of you who know me will understand the weight of that statement.




So what have I actually done over the past week?

  • Heard the most insane (wicked awesome) conga playing ever
  • Taken 2(!) trips to the local mall the first of which was intensely boring as I had no money
  • Purchased a mosquito net! (suck on that mosquitoes - oh wait you can't cause there is a net in the way!)
  • Made 2 very close friends - I know quick work ehy? (p.s this was a massive answer to prayer thank you to people who prayed)
  • Had a candle lit meal?! (More photos may feature)
  • Lead a bible study on 1 John 1
  • Attempted to no avail to call home a couple of times (If you are reading this PICK UP THE PHONE!) 
  • Took around 100 photos
  • Laughed - ALOT
  • Took a walk (and a swim) in the rain (yes there was rain and yes there will be a blog post on it cause it was amazing and unfortunately no I don't have a picture of me walking in the rain because it doesn't mix with cameras too well)
  • Fried enough bacon to feed 70 people - bacon is so good.
  • Had a bonfire!
  • Witnessed more lightning that I have done in England in 20 years of living there.
  • Saw the sick healed (?!?!)
  • Loved Life
  • Glorified God


And now some photos where I actually feature - quite rare.



Title font used 'AR DECODE'

Saturday, 28 January 2012

Oh Happiness


This has been the soundtrack to my life for the past couple of days - I managed to get my hands on my South African visa on Friday, over a month after submitting it and that made me feel happy ... very happy.



I didn't realise how stressed I had actually been about the whole thing until I had been relived of it. I have just become aware that I have not really been functioning properly for at least a couple of weeks not really being able to focus on organising myself because there is always the niggling thought that I might not actually be going. That said it has definitely been a 2 weeks well spent praying that the visa would come through and it did! How much sweeter the South African air will taste now that I have had to endure to obtain it. I am now extremely excited about the next 6 months and all it has in store for me. Bring on the balmy 30 degrees (centigrade for all you american readers)

Getting currency was one of those things that the niggling doubts prevented but on my way home from the South African Consulate I picked some up and now all I have left to do is pack - which is fairly easy given that I can pretty much fit everything I own into a couple of bags.


It's quite strange collecting currency, there are few times when one is walking around with plies of cash in ones' hand and for good reason. It was a little unnerving to have a small line of people behind me listening to the cashier count out rand into the thousands. If they hadn't heard that it was Rand they could be forgiven for thinking that I was loaded. On that note - I think it would have been far more unnerving to have the same situation in South Africa where robbery is somewhat more likely ...


The conversion rate from sterling to rand is about 1:12 but even though I know that I have never felt so bad ass carrying a £20 note I mean seriously - it has a cheetah on the front!


O.K, moving on from money ...

... and on to tea



This is a retake of a photo I uploaded to Facebook recently stating that I had had a productive day except this has a significantly higher stack of tea bags than that one did.

 On a separate but related note about a month ago now I was kept up for the first time due to the affects of caffeine, a bizarre and strange happening as it had never happened to me before despite regularly drinking many cups of tea immediately before bed and if you know me or have read certain posts here then you know that I drink an awful lot of tea and this made me think that the amount of caffeine that I take in cant be great for me and now that it is actually affecting me I should do something about it.
If you combine this thought with the realisation  that for a month my house mate and I had mistaken the decaf jar of tea for the normal tea and as a result had drunk and given all our guests decaf tea for that length of time without noticing then you come to the realisation that you should just drink decaf and so that stack of tea bag you see up their it doesn't represent and caffeine at all.

O.K this is starting to feel like a couple of posts rolled into one and 'Oh happiness' may have finished now, depending on your reading speed (I read super slowly) and if that is the case then you should just go here and listen to the rest of the album and then buy it because it is amazing.

If that does not take your fancy then let your ears suck on this:





There is quite a bit of music getting a mention and that is because I have been preparing for the epic amount of travelling that is going to take place which means that a good amount of non repetitive music is a must.
and on that note check out  this album by Switchfoot - Hello hurricane at only £4 it is a steal.
and this cover by James Vincent McMorrow is better than the original - Higher Love

I think we are done here enjoy - it may be a little while until I can post again.

Title font 'Travel Typewrighter'