Baby Tea

Last Sunday, there was a baby shower/tea for Valerie! We’re all excited for her little baby to come into the world.

The beaming mother-to-be!

Delightful tea!

Lovely ladies!

Chitter chatter

Fun little gifts

Waiting for baby Eli!

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Music Festival 2011

March 28-31 was our 29th annual Music Festival.

Music Festival program

The Strings performed on Tuesday, the day after I got back from Madrid!  I watched my private lesson students perform solos for 2 judges (Kristi Dahlstrom in the morning and Peggy Stuckey in the afternoon). It was rewarding to see the fruits of the students’ hard work.

Cellist performs "May Time"

A.C. plays "Mi Mancherei" and a "Allegro Spiritoso"

Peggy works with J.K.

Thursday night was the Honors Festival for the outstanding performers the judges from each section chose.

D.P. plays "Long, Long Ago"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7jJkf9LbuZQ

K.O plays "Venetian Boat Song"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ3Dv-WH_XI

K.W. sings a lovely Victorian song

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0cWbBAFqAA

L.D. performs a classical guitar solo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xBv9kUD2tQ

M.F. performs "Snow Dance"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQckyccdufM

Katie and J.L play a flute duet

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iSxp69MdHnw

B.K. performs the Bruch Violin Concerto

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUAVd_ttvLU

J.L. performs a challenging solo to end the night

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9krTHqyurvU

To God be the glory.

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Madrid

The second to last weekend in March was the ACSI Honor Choir and Strings Festival in Madrid, Spain. Evangelical Christian Academy (ECA) hosted the event, bringing in a college-level choral conductor to coach the choir. I coached the string quintet while playing viola.

3 students and 3 chaperones came from BFA. We left on Wednesday the 23rd.  When we got to the airport in Madrid, my violinist realized he had left his passport on the plane! Fortunately he was able to get it back.

Someone from ECA picked us up, took our luggage to the school, and dropped us off with some students from ICSV (International Christian School of Vienna). We experienced a bit of Spanish culture by going Tapas hopping. “Tapas” means appetizers. We went to various Tapas bars and had little sandwiches and other things.

Sunshine could model for Coca-Cola advertisements!

One place specialized in seafood, so our guides ordered fried squid for all of us. It wasn’t so bad until I realized I could see the tentacles and eyes.

Mmmm.... fried squid!

Thursday and Friday were big rehearsal days. We practiced a lot!

ECA's violinist E.H. prepares to play

Adrianna marks in a bowing

Though we worked hard, we enjoyed our breaks!

Spanish soccer game that involved juggling, shooting on goal, and being "punished" if scored on too many times

More soccer

On Friday afternoon we played “Eine Kleine Nachtmusik” for ECA’s chapel time. The choir also sang a couple songs.

It was a rough performance for us. We had some intonation issues. So Friday night and Saturday we buckled down and came up with some strategies to improve the quality of playing. It was a stretching experience for me as a teacher. I think I learned as much as the students did this weekend!

Saturday morning we did a tour of Madrid.

Bus to Madrid

The entire choir and strings group

The most famous statue in Madrid: a bear kissing a tree

Plaza Mayor

I think this was the Communications Building

Madrid's version of the Arc de Triomphe

There was a Pro-Life demonstration in the central part of Madrid (Puerta del Sol). Katie and I tried walking the wrong direction.

Si a la Vida - Yes to life

We weren’t sure exactly what the focus of the event was. There was something about abortion, funding for pregnant mothers, and the events in Libya. It was all tied together.

Saturday night we played at the town hall in Camarma (the suburb of Madrid where ECA is located).

The choir sings beautifully

Our Quintet

For this performance, we played Eine Kleine (much more in tune) and the first and third movements of Elgar’s String Serenade.

The program cover

Inside the program

Program directors

Sunday morning we had a worship service at the school. The speaker talked about being salt and light in our schools. Then each school had a student stand up in front of the group and share about the youth in their country and ask for specific prayer requests for the school and the country.

Many of those kids have a great heart for the youth around them. One student said he had been challenged, “Don’t just be a missionaries’ kid. Be a missionary kid.” Even as children, students can be a light in the world. Many of them reach out by offering opportunities for the youth to learn English. One of the recurrent themes was that in the youth of most European countries, a great sense of apathy reigns. Please pray for these MKs as many of them are the future missionaries to the cold hearts of Europeans.

After the sharing time, we broke up into groups to pray, then had our banquet.

Salad at the banquet

Katie smiles with her salad

Hunter, chaperone extraordinaire, prepares to dig in.

Our final performance was at the Tres Cantos church, home to a certain community choir. This choir hosted us, bringing food and drinks before our concert. They also gave Dr. Anderson and me a special gift: the score and recording of their 50th Anniversary Commemoration  Mass, composed by their very own conductor!

Commemoration Mass score and CD

The performance itself went very well. We performed Eine Kleine and the entire Elgar String Serenade (the 2nd movement was the hardest but the students’ favorite). The acoustics in the church were lovely; it gave our little group of 5 a much more resonant sound.

Posing before the final concert

Ready to play

The 2011 ACSI Honor Choir and Strings

Funny picture

We were all fairly exhausted at this point in time. Back at the school, the kids said their goodbyes. It was amazing how quickly the students bonded. They have so much in common, despite their various backgrounds.

Early Monday morning, we said goodbye to the 2 girls from Kiev staying in our guest house.

Then we went to the school and said a few more goodbyes, dropped off our luggage, and took a train to the city. Our flight didn’t leave till the evening, so we had an entire morning and afternoon to roam the city.

Finally we went to the airport and sat at a table until it was time to go. We were sleep deprived and slap happy, ready to be home!

Crazy and sleep deprived chaperones!

Poker with a twist

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Music-filled Sunday

Sunday was a day full of music!

I took my Intermediate and High School orchestras to a church in Guebwiller, France. The church has several connections to BFA, and last summer one of the elders asked me if I could take the strings there to play for a service!

"If the Lord doesn't build the house, the builders labor in vain."

Randy Kent fed us croissants, juice, coffee and tea for breakfast.

My students are multi-talented. Four of my six high school players also play piano! Two of them played for the service.

cellist playing piano

I forgot to take pictures of our group set up on stage (15 crammed onto a small stage), so I tried to capture them in action after we were done. Some of them like posing for the camera….

B.K.’s father preached the sermon on the second half of Philippians 3. He gave me a run-down of the message on the way there. He opened with a story of a missionary in China many years ago who came back to America on the same boat as the President. The President had all kinds of parades and crowds to welcome his return from a fishing expedition, but the missionary had no one. When he complained that they got no recognition for doing work that was much more important, his wife said, “We’re not home yet.”

In his message he addressed some of the questions with regards to the disaster in Japan. It’s that same answer – “We’re not home yet.” It’s still a fallen world, and this earthquake/tsunami/radiation problem is just a reminder that we are not made to live forever on this earth the way it is now.

We played hymns that went along with the focus of the text, in that keeping our eyes fixed on Jesus is the main thing. We played “Seek Ye First,” “I Have Decided to Follow Jesus,” “Teach Me Your Ways,” “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus,” and “In My Life Be glorified.”

After the service, we went to McDonald’s for lunch and headed home. There’s no Mickey D’s in Kandern, so the kids don’t get to eat there very often.

Later in the afternoon, BFA’s Beginning Band had a combined concert with beginning bands from the community. I was able to attend and enjoy the cooperation of BFA with German school groups.

3 bands combined at the end; Katie explained how the concert came about

Sunday evening was a wonderful piano concert and message by Karen Purpero. The theme was “Freude auf den Frühling,” or Looking Forward to Spring.”

She tied in the way the melody comes back in a complicated, dissonant piece of music. In the same way, we go through deserts in our lives, but we can trust that we will get through it and it will get better.

She also said that we are all created for a purpose. How do we find out what that purpose is? Get to know the Creator!

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Schedule

Here’s a glimpse into my life these days:

Sunday morning I’m taking a trip to France with my High School and Intermediate Orchestras. We’re playing for a church service in Guebwiller. Next week I have to fit all my lessons into 2 days because I’ll be gone in Madrid (for ACSI Honor Choir/Strings) from Wednesday till the following Monday, and Music Festival is that Tuesday so I can’t just skip lessons! Here’s my scribbled attempt at a schedule for next week, written on my easy-to-edit whiteboard:

I’m still trying to figure out how to be in 2 places at once on Tuesday after school!

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How’s your German?

People ask me once in a while, “So how’s your German coming? You fluent yet?”

No, I’m not fluent. But I’ve made progress!

Speaking is the most difficult for me right now. Some topics are easy and I can just carry a conversation without having to think about it. Anything, however, that requires me to think abstractly is difficult because I have to switch to a different part of my brain, and the German hasn’t entered that part of my brain yet. Sentence structure in German is often backwards from English, so often I will think of the word that comes at the end of the sentence first because it would come first in English. Last Saturday I ran to Lörrach and met some Christians passing out tracts. We conversed fairly easily in German. I also talk with my stand partner in the Markgräfler Symphony Orchestra each week. Normally we talk about homework, practicing, the music we’re playing, etc., but a couple weeks ago we talked about faith and God and how He speaks to us. That was a little more difficult and I spoke painfully slowly and awkwardly, but it was a good conversation nonetheless.

Listening is coming pretty well, but it depends heavily on the speaker’s accent (Alemannisch is still almost incomprehensible), the speed with which the person is speaking, and the context (it’s hard for me to jump into a conversation with no context). Church has given me lots of practice in understanding various speakers. I love to hear someone speaking clear High German!

Reading comes fairly quickly to me now. I am reading chapter books in German without using a dictionary. I don’t get every single word, but I don’t need every word to understand the meaning.

Writing is much easier for me than speaking. The time it takes me to type out a sentence is just enough for me to process the word order and grammar! Last week, Frau Hill gave my German 3 class the assignment of writing a short story using a list of idioms. There were no guidelines other than “use all these idioms,” so I had to get inspiration from somewhere. Even if you can’t read German, the pictures will at least help you get an idea of what my inspiration was…

* * *

Eichhörnchen im Schwarzwald

Hallo Leute, ich heiße Süßigkeit, Kurzname Süßi. Ich bin ein Eichhörnchen. Wie bitte, fragst du? Ein Eichhörnchen? Tiere können aber nicht schreiben! Na gut, das ist, was du denkst! Ich bin ein besonderes Eichhörnchen. Ich muss schreiben, weil ich habe eine wichtige Geschichte zu erzählen! Die Menschen müssen etwas über Eichhörnchen wissen.

Meine Geschichte beginnt mit meinem Leben, aber ich muss zuerst etwas über Eichhörnchen sagen. Seit immer haben Eichhörnchen ihre hübsche kleine Ohren geliebt. Sie hassen Haaren am Ohren.

ich als Kind

Ok. Ich bin im Schwarzwald geboren und aufgewachsen. Als ich fünf Monate alt war (ein Teenager bei Eichhörnchen Jahren), war mein ganzes Leben verändert. Es war eine dunkle und stürmische Nacht…. Moment, nee. Falsche Geschichte. Eigentlich war es ein wärmer Tag im Herbst, Jahr 1050.

Ein Freund von mir, der Rostig hieß, sagte zu mir,

„Hey Süßi, willst du ein etwas mit mir spielen?“

„Was für ein Spiel? Spielen wir Fangen?“ fragte ich.

Nee, das ist Schnee von gestern!

„Spielen wir Kniffel?“

„Nein! Mann, das war tote Hose! Ich meine etwas aufregend, nicht langweilig.“

Das geht mir auf den Keks! Also bitte, was spielen wir denn?“ fragte ich.

„Mein Spiel ist ein Geheimnis“ flüsterte er.

Das kommt nicht in die Tütte! Ich werde nie ‚ja’ sagen ohne wissen, was wir spielen!“

„Aber dann wirst du all den Spaß verpassen. Vertraue mir! Wir werden Spaß machen.  Du kannst Gift darauf nehmen!“ spottete er. „Folg mir jetzt!“

Er hatte einen Vogel; warum sollte ich ihm folgen? Aber das tat ich. Ich kann nie ein Geheimnis entgehen lassen. Ich muss immer wissen, was um die Ecke ist, oder was hinter ein Wand liegt. Ich bin immer gespannt. Diesmal musste ich wissen, was für ein Spiel er meinte.

Er hatte mich über den Tisch gezogen. Beim ‘Spiel’ meinte Rostig, ‘Streich.’ Ich mag Streiche, aber nicht idiotische Streiche. Wir kamen auf einen schönen Garten an, und er flüsterte zu mir,

„Heute werden wir den Zwergen einen Streich spielen!“

Der hat nicht alle Tassen im Schrank. Zwergen sind mürrische, gefährliche zauberische Völker.

Das kannst du dir abschminken! Ich tue das nicht! Bist du total verrückt? Aber… was für einen Streich möchtest du spielen?“

„Wir werden nur ein Paar Pilze vom Garten stehlen und die am Dach des Zwergehauses umsetzen!“

mürrische (Garten)Zwerge

Das wäre ein Schuß in den Ofen! Die Zwergen werden uns töten, oder schlimmer, und wofür? Warum werden wir Pilze umsetzen?“ fragte ich ärgerlich aber neugierig. Er erwiderte,

„Es gibt ein Sprichwort, das lautet folgendermaßen:

Wer ein paar Pilze von Zwerge umsetzt,

Mit Händen und Füßen besetzt,

Werden drei Wünschen erfüllt werden.

Aber pflanz die Pilze nicht auf Erden!

Deshalb müssen wir die Pilzen im Dach umsetzen. Das macht viel Spaß! Ich kann kaum warten! Also los!“

Vor ich etwas sagen konnte, rannte er den Garten hinüber. Ich folgte ihm auf Zehenspitzen.

„Rostig!“ flüsterte ich. „Ich habe die Nase voll! Wir riskieren unsere Leben für einen Mythos??“

Natürlich hört er mich nicht an, und ich musste meine Geflüster aufhören und ihm helfen. Wir hatten fünf Pilze entwurzelt, als wir einen Tritt hörten.

„Schnell! Unter die Bäume!“ sagte Rostig.

Wir rannten vom Garten in den Wald. Rostig aber ließ ein Pilz fallen in seine Eile.

Das ging in die Hose! Was können wir tun? Der Zwerg wird den Pilz sehen!“ schrie ich auf.

„Wart hier. Ich werde den Pilz holen,“ flüsterte er mit Zuversicht.

Du hast Dachschaden! Wir werden getötet werden!“ weinte ich.

Aber er musste etwas tun. Er huschte hin und her, bis er den Pilz fand. Plötzlich tauchte den Zwerg auf! Er fing Rostig an seinem buschigen Schwanz und hob ihn auf.

Rostig wurde gefangen genommen

„Ach!! Herr Zwerg, ich kann alles erklären!“ sagte Rostig verzweifelt „Lass mich los!“

„AAARRRRRR!!! Es bringt mich immer auf die Palme, wenn störende Eichhörnchen versuchen, meine Pilze zu stehlen!“ knurrte er.

„Aber wir stehlen die Pilze nicht! Wir haben die Pilze nur im Wald gefunden und versuchten, sie zurückzubringen!“ weinte Rostig.

„Wir? Wer hilft dir? Wo ist dein Mitschuldiger? Das glaube ich gar nicht!“ rufte der aufgeregte Zwerg.

„Es gibt niemand anders! Ich, mich, meine, mir; wir, was ist der Unterschied?“ schrie Rostig.

„Das werden wir schon sehen. Hallo, Freund von dieser Dummkopf, irgendwo du bist, ich werde ihn töten wenn du sich nicht sehen lässt! Du hast zehn Sekunden, herauszukommen! 10…9…8….7…“

Ich eilte mich hinaus.

„Ich bin da. Ich bin die Mitschuldigerin. Es tut mir wirklich Leid! Wir wollten nur uns amüsieren. Wir haben nicht gemeint, Pilze zu stehlen!“ sagte ich.

„Hmm, du bist das ehrlichere Eichhörnchen der zwei. Sagt mir die Wahrheit, und du wirst dein Leben retten, und das Leben deines Freundes.“

Ich erzählte unsere Geschichte. Der Zwerg lachte und lachte.

„Er hat dieses Sprichwort geglaubt? Haha! Er wird nie auf einen grünen Zweig kommen! Die Dummheit! Ich hasse dumme Eichhörnchen. Ich hab versprochen, dass ich ihr nicht töten würde, aber ich werde alle Eichhörnchen fluchen!

Weil Rostig auf einen Mythos horchte

Werden alle Ohren des Eichhörnchens geflucht

Nie mehr haben Eichhörnchen hübsche Ohren

Sondern mit lange Haarige Ohren sind sie verflucht.

unsere hässliche buschige Ohren!

„Und du, meine kleine Süßigkeit, ich muss deine Ehrlichkeit belohnen.

Zu dir schenke ich dieses Geschenk:

Verständnis der Menschlichen Sprachen,

damit die Leute diese Geschichte hören können

und darüber mit mir lachen!“

Deshalb habe ich Schreiben gelernt. Jetzt kannst du verstehen wie und warum Eichhörnchen in Europa haben büschelweise Haare an seinen Ohren! Aber wir wissen nicht schon, ob das Sprichwort wahr ist. Wenn ein Zwerg in seinem Garten ist, kann man nie ihm vertrauen!

Dieser Gartenzwerg schläft... oder?

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Pray for Japan

Please pray for the people of Japan as they recover from the destruction, injury, and loss of life due to the earthquake and tsunami.

Gabe, a friend from Wheaton who is now teaching at CAJ in Tokyo, describes his experience in the earthquake:

http://gabetronblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/blog-12-earthquake.html

Jessica, working with MK2MK, visits various MK schools. She was scheduled to visit Japan, but God’s providential timing kept her away. Here’s her story:

http://jessicainrussia.wordpress.com/2011/03/11/japan-shaken-prayer-and-provision/

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High School Retreat

On Friday, the entire BFA high school went to Lenk, Switzerland for the annual retreat. I shared a room with 15 high school girls. This was the view outside my room:

Friday evening we had an icebreaker game with our small groups called Minute to Win It (based on the TV show). There was a set of tasks involving useless skills; after failing twice to complete these tasks within 60 seconds, a group would be eliminated. My small group made it through “knocking a bowling pin over with a tennis ball,” “kicking your shoe onto a mat across the gym,” and “shooting over 3 cards with a rubber band” before getting our first strike on the “spin around while holding on to toilet paper so it wraps around you without breaking.”

Then we had worship time with Dennis Jernigan, and our first session with Rod Taylor. Rod opened up by giving the kids a chance to ask him anything about his personal life. It was heartbreaking to hear that 13 of his spiritual mentors had fallen into moral impurity that had ruined their ministries. He was honest with his own struggles and the disillusionment that often comes in Christian ministry. After gaining their trust with his honesty, he confronted them with some spiritual attitude issues the student body is facing right now.

We broke into our small groups to discuss the message. Laurie Evans and I led a group of 7 girls, 5 of whom are in a regular small group together. In a weekend setting like this, it’s hard to earn the trust of the girls, especially when most of them are already comfortable sharing with another leader.

Saturday was a day mostly free for skiing for those who wanted to fork over lots of money (it’s Switzerland and therefore expensive). I decided my ski skills are limited enough that it would not be worth it, so I found a couple people to climb up the nearby grassy hill and sit in the sunshine.

The three of us walked into town and had ice cream, also. The day was very relaxing, which is wonderful after the wild pace of normal BFA life.

Saturday evening was another session of Minute to Win It (spin streamers around your arms, keep balloons in the air, and try to make your 4 pedometers add up to the highest number of steps). We were eliminated on the first one.

Then there was another session with Dennis Jernigan; he led us in a few songs, then shared his powerful testimony of how God rescued him from a homosexual lifestyle.

Rod Taylor’s next session touched on several topics, but here are a couple important things he said:

– People wanted to know if it’s possible to prevent falling the way his 13 mentors had fallen. His response: “You can’t live your life to prevent a fall; but you can fall more in love with God.” Those guys all had the same characteristic of being walled up with cynicism. They wouldn’t let people into their lives. So one thing to help: don’t get walled off.

– You have to be honest about where you’re at before you can be set free from persistent sins.

– In order to forgive someone, you must count the cost. “Forgiveness is taking upon yourself the consequences of someone else’s sins and giving up the right to vengeance.”

Small group discussion followed the session.

Sunday morning, we woke up, ate breakfast, packed up, and cleaned out the cabins. We had our closing session of worship time, a message from Rod, and  communion.

Rod gave BFA 6 random but related words of advice. In some ways, it was more valuable for the students to hear it from someone outside BFA. I think the things he said were exactly what the students needed to hear, but it will take some time for them to put them into action.

I wish I had more time with my small group! We had some good discussions by the end; it felt like there was a lot more to be said, though.

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Evening of Candlelight

A week and a half ago, our German 3 class put on a Candlelight Dinner for a German lady in the community. We got dressed up, served delicious food, presented our poems, played violin/piano music, and sang/danced to Roger Cicero songs.

Here’s a group performing a dance:

One of my students, A.C., made really delicious cheesecake for the dinner!

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Randomness

Last week a student asked if it was possible to play violin and cello at the same time. Naturally, I tried it out.

Conclusion: I don’t have enough hands to do it. If I were an octopus, maybe it would be possible. But I’m not.

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