ReCreation

words=>reality | thought=>action | ideas=>life

by Jonathan Lipps

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Costa Rica

tagged as: Travel, photos

I had the opportunity to spend a week with my parents in Costa Rica recently, and wanted to share some photos from the trip. They're primarily from San Jose, where we spent most of our time, but a few are from the Tabacon hot springs up near the volcano Arenal.

Simply click on the photo below to see the whole photo set at Flickr:

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Sabbatical Photos

tagged as: Photos, Travel

It's 3am in Orlando, and my brother David and I are getting in the car to drive it cross-country. We're blasting a trail across in order to transport my parents' vehicle and things to the new place in San Francisco. Before I go, I wanted to post some links to pictures from the last 5 months! They're unedited, but enjoyable nonetheless, I hope.

In each case, simply click on the picture to access the photo set!

On tour with the New Frontiers (Dec 26 - Jan 12)


Schloss Mittersill, Austria (Jan 16 - Mar 4)


Oxford, UK (Mar 4 - Mar 8)


Tumaini Children's Center, Nyeri, Kenya (Mar 8 - May 1)

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Sabbatical's End

tagged as: Personal, Travel, Updates

Four and a half months after I stopped work and planned to engage in a sabbatical of sorts, I'm back. I flew in from Kenya a day ago, and am now in Orlando as I prepare to help my parents move cross-country to San Francisco.

In many ways, I'm still recovering from Kenya, and cannot yet distill that complex and amazing experience into a weblog entry. In the coming days, I hope to write a thematic series of articles on the various aspects of my time there, which might be a better way of doing justice to it. For now, it's just hard to adjust to life in the US, and life away from my friends old and new at Tumaini.

I certainly have a lot to think about and process. Between 3 weeks of touring with the New Frontiers, spending 6 weeks at Schloss Mittersill in Austria, and now living 8 weeks in rural Kenya, I've had a number of new experiences, and noticed a lot of things about the world and myself which call for introspection, integration, and response.

As I look forward to my future both near and far, I find that I'm more confused about what I can and should do, not less! In that sense, the sabbatical did not live up to my hopes! But I'm beginning to see that this place is probably right where I should be, despite my desires for easy clarity. I think God and other people gave me so many unlooked-for gifts during this time away, albeit sometimes through hard circumstances, so it has been a slow process of gaining the eyes to see their goodness! I'm sure that process will continue in the next weeks and months.

Now, I must focus on re-inserting myself into the matrix of life here, finding work, and pondering next steps. There's an exciting freedom in not knowing where I will be in a year, let alone two months! But I hope that the right path, if there is such a thing, will present itself to me in enough time to follow it. It usually does, I guess.

So that's all for now--please stay tuned for the Kenya series, pictures, and other announcements during the next few weeks!

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Geneva 2006 (Video Addendum)

tagged as: Travel, Video

Near to the end of my trip in Geneva, I remembered that I had a video option on my digital camera, and randomly decided to take a short video at one of our dinners. It's below.

The question of whether or not to post this video was somewhat difficult, mostly due to the sudden rampage of videos hosted on my friends' blog, TrippingOnWords. Claire and Lara recently started adding one or more video spots to most blog entries, and I challenged this decision, for the following reasons:

  • Video can be more stimulating, but less evocative, than text
  • Video snippets are representative of pop culture at large and therefore should be avoided
  • Once you go video, you can never go back--readers will be shocked at text and drop like flies
  • Putting up videos of yourselves (especially as two young, attractive, American, globe-trotting females) seems a cheap way to boost a readership

The only problem is, the reasons I really felt bad about their videos were:

  • Their blog is more interesting than mine
  • They are globe-trotting, and I am not (apart from a week here in Geneva)
  • Their blog has many times the readership of mine
  • The content of their videos, while not "good" in any technical sense, are the kind of things that people will find cool. They're quirky, funny, and the poor quality and awkward dialogue just makes them that much more endearing

In short: jealousy. I couldn't watch those videos without feeling that somehow it should be me making hilarious comments while sucking coffee from a bag. Alas, the life I have chosen to write about on this weblog, while exciting, is not likely to make me reality TV's next star. While that rankles my underlying and cynically-hidden desire for popularity, I guess I don't need this weblog to be my vehicle to fame. Truly: I'd settle for its covert functioning as a singles ad! (Only that doesn't seem to be going too well either)

So, the decision to post a video was hard, because (a) I wondered if I am just doing it out of jealousy, which seems bad, and (b) I have no intention of posting more videos, so I don't want you to get accustomed to it. Remember, you didn't come here for fancy, flashy visuals! You came here to hear me whine about myself...oh...

But in the end I was bored enough tonight to edit this together, and here it is for your viewing pleasure. Flaming Desserts: (for those using Bloglines, it may not show--click here)

Now a message for those girls over at TrippingOnWords: consider the fine polish of video workmanship (which causes this jewel of cinema to glimmer with the sheen of greatness) to be a gauntlet thrown down to the ground before you, challenging you to come forth with the best you can summon. It's a duel! (And no help from outside experts allowed)

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Geneva 2006

tagged as: Beer, Personal, Photos, Reviews, Travel, Updates


If you want to skip right to the pictures, click here

I just returned from Geneva, Switzerland--a trip I decided to take a mere 3 weeks ago. Every year, my parents have a business trip in late September to some international location (for legal reasons, these meetings have to take place outside the US). Since I graduated high school in 2000 and chose to attend Stanford (a quarter school), I've had the good fortune to not be in class during these trips, and thus was able to tag along with my folks. We've been to some great places--London (twice), Dublin, Lisbon, and Barcelona (after I graduated). I didn't go on the 2005 trip, but since my work schedule permitted this year, I was able to go to Geneva. (For a few older blogs of such trips, see here for Lisbon 2002 and here for Barcelona 2004).

These trips are always fun, not least because I've gotten to know many of the other attendees, all great people. At times there have even been sons or daughters there like myself, and so there are often young people to hang out with, in addition to spending great time with my parents. My friend Laura was there, of this January's Bahamas trip fame.

The group dinners are generally quite nice, and so it's also fun to bring "dress-up" clothes to wear consistently. (I wore my suit this week for the first time since last December, I think). This trip was particularly special for me, however, because it happened that my 24th birthday was during the trip, and I had a wonderful time celebrating it with my parents and some friends, both at a spectacular dinner and later at our pub of choice, over fine cuban cigars and cognac. I certainly couldn't ask for a better birthday experience, though I did miss my friends from home. As an extra special gift, my parents also let me use some of their airline upgrade coupons, so we all traveled to and from Geneva in business / first class. What luxury!

I spent most of my time in Geneva sleeping, hanging out in our great hotel (the Hotel d'Angleterre), working out or using the sauna, catching up on my reading, or wandering around taking pictures and buying sandwiches using poor French. One tourist highlight was definitely the Patek Philippe museum, which had on exhibit some of the oldest and most complicated watches in the world. The sheer amount of time, love, and skill put into these objects by their craftsmen was literally awing. One complicated mechanical watch we saw had over 1800 unique parts, individually designed and produced and assembled. This watch, like some others in the exhibit, kept track of the time, of course, but also such measurements as the day, the week, the month, the year, the lunar phases, sidereal time, the location of certain stars in the sky, etc... (taking into account leap years, etc..--it's guaranteed to be accurate for something like 500 years if kept wound).

Life in Geneva appears to be very expensive, and the same was true of souvenirs. Accordingly, the only things I brought back were two beer glasses (one a .5L stein (Cardinal), and the other a Belgian snifter (Leffe)), both procured by my dad, free for the asking from bars. Incidentally, the beer of the trip was hands-down the Belgian Leffe (the blonde variety). It had a light color, a creamy texture, and a strong, sweet taste. It was not overpowering, though, and had a very strong spruce hops aroma which kept the whole thing dynamic and interesting. It probably now ranks in my top 5 beer list.

Well, check out the pictures, and let me know what you think!

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Futurebeer, NT Wright, and Frisbee Hype

tagged as: Beer, Books, Frisbee, From my reading, Movies, Random, Travel, Updates

Some random notes:

First, in trying to assist Nyffy with his desire to one day become the Brewmaster of Heaven, a contingent of my friends spent some time this last weekend brewing a batch of Futurebeer:


The current state of Futurebeer

Futurebeer is beer, after a while. It is not yet, however. It's that same mysterious "already but not yet" we find with the kingdom of God. Anyway, it was fun to go through a process involving (mostly) natural ingredients that will culminate in pure enjoyment after a period of care and waiting. Being a creative person who works mostly with digital or musical media, I was very glad to work with actual substances to create a product. It's sort of like the joy I have found in cooking nice meals, only greater due to the extended period of time involved in the process.

Second, I received in the mail from Amazon the first three books in NT Wright's massive "Question of God" undertaking, beginning with The New Testament and the People of God. After hearing much about these works and reading some other stuff of Wright's, I'm very excited to go on an extended journey of engagement with history, theology, and literary criticism on issues surrounding the origins of Christianity. Thankfully, I've finished Alister McGrath's likewise-authoritative critical-realism-inspired trilogy on scientific theology, so I now have room for another expedition. You will no doubt be hearing various thoughts on the books here, which is why I thought I'd give forewarning. As a bit of a taste, here's a paragraph from the introduction:

The New Testament has not been around as long as the land of Israel, but in other ways there are remarkable parallels. It is a small book, smaller than anybody else's holy book, small enough to be read through in a day or two. But it has had an importance belied by its slim appearance. It has again and again been a battleground for warring armies. Sometimes they have come to plunder its streasures for their own use, or to annex bits of its territory as part of a larger empire in need of a few extra strategic mountains, especially holy ones. Somestimes they have come to fight their private battles on neutral territory, finding in the debates about a book or a passage a convenient place to stage a war which is really between two worldviews or philosophies, themselves comparatively unrelated to the New Testament and its concerns. There are many places whose fragile beauty has been trampled by heavy-footed exegetes in search of a Greek root, a quick sermon, or a political slogan. And yet it has remained a powerful and evocative book, full of delicacy and majesty, tears and laughter.

What ought one to do with the New Testament? We may take it for granted that it will be no good trying to prevent its still being used as a battleground. No border fences would be strong enough to keep out the philosophers, the philologists, the politicians and the casual tourists; nor should we erect them if they were. There are many who have come to pilfer and have stayed to be pilgrims. To place all or part of this book within a sacred enclosure would be to invite a dominical rebuke: my house is to be a house of prayer for all the nations. Past attempts to keep it for one group only--the take-over bids by the scholars and the pietists, the fundamentalists and the armchair social workers--have ended with unseemly battles, the equivalent of the sad struggle for the control of Holy Places in the land of israel. This book is a book of wisdom for all peoples, but we have made it a den of scholarship, or of a narrow, hard and exclusive piety.

Inspiring, no?

Third, I am going to Switzerland next week. I would like to get a good digital SLR camera before then. Anyone have one they want to sell? Or any recommendations?

Fourth, I wanted to upload something to YouTube, but only have 3 or 4 home videos on my computer. Only one happened to be appropriately flattering of myself, and since the purpose of the Internet is for people to upload flattering things, I chose to throw it in to the churning mill. It's from last year in Costa Rica when Justin turned on the camera and told me to go catch a frisbee in the ocean. You can see the video here. After uploading I found many videos of real ultimate frisbee layouts, which were much more impressive. So watch those too.

Until next time, this has been your beer, academic theology, travel, and sports update. Cheers.

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Things That Are True

tagged as: Language, Love, Observations, Personal, Psychology, Random, Travel

As I noted in my Greece / Prague travelogue, I kept a list on my recent trip to Europe, which I named "Things That Are True". Disappointingly, the content of the list had little to do with philosophical truths or anything which would be of interest to your average human; instead, this was a list of things that were true mostly concerning myself (with the occasional random observation). It was a special list more because of the concise nature of the statements, the self-perception achieved, and the relatively high degree of honesty. So what follows is a very incomplete but nonetheless good summary of, actually, my identity as it currently stands, phrased in terms of struggles, loves, hopes, observations, and more.

Here it is, exactly as I wrote it out over the 10-day adventure (any editorial additions or comments will be italicized and in brackets):

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Greece / Prague Photos

tagged as: Photos, Travel

Here are some photos from my recent trip with my sister to Athens, Santorini, and Prague. They haven't been modified/photoshopped in any way! Enjoy. (You can click here to get to the photos)


Columns from the temple of Olympus Zeus

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Greece / Prague Travelogue, Part VI

tagged as: Personal, Travel

(this is part VI of my recent European trip journal. If you haven't seen them yet, you should read part I, part II, part III, part IV, and part V)

4-9, 11:30 AM, Somewhere over the Atlantic

Wow, has it really been 5 days [since I last wrote]? Shamefully, I did not write at all during the visit to Prague. Now, I'm sitting on the plane from LHR to JFK, so I have time to wrap up this trip journal. (That is, if the worst flight attendant in the world will stop being a jerk about my bags on the floor). [She had given me this really pathetic, patronizing lecture about exit row protocol, using a voice that I would only use with a 2-year-old, wearing a smile that was oozing smug sarcasm. Ugh.]

Well, the morning after I last wrote, my sister and I had some amazing breakfast crepes in Fira--the best I've ever had. After that, I did end up finding a greek Orthodox bookstore, where the proprietors did not speak very much English, but I hung out with them for a while, and eventually picked up a wonderful New Testament, with one page of each pair being the ancient Greek, and the other being modern (though I learned they still use the polytonic accents in the modern translation, out of reverence for the text). With that, our time in Santorini was more or less over, and we dutifully endured the long ferry ride back to Peiraias. It was quite a bit more crowded than before, and of course the one screaming child in our cabin was seated right next to me. I don't understand obnoxious screaming kids. Don't they get bored or tired after a while? Guess not. I hope to God mine aren't like that! We got to port just a few minutes after the metro stopped running, so we had to hire a cab for the ride back to our hotstel on Kydathineon street downtown--and of course the cabbie tried to up the price on us when we left. Ridiculous!

The next day was one of traveling. Rachel and I left our hostel mid-morning, taking leave of our traveling companion Victor; we made it to the airport OK, then took a Swiss Air flight to Zurich (before which, we were able to get into the British Airways club for an hour and have sandwiches, beer, and internet--thank you AA Platinum!). Zurich was a well-designed airport, but very hot. Our layover was not long, however, and soon we were on our rather small regional jet over to Prague!

When we arrived in Prague, the weather was cool and very refreshing--I was glad to be able to break out my jacket, finally. We took a crowded bus (it was 6 PM) to the crowded metro [to Namesti Miru], then another crowded above-ground tram to our hostel, the Czech Inn. It was by far the cleanest and nicest hostel I've stayed in, and cheap too! It's brand new, and done in a very elegant modern decor, all sans-serify. Moreover, the bar was excellent, with equally excellent Czech beer on tap, at about $2 a liter. My sister rushed off just as soon as we arrived to go to a dance with a friend of hers from Capernwray, Peter, who's from Prague. While she was busy being the belle of the ball, I entertained myself with beer and some Czech snacks [consisting of clumps of cheese, oil, onions, and rye bread; it looked and sounded disgusting, but went perfectly with the beer]. After a while, Rachel's traveling buddy from Capernwray, Vince [who'd been traveling with Rachel in the UK earlier], showed up. He was to join her and my mom and brother (due to arrive the next day) for the next few weeks. I went to bed exhausted and pleasantly full.

The next day (Friday), Rachel, Vince, and I were met early by Petr and his friend, also Petr. The two of them acted as tour guides for us pretty much the entire day, taking us to some of the main spots in Prague, but more often to out-of-the-way places where there weren't as many tourists. It was wonderful to have people who were knowledgeable about the city, and who could translate for us! [This was particularly important at lunch, when we wouldn't have been able to tell the (important) difference between, say, pork and tripe] We visited the national park otuside the city, walked through the center, then went to Vysehrad where we had lunch at a very local pub-type place and ate some traditional Czech food.

In the afternoon, I learned that some of Petr's other friends were going rock climbing, so I asked if I could go with them. Around 4;30, I met up with them at Dejvicka station and we were off to the gym (though they didn't really speak English, except for one guy, and I never really figured out their names). The gym was pretty far out of town, and it was insane--all top-rope, and all lead--so even the first-timers were being taught how to lead-climb at the same time as they were learning how to tie in! Crazy. I climbed OK--I was dehydrated from too much beer at lunch and no water subsequently, but had a good time nonetheless. [In fact, after a couple hours of climbing, I experienced some strange temporary blindness, until I drank 1.5 liters of water in about 5 minutes] Anyways, I thought we were going to be there about 3 hours, then meet back up with Petr and Rachel and Vince (and hopefully my mom and brother, who were scheduled to arrive then) for tea and dinner. Instead, we were at the climbing gym for about 6 hours--until it closed at 10:30. Ahh culture differences! Well, it was great to climb, and fun to do something, some activity, with all-local people, where we didn't even really need to speak the same language--climbing was universal! It was fun to have that connection.

Anyway, by the time I finally made it back to the hostel, David and my mom had already arrived and gone out to diner with everyone (they wisely brought back leftovers for me!) and it was great to see them, since it'd been a really long time. We were all exhausted, so I had one more beer for the day, and we all went to bed.

Saturday was our "be a tourist in Prague" day. We went to all the major sites, took pictures, browsed shops, etc... I was surprised at how touristy Prague was for what was, in my opinion, not a whole lot of really remarkable things. Or maybe I just didn't care as much about statues as those people. Anyway, we had a great and long day, walking, cafeing, talking, etc. That night (last night), since I was leaving this morning, just us Lipps went out to dinner at a really excellent cellar pub, again with excellent and cheap beer. We talked about all sorts of stuff and it felt good to reconnect as a family--we haven't really all seen each other in a long time.

Back at the hostel, we said our goodbyes and packed up. I was to leave in about 4 hours, and the rest were to be off mid-morning, starting the long train journey around Europe. We each had a shot of Absinthe to commemorate the adventure, and that was it! I woke up on time, made it through the extremely-crowded 5:30 AM bus trip to the airport, and made my flight to LHR. There was some security trouble or emergency there, so I almost missed my connection to JFK, but here I am on the flight!

It really was an incredible trip, and one I will remember forever. I was glad to see new places, to hang out with my sister, to start learning Greek, and to have lots of good transcendental plane/boat rides. Hopefully the fruit of these times will be evident soon--already I'm glad to have been working on my "Things that are true" list, since I believe there are a number of valuable insights there, pertaining to the issues I mentioned in the first entry of this journal. So there we have it! Thanks to God for a safe and awesome trip. Amen.

There we have it, indeed. Not a super-exciting trip journal, but I hope it was at least moderately enjoyable. I think I gained the most benefit from just setting aside time periodically to write, and with pen and paper--no computer glare or anything else to do. As I mentioned, though, most of the more intense and focused writing centered around a certain list, which I very simply titled "Things that are true". I'll reproduce that here soon, as the preface to a question I want your help in answering, but first I wanted to get pictures up for you all to look at, which will provide a break from all this text. So stay tuned, pictures coming up!

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Greece / Prague Travelogue, Part V

tagged as: Personal, Travel

(this is part V of my recent European trip journal. If you haven't seen them yet, you should read part I, part II, part III, and part IV)

4-4, 11:30 PM, Fira, Santorini

Picking up where we left off...after the sunset, we had an hour's wait in a cold drizzle for the bus back to Fira. When we got the hotel, we bid goodnight to the ladies (and hello to Victor, since he'd been elsewhere all day), and also goodbye, since the girls were scheduled out on a boat the next day. Then I proceeded to have what has been the best sleep of the trip, so far, by far: about 12 hours, with none of that waking-up-at-4am-wide-awake nonsense that sometimes happens.

That brings us to today. Today was somewhat less exciting, but very relaxing. Rachel and I spent most of it wandering around Fira, looking at random shops, drinking coffee, eating crepes, buying books, and so on. I had a lot of time to read and write, and also to play with the numerous dogs which roam freely about Greek streets. For the most part, they are clean, well-behaved, and healthy-looking animals--our tour guide in Athens said the government actually takes care of them! Dogs are great. Anyway, we had a late dinner with Victor, then a few drinks with him and a Canadian couple at an Irish bar here in Fira. I didn't like it--the bar felt fake, with American waitresses and music. I suppose if I'd been gone for longer, I'd have liked it, but it felt wrong in this place, like it was spoilng something. It was there that someone told me that Florida won the NCAA basketball championship vs UCLA--which, if true, means I had a really awesome basketball bracket. Well, time for bed--tomorrow I hope to find a modern Greek Bible, then we're on the afternoon ferry back to Athens, where we'll spend the night. We had to Prague the day after (Thursday)!

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Greece / Prague Travelogue, Part IV

tagged as: Nature, Personal, Travel

(this is part IV of my recent European trip journal. If you haven't seen them yet, you should read part I, part II, and part III)

4-4, 6:05 PM, Fira, Santorini

The last few days have been incredible. The long ferry ride to Santorini was peaceful, and productive. I thought, wandered the boat, stared at the myriad passing islands, read Greek, and watched Howl's Moving Castle. Like all Hayao Miyazaki's films, it was excellent. Like the others, there was a story, but it refused to let you see any character as totally good or bad, or totally on one side or another.

When we got to Santorini, Victor, Deana, and Lisa (new friends from the Athens hostel and tour, respectively) joined us in the ride from the new port up the windy hill road to our hotel at Φίρα (Fira). The accomodations are good--2 beds, couch, bathroom, kitchenette, patio for 20 euros a night per person (Loizos apartments). That first night 4 of us booked an island-hopping boat tour for the next day, then wandered around Fira to find a place to eat. We were persuaded to sit down at a cafe/bar overlooking the sunset-ready sea, where the management ordered some cheap and good gyros from another place, and furnished us with a steady supply of ouzo and beer. We had a downright beautiful show of a sunset, and stayed for hours talking, drinking, laughing, and hanging out with our Albanian waiter, Roland. We got back home after 11, buzzed and ready to fall asleep.

The next morning (Monday, the 3rd), Rachel and I were awake early to buy food supplies at the supermarket with which to avoid paying lots for lunch and breakfast. We readied for the day, which promised to be warm, donning swimsuits and making sandwiches. We took the 600 long steps down to the old port, where we arrived in plenty of time for our 10:30 tour boat departure. The boat took us and the roughly 40 other tourists first to the volcanic island in the middle of what used to be the Santorini atoll [or caldera]. We disembarked and hiked around for an hour and a half, following our tour guide as she pointed out random craters and shared local myths. There was a continuous stream of mumbling from everyone about how difficult the hike was, about which I had many an internal smug smile, since I wasn't breaking a sweat. Rachel was doing equally awesome, too.

Next came one of the more memorable parts of the trip so far. Our boat took us around the volcano (which, incidentally, was the site of the most violent volcanic eruption in recorded history--weighing in at 20 times the power of Hiroshima, the shock wave was heard 3 times by all the earth's inhabitants, as the force of the eruption rippled through the air, around the earth again and again) to a smaller island, where there were reportedly some hot springs. The boat had to stay a ways out from the island because of the rocks, so all those interested in visiting the hot springs were asked to dive into the ocean and swim to shore, where the spring was supposedly just offshore, amidst a patch of brown, sediment-filled water. Everyone who went was required to be a strong swimmer, because it was probably 125-150 meters from where we dropped anchor to the spring. It being by that time a very hot day, I was glad to be the first to dive off the side of the boat and let my muscles pull my smoothly to the springs. I have no real swimming training, though, and so by the time I reached the brown patch, my form was much less than smooth, and I was exhausted. Moreover, there was not a noticeable difference between the ocean's temperature and these "hot" springs, with the result that after I stopped moving, I was cold. [Incidentally, between the springs at last year's dude's camping trip at Big Sur, and now these Greek ones, I have officially sworn off any "hot" springs boasting a temperature of less than 100 degrees Fahrenheit. It's just not worth it.] I was shivering uncontrollably and having a very unpleasant time, so I made my way back to the boat, which was harder due to the current at that location. Nevertheless, moving was much better than sitting still, and when I climbed the boat ladder, my muscles full of lactic acid, I felt refreshed and alive. But even in the hot sun, with my black jacket on, my teeth were chattering for almost the next hour.

The third stop on our tour was the island of Θιράσσια (Thirassia), a gorgeous, rocky-coastlined island with only 300 inhabitants. There we had lunch and I took some time by myself to run up the cliff path and explore the town up there. when I reached the top and wandered alone through the empty streets and through flower-strewn fields, I felt an astounding sense of peace. It seemed that in that place, life and time moved together at the correct speed. I wanted to stay for hours, but our boat was scheduled to leave, so I ran back down the stone path to the dock and we were off.

The fourth and last stop of the day was at the port of Ωια (Ia), and there the 4 of us (me, Rachel, Deana, Lisa) decided to leave the tour and walk up the cliff path to the town, which is one of the most picturesque in all the Greek isles. It was then only mid-afternoon, and we wanted to see the sunset, so we killed time for a while by wandering, sitting in the shade, reading, and napping. Everywhere I looked, beauty attended my glance, and I wore out my camera with photos of houses, churches, the sea, other islands, etc... As sunset neared, we got gyros at a stand and walked to an old tower on a point, from which was supposed to be the best view. Unfortunately, a swift-moving cold front decided to bring many clouds, which blocked the sun and spoiled (we thought) our hope for a beautiful scene. Sadly, we made our way to the bust stop, where we arrived just in time to see the sun dip in between two cloud layers, and light the entire sky with absolutely unreal shades of pink and purple. Had there not been power lines and ugly houses in the way from that spot, it might have been the most beautiful (albeit short) sunset I've seen. Oh well--that's the result of lack of faith!

[Then it was time to leave for dinner...to be continued...]

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Greece / Prague Travelogue, Part III

tagged as: Adventure, Observations, Personal, Travel

(this is part III of my recent European trip journal. If you haven't seen them yet, you should read part I and part II)

4-2, 8:11 AM, The Aegean

I slept fitfully last night...it didn't feel like I slept at all, but 5:30 AM eventually did come. Rachel and I were out of the hostel at 6, meeting up with our hostel-mate Victor, who was traveling to Santorini on the same boat as us. We walked the deserted Athens streets and caught the Metro to Peiraias in time to buy a sandwich and board our ferry--a large, cruise-style ferry with first class, cabins, etc... I think it counts as the biggest ship I have ever sailed on. The seats are large and comfortable! When we set sail, I went to the deck and took pictures of the sunrise as we were leaving port. Again, there was a sense of excitement, as well as a sense of deep sadness. Here at this port and in this ocean were spawned the tales of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Great men and adventurers saw the same hills as they worked their sails in the harbor. Then, leaving was actually meaningful--the weather was fickle, and there was never a sure return. Traveling took adventure and commitment. Now, all it takes is 30 euros. The port was bustling this morning, as it would have been 2,500 years ago, but today it was filled with the noise and smell of cars, and the waiting ships spouted black smoke in the air. What sadness! Are there any adventures left? It doesn't seem so. The ocean is a sea of calm, barely a ripple as we glide through. But I wish, just a little, that a storm would come and make things more interesting.

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Greece / Prague Travelogue, Part II

tagged as: Culture, Observations, Personal, Travel

(this is a continuation of my recent trip journal...be sure to read part I if you haven't already)

4-1, 7:30 PM, Athens

So we arrived OK. After a long, cramped ride from Chicago to London, I settled in at British Airways' executive lounge, where Rachel arrived shortly after I did. It was good to see her, and she looked all pro with her backpack and whatnot. We had a long layover, and boarded our plane to Athens around 9:45 PM. We'd tried to talk about how things were going with us [our relationship] in Heathrow, but I was very tired and kind of annoyed so it didn't really go anywhere. It didn't help that I couldn't get my mind off of "my troubles"--made worse in public places, where there are hundreds of girls for me to be constantly evaluating--not sexually or anything, just... [hmm, this one is kind of hard to explain sensibly...]. So, the peace of airplane solitude was definitely broken.

On the seat in front of us on the flight, there was a young Greek woman, and I realized again how attracted I am to foreign girls. Something about speaking other languages just makes them infinitely more beautiful...I wonder if that's something that would wear off, if it's something I should really care about or look for...I don't know. Is it true mystery or just surface mystery? Probably depends [just like with women in my own culture] on the girl.

Anyway, our flight got in on time, and Rach and I found the bus to Syntagma square alright--10 minutes later, and we were waking up the receptionist at our hostel! The room was small but we were tired, and it was after 4 AM. The next day we slept until about 2 PM, then braved the ancient Athens streets for the first time. I was pretty amazed by how close our place was to the center of everything--the Acropolis, the temples, etc... Rach and I found a grocery store and got a loaf of bread and some chicken salad for lunch. Not quite gyros, but cheap. Then we proceeded to get ourselves lost until dinner, taking in the maze of old streets, the views of the agora [the ancient agora] and the acropolis which promised an enjoyable morrow. [Even though] tired, we decided to walk across town to the Lykebatos hill, on which was a church and some awesome views of just-past-sunset Athens. Food there being too expensive, we walked all the way back to our hostel and ate at an estiatorio [restaurant] next door around 9 PM--the meal, which was excellent, lasted till 11 or so!

This morning, being Saturday, the 1st, we woke up relatively early to go on our walking tour. It was as you'd expect such tours would be--a lot of walking interspersed with some ancient monuments. Being some of the most important ancient monuments in the world, it was an incredible experience. In the space of 15 minutes I'd stood where Socrates had taught, and sat where Paul had preached in the Areopagus. So much history I was overwhelmed by it--but the hundreds of other tourists there didn't seem to be--talking, laughing, smoking, littering...on the Areopagus, the stone smelled of cheap beer from a recently-broken bottle. It made me angry at humanity, both specifically for littering there, and more generally for creeping with its ugly modernity over and into places which should have been kept holy as monuments to the more important kinds of progress--philosophical and religious, for example.

In my opinion, to be in ancient Athens and to be anything but in awe is to be disrespectful of our own nature--all that God has given us to be. So in that sense I'm actually quite glad I don't live here--these monuments can thus stay mysterious and far-away, otherworldly. The chattering tourist mob still kind of ruined it for me, but at least my imagination could still conjure up the sights and smells of a bygone era, when people were probably exactly how they were today, in terms of forgetting how to be in awe. Even then, better to have been the pilgrim from a distant village than a desensitized resident of the Acropolis. Well, I'm rambling--I should get Rachel and find a place to eat dinner. Tonight we pack, for tomorrow we leave very early for the boat to Santorini, where we'll spend the next 3 days!

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Greece / Prague Travelogue, Part I

tagged as: Personal, Travel

I am back from my week and a half of European travels! I had an excellent time, and a fruitful one, I think. For some reason I decided to keep a travel journal (which I never do), so I thought I might as well refactor it for the weblog. It'll come in 5 or 6 installments, corresponding to the number of entries I wrote over the 11 or so days. I'll probably put a couple of these up a day, so check back often and make sure you haven't missed any! After the travelogue segment, I'll post up some pictures and, most importantly, a special list that I kept adding to throughout the trip (which is referenced at least once in the journal--so just hold your breath). Any post-trip edits will be italicized, and in brackets! I hope reading about the trip is enjoyable in some way... Here we go!

3-29, 10:40 AM, SFO

Well, I don't normally keep a journal of any kind apart from a weblog, but I feel that this trip may be an important one, so here I go. I've spent the last couple days preparing, and I feel that I haven't forgotten anything important. my two major stresses are only that (a) something at Teleios might crash while I'm gone, and (b) I will feel really shy in situations where I can't communicate in Greek or Czech. Grant me grace in both those things!

I have some high hopes for the trip:

  • I hope to get to know Rachel better and deepen our relationship significantly.
  • I hope to take advantage of solitude on planes and being in new environments to take stock of life.
  • I hope to understand and come to grips with my desire to live overseas, to see what is underneath and evaluate why it's important.
  • I hope to have many good conversations with God, in a way that only being outside my normal mode of existence can bring.
  • I hope to become pretty good at basic Greek.

Grant me success in all these things!

OK, enough for now: time to learn more Greek. By the way, the official soundtrack for the trip is the album Peregrine, by The Appleseed Cast. It is dark and brooding, with occasional flashes of hope amidst chaos. Very representative of my life right now, actually.

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Trip to Athens, Prague

tagged as: Personal, Travel

In about 12 hours I'll be taking the BART to SFO in order to fly to London, where I'll meet my sister Rachel, who's been doing a little backpacking around the UK. Together we'll fly to Athens and spend about a week there. I've never been to Eastern Europe or the Mediterranean (apart from Barcelona), so I am very excited. Because we at Teleios (soon to be something else, hopefully) have been working furiously in preparation for the official launch of this website and more importantly our learning software, I haven't had much time to focus on learning Greek, but I have been getting a minimal familiarity with the language. Ancient Greek doesn't transfer super-well to understanding Modern, but it's at least a good start, and I'll certainly be able to read street signs for names.

Rachel and I aren't too sure how we're going to spend our days in Greece--we've heard that Athens is cool but not sustainable, so we're going to try and visit some of the Isles or maybe some coast towns on the Peloponnesian.

After Athens, we have a couple days planned in Prague, another place I haven't been. The word on the street is that Prague is almost not cool any more, now that all backpacking college students know it's a good place to visit...but hopefully we'll survive the tourism. Rachel has a friend from Capernwray who lives in Prague, and he has promised to show me where to find the best beer. Excellent!

I'm obviously looking forward to every part of this adventure, but given that a lot of it will involve some cultural or linguistic stresses or awkwardnesses (and given that I'm pretty sensitive to those situations), I'm honestly looking forward, at this very moment, to the plane flights. I think I've mentioned before how plane travel is a very "healing" sort of experience for me. It promotes the kind of solitude that helps me grow, helps me come to grips with myself, what I'm doing at the moment, what I'm doing in life, and so on. Since I've decided not to bring my computer along (can't risk loss or damage), I'm also excited to have some companions who couldn't possibly ask me to do work. I have 5 or 6 books which I hope to finish off, and I also put Howl's Moving Castle on my iPod to watch, which I have been looking forward to seeing for a very long time.

Of course, I'm also very excited to have some extended time with my sister, whom I don't get to see very often, and who I'm sure has changed a lot after this past year of school abroad.

I'm hoping that this trip will help provide clarity in my heart about what sorts of things I love, and maybe provide some clues about what I should be thinking about doing as I look ahead to next year and beyond. I have so many desires and dreams--they need some kind of ordering scheme or I'll never be able to make any decisions that I feel good about. Oh well, I'm rambling...and I've got a lot of packing and e-mail writing to do. If I find a way to get on the inter nets where I'm going, I'll try and check in here. Αδίοσας! (or however it might be spelled)

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Bahamas Photos

tagged as: Nature, Photos, Travel

I finally put some pictures online from my trip to the Bahamas to hang out with my friends Nate and Laura. You can look at them here.

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Life in the Ocean

tagged as: Art, Love, Nature, Personal, Poetry, Psychology, Travel

Some random experiences from a few days in the Bahamas (from which I am now in the process of returning) spawned this poem, which spilled edit-free from my pen yesterday:

Shapes in clear water when moving
    are blurred and the fuzz provides fear
For unknown says death's always seeking
    and will in the end become near

So sun and life soon are forgotten
    if only for a space of seconds
Heart and mind illusion-smitten
    propel the soul back to the sands

From the shore heartbeats are slower
    Embarrassment looks like the heat of the day
The water is clear, it seems fear need not tower
    O'er a reckless rejoining the fray

But horizon reveals, dark symbols appear
    Omens or fins? both blacker than sky
Recklessness checked, the imagined is here
     It seems a more rational soul would have died

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"On Assignment"

tagged as: Personal, Photos, Travel, Updates

This week, I am in the Bahamas. My friend Nathan Akers is randomly an extra in the next two Pirates of the Caribbean movies, and has a hotel room in Freeport for a while. I decided there needed to be availing of (a) Nathan's company, (b) Nathan's hotel room, and (c) Nathan's hotel's free wireless, and so here I am. No idea what will happen, but so far the company is fun and the drinks are provided by someone else! Cheers.


The view from the hot tub (...of another hotel)

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UK Trip 12-2005

tagged as: Personal, Photos, Travel

I went to the UK last week with my family, as we wanted to go and see my sister when she got off from her semester at Capernwray hall, and accompany her home for Christmas. We had a wonderful time wandering around the lake district of England, randomly went to a Delirious concert in Liverpool (my mom is friends with the keyboardist), and then hung out a few days in Wales, hiking up mountains and seeing castles and such.

Apart from being pretty sick the first couple days, it was great to be with family, to be relaxing and eating well, and to be tramping about the windswept hills in 0-degree (celsius) weather.

It reminded me how much I love the UK, and being overseas in general. That, plus the generously long (and cocktail-filled) plane flights, made for some good observations and reflections about things I saw or realized last week. I'm hoping to write a few entries on those topics soon. Until then, here are some pictures, so you can at least see what things looked like in general over there.

Pictures from the trip at my .Mac picture site

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Faith and Science

tagged as: Christianity, Community, Discoveries, Philosophy, Science, Theology, Travel, World of warcraft

I'm in Orlando this week for a seminar we're putting on with Alister McGrath as the lecturer. We're filming the whole experience in an insanely-designed soundstage at Disney's MGM studios, and just being in such a cool place every day is pretty fun. The lectures themselves, and more importantly the interaction that I've been able to have with Alister both on and off camera, have been incredible.

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Back in the US

tagged as: Community, Culture, Travel, Updates

I'm experiencing a general sense of depression as normal life here in the states is starting to re-encroach on my soul. Our little community/house church retreat to Costa Rica was challenging and satisfying in so many deep ways it is sad to see it end.

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Costa Rica

tagged as: Culture, Random, Travel

Well, who would have guessed! My hotel here in Costa Rica has internet access! I made it here without mishap, though one of my friend's flights was cancelled.

Just wanted to drop a line and say hello--hope you folks get along well without me while I'm gone. Doubt I'll have internet outside of San Jose here--we're going to some remote (and awesome) hot springs and beaches starting tomorrow.

So far Costa Rica is a cool place--very Centroamericano, and the country saying is--"Pura Vida". I love it.

See you guys in some days! (I forget how many)

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