Don't start here... oh no... here is the order (with links to show you that I want to make it easy and that I understand technology :) that you should read them in. Don't worry... this is the last one and has no links in it... other than the ones below...
Myanmar (no link. You're already here.😀
If he really understood technology, wouldn't he just have posted these in the correct order? Good question...
Myanmar. The third and final overseas destination on my busy summer of traveling! I was home about two weeks after Thailand... just enough time to get over jetlag before heading back. I had a great final day with my family before heading off to the airport to start my lonely journey to a country just a little north and half an hour behind time wise from the last country I had been to.
God smiled on me and I had three seats to sleep across on my 13 hour flight to Seoul. I nearly fell asleep at a lounge in Seoul before getting on my final flight to Bangkok. Great flight! I slept nearly the whole time and arrived at midnight. I gathered my bag and headed to the hotel and met James Covey for only the second time ever in person.
The trip into Myanmar was fairly seamless. We met up with a nice missionary in Yangon who took us out for a nice lunch of authentic Myanmar food. This is a popular breakfast dish.
The fun really started when we got to Myitkina. It has the most interesting and tiny airport I have ever seen. The tiles in the baggage claim have not been glued down, most of them are broken. There is no luggage carousel, you just go and get your bags off the cart as it is pulled closer to the terminal. They checked our visa and passport yet again and made sure they knew where we were staying and then talked to the guy who picked us up and got his number. They then called him a few days later to verity that we are actually staying at the hotel where we booked. Foreigners can only stay in designated hotels... we couldn't stay with the team even if we wanted to. There are many closed off areas to foreigners. When he called our host later on to check in on us they realized they are from the same people group, language crosses barriers! Now they are friends.
The hotel had nothing for us to eat, but it is sandwiched between two other really nice hotels that do have kitchens open for dinner. After a nice meal we went to bed. James is coming from Spain... a whole different jet lag than Dallas. While we were together I would get up really early and he would stay up really late.
Amazing carving outside a restaurant you are about to see.
Facilitator dinner the first night! Amazing food on the river.
I love interesting vehicles!
The labyrinth of forgiveness. It's not a straightforward process!
I love seeing the creative ways facilitators from different countries come up with to teach the material. This is fight flight or freeze... if your Burmese is a bit rusty.
James and David! What a fun couple of guys!
Indian food with Tom and his wife! Tom was a widower who remarried someone from Myanmar. He lived in Yangon through COVID and the coup and now lives there permanently working with the Seed company. A very cool story!
Trip advisor recommended visiting this temple. Really cool from the outside. Not a lot from trip advisor in the area :). There is a great pizza place just past the temple.
The door into a church, inlaid with jade. Amazing.
The incredible group!
I love watching them doing with the youth what we just did with them!
James and I visited the four groups of teens before he left. They were in two locations.
The training was fantastic. How often do you get to do Teen Trauma Healing with one of the authors?! It is so cool to learn from James and hear the things that didn't quite make it into the book and also understand the behind the scenes better. James and I are very similar, both extraverts, both up for a good time and full of energy and with a similar sense of humor. I had such a blast working with him and having fun with him while he was here. He left Saturday and I'm here until Thursday.
I have never done the training with a translator before, this was a new and growing experience. Sometimes you say a few words and it turns into a long translation and vice versa. Overall it was great having James to share the load with and to watch and learn from.
David is our host and an amazing man with a heart of gold! He did all the translating and is local and speaks incredible English. He is behind bringing Children's, now Teens, and Adult Trauma Healing to this area through a capable team that he has mostly hand picked. He showed us where he plans to build the future TH headquarters.
Things here are very cheap due to radical inflation. No one wants this currency, unless you are here and must use it. Once you have it, it's yours and you can't turn it back into dollars or even baht. This has really hurt the people who have lived in uncertainty for the past three years since the coup. Many children missed two to three years of school which is a real hardship. It's hard to have hope for the future. Things were getting really good hear before the coup, since then the train has stopped, inflation has sky rocketed and government services in general have stopped working. Many officials are fearful as there are still freedom fighters looking to put things back the way they were.
But on an average day you can barely tell that any of that is happening behind the scenes. The people are hospitable and kind, they aren't pushy or desperate at all. Crime has gone up due to the inflation but I have felt very safe in all the places I've been.
God did great things through the training. 12 facilitators got trained and they are doing a camp for 50 plus teens! Healing is happening and God's kingdom is advancing! Nothing can stop that for sure. Here it sometimes feels like I get a front row seat. There is a Hindu teen in particular that was so touched by the lesson on laments. She wept and wept as she poured out her pain to an unknown God! May she come to know and love this true God who came to take her pain and give her beauty for ashes.
I miss my family and am looking forward to finishing my time up here strong before heading home... for more than two weeks in a row :). The power goes out here all the time, but then comes right back on. The voltage is very irregular. It makes life more interesting and really warm sometimes as the AC struggles to keep up. The training was toasty! I have caught a cold (I wanna throw it back) with all the warm cold transitions and lack of sleep.
For whatever reason after the facilitator training I was told that I don't need to be there all day for the camps. That is nice since I wouldn't understand anything anyways. I come by for the debriefs. I have today off and tomorrow will go in for the closing ceremony. I'm trusting God to make the most of this time and trying to view it as a sort of spiritual retreat. Yesterday I got my hair cut and lost most of my beard too... lost in translation :).
I miss you guys! I'm looking forward to getting back to my amazing family and friends and my work back in Dallas... and Football is here! Camp is a week and a bit away and I'm excited for that too. I want to pick up the pieces of life back home, but I'm grateful for the adventures. Thanks for being worth missing. And thanks for your prayers and support while I have been away. For checking on my family and for your words of encouragement.
Higher up and deeper in!
I'm up for coffee... not so much rice of any kind :)... if you wanna get together and hear more! Love you guys! Grateful for you!
Fin
Blessings,
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