Showing posts with label family blog kenya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family blog kenya. Show all posts

04 February 2014

Third Culture Kids



Raising "Third Culture Kids".  Also known as TCK.  




Part of me is hesitant to talk about this.  For one because the more people we network with and the more people that follow this bliggity blog of ours, the more I want to retreat and hide out, keeping our family as private as I can.  Of course, there's some wisdom in that, but there's also a time to get real and share real life situations to learn and grow together.  The other reason is because we are still very new to raising our own children in general, let alone raising our children in another culture.  But we have found that when God calls you to something, He doesn't just leave it up to you to stumble around and find your way.  The God who created the heavens and earth is actually right by our side every step of the way when we follow Him and put our trust in Him.  His Holy Spirit has been our teacher and comforter in this area.  Not to say we don't have some messy days and crazy kids every now and then but wow, I'm so grateful to have the spirit of wisdom from God.  I'm also forever grateful for some pretty incredible parents of older kids along the way that have spoken wisdom into our lives.  So here's my attempt to share a little into our journey of raising TCK.  

Oh and one more reason is there are a lot of books and articles on this subject.  When moving to Africa (before I was married and before having children), I had no idea of the term "third culture kids".  Then after our first born, I started hearing more about it and was recommended the books.  I haven't read even close to half of them.  Actually haven't picked up and read a whole book about it, mostly because of the responsibilities we have here and raising three small children and three teenage boys in our home. But I have wanted to!  So this is just our journey and what I've learned so far. 

I've learned with living here that sometimes it's better not to read too much but let God and those discipling us to teach us.  Mommy blogs and articles are great but sometimes, it's too much.  This might not even make sense unless you're living in a culture far removed from America.  Labels and 5 step programs to a better child can limit your parenting regardless of where you live and then trying to do things the way American moms do and applying it here, doesn't always work out.  Perfection in parenting can be your biggest enemy.  Excellence in parenting with complete reliance on the Lord is a better mindset.    

I like to stay in touch with whats going on in America to a degree.  Missionaries long ago barely had communication through phones and relied on letters every few weeks or months.  That's not us.  We can get on the internet everyday, check facebook, skype with grandparents, call a friend and chat a bit for only a few dollars, and make a handful of recipes of foods we miss (i said handful, ha).  Which makes it easy to raise our children with familiar things from our culture.  At the same time, I want them to grow up loving Kenya and Africa as well and things like Kenyan food and the language to be normal.  

We homeschool.  I know I tend to go back to this subject but at the moment, this is a lot of my life.  I don't homeschool to shelter him.  Hello.  We moved to another country.  But at the same time, we can't lock ourselves down in our compound here, which some days is easy to want to do.  We go to Mattaw often and make friends around here.  We travel around Kenya and make friends where we go.  My kids have made friends with Kenyans, kids from Australia, from Switzerland, America and many other places around the world.   They don't look at the color of skin and think anything different.  In my kids eyes, we're all equal and that's how God intended us to see one another.  




There are reasons I'm glad I'm not raising our kids in the culture we grew up in and at the same time many reasons I miss not being able to raise our kids in America.  Facebook will keep us up to date on some things.  I came across an article of a public school in America kids can't even mention having a gun that blows bubbles at home and asking a friend if they want to play with it for fear they'll be expelled.  It didn't even cross my mind about there being anything wrong with the first picture above but I'm gathering that if Elisha took it to show and tell in a public America school, he'd be in huge trouble and I'd be frowned upon as a parent.  When here, our Mattaw kids make bows and arrows all the time and we found a few days ago all the little boys eager to get out of school and play with them first thing.  No one thinking anything of it.  Anywho, not to get off on that subject or ruffle any feathers.  

I've learned that being missionaries or even just being people that are from another country and now living halfway around the world, that you can't put yourself in a box of how you do things.  Some people will send their kids to boarding school, some will home school and some will send them to local day schools.  We have to do what we feel God has led us to and not judge others if they do it differently.  Some missionaries live in huts and others live in western type houses.  Some want their children completely submerged in the culture, dressed exactly the same, making the national language their first language.  While others will stay as much to their roots as possible.  Then there's everything in between.  

Comparison is the stealer of joy.

Bud and I started our married life here, making it easier to raise a family here.  We didn't get settled in the American culture then have to transition our family here.  Although we have jumped back and forth, living in the states up to 6 months every few years (to have our babies).  So for us, we've stayed more in touch with family, friends and the culture.  We are here in Kenya for almost a year this time before visiting the states for around 3 months.  In a way, we are nomadic.  But we do not consider this world our own.  This is how all believers should live.  Our home is heaven and we are all on a mission here.  One of the greatest revelations to our generation I've noticed is the common teaching of "missions is not a destination but a lifestyle" and also "missions is a lifestyle all christians are called to, you can do missions wherever you are".  That's another subject though.  I could so keep going off rabbit trails here.  

We have found that you gain some things and lose other things.  Our children lose a lot of the roots where Bud and I were raised, but they gain perspectives, understand more nations and have the ability to communicate with more people.  We are from TEXAS.  And we are very thankful for that.  So you can bet my husband wears a cowboy hat and boots and we have a bit of Texas decor in our house and make a lot of southern meals.  When playing pretend games, Elisha has a hard time deciding if he will be a cowboy with a gun or a tribal warrior with a spear and bow and arrow.   Last year we spent 7 months in the states having our third baby and ended up staying longer than planned for our baby to have heart surgery.  During that time, our kids were able to attend a christian pre-school.  It was great.  And I thought I was really messing them up by letting them get used to life in Texas and they would miss it in Kenya.  Although we do bring it up from time to time, they still call Kenya home and love it here.  When in Texas, they would talk way more about missing our home in Kenya than they do here in Kenya talk about missing Texas.  



(western day at preschool in Texas)

For our children, the life we live is the norm.  I sometimes will process with our children where we live and differences from where we came from.  But I find that it's just all the same to them.  Going or coming, it is normal to them.  Sure, transition back and forth isn't always easy, but it's normal.  They learn so much from watching how we handle it.  When I get to missing their grandparents and our friends, I notice they bring it up more often.  So as that is a healthy thing to miss, I try and not let negative thoughts influence them.  Like complaining about situations here that are hard.  To them,  often power outages and ridiculous bumpy roads are normal.  A trip to the grocery store where people want to touch their hair and laugh at how they talk might not always be easy for them, but it's normal to them.  

Home school is a new learning adventure for this mom.  I found getting Elisha to learn his letters and start reading is HARD.  But we are overcoming.  But in a moment of discouragement at how much he is learning in certain areas, I found a few nights ago our Kenyan sons drilling him on how much swahili he knows.  Although he can talk more than translate, he was able to translate so many words and sentences from swahili to english.  It was just what I needed to be reminded that although he might not be getting the best academic schooling at the moment, socially he is learning far more than I could ever give him in America.  He will grow up knowing many cultures and having a world view that is not intimidating but adventurous. 

We teach our children to embrace every people group, live life through positive lenses, have adventure, ask many questions, travel to the unknown and do not be afraid.

One of the reasons why I ultimately decided to homeschool our kids in their early years (notice I don't have a time frame of how long until they possibly go to a private school, although they might always stay home for school) is because in some way I felt they need a sense of stability and consistency.  Whether we are in Kitale, on safari, in London or America, I can always bring school on the road... or plane.  Family and home should always be a safe haven for children.  And with all the travel  we do, school and our family can be certain to them.  A friend gave me a cooking spatula that says "home is where your mom is".  As simple as that phrase is, it rings true for us.  Wherever Bud and I are, is where home is for our children.  




Another thing important for us for our kids is staying in touch with family and friends in America.  Grandparents are talked to weekly by skype or phone and we have a few best friends in America.  
(cousins and grandparents in Texas)

(Ezra with his Nene in Texas)

(Besties in Texas)


(playdate with friends in Texas)

Although we do not have all the answers to how to do this lifestyle with our kids, we are learning.  This was in no way to say our kids are better because of where we live or what we do.  We all have our calling and have to be faithful to God to keep saying yes.  I'm so thankful to be on this adventure with Jesus and wouldn't have it any other way!

 (Ezra in the middle of Turkana, enjoying the sand and playing with the girls necklace)
(Claire making a new friend in Turkana.  She still talks about her friend Epeyo that lives in the desert)

(Turkana)

(Claire with some of her besties at Mattaw: Blessing, Rosie and Hope)

(Claire with Lucy at Mattaw)

(Elisha playing on a soccer team in Texas)

(Elisha playing soccer in Kenya.. barefoot)




Last thoughts on this, for today, is that my kids are not the center of the universe and are not my entire world.  However, they are a priority and there's a difference in raising and training a child.  There's a difference in maintaining a child and being intentional to train up God-fearing children that will be leaders.  I was talking with missionary friends a few nights ago and found a way to put words to it.  We want to categorize our life... first God, then husband, then kids, then ministry.... or some might change the order.  But when really, God is the center of it all and we allow Holy Spirit to lead us where and when to make each one a priority.  Our marriage, our children, our ministry... its all highly important and Jesus needs to be the Lord of our life and to be the center of each relationship.  

And that's a wrap!

01 February 2012

swings and sharon

It was so sweet the other day when Claire was swinging and I caught Lucy Lou go and push her while I had my back turned. She can push kids on the swing! Her life is a living miracle. Pray with us that she'll start speaking soon!

Elisha caught on too.

(we're back to dirty bums and feet, at ALL times)


At the end of October this past year, we took in two children, Sharon and Phillip. Phillip was fostered for a few months by a missionary family that lives in our neighborhood (I'll update on him soon) and Sharon stayed with us for a few weeks. You can read about them by clicking HERE. She is now living at Mattaw in house one and will transition to house four permanently here in a few weeks. It never ceases to amaze me how quickly children transform by simply being placed in a loving and Jesus centered environment. I have so much to learn from the children. How quickly they forgive, forget and live so joyfully.

She has many many reasons to be a resentful, rebellious, sad little girl. But because of God's great love for her, she isn't. She is funny and is learning to love again.

She is often found laughing again.

I'm so grateful for the lives we get to see transformed over and over again. We have such a loving Father whose heart is near to the orphaned, poor and brokenhearted.

(we've got two new precious girls living in our home now. they've been here three days. i'll share about them SOON!)

03 May 2010

The Dumm Farm


This past weekend we went to Joplin, Missouri to stay with the Dumm family and speak at Forrest Park church. The Dumm's have a farm outside of Joplin that we stayed at and were so blessed! It is such a beautiful place. And they are such an incredible family. They are the family that came to Kenya this past January that Bud went and met up with. They have four girls but had brought the two oldest to Kenya, ages 10 and 12. The wife, Krissy, had come on a team last year in March. Their church will be sending a team again this summer in June so we got to meet with them Sunday night. I'm just overwhelmed with thankfulness to have them be a part of Mattaw. We ask the Lord often to bring the right people along to be a part of Mattaw Children's Village, whether it be in a big or small way. We had prayed way back for where we needed to visit before going back to Kenya and felt we should make it up to Missouri. I'm so glad we did! And I thought Texas was the only place that has such great hospitality and made you feel right at home. I was wrong! There are indeed people outside of Texas that do and we just so happened to stay with them this past weekend :). Lets recap the weekend...

We drove there Friday. It was a 6 hr drive from where my parents now live. Have I mentioned they moved? Yep, moved AGAIN. Northwest of Ft. Worth. The time went by super fast to get there. We timed it well so that Claire and Elisha slept most of it. Elisha was nice to us and slept 3 hours of it. We got there around 4ish. Bud went around the farm with Matthew. Elisha liked seeing the horses, cows, tractors, and bunny. Take note I said "seeing". He wasn't too interested in getting close. They have a baby calf that is orphaned and missing one ear. They have to bottle feed it. Elisha got all excited at first until the calf ran full speed up to him and he realized when we said "baby" it was a baby that was bigger than him. I pretty much didn't see Elisha all weekend. He spent most of it running off playing with all the girls. Everywhere else we went there were children that would take him to play too. The girls we stayed with were so sweet and played with Elisha and Claire all weekend. Bud teased Makensey that she was our nanny for Claire. She was awesome with her that's for sure. That night Matthew and Krissy had their parents over for dinner as well as their aunt and uncle. They cooked a delicious meal with brisket and all the fixins. You could have fooled me and made me think we were in Texas with all the good food and hospitality. Even sweet tea. We enjoyed getting to hang with all of their family. Matthew's parents came on the trip this past January as well.

The second daughter, Reagan, is a great softball player and had a few games this weekend. Bud went to watch them Saturday morning but it was delayed because of the rain so we never got to watch a game. Lunch Saturday we went to another family's house, the Meneval's. What a precious family. The husband, Carson, went with the Dumms this past January as well. He and his wife plan to come to Kenya next year. Very excited for them to come! They made us a feast for lunch. Bud ate three steaks. Yes, I said that right. They have a two year old little boy that is a few days older than Elisha. Also a four year old little girl. That night we went to the church and spoke to the children at their night service. We had a Mattaw table set up and were grateful for those that signed up to sponsor.

Sunday morning we went to church again and did the same thing, different group. That afternoon we went over to the Towery's house, who were the couple that led the team last year. Another awesome family. The wife is leading the team this year. That night they had a big cook out. They invited the people that went on the team last year as well as those coming this year. We were able to talk to those coming this year. There were A LOT of kids running around but it was fun none the less!

This morning we took our time having breakfast with the Dumm's and then left at about 10. It felt like a little bit of a longer trip this time but it still went well. We were a little sad to leave! But glad to be back with my parents and spend our last week here before flying out NEXT MONDAY!!!!

Here are some pictures from the weekend. I got them from Krissy's camera because I forgot to charge our camera's battery. And when we got to my parents, I found that we had the charger the entire weekend. Oh well, Krissy got some good ones...









From left to right: Krissy, Makensey, Claire and I, Bud and Eli, Abigail, Reagan and Livia. Matthew took the picture.

Livia and Abigail with Claire. So sweet!

Reagan feeding the calf, Jordan. Elisha not so sure about it.

Makensey and Claire at church

Claire smiling and talking to Reagan

Bud and Eli playing a game with the girls. I'm pretty sure he was cheating.

Matthew, Bud and Makensey at church

Alicia and I. Alicia will be coming with the team this summer and staying a month!

Bud and I talking about our precious Kenyan children, it never gets old!

Did I mention that we leave for Kenya a WEEK from TODAY?! I'm glad to have this last week for last minute packing, running errands, and spending time with family but gosh, I'm so ready to be back! Oh and please pray for my sister in law, Kim. She is scheduled to have her fifth baby this Wednesday. What perfect timing since we'll fly out of Houston. I'm excited to meet the little guy.

 

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