* Michelle Thoughts, * Peace Corps

Habit-Less: Living with Intention

I took this phrase from a similar, but not exact quote that I saw on pinterest. It ties in with the quote I used in the first of this series, the Intentional Habits post. The image is of our friend, Thomas, on a ropes course at a staff team building retreat with us (about a week after Jedd and I first met). I just think this phrase makes a fantastic motto. It also sort of sums up why we are taking two years off to do Peace Corps, which we consider to be like a “Sabbatical”- a time to pause from life as we know it (our habits) and do something different that forces us to re-evaluate our values and how we live. Hopefully we’ll come back with life-long lessons, new ways of seeing the world, and resolve to help us live a fuller life- a life out of intention.

Speaking of living with intention, I’ve listed below some interesting posts from several bloggers I follow. Continue reading “Habit-Less: Living with Intention”

* Michelle Thoughts, * Peace Corps

Three Things Thursday

A Video

We have three things to share with you today… Number One is this great Youtube discovery (above) in which a Jamaican woman gives lessons on speaking Jamaican Patois. It’s a great way to get a flavor for the language we’re going to be learning in Peace Corps, and we love this woman’s energy! We thought you’d enjoy it, too. Continue reading “Three Things Thursday”

* Michelle Thoughts, * Peace Corps

Jamaica: Second Hand (Part Two)

A journal collage from Peace Corps materials by Michelle

Here we are with less than a month left to before departure! This past week we have been happily inundated with Peace Corps e-mails about our flights, staging in Atlanta, initial safety training, pre-service training schedule, and phone meetings with our program officers. We will officially be flying to staging on March 12 then heading to Jamaica early March 14. As many of you know, our journey toward this upcoming departure to Jamaica in March has been a long one and since I (Michelle) have not had “official employment” for several months, I’ve had lots of time to browse current PCV (Peace Corps Volunteer) blogs. I thought I would take this space to share some of my favorites for those of you interested in what our lives might look like these next couple years. Keep in mind that the one piece of advice we’ve heard more than anything is that each volunteer’s community, project, and experience is completely unique:

PC Volunteers ’06/’07

Tight pants– Curious what we’re supposed to bring to Jamaica? Advice from former volunteers about packing.

Continue reading “Jamaica: Second Hand (Part Two)”

* Michelle Thoughts, * Peace Corps

Jamaica: Second Hand

We get a lot of questions from friends, family, and even strangers about our upcoming Peace Corps experience in Jamaica that all center around similar topics. There’s obviously a lot we still don’t know yet, but I’d like to share some Q&A about what we think we know so far, based on second-hand experience (blogs, Peace Corps materials, etc.). So please do keep in mind that I’m summarizing based on preliminary “research” and giving my best guess here, just to give everyone else an idea of what to expect. Continue reading “Jamaica: Second Hand”

* Life Updates, * Michelle Thoughts, * Peace Corps, Videos

Peace Corps Invite!!!!!!!!!

This is what WE (and many of YOU) have all been waiting for! 13 months after applying and even a few weeks after we were originally supposed to depart, we received our Peace Corps invitation. Even though we’ve known it was coming for the past week, it arrived at the door- not the mailbox- so it was definitely a suprise. We had also been clued in to the general region where we’d likely be placed (although we were warned that the program had not made it through final approval yet- and with all the budget cuts going on, we tried not to get our hopes up), but the country we’re assigned was also surprising! Since we’ve been doing a lot of house-sitting lately, the invite came to my (Michelle’s) parents’ house while Jedd was still in Portland for work so that’s why you’ll see Jedd on Skype in the video.  You’ll just have to watch it to see where we’re going to end up…


For more key points along our Peace Corps journey, from application stages to moving in to our Jamaican home (including more videos), see: Our Peace Corps Process.

* Jedd Thoughts, * Life Updates, * Peace Corps

You want to send us where?


So if you have been following our lives for the past year, you know that we have been anxiously waiting to hear from the Peace Corps (PC) regarding our placement of service (if you have no idea what I’m talking about you can recap here).

This past Monday we received a call from a PC placement officer to talk about a potential match for our skills (it turns out that placing a couple, especially one with two different jobs, is more difficult than a single volunteer). Michelle and I were stoked. We had been waiting anxiously, checking the mail obsessively, and now we would learn where we would live for the next 27 months (something we had been preparing for the last 9 months).  Gary (not his real name) got straight to it, “We would like to send you to the North Africa/Middle East region starting in September.”

*Silence*

I looked at Michelle’s face and immediately could see and sense her heart had broken. Gary explained to us some of the particulars and about their process, but then focused on the true issue at hand, “I can sense that your energy is not the same when we first started this conversation.”  He was right. For me, I was disappointed with the news, but was open to the possibility. My battle has always been accepting that I could actually live abroad for two years (something I have fought with myself for a long time) so for me, where we go wasn’t as important as the fact of actually going.  For Michelle, it has been a dream of hers for so long to live in Sub-Saharan Africa. Before Monday, we had believed and convinced ourselves that this was the story that would happen for us but now, at least for Michelle, it felt like that dream was shattered.

We asked to have some time to make a decision. If we accepted we would leave in September. If we didn’t accept, what would we do next?

It’s not that we have anything strongly against the region, there is just no particular draw, no sense of call or excitement when we thought about it. At best we could see how interesting it could be, but there didn’t even seem to be a sense of wanderlust.

Needless to say its been a challenging week. We took walks. We prayed. We spoke to friends abroad. We spoke to former PC volunteers. We prayed some more. While we had hoped for a clear, distinct, yes or no, everyone was encouraging, supportive, and truly believed that we would be blessed in whatever decision we made. Everyone gave us incredible insight, love, and support.  It boiled down to two things: 1st. Do we say yes because it’s a great opportunity even though we are not excited about the placement? Because its something we feel like we have to do? Or, do we say no and start all over again, wait for something else that we might be more excited about. Each had its pros and cons.

We decided NOT to take the placement.

We spoke with Gary today and explained that we tried to embrace the idea of going to the region we were selected for, but that it didn’t feel right. We were both scared that this would mean our PC opportunity had passed but to our relief, Gary appreciated our honesty and thoughtful consideration and assured us he would work to try and find us another placement. So we are back in the waiting game. I give PC credit, they know their process well and have been very honest with us from the beginning. They told us not to quit our jobs (which we did), not to give up housing (which we move out this week), they told us anything can happen with our placement (which it did), and they told us it can be a long process (which it might end up being, 9 months and counting). We had been telling everyone about our PC service to Africa, and that we would be leaving in July (our awesome families were already putting together going away parties) and now, it’s almost back to square one. We are still committed to seeing if we can get a PC placement, but the next time those programs would leave would be after January 1st, 2012!!!

So what’s next? Great question.

For now we are going to explore other opportunities to serve abroad. We will take a month and a half to travel, and from June – December we will need to find a place to live and find additional employment. Currently I work part-time for Relevant Studios and am happy that I will be able to stay there longer.

So thank you for your thoughts and prayers. Thank you for being with us on this crazy journey. Life before Monday was a lot different than life after Monday, but really, we are doing well. We are thankful for the privilege to be even on this journey and as history has shown for both of us, surprises like this are not uncommon. I mean, we did meet and get married and believe me, we did not plan on that to happen. God is good. He has been and is always more than faithful to us and I hope that we can have the courage continue to trust in His plans. So here’s to whatever might happen next. We will keep you posted, and next time, I’ll have Michelle write because she’s more concise.

* Michelle Thoughts, * Peace Corps

The Waiting Game

If anyone else is thinking about doing Peace Corps, be prepared that training actually starts as soon as you apply (Peace Corps is very upfront about this- and it’s true). We haven’t even left the U.S. and already our patience and flexibility have been tested multiple times. Our application was submitted sometime in late June of 2010. We had an interview at the beginning of August (which had to be followed up with a phone call because we ran overtime). In September, we got the surprise call that a placement opened up that matched both our job qualifications: in Africa, starting July 2011. Please decide in the next 24 hours if you want your spot held? Soon after saying yes, we received the Medical Report packet. I (Michelle) had my scheduled physical postponed twice in a row, ended up returning to the doctor’s about a dozen times because of missing signatures in all the necessary places and lab tests not being ordered all at once for some unknown reason. I thought I would have everything done by October easily but in reality, it took an additional month- not to mention the follow up medical paperwork I had to do in January once Peace Corps looked at my file. Jedd had a similar experience with the Dental portion, having to return multiple times to get the paperwork and dental work finally completed. I believe it was March when we officially received medical clearance. I feel like our patience muscles have been adequately flexed through the medical process, just one more step in preparation for life in the developing world.

Currently, we are waiting for the Placement Office to do a final review of our application, determine that we are indeed suitable for service and a good fit for our placement, and then send us the official Invitation with date of departure and country! While the medical process was tumultuous, the silence of the Placement office has quite possibly been the greatest test of patience. The anticipation is becoming nearly unbearable! On a daily basis, we check our e-mail and our mailbox in hopes of some indication that our Invitation is coming. On a daily basis we also get asked by curious friends and family if we have any news. I feel like a broken record explaining multiple times a day that we are still waiting to hear more, but it is nice to know so many people are excited for us. We are about 3 months away from our supposed departure, so we should literally hear any day now, although they could technically wait up until 6 weeks beforehand to send notice.

Your prayers for patience and peace at this point are much appreciated. Thanks for following us along this journey.

* Jedd Thoughts, * Life Updates, * Peace Corps

Chapter 28: Plans For Africa (How I Got Here)

If all goes according to plan, Michelle and I are going to Africa (country TBD) in July to start a 27 month commitment to serve as Peace Corps volunteers. It will be the biggest and most life-changing decision each of us has ever made (since getting married). We know that there is a lot that could happen from now till then but for now, the decision and commitment to this journey has been made. We have given a heads up to our places of work. We have already started to plan how we want to sell most of our possessions. We have already started to plan how we want to spend the last couple of months in-country before leaving. We are both excited, a bit nervous, and easily overwhelmed thinking about how much life will change for us in the upcoming months and years.

It has been 28 years in the making (thus the blog title) but I’ll just share my perspective on how the last three years has led to this point in our lives.

Three years ago I had a life plan (well sort of). I was looking to find a career field that matched my values and passions, buy my first car, own my first pet (a dog), and settle in my own place in a new city I had come to love.

When I moved to Portland to start a new job, I was also trying to start a new life. I was trying to break free from the way that people had come to know me and I was trying to break free from the way I had come to know myself. Portland offered a chance to redefine myself, to redefine my life. It was also the first time I had truly accepted the fact that I might not ever get married and that would actually be ok, but of course, God had other plans for me and introduced the most beautiful plot twist to my life: Michelle.

Michelle and I recently finished reading (She doesn’t think it’s reading because we listened to an audio book. I still think its reading) “A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life” by Donald Miller. Michelle and I like Donald Miller. He’s down to earth, real, transparent, writes well, and his personal stories about faith and life is encouraging and inspiring (he also happens to live and write about Portland which makes reading/listening to his stories even better because we can visualize what he talks about). I wouldn’t mind having a beer with him and talking about faith and life.

“A Million Miles in a Thousand Years…” is Donald Miller’s explanation of what “story” is, the necessary elements and its importance, and how these elements started showing up in his own life.  He shared that in life many people do not recognize that everyday we are living a story, and more importantly, that we have a lot of creative authorship of our own lives/stories. It is with this understanding that we have been able to make sense of all that is going on in our lives today; we are trying to write what we hope will be a better story.

Since Michelle has entered my story, a lot of the things that I wanted for my life are still there but look very different. I like to tell people that since meeting her I am healthier, fiscally more responsible, more social justice minded, more willing to engage in difficult issues, more willing to travel, more willing to change (which makes me sound like I was pretty miserable without her, lol). She would probably say that I support the lifestyle that she has always lived and also challenge her to grow as well.

I recently told my arch-nemesis and best friend Justin, our big plans, and his reaction surprised me. “Jedd, is going to Africa something you really want to do, or something Michelle wants to do?” I could see that he was still thinking of the old Jedd (and I can’t blame him). Yes, Michelle has been a huge influence in many of the changes in my life, but the real difference has been the belief in myself and the trust in God to really live. To take all of the lessons and things that I believe to be true and important in my life, and to make choices that support who I know God has called me (and Michelle) to be.

While in many ways living away from our family and friends, leaving our jobs and current lives may not make any sense at all, and yet it makes perfect sense. The beauty of it all is the way in which our individual stories have been woven together and that instead of following a life plan that seemed generic to me, we are now embarking on a path where there is so much uncertainty, and though scary, seems much more interesting.

“If the point of life is the same as the point of a story, the point of life is character transformation. If I got any comfort as I set out on my first story, it was that in nearly every story, the protagonist is transformed. He’s a jerk at the beginning and nice at the end, or a coward at the beginning and brave at the end. If the character doesn’t change, the story hasn’t happened yet. And if story is derived from real life, if story is just a condensed version of life then life itself may be designed to change us so that we evolve from one kind of person to another. ”
Donald Miller

I can only imagine the ways in which our lives will be transformed in the coming months and years…

Update 1/16/11 From Michelle:

For those who may be wondering about more details, we have been “Nominated” for Peace Corps which gives us a region (Africa), departure month (July), and job categories (Michelle- secondary school ESL, Jedd- Community Development). We have submitted our extensive medical reviews and are currently waiting for those to be reviewed by Peace Corps before we can receive our official Invitation, which reveals the rest of the details of our assignment like the country and exact departure date. This process can take several months so we’re hoping to hear back sometime between February (if we’re lucky) and April. We promise to update everyone as soon as we know more!