The journey continues! Although I have seen many wild animals in the first year I have been here this blog is not about the sort of safari you would normally expect. It's about the journey into prison throughcare ministry in Kenya. It's a place where I can make note of the people I come across and the things I do and see. It's a place to pass on info and make links to other stuff as well. Keep track!
Wednesday, 6 July 2011
Bag packing
Packing suitcases is always a big challenge - what do you put in? what do you leave behind? what is indispensable? what isn't really needed? I am always intrigued when I return from a trip to see what never got used. I suppose I am one of those people who puts things in 'just in case'. But as I leave for Kenya on this trip I am having to think about three different types of journey - and I am not sure whether the task is made any easier by the fact that I have just discovered that we can take two 23kg suitcases per person. O the choice of what to take and what to leave! Most immediately there is the family holiday to consider. That part is easy - swimsuit, mask and snorkel, cotton clothes, sandals, bird book, binoculars (yes I am a birdwatcher!) . But then there is my 4 week secondment to the Presbyterian Church of East Africa and to Philemon Kenya. Will I need any books to help prepare sermons? Better take Common Order me thinks. It's a funny feeling leaving my library behind. I have been so immersed in books over the past few years and now I will be standing in a foreign country, miles from Scotland with nothing but the Bible and all I have ingested through years of study and placements. Then there is the actual move out to Kenya which I will be making later in the year. What can I take out now that I might need later? My youngest son, Aidan, will be starting school in Nairobi in August and he is packing all his worldly goods into 2 suitcases. What baggage we accrue as we go through life. In fact one of the good things about moving is that you get a chance to throw out all the junk that you never use or wear. Preparing for moving to Kenya is also an opportunity to look at what I will find most useful in all the training I have undertaken and what bits I may end up leaving aside. As circumstances change different skills and attitudes are needed at different times. This can be unsettling but the lure of a new place, new people, new situations always outweighs any reservations I might have. I have found it is the same with my faith as well. As new questions arise, as I face new situations, as I meet others and listen to their point of view I have a chance to reflect on what baggage I have been carrying around from the past, what is useful and what needs thrown out. So my cases are packed - but only for the journey. Its not good to pack things away for too long.
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How very nice to have discovered your blog!
ReplyDeleteHelmut.
Sheena,
ReplyDeleteI found your blog through Sanctuary First. I am so excited for you and your journey. Know that you will have prayers from around the world, including Calfornia.
My church, Grace Chapel of the Coast (Oceanside, CA), sponsors missionaries Rich and Stacy Davis in Kijabe, Kenya. He is a doctor and works at a hospital there.
I do not know the Davises personally, but I do know someone who went to school with Stacy. Kind of a friend of a friend... the same way I found out about you.
Blessings,
Christine