Physical Education

I teach PE (Physical Education) at the mission school where Joshua attends.  This is my second time of teaching PE and I have a lot of fun doing it.  I think the students enjoy this time of movement, team work, cooperation and play.  I have a minor in Recreation and I used to receive many jokes about my Bachelor of Science in Tourism Management and my minor in Recreation.

I look back on all the things I learned growing up in a small, rural community; during my wild youth; the degrees I ended up choosing and the many jobs that I’ve held.  None of them are wasted and you just never know when you will need to use a skill obtained from one of those experiences.

IMG_2209This is a snap shot of some of the students during PE Amazing Race.

Posted in Cameroon | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Happy Birthday David

Today is David’s birthday!  I won’t share his age, but will share several pictures.  He’s a wonderful man inside and out.  I’m proud to be his wife and full of joy to celebrate his birthday today.  Happy Birthday David!

david2 Scan506 85 100_0132 100_1307 100_2184 ???????????????????????????????

Posted in Cameroon, home | Tagged , | 7 Comments

Shoes Optional

Today during student pick-up at the school where Joshua attends, another parent was waiting beside me on the bench.  He’s Korean and he usually asks me (DeAnna) USA cultural questions.  I think he asks because the majority of the curriculum taught at the school is American and he wants to understand different nuances since his children attend this school.

He asked me, “Why do American children wear baboosh (slip-on foam sandals) and remove them before they start playing?”  I tried explaining that in the USA where we are from, children don’t wear baboosh and usually children must wear sneaker type shoes to school.  He looked confused and asked in a different way why the children remove the shoes before playing.  I answered that when we first arrived our boys were wearing sneakers, but after going to school asked to have baboosh to be like their friends and would remove them as a line place holder and run off to play.  I know I didn’t answer him in a sufficient way because he asked a third time.

Our boys wear baboosh 99% of the time.  When they have to wear sneakers for PE, they both complain about how hot their feet are, how wet their feet are from sweat and how cumbersome it is to wear tie shoes because they take so long to get on.

IMG_2211

Posted in Cameroon, Kids | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Third culture kids and garbage disposals

One of the blogs that I (David) enjoy following is a life overseas: the mission conversation, you might have noticed I’ve added their button to our website. Last week they had a post on Third culture kids, commonly known as TCKs.

The post was a letter to parents of TCKs with a few reminders that I’ve heard over the years through the various training programs that we have attended, but one of the issues that always seem to be a challenge for me is what the long term effect will be on them for living outside their passport country as children.

I know that I struggle with the fact that they don’t get all of the various opportunities that another child in our passport country might be able to have. First point in the blog GUILT WILL GET YOU NOWHERE. The next point was where is back home, from time to time Jonah might blurt out “I want to go back home to FRANCE.” Thankfully he doesn’t say this very often, but we struggle to make where we are a home where they can feel safe and know that where ever we are sleeping is home. Or wherever there is a trail of blue tape.

So at the dinner table tonight when one of our children asked “what’s a garbage disposal?”, we just smiled and explained that in the USA many people have a machine attached to their sinks where they can put the food that they don’t finish and the machine chops it up into small pieces and down the drain, instead of in a pink compost bucket under the sink like us.

No guilt today, just a little chuckle about a small machine that hasn’t made it to our kitchen in Cameroon. One of these days we will need to explain what a street address is. Not this week though.

Posted in Cameroon, home, Kids | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Yard Sale Entertainment

There are a couple of times a year when the mission community comes together to have a great exchange…oh I mean…yard sale.  I think it’s not just a time to get rid of some unwanted stuff, but also a time of entertainment.  There are very few entertainment options, so if there is something going on, it’s the social event.  I’m always amazed at stuff people hold onto and try to sell.  I’m also amazed at some of the treasures within the piles.  We had very little to sell and as always, came home with other people’s unwanted things to replace the items we just got rid of.

???????????????????????????????

Posted in Cameroon, home | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Car Repair

The basketball court just outside our gate is a great area.  We are thankful that the previous residents of the house we live in made the court.  It’s used for all kinds of things, including car repair.  What I (DeAnna) found most interesting wasn’t that car repair was happening on the basketball court, but that the whole car was being propped up like one would prop up a car hood.  We’ve seen this before as we pass car repair entrepreneurs, but this time we could get up close and take a picture.

I remarked to the men working on it that it seemed dangerous to me to work under it and they all got a belly laugh from my comment.  Later that day we heard a loud noise followed by laughter when they removed the boards and allowed the car to fall down just like one does with a car hood.

IMG_2176 IMG_2175

Posted in Cameroon | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Fowl

There are roaming chickens pretty much everywhere you go.  I’m (DeAnna) nervous when they seem to not be moving off to the side when I’m driving because I don’t want to hit it and have to pay the owner for the chicken I hit.  We didn’t know until living here that roosters crow all the time, not just in the morning, however, we are used to hearing them so they don’t keep us up anymore.  Just outside our gate is a poultry family who likes to nest in the ashes of our neighbors burn pile.  As David would say “They are fowl.”

IMG_20131010_133050

Posted in Cameroon | Tagged , | 3 Comments

Mud Homes

The soil here is red and full of clay.  It reminds me (DeAnna) a lot of the soil where my grandparents live (Burtville).  There is a pottery place in Eseka that uses the clay found in the riverbed.  It is a natural building material for constructing homes.  First one starts with the frame and fills in the gaps with mud and let it dry.  Sometimes the mud and frames are covered with a thin layer of cement or sometimes not.  Sometimes you’ll find places making mud bricks that dry in the sun, then the bricks are stacked to build a structure.

This house is one we passed by and took a picture to show a typical mud constructed home.

IMG_2139

Posted in Cameroon | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Owl What?

I (DeAnna) was given an owl pellet in August to use during our homeschool year.  While making lesson plans, I found a great unit to add this dissection process to.  When an owl eats, it doesn’t chew up all the little bones and parts of what it eats, so it creates a ball (kind of like a cat’s fur ball) that it spits up and violà you have an owl pellet.  Within these small masses one can discover many bones and find out what the owl ate.  Jonah’s had so much fun dissecting the pellet and finding these little bones.

Our educated guess, based on the bones found within the pellet, is that this particular owl ate a mouse and a shrew.

IMG_2169 IMG_2174

Posted in Cameroon | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Calm and Stress Free

We saw this billboard on the side of the road during our daytrip and found it interesting how the bank was advertising a calm and stress free retirement, yet it also had the MasterCard and Visa emblems.  We are big Dave Ramsey fans, his program is part of our story to missions, so this billboard was all that more ironic because any kind of debt doesn’t make anyone calm or stress free.

IMG_2150

Posted in Cameroon | Tagged , , | 1 Comment