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surreal, but nice: five.

December 18, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

A few other special notes that were particularly surreal, but particularly nice. 

This was our first autumn to be back in America in a very, very long time. Eight years, in fact. 

Honestly, I’d forgotten what it was like. There would be times driving down tree-lined roads in Thailand, with dead leaves falling from trees, I’d note that it felt like fall.  But it isn’t really about the falling, it’s the colors. It’s beyond description!

I found myself practicing conversations in Burmese with our neighbors, trying to explain to them the incredible vibrancy of the colors: the reds and yellows and oranges, so bright, so bold, and then they just fall! I found myself picking up leaves and gluing them into my notebook, just trying to capture it. 

I am so glad we were there for a fall this year. 

We were married in the fall, and thus celebrated our anniversary  among the fall colors this year!

While we limited our travel as much as possible, we had some really sweet friends make drives to see us. In most cases, it was a significant sacrifice of money and time to do that, and we are really, really thankful. 

I–and really, we–were able to work with these guys with The Spero Project for just a year in OKC. It was a short year, but it has sparked a great friendship. We are thankful for the moments we get with them.

And for the time we get with their incredible, spunky kids!

This friend also came through town (and her amazing family, but didn’t snap that group photo, so…) for a job interview for her husband, and I am so thankful for the time we had!

These guys drove their family of six a long twelve hours for a weekend together! We loved it.

After meeting and doing life together in Mae Sot, it was fun to catch up and chat stateside. People who know you on both continents are few and far between. 

This mentor and hero of ours met with us faithfully twice a week, starting some early mornings over coffee and bagels. The hours of wise words, advice, counsel, and truth he pours over us are hard to capture. We’re just honored to know him and thankful he has walked this road with us since before we were married. Paul, you’re a faithful friend and we thank the Lord for you and the moments we get together.

The two most popular questions about living overseas:
What are the toilets like?
What foods do you miss most? 

I miss Zaza’s House Salad: spinach and greens, pecans, blueberries, strawberries, goat cheese, and a vinaigrette.  The BEST. And lots of things we don’t often get here. 

But we did get to enjoy a date out for salads 😍

And last, one of the things Stephen loves to do in big cities is visit the Apple store. Some of them are “flagship stores” that offer different classes or trainings, have unique designs…I’m not sure. But we go. And since we don’t buy anything, it’s a cheap activity! We’re both winning 😂

This was in Chicago, in the huge store of glass they have there. And–spoiler!–we also visited the newest flagship store in Paris and there’s another photo of that coming! 😁😂  
#thethingsyoudoforpeopleyoulove

surreal, but nice: four.

December 17, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

And those surreal, but nice moments with the Bluniers!

Meal times are one of my favorite things to come back for. Thankfully, they happen all year 😄

I love being gathered around a table, often with laughter, often with better food than I’m used to! This company is what I miss most, and thus, what feels the most surreal and the most nice.

We limited our travel on this trip, since it was already so full; but so many people traveled to see us! One of those was my grandmother and her husband, which meant so much to us. 

Throughout the year, I’ve been in a Book Club with my niece. We’ve been reading The Giver series and Skyping to discuss it. While I was stateside, we got to meet for our Book Club in person at Starbucks!

She also chose to do her school project on Myanmar, so we met to practice a few phrases of Burmese and for me to answer some questions. 

I attempted to teach her a few of the games the kids in the neighborhood play. This one requires rocks, which are surprisingly hard to find near a Starbucks parking lot…so we used the cough drops in my bag. Either way, it was hilarious; and we were throwing cough drops all over Starbucks and then chasing them down.

I think I’ll love this photo forever. It’s already on my wall. 

While Stephen helped my parents with an Apple purchase, I [got bored and] popped over to Anthropologie. Here I found my sister, who had left her kids with another sister during an appointment and “ran by Anthropologie” on the way to pick them up. She was caught by all of us. 

And I have just never run into my sister in a store in Thailand, so…loved that.

We caught my sister’s birthday, too! A walk in the park, with kids, cake pops, and coffee for the win!

I must say, I thought cake pops were overrated. How good could they be?

This was my first cake pop ever. I got cookie dough. Folks, this was a ball of cookie dough, covered in icing, and called a cake pop!

Pretty sure I went home and told Stephen we needed to fit in as many cake pops before we left as possible. That might explain why our neighbors welcomed us back with our traditional greeting, “You’ve gotten so white and fat!”

These were our last ones as we left Chicago.

 We tried to take a family photo. And they wanted to stand here. 😂

surreal, but nice: three.

December 17, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos 1 Comment

Since our goal for the time in America was to see our families, these are my favorite, surreal moments with the Spurlocks!

The last time we left America, Kat was pregnant with twin girls. Instead of dwelling on the milestones we missed, I’ll just say I’m glad we got to meet them sooner than we thought! 

We celebrated Stephen’s birthday when we arrived, and later Rex’s birthday. I love the memories around this table.

They did a Christmas meal for us before we left, with all the traditions! 😍

We all went to a Razorback football game as a family, my first one! So much fun, and one of the few they won this year. 😬

The sun was coming from the right side, and I hope I never forget Rex putting on his hat sideways. To be fair, Stephen & I both came home with one side of our face burnt, so kudos to the smart ones of the crew!

On Rex’s birthday we went out to lunch in his Chevelle and ate at a fish restaurant that was very “Spurlock.”  One of my favorite days we had. 

surreal, but nice: two.

December 16, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

This is mostly a collection of what I don’t want to forget. Perhaps it was so surreal and so nice, I want to cherish and re-cherish all the details. 

This is how tired we were when we left. 

We landed first into Paris, where we planned to spend a couple hours in the train station before we left on the 5am train. 

Well, the train station closes, which no one we had chatted with seemed to know! Whoops. We couldn’t find a restaurant open or a coffee shop, or really much of anything within walking distance with two large suitcases. So instead, we found a bus stop. This provided a seat and a glass wall to block the wind, making the 50 degree weather a little more bearable to us. We opened up our suitcases to change Stephen’s Chacos for Converse; and we pulled out every warm layer we brought. Every single one, which really wasn’t that much. We wore it all, then huddled down between our suitcases (also wind blockers), and waited out the three hours until our train arrived!  

Once we arrived, soon-to-be-friends were waiting for us at the station and drove us out the house. It’s hard to even begin to explain how gracious and kind this family is.

Perhaps I should start with the official side of things: they’ve created an organization, Restored & Renewed Ministry.  One of the couples is two counselors, one of which we’ve been Skyping with for over a year.  Their daughter and son-in-law moved their family to France to manage a chateau that their family collectively bought to use for ministry.  The goal: to provide a place for overseas workers to stay and refresh. 

They have done this above and beyond what we could have imagined. It might help that we just really love them all, and it was so much fun getting to know them. They are also just incredibly hospitable, and so great in their roles. I love seeing how life and ministry can look different across different opportunities, but have so many things in common; and ultimately how God places us all so differently. 

Back to where we landed: we went out their chateau for about week on our way to the States. That first week, we slept a whole lot. And really, I think I might focus more on the chateau when we returned there after America. But we are still so thankful for that first week to breathe easier!

Our first stop Stateside was Chicago, and I don’t want to forget the unique opportunity to see two of my brother-in-laws run a marathon! We had so much fun cheering them on.

Stephen and I also went back through Chicago on our way out of the States (y’know, since that’s how round-trip tickets work!) and took a couple days to celebrate our 9th anniversary.  Since we love Chicago, it was pretty great. And since it was below freezing, we were really, really cold. 

We knew there was a large Burmese community in Chicago and found a restaurant across town. Since the “L” didn’t run too close, we used the bicycle rental system and biked there.

It was not our best idea in the below-freezing weather, and then the shop was closed. We were pretty disappointed, and were walking the block deciding where to warm up when we found a Burmese grocery! We popped inside and found it as warm as our home, boasting at least 80 degrees. We also got to meet the restaurant owner and chat with a few people in the shop. We both pretty much just loved the whole experience. It’s funny the things that feel like home; even some that aren’t home at all.

I think surreal, but nice simply fits this whole trip perfectly.  

surreal, but nice: one.

December 9, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

We’ve just returned from a whirlwind trip: Mae Sot > Bangkok > Paris > Lafauche > Paris > Chicago > Fayetteville > Little Rock > Fayetteville > Little Rock > Chicago > Paris > Lafauche + Troyes + Doremy + Strasbourg > Paris > Bangkok > …to Mae Sot on Tuesday. 

That was a lot of stops, full of faraway places and people we love and incredible cities. I’ll post the incredible photos of it all in the coming days; I’ll tell a few stories.

As I look back on the photos in the weeks before we left, I see the exhaustion on my face. I see my glasses, worn due to another eye infection. I see our travels, to and from cities trying to breathe, trying to prevent another staph infection from requiring surgery; trying to survive. I see the loaves of bread that were still baked, the birthdays that were still celebrated, the classes that were still taught, the meals that were still served. But we were so, so tired in our souls. 

This was the first time we left Mae Sot that I wasn’t sure I’d be back. I suppose I knew we’d at least come back for our stuff, but I didn’t know if we’d really return to all of this. It was so tempting to just leave it all behind. 

_______________

Fast forward to Fayetteville, just two weeks after we left. I was sitting in a Passion worship night as they played a clip for Compassion International, whom they’ve partnered with to encourage child sponsorships.

It looked a lot like this.

For all practical purposes, that was my street on the screen. Those were my friends playing with a destroyed soccer ball in the street. That was my destroyed soccer ball. The speaker challenged people to give, “Perhaps you’re in a position…”

It wasn’t until that moment I realized I was looking for a way out. I had been for sometime, hoping God would agree, giving some sort of permissive exit: You’re right! This is too much for you. You’re free to go. 

An honorable discharge, of sorts.

But perhaps I am in a position.

Perhaps I have a house already on that street; I already own the soccer ball. I already have the friends calling my name, and I know more of the language than the others in this particular room.

Perhaps my position doesn’t recommend me to give $38, but to simply use the plane ticket I already have. Perhaps I’m in a position to just stop looking for my exit strategy. 

That evening, I knew we’d be going back. I still don’t know for how long, or what our next steps are, or what surprises will show up on my doorstep this week. 

But we’ll be there for them. And we’ll have bells on for Christmas!

_______________

The best words I have for our trip are this: surreal, but nice. (Thank you, Hugh Grant.)

Surreal, because I never guessed we’d visit the French countryside, welcomed by the incredible generosity of friends who hosted us for a month. They made our meals, they gave us space to rest. They provided hours and hours of counseling. We curled up by the fire for reading and puzzles; we went for walks in freezing temperatures. 

I never guessed we’d have the privilege to see Paris, visit the Louvre and take picturesque photos by the Eiffel Tower.  All surreal. All oh-so-nice!

I didn’t guess we’d have this surprise trip back to the States. I wasn’t expecting to get to hug those necks for a few years more, and that is a beautiful surprise. I wasn’t expecting to be a part of those birthday parties or go to that Razorback game or watch my two brother-in-laws run the Chicago Marathon. So as I lived them, it just felt surreal. 

But oh-so-nice!

We’re really thankful we got to go. We’re really thankful for the timing, as we head back to Mae Sot just in time to have yet another—our eighth!—community Christmas. 

And most importantly, I’m really thankful for our community again. I looked through photos again today, remembering how much I do love them. Gosh, they are our world. That little home has so many memories for us, so many stories. And we get to be there again so soon, right where we’re supposed to be.

our favorites: flour & flowers.

October 11, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: housewares, kelli, mway mway's photography, photos Leave a Comment

It is a bit hard to include this as a favorite, if I’m honest. It has brought a lot of heartache this year: cultural challenges, poverty issues, difficult conversations, and challenging friendships. I think it’s really only in stepping back that I can look back and see what good it is. 

It is a favorite. 

More than that, it’s a part of us; particularly me. For four years now, every week has included deliveries around Mae Sot. We have baked loaf after loaf of bread and rolled out so many tortillas.

It amazes me to think of where my language was when we started this: trying to learn the words for cup and teaspoon; flour and yeast. To now, when the ladies and I chat as we bake and have heart-level conversations about abuse and kids and faith and money. (All while they still correct my grammar. 😉)

It amazes me to think that we started this when Nyein Nyein was pregnant with her first son—who will turn three in December! And that we just met her second-born, a beautiful little girl, the day before we left last week. 

We have come so far with these ladies, learning so many skills between all five of us! We have watched Daw Ma Oo face cancer and go into remission!  When we started, we had rules about a Flour lady and Flower lady joining us each week, to carry their own responsibility. Now I only go with on Flour lady each week, so that we all pitch in to allow Daw Ma Oo to rest (and still sell her flowers), as she continues to gain back her strength after radiation & chemotherapy. 

Together, we’ve been through many childbirths, hospital stays, travels, family crises, and more. All over bowls of bread and newspaper-bundled flowers. 

It’s all too good and too messy and too beautiful to not be a favorite!

Here are a few numbers to put to the stories and smiles. 

28 September was our last Flour & Flower delivery until 2019, so many in Mae Sot filled their freezers with bread for the next couple months. We used 47 kilos of flour (that’s 103.6 pounds!) to make 65 loaves of bread, roll out 340 tortillas, and make 180 cinnamon rolls.  

Our weekly flower deliveries began in 2014, and then we started baking bread—officially creating Flour & Flowers—in July of 2015. In the three years of bread baking, the ladies and I have baked & sold: 

2,866 loaves of bread
17,115 tortillas
659 pans of cinnamon rolls

Since we are done for this year, the ladies took home some savings to help them through the next few months, and will get additional savings per our usual schedule, in December. This year they will all get the largest amount of savings yet: 5,000 baht per person, or about $150. For many of the families, that is a monthly salary at, what they would consider, a well-paid job. 

So yes, clearly it’s a favorite! It’s amazing to see what God has done. 

our favorites: the views.

October 10, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

We live in a really beautiful place. Sometimes the heat can distract you from this; or even the snakes or street dogs or current hospital situation. But it really is stunning all around us. We are in a valley with mountains on every side, and it needs to be noted as a favorite. 

This is the view from a domestic flight, returning into Mae Sot recently.

And this was a Sabbath. On Sabbath days, one of our main objectives is to simply be away from the house—where everybody knows our names!—so we took this rainy and cool Saturday to sit beside the reservoir.

It’s pretty amazing we live here, right?!

our favorites: schoolhouse.

October 8, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, mway mway's photography, photos, schoolhouse, stephen Leave a Comment

Stephen comes up with the best ideas. A few months ago, I mentioned we started something new through Stephen’s great idea and a grant from Kingdom Mission Fund.

It’s easily a favorite these days.

Currently, we have ten students and four adults learning English. We have four students learning guitar and one more learning cajon. (Even more incredibly, thanks to the help of some friends in Mae Sot and Stephen pre-organizing all the curriculum, all these are continuing to study while we’re away!)

There are lots of reasons to love schoolhouse.

First, we love seeing the kids and adults succeed; to be so proud of themselves. It’s fun to work with them on it, helping them learn and answering questions.

For English, Rosetta Stone is a pretty incredible program. I’m so thankful it allows me to be everything other than a teacher in these classes! Sometimes I watch kids; sometimes I help with pronunciation. Stephen is often the technology specialist: helping them understand the warnings that open, or why the microphone doesn’t work.

One day Stephen had run to the hospital while I oversaw two boys’ English lessons. One of them was having a hard time with Rosetta Stone understanding him, so I was trying to help as he would repeat, “It is a car. It is a car. It…is…a….car. IT IS A CAR. IT IS A CAR.” Then he switched to Burmese. “IT ISN’T WORKING BECAUSE STEPHEN ISN’T HERE.”

So at least we all know what our roles are 😁

And while Rosetta Stone is amazing, it’s very gracious with pronunciation. VERY. Sometimes I can’t tell what they were supposed to be saying!

For guitar, we have an app that teaches them a chord, and then has them play it with a song. They have to hit it on beat and get the chord correct. (Not that surprising for the idea of learning guitar.)

And then for cajon, Stephen has a separate lesson with this student every Friday. They have been working their way through a video course, and he’s getting pretty good!

I think our favorite part of Schoolhouse are the one-on-one opportunities it gives us. As the community keeps growing, it’s hard to stay connected to those we know best and have known the longest. Sometimes they are actually more stable now than they were; while the more unstable families ask for assistance and take more time. These classes have really allowed us to pick and choose some individuals we can invest in, hopefully with long-term impact on their language and music skills, learning opportunities, and mentorship.

We continue to ruminate on to Jared Diamond’s words, “I have heard many anecdotal stories, among my own friends, of children who were raised by difficult parents but who nevertheless became socially and cognitively competent adults, and who told me that what had saved their sanity was regular contact with a supportive adult other than their parents, even if that adult was just a piano teacher whom they saw once a week for a piano lesson.” (The World Until Yesterday, p.190) Here’s to hoping these lessons are just that–in difficult home situations, amidst the challenges of poverty–one hour a week with a friend willing to stumble over languages, laugh, and learn new skills together.

our favorites: toddler schoolhouse.

October 4, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, mway mway's photography, photos, schoolhouse 1 Comment

This is easily one of our favorites. Toddlers are such fun in any culture, and when they are shouting out “Auntie Kelli! Uncle Stephen!” it just gets better.

For years, in our effort to learn Burmese and in our personal dread of teaching, we have avoided English classes. I have tried one here and there, but I am not a teacher. I was doing it out of love. But I will be the first to admit that as students dropped off or forgot to show, I was relieved and occasionally elated. That is probably the end of any class.

Then last year arrived, when a favorite “little sister” took her matriculation for Burmese high school. It is the equivalent of the American ACT or SAT standardized test, with six subjects: Burmese, English, math, chemistry, biology, and physics. She was second in her class at the high school down the street, and we knew she’d do well. What we didn’t anticipate was her passing five subjects and failing one: English.

As her native-English auntie and uncle that spent hours upon hours a week with her, this was a big failure on our part. We still feel awful for her now, retaking her senior year in Burma with hopes to try the test again next year.

But, that has led to another attempt at English. We won’t let this happen again! Our first step was to buy two Rosetta Stone licenses for adults and students to learn English without us being the official teacher.

The second step was a toddler class. They learn so fast, it seemed an obvious step. They are also so very easy to entertain; I thought surely I could teach colors, numbers, shapes, and basic words with little preparation. And just in case I couldn’t, I called in help from Mway Mway. Before she begins making jewelry on Thursday, she helped with the class. She would rally the kids while I taught English, and then we’d swap. I’d rally the kids while she taught Burmese.

It has turned out to be the highlight of every week!

First, there are the backpacks: all empty, some purses, some lunch boxes. All carried in with great importance.

Then, there are the cutest kids ever.  I’ve been focusing on colors, counting, animals & sounds, and opposites.

We have this fun opposite book that teaches them the idea, and then we’ll use a few of them: we sing the ABCs quietly and then loudly; we sing Head & Shoulders slowly & then fast. Before we sing If You’re Happy & You Know It, I go over happy and sad. I act them out: HAPPY! with a smile; ssaaadddd with a frown. Zwe, without fail, shouts SAD! with a giant smile on his face.

Stephen also leads our singing with guitar, which the kids love. It’s really our very own little library storytime, and I’m not sure I could love something more!

We do animal sounds, which has turned out hilariously. They love Old McDonald but struggle through every bit except ei-ei-o. And we left a lion in at the end, despite it not being a farm animal, because it is fun to growl at each other. I also taught them a few with hand motions: “elephant” with a trunk; and “rabbit” with little ears. What I didn’t realize was that as I do the rabbit ears I also say, “Bop bop bop.” So now they all make rabbit ears and say “Bop bop bop.” Whoops.

The colors are going off the best–easy to review in the afternoons and we all love picking out the colors we’re each wearing! One week I asked the usual, “Who is wearing BLUE?” Zuzu proudly lifted up her dress and pointed to her panties, “BLUE! I’m wearing BLUE!” She was right, at least 😂

We’ve also been practicing our colors with superheroes: SPIDERMAN! Spiderman is RED and BLUE. The HULK! The HULK is GREEN and PURPLE. We have hand motions, as you can see below. It’s adorable.

The mixture of Burmese & English is tricky for little brains: they struggle to know which to say. I teach them all the colors in English, and then Mwei Mwei follows in Burmese. This leads to them shouting all the colors in all the languages. We have since decided it’s better if we teach different things for now: she’s been focusing on fruits, vegetables, and first words. In the mean time, there is a lot of confusion about chicken–which is pronounced similar to “jet” in Burmese, and is now most often called “jetkin” in our home. Again, whoops. I mentioned I wasn’t a great teacher, right?

It’s been a great opportunity to give the kids attention and teaching, in addition to the social lessons of thank you’s and following instructions. And of course we go home with a snack, so that everyone’s winning!

new skills, new perspectives.

August 3, 2018 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: housewares, kelli, mway mway's photography, photos, schoolhouse 3 Comments

Mwei Mwei is one of my favorites. (Or Mway Mway; she uses both because it’s really မွှေးမွှေး) After a little hiatus to Bangkok, she’s been back in our lives for over a year now. She makes porcelain jewelry for Sojourn Studios two days per week, and also sews canvas bags for Housewares one day per week. With this job, she also studies at our house: she takes private Thai lessons once per week that are subsidized by Sojourn Studios; I’ve been teaching her math; and Stephen’s been teaching her guitar and photography. We have hopes of starting her on Rosetta Stone in English in coming months.

We’ve learned that if you can find something she loves or cares about, she’ll give it her all. If she doesn’t care or feels she’s competing with a sibling, she sits back and quite obviously doesn’t put in effort. It’s been a learning curve to find her strengths, find her passions, and get to know her.

One of those things that motivates her? Photography. She loves it, and has an eye for it. She has been easy to teach and has picked it up quickly. And now we want to show her that she can make a future of this; she has skills she can offer to both us and the whole world.

So after a few months of photography lessons on Stephen’s Canon DSLR, we’ve given her the project of taking photos in the community every week. She can choose what to photograph: Sojourn Studios jewelry, the kids playing or taking classes, sewing projects, The Breakfast Club, Flour & Flowers, The Reinforcers. She captures photos through the week, and in her class she sorts and edits, with Stephen’s oversight.

Nyein Nyein, one of our Flour & Flower bakers, and the best tortilla roller!

Pyint Soe, a Reinforcer and high school student; son of Daw Ma Oo, the Flower Lady

And then we buy them! Each week, we pay her for the photos that are good. We give her two different rates, for if she captures a good moment, but perhaps it not fully in focus or not well aligned. Photographically it might not be amazing, but we love the people and love that she captured it! And then, when she really captures a beautiful photo with great skill, she makes a pretty decent price for our little neighborhood!

Since we started, she’s made a few extra dollars most weeks. Last week, she took photos of San Aye making jewelry, and did an absolutely stellar job. She made nearly double her weekly salary!

We’re pretty excited about this. We’ve helped her create a watermark, and explained how this shows everyone it’s her photography. We showed her this blog and our monthly updates, so she understands where the photos are used and why. We’ve explained how our friends and family in the States want to meet our friends and learn about our lives here; and that through gifts of the Church, we are able to do all these projects and create jobs like hers.

It’s always intimidating to share all of this with our neighborhood. But a friend posted an African proverb the other day that I think captures it quite well, “Until the lion learns how to write, every story will glorify the hunter.”

While I think this captures the point, I’m not sure I want to be represented as a hunter, nor do I wish to present my friends as lions. But the idea still stands that if we never open this up to their perspectives, you will only see ours.

I don’t know if we’re to the point we can equip our neighbors to tell their own stories, but I hope someday we can. For now, this feels like one of the first steps. We want you to see our neighborhood, and for our friends to be presented, from another view that isn’t just ours. We don’t want you to always see what we see or praise what we praise; it will probably always make us look good.

But if we give our friends room to tell you themselves, to show you their lives and their work and their skills, we hope that honors them.

So enjoy these beautiful photos that Mwei Mwei skillfully captured, and be looking for more photos with her watermark on it! We are excited to see where this can take her, and us, too.

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