The House Collective

  • housewares
  • playhouse
  • house calls
  • on the house
  • house church
  • schoolhouse
  • onehouse

big dreams.

September 24, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

Stephen has big dreams that he’s often recounting to me. A number of them revolve around a recording studio, and some day putting his college degree to positive use.  And the longer we’re here, the more those dreams capture the music of the oppressed and incorporate the lives of those around us.

His dreams are most often overwhelming to me. We’ve just arrived here, and it seems difficult to dream of another step ahead of us. I also get caught up in the practicalities of it all; that we don’t have $4000 to purchase the microphone you’d need, or even $300 for the “cheaper” one.

I’m learning, and really praying, for ways to be more of an encouragement to these dreams rather than simply a realist.

We all know that realism is really just pessimism with a better name anyway.

Here is the current glass that is just over the half mark: there is a company, Sweetwater, that sells music and recording gear. They have a monthly giveaway that Stephen keeps his eye on. September’s giveaway is a package of microphones worth $27,000–and he’s excited. He’s already registered–well, his dad has since you have to be stateside–and hoping. His mind is already turning with the possibilities this could hold.

So I’ve started praying he might win this, and I was wondering if you could, too.

And he would like to know if any of you would be willing to go register for the microphone package with a willingness to give it away 🙂

Here’s to dreaming big.

so we gave them oranges.

September 23, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

We were busy cleaning up our house today–quite a way to spend the day off–and suddenly heard our gate opening and shouting in the yard. We ran to the window to find some our neighbors shouting between each other and running around frantically.

Something was happening. Or as we soon learned, someone was coming.

And for the next little while, we had six guests hiding behind our house. There is a small walkway that goes past our water tank and behind the house along the drainage canal.

IMG_6725

We brought them a bowl of oranges.

There were so many things to communicate: You are welcome here; stay as long as you need. Is there something we can do to help? What is happening? Who is coming? Can I get you anything? What do I do while you hide?

So we gave them oranges.

I snuck out the backdoor and simply bent down to give them a bowl full of little oranges, attempting to communicate friendship, welcome, support, encouragement, and love in one fell swoop. One little bowl of oranges.

I suppose the story was really told in their faces.

The older woman, maybe in her seventies or eighties–she looked scared.

And the men–they hung their heads; in embarrassment, it seemed.

And the teenage girls, who have spent many an afternoon playing in our yard, just brightened at the oranges.

The gate was left shut, and after some time everyone came out from hiding. They thanked us and left.

As we were preparing to move to Thailand, someone shared a story with us about a missionary who was living in a village and often welcomed the locals into her home. People were often visiting, and one day a young girl came to simply sit with her. The girl explained that for everyone in the village, this was their favorite place to be because it was peaceful.

We have prayed that over our house: that our house would be a place of peace and safety. That the Lord’s presence would be felt here; that in some way it might be a sanctuary.

Maybe a sanctuary that provides oranges when necessary.

Later this afternoon, we found a man sleeping on our porch chair.  This is a unique situation–there are few adults that will come around the house. They seem hesitant, and much more keen to watch the children from the road.

And we hope that today it might be because he just felt he could sleep peacefully.

keeping it light.

September 21, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

In an effort to not drown us all in sorrows, we’ll turn to When Parents Text–a pretty hilarious site of texts sent between kids and their parentals.

This made us laugh.

wpt jpg

 

happy world peace day.

September 21, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

Happy World Peace Day!

Yes, that really is a day, and it’s now.

“When we truly discover love, capitalism will not be possible and Marxism will not be necessary.” -Will O’Brien

This quote always makes me think; and somehow fitting for achieving world peace.

the good, the bad, and the ugly.

September 20, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

I don’t really know a better way to say it.

But I do know I prefer to start with the good.

First, we celebrated Stephen’s birthday on Saturday. We organized a rest day for the team to enjoy a local cooking class and dinner with our boss while we celebrated!

We started by sleeping in until about 10am. A rare and cherished treat.

Stephen then got to open seven packages that had arrived in the week prior!

IMG_6673Everyone knew him so well, and our cupboards are now stacked full of mint chocolate treats, Reeses, and American cereals!  He also got American deodorant & body wash, and some new polos and white tees. Add in some new music and movies, and he was pretty excited.

Katherine & I went together to get him a ukelele, too, so he went to pick one out in town that day.  He has been so excited to learn and has spent the last few evenings practicing.

We’ve been eyeing bicycles ever since we moved, so I went ahead and ordered him one for his birthday. We had been faithfully searching for a used one in the local equivalent of a classifieds, but in the end I decided I’d rather spend a little more on him and get what he’d always wanted. He now has a nice bike, where the brakes work, all the gears change easily, and the 19″ frame fits him!  It’s affectionately named Chuck.

IMG_6677

After we went to pick up his bicycle, which he was so excited about and so surprised at, we realized that we now had two forms of transportation: neither of which I could use.

So we went shopping for a bicycle for me!

That was a fun surprise. I’m a little less picky–my dream bike was just a cute frame with a basket. I didn’t particularly want gears since I don’t use them anyway, so it made it easier to find a simple used bike for me. We bought it from a wonderful little Burmese family, and they did include the basket.

She’s named Lucy.

And now, we both have our dream bicycles! We went for a ride that afternoon that adequately broke in Stephen’s mountain bike and took Lucy for the ride of her life. We’re loving it, and actually got caught in the rain just a few hours ago on another ride. We are really looking forward to biking to work, the market, and around town.

We really enjoyed the day off, and Stephen had a great birthday.

It was good.

More good?

The team that has been in town came out to our neighborhood yesterday to teach about good hygiene. The neighbor children that so often fill our porch were there as usual, but this time they were greeted with a lesson in hand washing!

IMG_6694After teaching the importance of keeping clean hands, each child had a chance to practice, and received their own soap to take home with them.  The team also taught about brushing teeth and flossing, and were able to use a huge set of teeth to show the kids.

IMG_6701Each child also received a toothbrush, toothpaste, and floss to take home with them. We also gave out some clothing we’d been collecting for the community. The team was so willing to help, and it was a great opportunity to bless our neighbors, but through visitors, so that we can hopefully continue to develop friendships rather than simply provide for needs.

And through translation, we’re still discussing the garden. There have been repeated miscommunications, but we have pumpkin, okra, and bananas successfully growing. (Sadly our papaya tree fell down during a recent storm.) We’re grateful that it seems to now be understood that they can use the garden freely for their community–not just working for us. We had people out working in the yard when we awoke this morning!

We are really loving where we live. I love walking out the door into big hugs. I love coming home to so many hellos and always having the opportunity to sit down on the porch for a game.  I love learning to communicate and having my definition of friendship redefined.

IMG_6684

We are nearing the end of our fourth team to visit Partners, and we are looking forward to a full month in the office to develop curriculum, evaluate the teams that have come through, and continue our Karen studies.

And that little stint in the office will be followed by the long-awaited visit from my sister & brother-in-law.

It’s all so wonderful, and we’re excited.

That’s the good.

The bad? The ugly?

Some fellow staff members were recently robbed over night, having their motorbike, three Mac laptops, and two SLRs taken. It shook them up quite a bit, so we’d appreciate your prayers for them as well as our own safety–personally & our belongings here.

Amidst the boxes we received for Stephen’s birthday, one of the soaps had leaked onto some of the candy suckers that had been included. We sorted through and picked out the ones unblemished (or slightly blemished…) and threw the rest away.

And today, as we drove away to meet the team, we passed the neighbor kids with suckers in their mouths.

I distinctly remember one little girl, being held by her dad, with a big smile on her face–eating the sucker I had discarded.

And I guess thats just a small example of how I this town can weigh on you sometimes.

I’m learning much better how to take one day at a time, one moment as it comes. To love the child in front of me; to take this unexpected turn without thinking of the five more that will probably be coming.  I don’t know how long we’ll be here, and I guess I know now more than ever that it doesn’t matter. I just live here–for now, and do my best to love well. To stop defending myself, to stop worrying about what patterns this is setting; but maybe just cherishing this moment, this smile, this bike ride, this one new word added to my vocabulary.

But I can still sense the weight of living in this world between.

I can still sense the sorrow that surrounds us and the battle at hand.

We were watching Prince Caspian last night, since Stephen received The Voyage of the Dawn Treader for his birthday. There is a scene where Peter leads the army into attack the Telmarines within their gates. The plan goes awry, and they are forced to flee–but many die. The scene shows many of them locked inside the gates, unable to retreat with the rest.

And for some reason as we watched this, it represented us. It represented the battle we’re fighting, and I began to cry.

I guess that’s the ugly of it: that sometimes it all feels so heavy and I’m just grasping at straws to focus on the little joy in front of me.

Sometimes family and friends feel so far away.

Sometimes the battles feel so big.

“For we know that the whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves, who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we were saved. Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what he sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.”

Romans 8:22-25

looking forward.

September 18, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

“The angel of the Lord showed me the river of the water of life, bright as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb through the middle of the street of the city; also, on either side of the river, the tree of life with its twelve kinds of fruit, yielding its fruit each month. The leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations. No longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and his servants will worship him. They will see his face, and his name will be on their foreheads. And night will be no more. They will need no light of lamp or sun, for the Lord God will be their light, and they will reign forever and ever.”

Revelation 22:1-5

book review.

September 12, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

For the past five years, I’ve attempted to keep up my reading and research of Burma. Each book has presented a different aspect of the same conflict: the victim of a targeted ethnic minority, the Western researcher that has given her life to historical research, the victim of socialist policies, the Westerner who lives among the people and writes of his quest for democracy, the Westerner who lives among the people and writes of his quest for Christianity, the victim who has resettled and begun a new life; the list goes on.

I find it most challenging when people ask which book they should read about Burma. Each book creates a more balanced, more holistic view of the situation–of every ethnic group, of every party, of every religion, of every army.

And it is the valiant effort at a balanced portrait of Burma that I loved most about my most recent read. I just finished Nowhere to be Home, part of the Voice of Witness project. I had seen it was in the making about a year ago, and I’ve been watching their website since. It finally came out, and I immediately paid the money to have it shipped here to Mae Sot.

IMG_6612

Voice of Witness writes their books using oral histories, interviews, and stories to document social justice issues. They work for years to gather multiple interviews, various perspectives, and to go through the process of translations, editing, etc.  This particular volume about Burma includes personal accounts from Karen, Burman, Shan, Kachin, Mon, Rakhine, Chin, Karenni, and Rohingyan.  It includes stories of former SPDC soldiers, victims of trafficking, political prisoners, resettled refugees, migrant workers, and more.  It has stories of all ages, with perspectives from Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, Bangladesh, and the US.

And it captured me.

So much, really, that I’m passing it on.

I wanted to include a few excerpts, too, from my favorite narrative.  Toward the end of the book, Law Eh Soe, a Karen refugee that has been resettled to New York, was interviewed. As I read his account of being a photojournalist in the ’88 Uprising and his photos from the 2007 Saffron Revolution being broadcasted around the world, I was reminded of everything that has captured me about the Karen. His story said it all: an oppressed, struggling people that somehow seem more defined by their optimism and generosity.

I know, this is quite a bit to call it an “excerpt”–but it was all I could do to not type out the entire chapter for you, and even that was more to avoid copyright infringement than to avoid the typing.

————

“I loved that Yashica MG-1. I started taking pictures of church events, like weddings and ceremonies. So after those first years, I really knew ow to use the camera. One day, my very respected Christian minister came to discuss cameras with me. He told me, ‘I have committed to go in a few days to Naga Hills as a missionary. I will stay there for over five years, and I need to document it with a camera.’

Then I thought of something. I told him, ‘You take my camera. Yeah, you take my camera.’

‘But why? Do you have an extra camera? How will you take photos?’

‘No, you take it. God will provide for me.’ He was surprised, but it made me feel wonderful. It was my only camera, but ten years later, I had three or four cameras. But I’ll never forget that, because you always have to give the best of what you have.” (p.402)

————

[a few days into the 2007 Saffron Revolution, after Law Eh Soe participated as a photojournalist and protestor]

“I knew the government was looking for me because just after I left, they raided my friend’s house where I had been hiding for a week. I only stayed in Rangoon for two days. Then I left and went out to the border area. I stayed on the Burma side of the border, because I had a good relationship with some people there. So this time, when I was in trouble, they helped me out. It’s like a movie–but it’s not like Hollywood.

When I got to the border area, I received help from some friends. When I was there, a man I knew from before gave me a satellite phone. ‘You can call anytime you want.’ He brought a TV from the city and he set it up for me with a satellite dish so I could see what was happening in Rangoon.

And then, for the first time in my life, I saw that CNN, the BBC, and Al Jazeera had all used my picture. This was the most wonderful thing in my life, I was so proud. I can’t compare my skills with many other photographers–I’m not a good photographer, but I can do something. In the 1988 uprising, mostly Westerners came and took photos inside Rangoon. In 2007, this was my time. Also, I saw that in Norway, some people were protesting Burma’s government because they were shooting and killing the monks. A few countries went to protest before the Burmese Embassy, and they were using the photo I took. I thought,  Yeah, this is wonderful!  That’s my picture!  I was very proud of it.” (p.407-408)

————

“On March 18, I had to leave Thailand. I reached America on March 19, 2008. It was my birthday. Before the plane landed at JFK airport, I was still thinking about how I spent those two months in a remote area in Burma, and then now, I could see the Statue of Liberty. It was a wonderful moment. But the very simple thing was that my mom wanted to see me. My mother had been resettled in Buffalo in 2005, with my youngest brother. It had been almost six years since the last time I saw her. Like many people in Karen State, my family was suspected of supporting the KNU. Because of this, my mother and brother had to flee to the Nu Po refugee camp. My other brother fled even earlier and was resettled in 2000.

I had to sleep one night in New York. It was like another planet. But the thing is, it wasn’t a big culture shock for me because I read the newspaper and magazines, and I watch TV. I thought, So now I’m in the land of opportunities.

When I was in Burma, I’d never been cold. But here I’ve been in the cold many times. In Buffalo, I worked in a communication product company for a month. After only one month there, the refugee agency came and said, ‘We need you.’ So that’s why I went to work with them, and I’ve been there for almost nine months already. Working as an interpreter is a wonderful experience. I’ve been to schools, the hospital, the clinic, police stations–several places. I interpret for people from Burma: Karen, Burmese, Chin, and Arakanese. Also, I’m going to college now. I’m studying social sciences in Buffalo. Classes are wonderful, but I hate math. It’s awful for me and I’m not interested in it. I started writing some essays that I sent in to a Burmese website.

I’m living with my mother, my two younger brothers, their wives, and my niece. Buffalo is like the unofficial capital of refugees in New York. Resettled refugees have a wonderful life here. In every place, every corner of the world, they have different kinds of opportunities. But at the same time, there are challenges. For older people, the language barrier is a challenge. Also, culture shock. Young people adapt easily and quickly–it’s both a good thing and a bad thing.

Sometimes it makes me sad. One day, I went with a refugee woman to the clinic. While we were waiting at the clinic, we had a conversation. She said, ‘Yeah, we have a good life. Good social services. But the thing is, I miss my mountains, my river.’ She just said it simply, you know. But it made me sad. Nothing is like home–for me too. But in life, almost 75 percent of what happens, you never expect. The thing is how you deal with the challenges. You can see the cup is half empty, or you can have a half full cup. I always see it as half full.

I want to stay low profile, so I don’t usually want to do interviews. But a journalist came from Buffalo News to interview me, and they published an article about me. So that’s why when I go to the store or the clinic, they know that I’m a journalist. I think the people should know, so that the next generation knows what we have come through.

In America, I get $10 an hour. In a month, that’s 2,000-something dollars. Maybe for American people, it’s very little money. For me, it’s more than enough. I have a wonderful life. I just share my payment with my mom, and buy food. I only save some money to buy books. People told me I should go to the library, but although I love to read, I love to underline books too. I want to set up a library One day when I go back to Burma, I will ship all my English books to Burma and I will leave the Burmese books here.

So many Karen people are stateless, but at least now I can apply for permanent residence. At least here we belong to some country. I love Buffalo–we are already Buffalonian. My mom has a wonderful life here, after suffering for almost thirty years.

But just a month ago, my mother was diagnosed with colon cancer. She is going to have a major operation on July 22. It’s like God’s timing because she kept praying to see me, and now I’m by her side, you know? She’ll have her operation in a few days.

The thing is, life is like that. Nothing is permanent under the sun, my friend. I feel sad sometimes to have left Burma, but now I’m beside my mom. I’m very close to her, you know, so she is very happy that I am here. I have two brothers who are both married and have families now. But I’ve stayed single, so I can be beside my mom. She’s very happy. It’s God’s timing. Simple faith is the most important thing I’ve learned from my mother.” (p.409-411)

————

“As Mother Teresa said, ‘We cannot do great things. We can only do little things with great love.’ When I was a teenager until I was twenty-three or twenty-four, I admired Che Guevera. And now in my thirties, I admire Mahatma Gandhi and Mother Teresa and the way they see the world. They live very simply. They act very simply. And also they did great things with big hearts. It’s wonderful.” (p.412-413)

his time.

September 11, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

We visited Dr. Simon’s bible school outside of Mae La today.  The school began in 1983 in Burma and was moved into Thailand, right outside Mae La camp, in 1990 to flee the Burmese government.

“We came to Thailand in 1990. Our motto was ‘God can do anything.’ And we believed it is true. We prayed and we studied.  Then we are here one year. Two years, then five years, and now twenty-one years. And now our motto is ‘God can do anything in His time.'”

healthy schmealthy.

September 10, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

We’re here, busy with a new team in town!

And we have a request.

Please pray for health. After one day of good hearing, Kelli came down with a cold-like something. It led to her hearing going out again, plus a sore throat that has stolen her voice. This is quite a challenge when dealing with a team, where we spend a lot of time conversing and answering questions.

And this team has a lot of questions.

Stephen, also, has recently had some pain in one tooth. And we can safely say now that we don’t have the funds, energy, or desire to go back to Chiang Mai for legitimate doctors.

So we’re just praying it will all go away.

Will you pray for this, too?

 

waiting for skype.

September 7, 2011 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

Photo on 2011-09-06 at 16.36

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 101
  • 102
  • 103
  • 104
  • 105
  • …
  • 121
  • Next Page »
  • about
  • connect
  • blog
  • give
Copyright © 2025 ·Swank Theme · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress · Log in