I just found out that there is a part four to the Giver series!
I’m very, very excited. Definitely more than I could express in a blog.
It’s coming out in October, and I’m going to pre-order TODAY.
by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment
I just found out that there is a part four to the Giver series!
I’m very, very excited. Definitely more than I could express in a blog.
It’s coming out in October, and I’m going to pre-order TODAY.
by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment
life goes on, it gets so heavy
the wheel breaks the butterfly
every tear a waterfall
in the night, the stormy night, she’ll close her eyes
in the night, the stormy night, away she’d fly
and dreams of para-para-paradise
…and so lying underneath those stormy skies
she’d say, “oh, i know the sun must set to rise”
Paradise by Coldplay
by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment
This morning was trip four of five to the hospital for the older woman’s rabies treatment. And this time, the community sent a little girl, Naw Eh, to accompany us. I can’t communicate with Naw Eh either, but we are at least quite familiar with our lack of communication since she plays are our house regularly.
And then when we returned at 9:30am, Naw Eh had the rest of the day off school. I offered to let her color, and she returned this:
That’s me, apparently; it’s at least my name in Karen written at the top. It does confirm my princesses and castles theory a little. I was skeptical, though.
But then I saw the next picture.
And at least that’s not how she views me.
by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment
Amidst a variety of roles, Stephen has begun taking photos for Partners. He’s been learning and practicing on various Partners projects, and I’m excited to brag on him: Partners posted his work on Facebook today!
You can check out the Partners Relief & Development Facebook page or I’ve re-posted it to my profile.
I’m pretty proud 🙂
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Stephen really likes cereal.
And in Mae Sot, they have just a few varieties: over-priced sugary, chocolate types; Corn Flakes; and over-priced berry granola.
With so much being over-priced, and Corn Flakes being quite boring, we don’t eat cereal very much.
This morning when I went to wake Stephen, the first thing he said was this,
“I had a dream.
I went to Karen’s house, and I had to decide what cereal I wanted.
Her house was like a grocery store with cereal everywhere in the living room.
It was so fun.”
_________________________
On a semi-related note, we go through phases where we miss things in America. Some days its hard to imagine why we would miss anything: it seems you can really get whatever you want here, or close to it. And other days, I wonder how we have made it this far.
And I have no idea how I can switch that much between days.
This week, I am missing America. If I could spend a week back in the States, here’s what I would do, in addition to the obvious of visiting all of our state-side family and friends:
I would go to the Smoky Mountains, because Stephen’s parents are going this week, and I am so jealous. I would go for a hike each morning.
I would wear dresses. I really miss dresses, but its hard to find a dress that isn’t sleeveless, covers your knees, works on a motorbike, and doesn’t look ridiculous.
I would wear heels. Surprising? It surprised me, too. But I don’t have any here, and I would love to wear some. I would probably wear them with a really nice dress and attempt to dance.
And a few specifics on spending time with family: I would rub my sister’s baby belly. And Stephen & I would go have frozen yogurt with her family. And I would have dinner with all of Stephen’s family, who are so lucky to live in the same state: well, except us.
Oh, and visit Target and Gap, my favorites.
And the two things Stephen is probably tired of hearing about: I would find a way to watch Hunger Games and go to a water park!
_________________________
I asked Stephen the same question. If he could spend a week in the States, he would:
Go to the Smoky Mountains and hike with my family; and hike without fear of snakes and swim in clear water.
“Eat great food; probably cereal.”
(For the record, he said both of these without seeing the rest of the post. And we have now had four conversations about cereal today.)
Go see a movie.
Visit Guitar Center and an Apple store to see the new retina display laptop.
Play a real piano.
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I recently read Ann Voskamp’s One Thousand Gifts, and though her writing wasn’t my favorite, I took on the challenge of writing down one thousand gifts in my life. I’m working on an attitude of thankfulness and joy, and this seemed a basic, tangible effort in that direction.
I’m only at one hundred, but here are some of my favorites thus far:
1. when shuffle plays “The way you make me feel…it really turns me on” (Michael Jackson) followed by “Saddle up your horses, we’ve got a trail to blaze…” (Steven Curtis Chapman).
16. when I can heard the kids spitting/blowing rubber bands right outside of our front door.
41. lightning bugs.
54. fairy sleeves on a shirt.
67. breakfast wrapped in a banana leaf for just 30 cents.
69. Stephen’s funny joke at an ideal time; so well timed that I don’t remember what it was but just that it was a gift.
73. animal print bandaids.
75. Yuh Meh Oo and all she is.
80. hooks; all hooks.
97. a solid house in the pouring rain.
99. a country that teaches me patience.
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This weekend was good. Almost like salve on a burn.
If I was looking from the outside of our lives, here is what I would see:
We came home Thursday night to our kitchen flooding. The roof has been leaking little bits for a couple months, so we told our office manager to pass on to our landlord. It didn’t seem urgent, until this downpour. We spent the evening mopping up the mess with quick-dry towels–not ideal for such a situation–and our much-more-effective sarongs.
The next morning, I left for the hospital around 8am with the old woman receiving treatment for rabies. This was trip three of five. Since she only needed a shot, the hope was that it would take about thirty minutes, as it did last Friday, and I could pick up the volunteers at 8:45. Fail. It took two hours.
I also received a call about thirty minutes into our visit. It was our office manager, and the conversation went like this:
“Kelli, where are you? The landlord is at your house. He says he cannot go in.”
“I’m at the hospital. We didn’t know he was coming, so we left. And locked the door.”
“Can you go home now?”
“Not really…”
…And the roof was fixed later that day.
On Saturday, we learned that our credit card had been hacked. New one on the way.
And then today, I went over to speak with our neighbor lady, Mong Ey. I am trying to arrange to have tea with the Karen-speaking women so that I can practice my Karen. Due to the nature of our lives and theirs, a scheduled tea isn’t really possible. I told her around 8:30am that I would be home this morning if she and the Karen-speaking women wanted to come over to talk.
She asked what hour, and I said any time this morning. She could choose. Then she said “19”, which in Karen could be “10, 9” or “19.” I came back to tell Stephen: They might come at 9am. Or 10am. or 7:00pm. Or they might not come at all.
We decided to stay around the house as much as possible to see how it played out.
And the verdict for today: not come at all. I guess we’ll try again tomorrow.
A group did come over about 8:00pm tonight. A woman had fallen from her bicycle, hurt her leg, and was in a whole lot of pain. Stephen took her to the hospital, and we ate our dinner at about 10:30pm when he returned.
(With this large of a community, taking them to the doctor–even just for emergency situations–could become a full-time job, it seems.)
And somehow, with all the unplanned and plenty of unwanted, this weekend was a salve.
I’m not entirely sure why.
by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment
by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment
We have a little blessing in our bedroom that we call the air con. It’s lovely.
And on the air con remote, there are some options: you can have cold air, fan, humidity, or another symbol we don’t understand. We leave it on cold air, because if you’re going to be paying for the air con, what else would you want?
Unfortunately, adding humidity is just an easy click away. In the process of turning it on, you can easily and accidentally hit the humidity button in the process. And before you know it, you’re sitting in stuffy, wet room where you can hardly breathe.
Who in their right mind would want to add humidity to any room in this country?
It baffles me.
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After painting a number of weeks ago, we finally borrowed a drill this weekend to hang some things on our walls. It took quite awhile, but 58 holes later our house has a little more character!
Drilling into concrete is no easy task, and Stephen did a stellar job with a great attitude. Love him.
We found these knobs at a Burmese antique shop and added them to our coffee tables. They don’t particularly match, but I love them.
Most of what we hung up were hooks: we now have sixteen hooks in our room, eight in our kitchen, four in the studio, and ten in the living room. I really love hooks. These are by our front door and purchased from the same antique shop.
In the dark corner of our living room, Stephen would use the headlamp to see where he was drilling, then I would use it for marking the drill holes, hammering in anchors, and whatever else I was strong enough to do. Either way, he got it all sweaty and I didn’t want to put that on my forehead, so I used this little baggie from hardware shop.
He thought this was hilarious.
This is the curtain that separates our new guest room, allowing Stephen to have a studio.
We’ve been collecting frames and created this family collage. Well, it’s not family yet–it’s sideways photos, dated photos, and the King–because we haven’t printed the pictures. But soon I think this will be one of my favorite things.
How great is this handmade hook?!
Compliments of my sister, Jenn. This photo really doesn’t do justice to her amazing job on this, and how great it looks in the studio, but it’s one of my favorite things.
One of our door knobs broke, so Stephen replaced them both. They’re not genuine antiques, but still pretty great.
So this didn’t require any drilling, but most of the things we put on the walls are my favorite things in our house. So I decided to add these last two favorite things: first, these fun pillows in our living room.
And second, I found this purple paisley fabric in a local shop, and had another shop sew them into pillow cases. They look really wonderful in our room, and again, it’s one of the little things I really love.