Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Cairns --> Sydney road trip 09

5 of my friends and I rented 2 camper vans, and ventured through the east coast of Australia. It takes 36 hours to get from point A to point B, but we decided to do it in 6 days. It was the best trip I've ever been on! These people are golden.

Highlights
Rebekah(Vancouver, Canada), me, and Lisa(Jersey)
Our home on the road.



The boys.
Danzo(Florida), Alf(Germany), Carson(Edmonton, Canada)

July 16th- flew to Cairns
-The sweet waterfalls that I was too sick to go in and enjoy
Milla Milla Falls
---Milla Milla Falls (where Bekah proved her womanhood)
so cold. How did they get in?!

Tarzan. aka Danzo


Rebekah proving she isn't scared.


---Zillie Falls
---Ellinjaa Falls (me & Carson explored the forest)
Carson exploring
---Found Coconuts on the side of the road to EAT!
Alf and Bekah enjoying fresh coconut

Pretty Lisa
July 17th – still in Cairns
-Free breakfast at a really nice hotel thanks to Mr.Hargis
-Great Barrier Reef
If only I had an underwater camera. It was incredible!
---Lisa, Rebekah and I snorkelled and took a submarine thing to cool parts of the reef
me and my gear


In the semi-submersible boat


sunshine. mmmm.

jump in!

poking sea cucumbers

What a tiny starfish!
---Carson, Alf and Danzo scubaed all the way to the depths of the reef...which isn't that far down
Carson.

Alf is stoked
---8 hour cruise with BIG buffet lunch
-Boys locked the keys in their camper, and then proceeded to retrieve them. I went on a road trip with McGiver.
found the key!

the Savior! A Hanger!
-12 hour drive to Bowan- lots of energy drinks
July 18th – Bowan
-Saw the sunrise beachside-- and then went to bed.

Please note Bekah's foot wear
-Chilled at Bowan beaches all day long.
---Tanned on top of sweet rocks
---I dropped our camper keys between 2 very large Australian-been-there-forever rocks.
---Rebekah dove down(because she was the only one who was in the water) and saved the day!
---She got all scratched up!
---She saw an orange and black eel!
---It was scary!
-Drove to Airlie Beach
Bowan's Big Mango
sugarcane! Heaps of it!
Lisa liked driving the most.
Airlie Beach! We missed the other college crew by like. an hour. so crap.
---road games
---LOTS of dead wallabes and kangaroos
---we made pancakes at Airlie
July 19th – middle of nowhere
-the boys almost ran out of gas and we had to wait til daylight for anything to open
woke up on the side of the road.
the gas station.
-Peed in a nasty nasty toilet on the side of the road. It was awesome.
-Drove to a park and had breakfast together
wrong side of the road, wrong side of the car. bring it on.
-Went to Tannum Beach (pretty! Go back!) also in the middle of nowhere. We spotted a little beach sign, and decided it was the last warm beach we would go to for awhile, so we took a little detour.
-Started our drive to Sunshine Coast
goin a little crazy
-midnight- we made soup and toast for dinner, and fell asleep beachside.
July 20th – Sunshine Coast
- Woke up to a man BANGING on the campers telling us to leave or there would be a fine. Oops.
-Hung out in Noosa Heads all day
showering where we can

al merrick's surf school
Noosa. pretty touristy, but still beautiful.
welcome.

---Went to 2 different beaches
---Saw crabs and hermits hanging out on the rocks I was reading on.
---Subway. Mmmm.
-Brisbane (really lame)

-Surfer's Paradise (would have been fun if we weren't DEAD tired. No photos, too tired to take them)
-Slept on the side of the road in Byron
July 21st – Byron Bay
-Woke up at 6:30am to viscious knocking and a warning to get off the side of the road.. haha. We can't win!
-Sightseeing in Byron Bay – little hippie town. I'll go back.



---Chilled at Byron Bay Sanctuary Beach
---Had the best burger of my life at Railz Pub
this is not a burger. I don't really know what this is. The question is: do we eat it?
Twilight
Some of the heroes on this statue have inappropriate names. If you zoom in...
July 22nd – DRIVING---my camera died...
-The Big bananna- tobagging at a kids theme park for $3
-shopping at used books stores and music shops
-stopped in lots of little cities.
---Drove a lot! So good!
---Drove in Sydney!
-Came home!

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

end of last semester.

conference 09!! I was sick, I was tired, I was worn out. We'd get up at 5am and get home at midnight. or 1. or 2. BUT God still moved through me and the other 4,000 volunteers to make this golden week happen.
I love when our church makes events like this happen. This is just a local church. A body of believers who love Jesus and creativity and are committed to building His kingdom. I'm now becoming 'part of the furniture', and I'm really making this church my family. I love watching these youtube videos and watching people I do life with everyday. I love knowing these people aren't on that stage in front of over 20,000 delegates because they're talented. They are there because week in and week out, they serve wholeheartedly for the cause of Christ.


Check out these amazing highlights! (PS I may or may not be in a big puppet version of me at the end of this video...)

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Happy Father's Day

It's late, so I'm really sorry that I'm not louder, but I couldn't run the risk of waking up my flatmates.. you know, courtesy and all.

Love you!

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

sometimes it's good to be quiet.

Tonight at connect group, I didn't say a word. It wasn't intentionally an experiment as much as it was me needing a break from being 'outgoing'. Sometimes you just need to shut up and observe.

But something hit me that I thought was interesting. Everything I would have said got said at the exact moment I would have said it.

It was as if nothing was taken away from connect group because I didn't say anything. I kind of liked it. I got so much out of it by not saying anything. I wasn't busy gathering my thoughts while someone else was talking, I wasn't trying to think about how I could intellectually respond to a question, I wasn't offering heavy prayers to the heavens, I was just listening and enjoying.
After wards, one of the guys asked if I was tired, because I was so quiet, and I told him I wasn't, but I guess the truth is I was.

I guess the truth is I was tired of thinking and talking.
sometimes it's just nice to fill up on other people's thoughts and words so that your words have more weight later.

I just want to suck in wisdom. This week, maybe I will focus more on being quiet in group situations-- I want to see what else I can take from a group with my mouth closed. :)

Sunday, May 17, 2009

these are the encounters I'm learning to live for.





I am writing to you at 12:30 Sunday evening. This weekend marks the mid semester break, and although we are technically off of studies, our weekends are still full with kingdom purpose. Saturday morning I arrived at church at 8:30am for Street Teams. This week, we joined forces with a group who goes to State funded housing in Waterloo behind the church’s city campus area.
We started off by meeting a beautiful young Australian woman named Carmen. She was terribly ill, and so she asked us to take her dog out (she lives on the third floor of a run down apartment building wreaking of smoke and urine and dust.) Then we had a visit with a gentle old man stuck in his home because of past work injuries. Lory was a pilot for many years before he was the victim of a plane crash that put him into a coma for 4.5 months. Since the crash he has slurred speech and very little mobility. He lives alone in a little apartment, and it is beautiful to see him light up under the snowy white beard covering his gentle face. We talked with him about the weather and how it made him feel. We talked about getting transportation for him to join us at Hillsong on Sundays. Everything we mentioned seemed so significant to this man, he hung on our every word. Since it is difficult to understand him, he was patient to repeat everything several times and use what little body language he could muster. This man is living in a cocoon feeling alone and rejected and once a week 4 college students spend 10 minutes with him and he closes the door very obviously feeling like a million bucks. It seemed so wrong to me.
We met with others, including a man from Finland who learned the accordion and laughed about his poor form and lack of talent. We met with men who needed help lifting things because of back problems, and elderly who treated us like princesses in their home just so they could have a few companions for a bit.
Saturday reminded me that the community I have at home and now at Hillsong is an honor and a privilege and not the norm. We are living among the forgotten.
I so often pass by the women on their walkers and the drunkards on the side of the street without a second thought. But tonight I am reminded of a Savior who didn’t just see their outward appearance; He looked into their soul and saw something worth dying for.
I’m embarrassed to say that Friday night I debated on whether or not I should even go to Street Teams. I struggled all night and I finally went to bed thinking that Kingdom purpose is a better thing to live on than 2 more hours of sleep. And now I think of Lory’s face when he closed the door. I think of Carmen’s desperate plea for someone to just take a dog downstairs for a bit. I think of old men with windbreakers dreaming of more vodka as a companion, and being pleasantly surprised to get us instead. These are the encounters I’m learning to live for. This is the purpose I’m living out in Australia.

That same Saturday night I met a beautiful Norweigan woman appropriately named Bella. She had the wisdom of a life filled with adventure, academics and humanitarianism. Bella sat near me on the bus and we talked music and culture and science. I was inspired to live life her way. She had been to 17 universities in 8 different countries with varying degrees from the highest rated schools and was working as a pediatric neurosurgeon through an organization that sends her all over the world to the greatest need. She had lots of knowledge, but more than that she had a lot of appreciation.

Christine Caine spoke tonight about living without fear. Getting to death safely is no way to live. I would like to be a beautiful Bella one day. I would like to be sent to the greatest need, but also find room for the invisible need in places like Waterloo state funded housing.
This weekend reminded me that I am alive for more than my desires. God’s call is so much bigger than our circle of friends; and sometimes you only need to take a walk to find the need.

Friday, May 8, 2009

We serve God

Joshua 3

The Jordan
1-4 Joshua was up early and on his way from Shittim with all the People of Israel with him. He arrived at the Jordan and camped before crossing over. After three days, leaders went through the camp and gave out orders to the people: "When you see the Covenant-Chest of God, your God, carried by the Levitical priests, start moving. Follow it. Make sure you keep a proper distance between you and it, about half a mile—be sure now to keep your distance!—and you'll see clearly the route to take. You've never been on this road before."

5 Then Joshua addressed the people: "Sanctify yourselves. Tomorrow God will work miracle-wonders among you."

6 Joshua instructed the priests, "Take up the Chest of the Covenant and step out before the people." So they took it up and processed before the people.

7-8 God said to Joshua, "This very day I will begin to make you great in the eyes of all Israel. They'll see for themselves that I'm with you in the same way that I was with Moses. You will command the priests who are carrying the Chest of the Covenant: 'When you come to the edge of the Jordan's waters, stand there on the river bank.'"

9-13 Then Joshua addressed the People of Israel: "Attention! Listen to what God, your God, has to say. This is how you'll know that God is alive among you—he will completely dispossess before you the Canaanites, Hittites, Hivites, Perizzites, Girgashites, Amorites, and Jebusites. Look at what's before you: the Chest of the Covenant. Think of it—the Master of the entire earth is crossing the Jordan as you watch. Now take twelve men from the tribes of Israel, one man from each tribe. When the soles of the feet of the priests carrying the Chest of God, Master of all the earth, touch the Jordan's water, the flow of water will be stopped—the water coming from upstream will pile up in a heap."

14-16 And that's what happened. The people left their tents to cross the Jordan, led by the priests carrying the Chest of the Covenant. When the priests got to the Jordan and their feet touched the water at the edge (the Jordan overflows its banks throughout the harvest), the flow of water stopped. It piled up in a heap—a long way off—at Adam, which is near Zarethan. The river went dry all the way down to the Arabah Sea (the Salt Sea). And the people crossed, facing Jericho.

17 And there they stood; those priests carrying the Chest of the Covenant stood firmly planted on dry ground in the middle of the Jordan while all Israel crossed on dry ground. Finally the whole nation was across the Jordan, and not one wet foot.

Monday, April 27, 2009

The art of care packages.

my mom is a professional care package packer. Everything I would pack in a suitcase, she manages to pack in a medium sized box...
So kudos to mom.

But there's always the random stuff. See picture 2 for example. Sweet & Salty Nut bars. Good. Value Size. Great. Chicken Vienna Sausages in Chicken broth--ehh.. You know, a little weird, mom. I mean, great thought. I'm shocked it even got past the quarentine Australian people. The Slim Jims were taken and I was oh so sad. Apparently they call that 'beef'. crappy food police prolly ate it with their lunches.

In my last package I recieved 'gourmet jelly beans'. They were tasty. The only downfall was the unusual amount of bubble gum flavored beans. I have nothing against bubble gum, it's just a bit too exciting for my tender taste buds. They couldn't handle the explosion of easter flavor. And so I will put them on the list of weird things recieved.

My first care package had a pair of cheap sunglasses that Lynn bought at a 4th of July vendor during a volleyball game. Apparently mom didn't know they didn't belong to me and I recieved them in a package. lol. Sometimes we leave things at home because we'd feel better starting over without them. Sometimes it includes the belongings of others.


Out of the dozens of things I've recieved from my mom since being here, to only list off 3 random things gotten through the mail, I feel like she's made some kind of mom record. She balances heavy with light, she stuffs underwear in shoes, and puts toothpaste in ziplocs, and I can keep the ziplocs. She's so creative. I don't give her enough credit.

Mom's are underappreciated. I just decided.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Thanks Oswald

"We have no right to judge where we should be put, or to have preconceived notions as to what God is fitting us for. God engineers everything; wherever He puts us our one great aim is to pour out a whole-hearted devotion to Him in that particular work. "Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might."

hecka funny video

This is my friend Daniel and I's silly video trying to be like the dance instruction videos for hillsong Kids. We put on our best aussie accents and we reckon you'll enjoy it, mate! Follow along to our song we perform in songwriting class this week...lol, you never know, it might just end up on an album some day...

Monday, April 13, 2009

leaky faucet

This blog is meant for updating. The problem with updating is this idea that updates string together with the other updates, creating a kind of chronological tale of my time here in Oz. As you have noticed, my updates are few and infrequent. My updates are more like awkward highlights in a textbook—like the kid who doesn’t know how to study for his biology test, and highlights the things he thinks the teacher may find important. Sometimes, I write to my audience too much. I try to think of those who will read this and ask myself, “What would they like to hear of my experiences?” The problem is the expected fluidity of blogging turns into more of a leaky faucet.

But I figure if I’m going to give you a leaky faucet update, I might as well drop some large driblets.

Here are some new ideas for today. Only today, because my brain won’t even consider processing the last week.

In order for something to be fixed, it must first be broken.

My creativity isn’t wrong. It isn’t judged. It isn’t perfect. It isn’t ‘beginner’. Creativity is.

Don’t bother playing Chubby Bunny with an Aussie. Their cheek elasticity is better than Americans.

Rosie isn’t the only one in the world who calls people “Mangas.”
Watch Angus, Thongs, and Perfect Snogging and the English world will open to you. I suddenly understand so much of my roommate that I once found perplexing. It’s a girly boy crazy teen girl who discovers acceptance. It’s Nickelodeon, so it’s pretty feel good cheesy, but it makes so much sense!

Girls nights never end with just girls.

I am not alone in the values I was alone in back home. I am in common minded company. Sometimes that makes things too easy. Sometimes its better to be around people who don’t think the same as you-- it stretches you. I don’t really feel the stretch mentally. I feel the stretch in different ways- emotionally, for instance—but not mental. I suppose if I was being stretched in all areas of life I would have a mental break down, so I guess this will do for now.

An Update: Assessments Unpacked

I was asked to write a reflection of our week at colour conference-- answering specific questions throughout. Maybe this will give you a little slice of what I do with my time at Hillsong College.
Grace & Peace
Sarah

Colour Conference was unique to Carson Stobbe and I, as we saw the beauty of womanhood through spongy eyes and lips. Our body was roofed in thick layers of fleece and a bright poly cotton blend. The 5 pound smile permanently displayed on ‘our’ faces welcomed cuddles from child and woman, Fijian, African, Dutch, American, Kiwi, Ozzie, German, and the like. Our focus was fun although our vision was lacking, not because we’d perished from the smell of our sweaty descendents, but because of the concave plastic shielding our eyes from the sites of stairs, narrow hallways, and hurried delegates.
Max and Melody is truly a world of its own. It is a kind of cartoon land, and it is easy to become spellbound by its repetitive cuddles, high fives, and giggles. Body language is the only form of communication in M&M land, and although it is worth 55% of all communication for humankind, it makes conversation a bit dull…unless of course, I’m interpretive dancing—then it’s legitimately the best conversation of the day.
I’ll admit it, 2 people dressed up as mascots can be a little creepy.
No one knows who we really are, and when women ask my helpers if the unusually tall Melody is actually a girl, it doesn’t help when their response is, “Of course Melody is a girl!” The women immediately assume that vague response is code for, “I can’t tell you because it is really a boy inside those pigtails and princess waves.” Some women create an awkward wall between the unknown (me) and the target (themselves). But since my job is to bring fun, I actually hide from them before they can even express their fear verbally. When they see how silly it looks for a 6 foot cartoon character to hide behind a pillar, they come out of their shell and laugh a little. Mission accomplished. I can move on knowing that I haven’t scared anyone. It’s all in keeping character. If an 8 year old were told she was feared, she would probably run and hide as will. It puts things into perspective.
Those inside Max and Melody are sweaty, tired, and sometimes dehydrated. Within 10 minutes my entire back was laced with sweat. It doesn’t matter how little you wear underneath, or how often you take a break, sweat is inevitable. During the first week of Colour the sweat didn’t bother me so much; but by the beginning of the second week I was tired of smelling like a hockey locker room. I didn’t want to be high energy anymore, and I certainly didn’t want to cuddle kids who would test my balance all day by hanging on the nearest appendage. I was done with 4 layers. There were times when my attitude was less than willing to be the face of Hillsong Kids; and then God would remind me that it is my turn now to be the change, and even if I didn’t get to be in all the sessions, because of what we’re doing, a women feels comfortable leaving their child with us so she can spend time with God; it’s all worth it when God reminds you of your importance. Every piece has a place.
Max and Melody have a sparkle in their eye for bit of mischief and a lot of love. The blend is fiercely appropriate for the atmosphere of Hillsong Kids and I feel that as the heart and soul of Melody, it was my privilege to bring this personality to life. I wanted to be seen, but I only wanted the best kind of attention—the kind of attention an 8-year-old girl longs for. The kind of attention that reminds a little girl she is princess, a marvel who is fearfully and wonderfully made. I wanted to remind women of the innocence of their youth, and I wanted to give them a moment of childhood if their young life had been somehow robbed.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

hello there!

capitol theatre worship (we weren't allowed to jump, because they were afraid the stage would buckle.)
Melody on the inside.
Melody on the outside with Max on the inside(Erik Nensen from Sweden)
My dressing room... oh yeah. (it would've been cool if this was only my mirror that day, but the events team quickly took over this area. )

GOOD NEWS! Updates to happen more frequently. Would you venture to guess why?
Internet will happen in like 4 days!!!! YES! Finally!

School is amazing. I am feeling the stretch but I am excited, because stretch means growth.

Life is approaching quickly!
I love working with Hillsong Kids worship! I got to be Melody for one of the coolest days in history for Hillsong City Campus. We had the privilege of doing church in Capitol Theater(the coolest theatre on the continent) and I got to be the kids mascot that all the babies hugged on the way in. Good stuff. Sweaty, but good.

Classes are amazing. We're developing more and more of an honest family atmosphere through tutorials.(like home room, maybe, for those of you reading this in the states)

Anyways, that's all for now. More to come, in 4-6 business days.

grace & peace.

PS New Mandate: Next time you see my brother, tackle him and say, "Love Sarah."

okay bye