Thursday, January 29


Ko, Harry, and Edwin with Mr. Harkishan, owner of a store that EMI frequents in the bazaar.



Me and Islam, a local tailor



Hacky-sack has become a popular pastime. From left to right, Ko, Harry, Ryan, Edwin, and Gretchen.



A twilight view from our house



The view from our front yard, and yes, those are the Himalayas

Wednesday, January 28

Some highlights on the week

There is just so much to tell about my first week here, I’m only able to hit on the main points. Harry, Edwin, Ko, and I have been going through orientation with the India office. This is mostly a practical look at what the office is like, getting to know the staff and having them get to know us, and some intense cultural studies/training. We have learned so much about Indian culture, the religions of India, and some basic Hindi; my head feels really stuffed. If you would like to know more, I would love to tell you about it; please email me. It would take to long to do it here.

By far my favorite activity was the scavenger hunt. Basically, the staff gave us a list of stuff to see and visit throughout Mussoorie and pushed us out the door with a camera. And this was on Friday, our second full day in town. The main bazaar in Mussoorie is around 1000 ft. below where our office is, so we hiked all the way down stopping random people on the road to ask questions. I felt so unprepared and it was extremely stretching to literally not know anything about everything including the language. That being said, it was also probably the single most rewarding experience of the week as it forced us outside of our comfort zone and blasted any assumptions we may have had about how prepared we were. It was sooo much fun too; the bazaar is an incredibly interesting place, and we even made friends with Islam, a local tailor who invited us up for chai. It really struck me that although the majority of the world’s population shops like this, it is so foreign to Americans. Yet besides the constant stares and lack of time efficiency, I felt part of a process that was more universal then I was used to.

On Sunday, Ko and I went to the Friends Of Garwhal church service (Garwhal being a geographic region which Mussoorie is on the border of). Besides Ryan, the staff member who took us, and two others, we were the only westerners there. Although I certainly felt out of place, it wasn’t nearly to the extent that I expected. All the members treated us as typical newcomers and were very hospitable (typical of Indian culture). The music was interesting, as it was all in Hindi, and some of the songs weren’t even written in roman characters!

Monday was an interesting day as well. In addition to it being Chinese New Year, it was also Republic Day in India. This is a national holiday which is held to commemorate those troops that have died (similar to Memorial Day for the U.S.). So, we listen to the Indian national anthem and watched the Republic day parade: basically, the Indian military parades a show of its strength in front of the capital in Delhi. That evening was an incredible treat, Dr. Raju Abraham visited Oaklands (our office) and we had chai with him. This man is certainly amazing; he left a six figure career as a British neurosurgeon to pour into a Christian hospital in north central India. He talked about the history or outreach in India, specifically concerning this hospital and how up until the past decade or so there was practically no fruit. In recent years however, they have seen over 40,000 new brothers and sisters despite persecution and even physical attack. He also talked in depth about the caste system and the political issues within Hinduism. He was just such an inspiring and impressive figure. I will never forget how he described a believer’s work: “We need to enter heaven with our dreams and imaginations, picture what it means to live in perfect harmony, and actively pull those visions down onto the earth and make it a reality.”

Monday, January 26

arrival continued

Hello and sorry again about my tardiness with the updates. Sometimes it’s hard to find time to go down to the bazaar for internet access. Anyway, to continue with the story…

So we took a taxi to the train station in Delhi before the sunrise. I was amazed at the number of people out and about; most of the day laborers for construction projects and such rise early, and the shopkeepers must be up to serve breakfast I guess. The station was quite crowded, but definitely manageable, although it took us awhile to find which platform our train was on. When people tell you its hard to get around in India with luggage they are sooo correct. Between us four interns and Matthew and Ivy who picked us up, we had four large suitcases, two hiking packs, three backpacks, a large duffle, a heavy box housing our survey equipment, and a box containing a large tripod. Again, it was all manageable, but getting our luggage onto the train and into the overhead racks was a chore.

I described the train ride pretty well in my diary, it goes as follows: “The train ride to Dehra Dun was great. They served us tea and biscuits (residue from the brits) and breakfast on the way. It was interesting to note the change from the square concrete and masonry buildings of Delhi sprawled out in all directions (some housing projects in the distance looked like cabrini green), to smaller infrastructure scattered between irrigated fields, to just the fields themselves as far as the eye can see. Tall, grass like sugar cane fields were intermittently broken up by verdant rice paddies and yellow flowered mustards stems in between. I’ll never forget the first major town we passed outside of Delhi. Most of people were children on their way to school, the square block homes stacked on top of each other looked far cleaner and well kept, and the surrounding green of the agriculture cut the brown grey and charcoal of the town. It was really quite beautiful in its simplicity and plainness. Almost 5 hrs. into the ride, the scenery shifted as we began to enter the hills. The elevations rose on both sides of the tracks and we even went through a tunnel.”

Dehra Dun was fascinating, we entered around 1pm and it was more like what I expected India to be than any other place. Long streets lined with rows of small shops and chaotic traffic that somehow gets everyone where they need to be. We picked up a taxi that would take us to Mussoorie, and began the long, winding ascent. This was by far the most incredible part of the journey. A 1 ½ lane road winding through the mountains, catching glimpses of a city built on the top of the ridge around every bend. No description can accurately depict the first time you take that route, but it was the most amazing drive I have ever experienced.

I will try to put up pictures from the trip and Mussoorie soon. This town is so incredibly beautiful, its almost a pity that I can’t fully describe or show the full extent of Mussoorie’s splendor. It is absolutely no surprise that it is one of the most popular tourist destinations in India. This brings us up to my arrival here, hopefully soon I can update you about the events of the past week. There is just so much to tell, I’m having difficulty keeping it all straight.

Saturday, January 24

Arrival... and a heckuva lot more!

Hey everyone, I apologize in advance for the length, but there is just so much that I have to share with you. Also, I don't have many photos uploaded to my computer yet, but I will soon have those. I may even do a photo-only post next week.

So, the story starts with us being delayed in Denver due to snow in New Jersey (our transfer stop). This only gave us about 40 min of layover in Newark. So, us being brilliant interns, we stopped for dinner and ended up almost missing our flight. Haha, I was sprinting to the gate as they called our names over the PA to try and hold the flight for the others bringing our carry-ons. We made the flight, and luckily it was very nice. the plane was only about half full so we had plenty of room, watched a few movies and took a nap. Edwin ended up sleeping half the flight, which was a mistake because now he's got jet-lag while the rest of us are fine.

So landing in India, I had no idea what to expect. I remember toally having that deer-in-the-headlights feeling as we searched for Matthew and Ivy who were supposed to meet us. After a little confusion as to which direction to exit the airport (which ended up not mattering anyway :) we meet up and took a taxi to our hotel. Wow, now I understand when people say that lane laws don't exist. I was pretty sure we ran two red lights on our 20-min taxi ride in which we probably passed half the population of Delhi within 3 inches. I vividly remember thanking God that there was a merridian seperating us from on coming traffic. Welcome to Delhi. Since then, we have all gotten quite used to driving in India and although I'll never have to, I probably could do it myself if needed.

Our accomodations were actually quite nice, if small, but we were so tired it didn't really matter. You wouldn't recognize the Cottage Yes Please from the outside since it sat in a run-down (to my standards) section of the city, but the inside was beautiful. Unfortunately, I didn't remember to take pictures. Shoot, my time is up and I have to go, but I'll try to finish the story soon. Namaste!

Sunday, January 18

Next stop: India!

So I really wanted to get this post up yesterday, but I was pretty tired and had a bunch of other stuff to take care of. Anyway, the four India interns (Harry, Edwin, Ko, and myself) are leaving for India shortly after breakfast on Monday, so this is probably my last post before India. Unfortunately, I don't know how accessible e-mail will be in India until we arrive at the office on Wednesday, but I will try to get something up before then. Its basically an 18 hour plane flight (one-stop) to New Delhi where we will stay the night and then take an 8 hour train ride and a taxi up to Mussoorie, where the office is. I'm totally pumped to see India!

However, the past few days have been full. On Thursday we discussed both our spiritual gifts and testimony, and tied that into the personality test in order to start gaining some self awareness as to how we serve most effectively. On Friday we visited the main EMI office in Colorado Springs for our official commisioning and a great discussion on the Biblical perspective of poverty. Today we talked about our individual talents, how to turn those into strengths, and finally looking to the future as to what calling God may place on us. We also went hiking today which was challenging and really fun, but I'll probably feel it in the morning.

Overall the week has just gotten better and better. Although I've done some of the personality and spiritual gifts stuff, integrating it into my own testimony and strengths has been surprisingly helpful in understanding myself. It hasn't just been a self-realization adventure, though. The Biblical support concerning missions, the Church, poverty, and culture has tought me a lot about God, and serving others in a cross-cultural context. I'm really looking forward to getting to India, although I'm expecting it to be really hard. If you'd like, I know the other interns and I would really appreciate prayer over the adjustment process; Indian culture is far different than American and I don't want to withdraw. Thanks, and see you in India!

Wednesday, January 14

The first days of orientation


Wow, have we been busy. I've been scrambling to get up and running with the blog and e-mail list during our limited free times these last couple of days. Everyone here is really nice and its been a blast getting to know the other interns and staff serving with EMI this spring.

Yesterday morning was spent rock climbing at a local gym; just to have some fun, get to know each other, and try to direct someone up the wall while they're blindfolded. Not easy. That night, we started our culture training by doing some role-playing games. Every time I talk about it, it strikes me at how radically different people can be based upon what culture they come form. Even so, there is certainly a lot that unites us as people, too. Crazy stuff.

Anyway, this morning we did some more team building activities. I learned a few games that will be really fun to play after I get back. This afternoon we talked about some of the engineering techniques that EMI employs, specifically in a cross cultural context, and this evening I got a personality! We all took the DISC personality test (much different than Meirs-Briggs), and discussed how personality can greatly affect conversational style, confict management, teamwork, and personal strengths/weaknesses. Sorry to be so succinct, but I'm dead tired and need some sleep. I hope you enjoy the pictures!

<-Me on the wall Pike's Peak in the morning ->

Saturday, January 10

Just getting started...

Well, this is my first time creating my own blog so bear with me until I get my bearings straight.

Right now it is 10:30 pm the night before I leave home for six months. Tomorrow I have to catch a 9 am plane to Denver, where I'll participate in a week long orientation session before shipping out to India on the 19th. Exciting! This past week has certainly been hectic: Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday saw me back in Champaign where I was trying to finish up my research before turning it over to my professor (thanks again for being so understanding!). That being done, I felt it was entirely necessary to take off Thursday from any trip planning and go snowboarding with my family. This was something I have been itching to do since Thanksgiving, and may not have a shot at until next year. Finally, yesterday and today have been jam-packed with last minute shopping, packing and organizing trip details. Right now, I just want to get the show on the road!

Strangely, but fortunately, I'm really not the least bit nervous or anxious right now. I'm very thankful for this peace and I know it comes from the Lord and the fact that I'm just doing His will. It has been such a blessing to look back and see the many ways in which He has made this whole thing possible. I would also especially like to thank all of you who have supported me either in prayer or financially as answers to my prayers.

Well, I still have some things to take care of and sleep to look forward to so I'll wrap this up here. By all means feel free to make comments - I will read them and cherish them as little bits of home (awww). Hopefully I will be able to keep the blog updated to within 2-3 days, but please be patient with me if for any reason I become delayed. My desire is that through this blog and my other updates you all may feel as if you are sharing with me in my experiences in even the smallest way. Here's to a grand voyage!

Blessings,