Saturday, December 29, 2012

Christmas In Japan

My dear friends,

So many different things have happened since last I wrote: the school's Living Nativity, non-stop Christmas shopping (or that's how it felt,) being asked to face-paint for a kids' event at church, a big earthquake that happened while teaching an English class, one of my very good Japanese friends getting engaged(!), getting to go to the Tokyo church's first service in their new (bigger) location, finishing school for the semester, saying goodbye to two interns, a spontaneous chance to sing in front of the church here, Christmas Eve services, Christmas day, and traveling to the mountains.

There was a lot of work and preparation that went into the Living Nativity. It was a lot of fun getting prepared, though. After each performance of the Nativity, we had a coffee shop set up at school where people could have a cup of coffee, a slice of cheesecake, and enjoy live entertainment. I had told my 7th grade students that we should do something for the coffee house, and we all agreed to sing “White Christmas” together. (Other students ended up participating, too.) It was a complete blast! I had so much fun practicing and performing with them.



A couple of weeks after the Nativity, everyone began preparing for the last week of school before winter break. On the last day of school, the day was split up so that the first half of the day we had normal classes, but for the second half we had Christmas parties in our classrooms. I created a scavenger hunt for my 7th grade students to find their Christmas presents that I had hidden. It was hilarious watching them run around the school and outside looking for them. Apparently they had fun, so that’s good! After that, we opened presents and watched a movie together.

7th Grade class watching Elf

The whole class with Bob-Scott (our plant)
BACK: Kenta, Gloria, Bianca
FRONT: Kei, Me, Megumi


Bianca, Gloria, and me


I got a very sweet card in my Christmas stocking at school that almost made me cry. It was from one of my 7th graders who had marked the letter as “anonymous,” but they knew I would be able to recognize their handwriting. They had written so many kind things to me, thanking me for being their teacher and friend. These students are such a blessing to me. They are so much fun to teach, and it’s always the highlight of my day to do so!

One thing that always impresses me is how sure they are of the fact that Jesus is their Lord and Savior. Their faith and relationship with Him is so important to them, and I always learn so much from them. I am so honored that God would choose to work through me to help them grow in their education and their walk with Christ. At the end of every school day, our class comes together after they clean and we pray together. It’s a very important part of the day for them, and it’s always hilarious if I ever forget to come up and pray with them right at 3:30. One (or more) of them will come hunt me down and literally drag me to the classroom saying, “You’re late, Melanie! We need to PRAY!” It’s an important part of my day as well.

It was kind of sad saying goodbye to my students after school on the last day. Breaks and vacations are really good, but I always miss everyone so much after just a few days. But I am so thankful to God for this chance to rest and gain back energy. After school on the last day, the teachers and I went out to dinner at a very nice French restaurant to celebrate together. The restaurant had unlimited bread they would bring to your table, and there was someone playing some music from my favorite Japanese movies on the piano, so I was having the time of my life!

Dinner with the teachers

After dinner, we all went to see Les Miserables together. (It came out in Japan a week before it did in the States, so I had some friends who were a wee bit jealous about that fact.) It was so good, and it was a lot of fun seeing it with everyone. We (meaning me, while everyone else laughed) were singing it in the parking lot afterward, and my friend Mary Beth and I have had the soundtrack stuck in our heads ever since then.

The day after we all saw the movie together, I was supposed to be joining a team that was going up north to the disaster area that was hit by the tsunami, but unfortunately the trip was cancelled. (The driver’s wife was 8 months pregnant, and she had to go to the hospital due to high blood pressure. She was induced a few days ago, and both she and the baby seem to be doing very well, praise God!) But, because that trip was cancelled, that meant I was able to go to the airport to say goodbye to two of my friends, Emily and Heather, who were going back to the States. Heather is back home after completing her 3 month internship here in Japan, but Emily is just home for the holidays and will return to Japan the first week back at school in January. I’m so glad I was able to go to the airport to see them off with everyone. We were also able to squeeze in one final Bible study at Starbucks together before they left!






As we were sitting in the airport, I became so relieved and overjoyed that I wasn’t the one getting on a plane to go back to the States. I am so thankful that God has given me a heart for this country, and He has given me such a love for what I am doing here and who I am spending time with. Obviously I miss people back home, but for now I am so content and full of joy about where God has put me. I so look forward to the months ahead and how He will use me and grow me in that time!

This past Sunday, Honda Chapel (the church I attend here) had a Christmas party after the service. It was a lot of fun! I just recently taught Mary Beth how to play a few songs on the piano after she informed me that she was “musically challenged.” Obviously that isn’t the case, because she’s been practice these songs so much and has been doing so well! So, on the way to church on Sunday, I jokingly told her that she and I should play/sing “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” for the church party. Well… we ended up doing just that. Mary Beth played the piano so well, and I fumbled through the Japanese lyrics of the song. Despite my mistakes in the song, I had a lot of fun doing it!
On Christmas Eve, I attended two candlelit services. At one, Mary Beth and I were asked to shoot off party poppers from the balcony as the choir finished singing the “Alleluia Chorus.” It gave it just a bit more dramatic flair!

On Christmas day, there were some people in the house who hadn’t done any Christmas shopping yet, so they went shopping while the rest of us prepared Christmas dinner. We had some friends over for dinner, and then we all opened presents together.

Mary Beth and me staying warm in front of the heater on Christmas morning

Iverson family Christmas tradition - picture on the stairs



A couple of days after Christmas, the Iverson family, their nephew and his family, Mary Beth, and I all drove up to the snowy mountains of Nojiri (where we visited in October) to spend time in the Iverson’s cabin, and to ski and snowboard in the Japanese Alps. I sit in the Iverson’s cabin now as I type this. I’m passing up skiing and snowboarding to respond to emails that I have been longing to respond to for so long, and to update you all on my life over the past month.

Thank you all so much for praying for me. Like I was talking about above, I am so full of an inexpressible joy for the opportunity I have to be here! God continues speaking to me through His Word and is showing me His goodness in all things.

Recently I’ve become more aware of the importance of memorizing scripture. A challenge within my Bible study a while back was to memorize Psalm 148. (“Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord from the heavens, praise Him in the heights.”) I knew the first few verses thanks to a song sung by my church back in the States, but it has been so exciting memorizing the parts I don’t know! A part from Sunday schools and Bible camps, I’ve never really set aside my own personal time to memorize scripture. Now it’s one of my favorite parts of the day! I plop myself on the counter at home at the end of the day with my Bible and a pen while I wait for the kettle to finish boiling water for the hot water bottle I put in my bed, and I recite the verses to myself, writing the difficult ones on my hand. I love having this routine, and two nights ago as I was writing a new verse on my hand, Deuteronomy 6:8 popped into my head, where it says, “You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes.” It made me laugh remembering that.

Thank you for reading this update! I’m sorry, as always, that it’s so long! God bless you all, and have a fantastic New Year!

-Melanie

Iverson's and interns
L to R: BACK - Seth, Carol, Dan
FRONT - Me, Mary Beth, Emily, Heather


Shopping in Harajuku

Emily and I found slurpees at a 7-11 in Harajuku!
Japanese Domino's :)
Face painting for a kids' event
Visiting some friends' home

Celebrating three teachers' birthdays

I find it hard to believe that NONE of these bicycle riders noticed the "no parking" sign...
Christmas sandwich!
Decorating the Iverson's Christmas tree

The interns

Sunday, November 25, 2012

One Blessed Girl

There is nothing quite like brushing your teeth after a crazy Thanksgiving dinner! Last night we hosted a Thanksgiving dinner at the Iverson's home for 50 people on the team here. It was so much fun! Carol and us interns started prepping the food, dining room, and living room on Friday evening, and worked all day on Saturday to have everything ready by 5:30 that night. It was a lot of work, but we were all so joyful about all we had to do, that it made the work a lot of fun! It was great working together in the kitchen, laughing, singing, dancing, and goofing around. It made the time fly to be working with such fun people.

Everyone arrived at 5:30, and at 6, us interns and Carol started serving soup and salad to everyone. (I love serving people at dinner events! Especially friends.) A while later, the turkey was carved and we were able to join everyone and eat. The food was absolutely amazing! We got three turkeys from Costco and a ham! I'm not a huge fan... or even slightly inclined to enjoy turkey, so I was extremely excited to have ham on the menu. Of course there were gobs of mashed potatoes, stuffing, gravy, cranberry sauce, GREEN BEAN CASSEROLE!!!! All the usual Thanksgiving things. 

While 50 people on the team were over for dinner, only about half of them were American! There were Australians, Koreans, Japanese, and a visitor from India all at the table! (I must say, it was pretty funny seeing them all saying "Happy Thanksgiving!" to each other. One of my new Australian friends, who was enjoying his first ever Thanksgiving meal, said later that it was like an "eating marathon!")

At the end of the night, after everyone had gone home, every room was cleaned, all the leftovers had containers, and every single one of the gajillions of dishes we had were washed, my friend Emily and I collapsed on the floor in the living room and released the familiar post-Thanksgiving-dinner moan of full stomachs. As we were lying there, I commented about how I felt like we had a glimpse of what God must have felt like after he created the universe and saw that "it was good." Thinking about all the work that had gone into making that evening happen, how much people seemed to have enjoyed themselves, and all of the after-party cleanup, one couldn't help but sit there afterward and look at everything and think that it was good. 

As I was looking around the room at dinner last night, I realized how blessed I am to know all of those wonderful people! For that evening, my big thing that I was thankful for was the fact that God called me back to Japan so soon after returning to America. I am so blessed that I get to work with these team members, that I get to teach such amazing students and see them all week, that I get to live with this wonderfully godly family again, that I get to live in this country, and that I am learning so much about the Lord through the people and circumstances around me. I am beyond amazed at His plans for me!

I am also incredibly thankful for my family, for loving and supporting me so much and letting me return to this country I love so dearly! Without their support, I think it would have been unbearably difficult for me to be here. And while they joke all the time about bribing me to stay in America, I know that they love me and will always support me 100%, even if I'm living on the other side of the world. I am one blessed girl!

Another thing I'm thankful for is friends who are patient enough to skype with me, even when skype crashes all the time! I've been able to have long conversations with friends back home recently, and I'm always so encouraged by these people God has put in my life. I'm thankful for the lessons God teaches me about cherishing the people in my life, and to love everyone, just as He first loved us.

SKYPING WITH SARAH, EMILY, AND HANNAH


Thank you to everyone who reads this updates, to those who support me financially and especially in prayer! You are all instruments God has used in my life in some way or another, and I am so grateful for your friendship!

Love,
Melanie

"Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." - 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18


THE CALM BEFORE THE STORM
50 PEOPLE GATHERED IN OUR DINING ROOM & LIVING ROOM
 

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Remembering the Past, Thankful For the Present

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Recently a lot of people here have been asking me how this time in Japan compares to my last time here. Well, this time is very different from the last. In good ways? In bad ways? Definitely good. Very good. Now, my previous time here wasn't bad, but since I've returned I've realized just how different I was last time I was here and how much I've grown since then.

Since being back, I've heard from quite a few people about how much I've matured since I left Japan. I was kind of shocked the first time I heard this, because I had only been in America a little over a year before I came back here. How much could I have changed in a year? Thinking back on the past year, I've realized how much God was teaching me in America through my anger, bitterness, and lack of contentment. (I wrote about this in my first update being back here in Japan.)

Last time I was here, I was just out of high school and experiencing life away from everything I knew for the first time. I was very immature. I had a hard time with my relationships with the other interns a lot of the time, and that made things very difficult for me. This time, I have been so blessed with fellow interns whom I feel so close to already, and am able to get along with so unbelievably well!

I must admit, when I first found out I would be living with so many girls, I was not thrilled. I'm so used to living with guys because of having four brothers, so I was really worried about having to work and live with these girls. Plus my experiences from last time made me very skeptical that we would all be able to get along. But despite my doubting spirit, God decided to bless me with wonderful housemates/coworkers/sisters in Christ that I get to spend everyday with! With these girls, I get to grow closer to the Lord and learn more about Him and His love for me. Our Bible study together is so rich. I am so thankful to be surrounded by such godly women who have been blessed with wisdom in different ways and who encourage and inspire me so much.

Along with the great relationships I have with the interns, another reason this time seems so much better is because of how easy it was to get back into the routine of things at CCSI. Lesson planning was so familiar that is was a breeze when I got here, and I already knew all of the students, so I didn't have that awkward first couple months of transitioning and getting to know everyone. I love my job. Why wouldn't I when I get to teach such wonderful students and when I get to work with my best friends and family in Christ?

Last time, I spent most of my time sightseeing and doing touristy things with the other interns. This time I am so happy to be building up relationships with the students and people at church. I've been helping with a lot of church, school, and team events, which I absolutely love doing! Last Sunday I was a judge for a fashion show for the kids of the church I attend here, and all of them were dressed up as Bible characters. This past Friday I was able to observe a children's English class I will be helping take over for a couple of weeks after the current teacher leaves Japan. This weekend I will be helping with a face-painting booth for a kids' festival. The weekend after that, we will be having our school's Living Nativity and coffee house. There is so much work to be done for that!

One other thing that gives me so much joy this time around is being able to understand a good deal of Japanese. It's so exciting to learn new things everyday and to communicate with the people here. Now, I'm not very good at speaking Japanese. I have the mindset that I need to say something perfectly or not say anything at all. So, I don't speak in Japanese very much. I'm trying to do better, though! The best way to learn is to try, succeed or fail, and learn from my mistakes.

I'm trying to keep this “short” because of my knack for writing novels every time I do an update. These are just some things I've been thinking about recently. With Thanksgiving coming up this week, I've been thinking about how thankful I am for the chance I have to be back in this country - to work with the people I do, to make so many new friends and build on old friendships, to practice Japanese everyday, and to learn more about this culture and the people who live here. I am thankful for His blessings, which come in such abundance!

There is so much God has taught me recently, and I am so eager to write about it. But I'm going to save writing about it for another time, because that will definitely be long one!

Adding to my list of things I am thankful for, I want to let you know how thankful I am for you. Words cannot express how overjoyed I am to be surrounded by such a wonderful friends and family! Though distance separates us, your love and prayers are heard, felt, and answered across the land and sea, touching my heart and comforting me in all I do for and because of Him.


God bless you!
Melanie
Oh, how abundant is your goodness, which you have stored up for those who fear you and worked for those who take refuge in you, in the sight of the children of mankind!” - Psalm 31:19

Something to put a smile on your face. :)


VIDEOS!!!!!!

Trip to Asakusa
 

 Power Rangers at a school festival

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

A Voice in the Wind

"Waaaaait a second... Melanie is posting two and a half weeks after her last update? WHO IS THIS IMPOSTOR?!" I know, I'm surprised too! :O

Well, when we left off, I seemed to be coming down with a bit of a cough. The day after I posted that blog, I woke up with no voice at all. I ended up not having a voice for about a week. It was incredibly frustrating in the beginning, seeing how my job description requires me to be able to speak. All of my students and the teachers were very patient with me, but I was impatient with myself. I kept trying to speak, and that just made me lose my voice even more. Eventually I came to realize that it was God telling me to shut up and listen. Now, I know I talk a lot, but I never realized how much until I was unable to do so. It was a very humbling week, to say the least. (Especially during our school's sports day, where I had no voice, but had to cheer my team on... we won, by the way... GO RED TEAM!)

"Let the wise listen and add to their learning, and let the discerning get guidance" — Proverbs 1:5



I got to "attend" a wedding over the phone/through Skype a couple of weeks ago, which was a very interesting experience! I'm so glad I got to listen to the ceremony for my friends Megan and Louie. After seeing them and being able to talk to a lot of my other friends at the reception, it made me miss everyone so much. I remembered from last time I was here that the times when I missed home the most was whenever there was an event back home where lots of people from my church were gathered together. But I was thankful for the ability to be a part of the wedding in some way. Technology is truly amazing.

A week and a half ago, our fall break began at school. My host family and my intern sisters and I all went up north to a cabin the Iverson's own in the mountains, right by the Japanese Alps. It was absolutely beautiful. Coming from Virginia, it's been pretty depressing going into fall and not being able to see trees changing colors in this "forest of steel," as one of the other interns put it. It was absolutely amazing leaving the city, going into the mountains, and seeing the beautiful fall colors everywhere.



We basically spent five days in solitude, sitting around reading books and working on puzzles. During that time, I really felt like God was speaking to me and was working in my heart. I read through "A Voice in the Wind" and "An Echo in the Darkness," both by Francine Rivers, while I was in the cabin. Both books made me look at a lot of things in a new perspective and think about things I'd never thought of before, while also hitting me at such a personal level. Those books, combined with the scripture I was reading through at the time, really grabbed me and gave me a sense of peace about a lot of things that had been weighing on my heart for such a long time.

The Iverson's Cabin


To add to all of the things racing through my mind that God was teaching me that week, we came home and had another seminary class that weekend. It's like I was a parched plant in the middle of a desert, and all of the sudden a typhoon came, nourishing me and giving me what I needed, but then there was so much that it just swept me away. God has been blessing me so abundantly with the food that I need, but there's so much of it now that I'm having a hard time swallowing and balancing it all out! It's kind of hilarious. I feel so at peace, but at the same time I'm trying to understand everything I'm learning. It's hard to do that though, because there are so many things that I'm learning and it's making it hard to focus on one thing and figure out what He's telling me about that, and then move on to the next lesson.

While we were in the mountains, we listened to a sermon by Tim Keller about our heavenly Father. He talked about how we're never satisfied with our "home" here on earth, how we always seem to be looking for that thing or place that makes us feel at home. Then during our intern girls' Bible study, this topic was brought up again. It's such a good reminder for me that my home is not on this earth, but it is in Heaven, where I will spend an eternity with Him. Hallelujah!

This week I went with some of my friends on a fun little escapade to Tokyo. We went to the Imperial Palace, but apparently you aren't allowed to see it... so... oh well. It was a lot of fun, though! After that, I took everyone to one of my favorite places in Japan - a city called "Tsukishima" that lies in Tokyo prefecture. We all got dinner together and then I took everyone to a place by the river where you can see party boats float by, and Sky Tree in the distance.

Tsukishima


I can't remember if I've said this before in one of my previous blogs, but every Sunday, I try not to plan anything a part from going to church. My reasoning behind this is that every week, without fail, something random happens that ends up taking most of the day. It's always fun going into Sunday without a clue what's going to happen. Sometimes it could be something sad like my host family's dog dying, but most of the time it's something fun and spontaneous. This past Sunday I got to spend time with friends in the afternoon, attended a young adults' worship service in the evening, and went directly from that over to a singing and dance show at Honda Chapel. It was such a fun day, full of God's blessings!

I keep seeing online that people are writing one thing a day that they're thankful for in November, leading up to Thanksgiving. I like this idea a lot, but I just want to say one thing that I am have been so beyond thankful for recently - my intern sisters. I'm so amazed that God has blessed me with such wonderful new friends who I already feel so close to and look forward to spending the entire day with. I wake up excited every morning, because I get to work, learn, and live with my best friends. I am so encouraged by these girls, and I'm thankful for the relationships we have because of our relationship with our common Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ!

"But he replied to the man who told him, 'Who is my mother, and who are my brothers?' And stretching out his hand toward his disciples, he said, 'Here are my mother and my brothers! For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother.'" - Matthew 12:48-50

"So we, though many, are one body in Christ, and individually members one of another." - Romans 12:5

Emily, Mary Beth, and Me


In closing, I ask that you would llease be praying for me, that I would seek my Father's wisdom and guidance about the things He's teaching me, and that I would apply them to my life in a manner pleasing to Him. At this moment, I'm sitting in an apartment in Tsukishima (same place in the pictures above of the party boat,) and I have a lot of time to myself. I'm looking forward to the things I may learn while I'm here, and I pray that I would grow in this time alone. Because there is always something to do with the team here, it's basically impossible to be alone. I pray I would see this time as a gift that God has given me to better understand Him and my purpose here in this country. Also, please be praying as we start back at school tomorrow. I'm very excited to get back to seeing the students throughout the week again! I've missed them a lot. Pray for us as we all adjust back into school life.

"Delight yourself in the LORD, and He will give you the desires of your heart. Commit your way to the LORD; trust in Him, and He will act. He will bring forth your righteousness as the light and your justice as the noonday. Be still before the LORD and wait patiently for him; fret not yourself over the one who prospers in his way, over the man who carries out evil devices!" - Psalm 37:4-7

THIS IS BOB-SCOTT, BY THE WAY! My 7th grade class' plant.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Teaching, Touring, and Things



It doesn’t come as a surprise to me that I haven’t written a blog in ages. I’m still disappointed in myself, though! Why does this always happen?! No matter how strongly I want to write a blog post, something always interferes!

I suppose that’s a good place to begin this post: ever since I arrived here in Japan, I hit the ground running full-speed! Thankfully, I didn’t have any jetlag, just like my previous time here. I am so thankful for the fact that I didn’t have jetlag, because there was so much that needed to be done and not enough time to do it!

The week before school started, I spent a lot of my time at the school moving furniture. Because there were so many missionaries arriving and leaving, we kept a lot of furniture in the attic at school, then we would play musical chairs *ahaaaaa pun…* by moving furniture from one person’s house to the school, then from the school to another person’s house, and on and on. It was one thing that we were lifting ridiculously heavy pieces of furniture, but add to that the unbearable heat and humidity, (especially on the third floor at school, which was basically a furnace,) and it was just such an exhausting task! Thankfully we were able to empty out the classrooms of the unneeded furniture, though!

The week before school started, the teachers and I went out to lunch. It was a lot of fun being able to spend time and catch up with these people I hadn’t seen in so long!



A few days after I arrived here, I began battling a very bad cough and a fever. Carol took me to a drugstore, and explained my symptoms to the nice man behind the counter. He found us a box of medicine, and assured us that it was, in fact, the “most popular cough medicine right now.” So don’t worry everyone – I’m only taking the popular drugs!



The first week of school, Carol and I were the only teachers in the English track at school. (It was a lot of work, but thankfully God provided another intern who arrived the following week!) It was nice getting back into the familiar routine of things at school. I am teaching English to the Japanese students in 1st-5th grade, tutoring one 6th grade Japanese girl in English, and I am teaching elementary art, but I am mostly focused on teaching the 7th graders in the E-track.

Teaching English to the Japanese kids this time around is so much easier! Last time I taught them, I didn’t know Japanese at all, so it was quite a challenge. This time, I know a lot more Japanese, and it is so useful in that class! (The looks on the students’ faces when they realized I understood what they were saying were absolutely hilarious!) This class is definitely not completely easy, though. It’s taken a lot of work to figure out where each of the students is linguistically, and now I’m at the point where I’m trying to assign the right kinds of material to match their abilities. It’s a challenge, but so far God has given me the strength and provision I need to make class happen every week, and I have full confidence that He will continue to provide!

I love tutoring this one girl, Annemie, in English! We became very good friends last time I was here, so I’m happy that I get to teach her again!

Annemie and me
Elementary art has been a struggle for me. It’s a bilingual class, so all of the elementary kids are in this class. It’s hard communicating with them sometimes, and it requires a lot of (a LOT of) patience. Someone has graciously decided to take over that class for me, so I am incredibly thankful!!

I absolutely love teaching the 7th grade class! This is definitely my favorite class! I have five students in this class: two Japanese boys, two Korean girls, and one Filipino girl. It is so much fun teaching these kids! I laugh so much everyday thanks to them! Every time I have to read something aloud out of a book, they ask me to read it in an accent. (So far their favorites are the Chinese accent and the Valley Girl.) We have a plant. I told them to name him, and two of the students shouted names at the same time: "Bob!" "Scott!" So, its name is Bob Scott. They love that plant so much, it's great! We're all so protective of it. This past Friday we had a pretty big earthquake during class, and as we were all getting under our desks, one of the students screamed, “BOB-SCOTT! GET UNDER THE DESK!!!” So, I rolled out from under my desk, leaped across the room, grabbed Bob-Scott, and dove back under my desk. Then there's Perry, the rubber Dingo Dog one of the younger students at school gave me. Perry didn't make it very long. He lasted about two weeks, then Perry "died." (AKA, one of the students took a red sharpie and drew all over Perry as "blood.") So, we buried Perry in Bob Scott's soil. Every day we mourn over the loss of Perry. The other day I gave the kids a homework assignment: I told them they had to find things to pin to this empty cork board we have at the back of the classroom. I was getting sick of looking at it because it looked so boring. So I told them to get things to pin to it. So far, we have a picture of a ghost, a drawn wanted poster with my face on it, a poster of a red panda, a drawing of two guys in a rocket ship, a picture of dinosaurs terrorizing a city, a drawing of a unicorn, and one of the kids ran home and came back with a Legos Pirates of the Caribbean poster.

A few weeks ago, I was able to attend my first Japanese wedding. It was so beautiful! It was a western-style wedding, but it was all in Japanese. I really enjoyed it.

Some of my students and I at the wedding


Recently, God has really provided for the needs of CCSI. As of right now, we have a total of four interns, including myself, working at the school! (They are all living in the same house as me, as well.) It’s been so interesting adjusting from it just being me in this house with my host family, to having three new “siblings.” It’s definitely an adventure!

We’ve started a weekly girl interns’ Bible study, which I am so thankful to be doing again. It is led by Carol Iverson, and we are currently reading through the “Prodigal God.” Last time I was here, we read this, and apparently the interns that came the year after me did it too, but didn’t finish. One of those interns, Mary Beth, is back again for this school year, so we decided to just pick up where she and Carol had left off. So, every week we all meet at Starbucks, read our book, and enjoy fellowshipping and growing together.

Through some strange series of events, Mary Beth and I are now taking a seminary class together. We were asked if we wanted to start taking this course, but it was very expensive, so I didn’t think I would be able to. But God provided the funds for us to be able to take it, so here we are! It is being streamed to the school we work at from Christ Bible Institute in Nagoya, Japan, and is being led by a man named “Michael Oh.” We have had two classes so far, and both have been challenging in a good way. I am very excited that I have the opportunity to be a part of this class! The course is on “Personal Holiness.”

Last Monday, all of us interns went to a university festival with some friends of ours. It was at Tokyo Christian University, so all of the events there were God-themed, which was very cool. (I mean, it’s not every day that you get to see Power Rangers jumping around with a guitar and giving thanks to God!) One of my very good friends is attending this university this semester, so it was fun getting to see her.



This past Monday, I played the role of “tour guide” and took the new interns to Tokyo for the day. We went to a place called “Asakusa,” where a very popular Buddhist temple is (the oldest in Tokyo.) The street leading up to the temple is lined with little shops and vendors. Thankfully, we went on a Monday, so it wasn’t as crowded as it would be on the weekend, which I was very grateful for! (There was still quite a large amount of people there, though.) 



While looking around one of the shops, my friend and I were both buying t-shirts. The man running the shop came up to us and tried to help us find the right size shirts. When we both decided on the shirts we wanted to buy, he said, “Wait one moment! I go wrap it beautifully for you!” in the cutest broken English. It was so funny!

As we got closer to the temple, I started to get very sad. As we approached the steps to the temple, I looked around and saw people gathered around what looked like a fire pit where incense was being burned. The people were trying to fan the incense smoke onto their bodies. They believe that the smoke has healing powers. Near the incense was a fountain with ladles resting against it. It is believe that you must purify yourself before entering the temple, so people poured water from the ladles to clean their hands. They also poured water into their cupped hands and put the water in their mouths, rinsed, and spit to “rid them of impurities.”



We entered the temple, and people were gathered around what I thought at first was a giant fan. They would bow, toss a coin in, clap their hands, and then say a prayer. As I was watching all of this, the monks inside were performing some ceremony, and then began to play ominous sounding drums. It was so eerie. (I was reminded of an Indiana Jones movie.) I went outside and started praying so fervently for the people inside. In America, I never really saw much of other religious practices outside of the Christian faith. Sure, there are so many different kinds of churches in America, but I had never visited a place like a temple and seen people worshiping false gods like this. Every ounce of my being wanted to run through the temple screaming, “STOP! Jesus loves you!” It was painful to watch. While everyone was throwing money into the fan thing and praying, I started thinking about the God I believe in. Instead of me paying Him for my salvation, He sent His Son to pay the price it cost for my sins to be wiped clean - all because He loves me! Instead of me saying, "Okay, I've given you my money, now answer my prayer!" He says, "I paid for you to be clean - ask and it shall be given to you! If you have the faith of a mustard seed, you can move mountains! I don't need your money!"



After visiting the temple, we all decided to walk to Tokyo Sky Tree, which was just recently finished being constructed. (Last time I was here, they were just starting to build it, so it was cool getting to see the finished project!) It is the tallest tower in the world, and the second tallest structure. As we were walking there, we stopped and took a bunch of goofy pictures. There was one place where we stopped and this Japanese man came up to us and kept trying to help us get the angle right to make it look like Emily (one of the interns) was holding Sky Tree. Eventually the man just took the camera out of my hands and took the picture himself. It was so funny!! Every time he didn’t take it quite right, he would say, “Ah! Mistake!” and would try again.

Emily holding Sky Tree
After Monday, I ended up being extremely exhausted. I haven’t really had a day off in about two weeks, so I’m very tired. I was going to take the day off on Monday, but my host dad really wanted someone to lead the interns around Tokyo that day, so I volunteered when he couldn’t find anyone. I’m paying for it now. I have a cold and a slight cough. Normally, I wouldn’t be too put off by these two sicknesses, but I have also lost my voice, which is incredibly frustrating when you’re a teacher.

Yesterday was my birthday, and I am very grateful that I wasn’t too sick then. The teachers and some of my friends “surprised” me that evening by coming over for dinner. I say “surprised” because one of the teachers was talking about it in Japanese at school during lunch the day before my birthday, and she forgot that I speak Japanese now. They all tried to cover it up, but it was really funny! So they all came over and we had a wonderful time! I felt so incredibly blessed. I was asked what my favorite thing about the past year was, and I said that it was definitely coming back to Japan. As my mom said to me, “I'm pretty certain the best birthday present ever happened when your plane landed in Japan a couple of months ago.” This is the truth. I am still so shocked and amazed that God led me to return here. 

I will stop here, and hopefully I will be able to find the time to write blogs more frequently so they are not so long! I apologize! Thank you all so much for your prayers and support. Please pray for my health, as I seem to be getting sick a lot recently. Please pray that I would have wisdom and patience with the students and for my relationships with the other interns – that we would grow in our relationships with Christ and each other.

In and through Him,
Melanie

Here are a couple of videos I’ve made since I arrived here. The first is a few random clips I took my first couple of weeks here, and the second is all about some very interesting food I’ve had the pleasure of eating! Enjoy!


Followers