Tuesday, August 7, 2007

New Website

We now have our very own complete website where we will also be blogging from now on. Please visit it and keep up with us there. It is http://web.mac.com/johnandjessie.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Technologically Slow

Yep, that's me! Techno slow! If I actually tried to get things done on the computer more often, maybe I would be better at it. But for now, I'm slow. Blogspot is blocked in China, so I can't even view my webpage. I've figured out how to get around the system and post my entries on the Chinese Blogspot, which is actually beneficial since it challenges me to get more proficient at reading the Chinese characters. But then I can't view the post to make sure it looks ok...oh well. I want to also post pics since we have so many great ones from our trip. Unfortunately, John's computer is a MacIntosh, better known to me as CrapIntosh. I obviously don't care for it in the slightest. He loves it since he's so artsy. Anyway, I can't figure out how to take pics that I've off-loaded from my camera and format them into a smaller size to fit the website. I feel like I've tried everything! If any of you have suggestions, please email me!
We have so many stories to tell! Where do I begin? Our flight across the Pacific was quite eventful. About 2 hours after we left LA, I heard a voice overhead asking any doctors or nurses to please offer their assistance immediately. As I found my way out of my chair, I noticed a man several rows behind me, unconcious and limp. During dinner he passed out and could not be aroused. Myself, along with another nurse and 2 doctors ran to help. He remained unconcious, though would respond to pain with the right side of his body, his left side flacid. We realized that he had a stroke. So, we ended up turning the plane around and making an emergency landing in Vancouver. Needless to say, our 14 hour flight turned into 20 hours. We were absolutely whooped! I told John that I thought they should have moved us to first class after that. Though they didn't do quite that, they did, however, copiously express their thanks to me for my help, and gave me a child's backpack and adult bathrobe and slippers displaying their logo "Cathay Pacific". I was grateful to have the skills and knowledge to be able to help in a situation like this.
John and I are hanging out at High Connections right now. It is a coffee shop that a dear friend of mine opened about 3 years ago. John comes nearly every day, and I tag along sometimes. It is such a relaxing environment, and a taste of home! John has really enjoyed getting to know Matthew, an Asian American who recently moved to Chengdu. John is helping him fix things around the coffee shop that need work, as well as hanging out often. I have enjoyed spending time with my old Chinese and foreign friends here. Adelle, a good American friend of ours, baked lasagna and brownies for us yesterday. During our lunch together, we brainstormed ideas for a specific business idea we have. We've been doing that a lot lately. I'm excited to see what our future holds with China. Whether we live here or back in the U.S., we desire to have business ties and strong relationships with the Chinese people. We had dinner last night with the Robinsons, the family I worked with when I lived in Chengdu. I have enjoyed volunteering my time at Dr. Robinson's clinic while I've been here. Pauline, his wife, and I went for a walk this morning in a beautiful park this side of town. It was so wonderful to catch up with her and just spend time talking. We will be having dinner at Hot Pot tonight with my Chinese friend Spring. Poor John doesn't like the spicy hot pot. But I do! This will be my fourth time to eat it in China this trip.
Ok, more stories, but too long of an entry. I'll post more later!
Jessie

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

To, From, and Back to Chengdu

We made it to China! Thankyou everyone for all of your thoughts you lifted up that have protected us so far. We have been here exactly one week now, and are absolutely loving it! I have enjoyed seeing this city where I once lived, now blooming everywhere! I went back to my old neighborhood and did not recognize it at all! It actually made me sad to see all the changes. I loved it just the way it was before. Oh well...
We spent a few days in Chengdu, hanging out at a western coffee shop to help the locals practice their English, attending cultural events such as the Sichuan opera, visiting the Panda reserve, and eating the famous hot pot. John has especially enjoyed the variety of Chinese foods like fish heads and cow intestines. I prefer to stay away from those things! It's been so good to see some old Chinese and American friends here, and I still have many more to see!
The past 3 days we have been visiting a small city called MaBien. It is about a 6 hour drive from Chengdu, complete with winding mountain passes and rocky so-called roads. We basically hung out with the locals and spent time intentionally walking around the city, praising our Father for His creation that surrounded us and the many gorgeous faces we encountered. MaBien is a central location to a minority group in China called the Yi people. They are absolutely beautiful! How wonderful to know that they are His creation too, though we look completely different from one another and lead very different lives in two far apart places of the world. Both nights that we were there, we joined the locals in the city square for dancing. I made some wonderful friends whom I call each one "Xiao Pengyou", meaning "small friend". All my little friends were between 7 and 10 years old. I have videos to show any of you who are interested when we return to the States.
I want to post pics, but I can't seem to figure out how to minimize the original pics from my flash disk so they can be put on the internet. When I figure that out, I will get them posted.
Can't wait to tell y'all everything that is going on in our lives and hearts. It is exciting!

Monday, July 16, 2007

Up, Up and Away!

Today is the big day...
CHINA
John and I leave at 7:30 this evening on a flight bound for China. I hardly slept a wink last night as a result of anticipation of returning to this place I love. John is still sound asleep, and he'll probably be until I jump on him. My husband has truly rubbed off on me...we still haven't packed! And we leave TODAY! Before John was in my life, I was so organized, even to the point of packing for an international trip 2 or 3 weeks in advance. Isn't marriage supposed to be a halfway meeting point? I think I've gone a little too far his way! At least we have the tickets, passports, and visas. No more traveling from one country to another for John without his passport. If you know John or you were at our wedding, you know what I'm talking about.
We will post pics and stories as we get the chance. I would love to say a couple of times each week while we are there, but you know how that goes.
Enjoy our entries this next month. See y'all Texans in August when we return...

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Stressed...but hopeful

John and I are tired, stressed, whooped, and the list continues. We have been living in a hotel now for the past 6 weeks since our newly purchased condo got flooded. The lady's toilet above us decided to overflow at 4:00 in the morning the day we returned from our nice vacation in Vancouver. Since it continued for an hour and a half, our entire condo got destroyed, ruining half the ceilings and walls, the entire floor throughout the condo, and a fair amount of our belongings. John has so diligently worked at fixing up the place along with the contractor we hired. Considering the fact that we already had decided to update the bathrooms at some point while living there, we went ahead and seized the opportunity to fix everything up all at the same time. John has scraped the popcorn ceilings, tiled a beautiful pattern into the master bathroom floor, remodeled the fireplace, built new cabinets for the master bath, and done a variety of other things. We are hoping to move back in within the next week, as long as we have one working bathroom and light fixtures in place. It will probably be another month before everything is completed. Hopefully in enough time for us to leave for our month long trip to China so my brother can still house sit.
In other stressful news, our wedding photos turned out so horribly that we have to pay another photographer to retake the pictures of John and I and edit those we do have. We met with a professional today who was absolutely stunned at the lack of professional work our photographer did. So much so that even with all the new edits that can be done these days, few will come out well. It is so sad! I'm about to cry another river of tears. So much for paying several thousand dollars to someone we thought would work out. The worst thing is that we can't get our special day back, and he screwed it up. He gave us some of our money back, but not all. We are reporting him to the Better Business Bureau.
Fortunately we have exciting news too! We leave for China 4 weeks from today! We will be there for almost a month just visiting old friends in the city I used to live in. It is a dream come true to return to the place I loved so much! I can't wait to bring my husband to a country where I have some of my best memories. And I can't wait to walk him down memory lane as we stay in the city and take a few trips out to the countryside I enjoyed so much.
No pics today. Maybe next post. See y'all later.

Saturday, June 9, 2007

15 Years Later...

This week has brought about many different emotions for both John and I. We have spent an incredible amount of time in reflection on the events that took place just 15 years ago in a little town called Mineola.

On June 8, 1992, DCBC (Dallas Chinese Bible Church) loaded up 3 vans with excited teens headed for a summer camp in East Texas. John was new to the church, having only met a few of the other kids previously. At just 16 years of age, John didn't know that his life would change dramatically as he ventured from Dallas with this large group of students. He never realized how close death could stare him in the face.

John's van was the middle one, trailing closely behind the group of young middle schoolers ahead, the youngest of the high schoolers behind. Trying to get their bearings to find their way to the camp, the drivers approached a large and dangerous intersection in Mineola. They had no idea just how infamous this particular intersection was for traffic accidents, having had 22 in the previous 8 years, killing a few people, and injuring many more. After stopping at the two-way stop sign, Betty, John's van driver, pulled out to follow the van ahead. As the van drove through the intersection, a 12 ton cement truck, fully loaded, plowed their van, dragging them 200 yards down Highway 69. John recalls seeing the large, orange truck approach them quickly. He remembers nothing more.

On that day, 4 kids and the driver Betty were killed. The two girls sitting on the same seat next to John died despite resuscitative efforts made to save their lives. Betty died on impact, and Raymond and Jonathan, sitting behind John, never made it out of the van that burst into flames the moment it was struck by the truck. Everyone else was pulled out by friends and strangers who witnessed the event. The other 10 people in the van were injured, most of them seriously. The kids suffered burns, blunt trauma, internal bleeding, and head injuries. John got a traumatic head injury and endured major brain surgery as a result of the accident.

Last week John was a counselor and I was the camp nurse at the same church camp that the kids were on their way to in '92. After the camp ended on Sunday, we headed to the intersection where the accident occured. Below is a picture of John standing at the now well-marked site, traffic lights and all. They have since leveled the ground where before was the blinding hill the cement truck driver appeared from. They finally put stop lights there too. It's really sad that it took such a tragedy for the state to finally mark the intersection well. It should have been done a long time before the '90s.









I wasn't in John's life when the accident happened. Maybe that's why I am grieving so much now. John's been through that. The other survivors have mourned. The families of the deceased have grieved too. I think it's my time now. My time to weep for the deaths of these precious children. My time to rejoice for the lives that were saved.

Genesis says, "Therefore, a man shall leave his father and mother and cling to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh." This verse is becoming more real to me through the deep emotions that I have experienced this week. I believe that this is one of the many mysteries of God. We as humans cannot possibly comprehend how two people become one through marriage. Yet somehow we are so intricately united, both in body and in spirit. And as I encounter God, my beloved spouse walks alongside me. I long to experience the pain, the sorrow, and the joy that my husband has experienced through this accident. I desire deeply to walk through life right beside him, and to encounter the Spirit with him. This IS a mystery.

I can't possibly connect the wealth of emotions and feelings I have and understand exactly what I they mean. That's ok. I have spent much of this week in tears, both sad and grateful. I praise the Lord for saving this wonderful man that I call my husband. My sweet John survived. And if for nothing else, to meet his wife. As this week comes to an end, if I don't feel another thing, I feel blessed...blessed to have this person in my life whom God abundantly loves.




(Jenny, Stanley, and Mikayla with us at the cemetary)


This is a picture of us and the Wang's at Raymond and Jonathan's gravesite. Yesterday on the 15th anniversary, we met each other to remember the lives of the kids who died, and to celebrate the lives that the survivors now live. Jenny was also in the accident with John and miraculously survived. So was Stanley's brother. We had a beautiful time with them at their house this week, talking about the events that occured that dreary day, and reflecting on their feelings both then and now.

I don't know why, but I am tirelessly seeking to put the pieces together, to surface the details of that day, and to understand what the survivors and the families went through. John and I are praying about how we can keep this story alive. We want to show God's faithfulness in the midst of both life and death. Starting with one of the teens that saw the accident from the van behind, and then on to Jenny, we have begun to talk to the people who were there that day and the family members of all the kids involved. It is our hope to write a book with the collection of the many stories we have already been and will be told.
For the first time, I see how God's faithfullness and glory somehow permeate even the most tragic and painful situations. All praise to Him!

Monday, May 21, 2007

Back Online


Welcome to our first website as a newlywed couple! We hope that this will be a place you can keep up with us at, and hear about the exciting things happening in our new life together. It is my goal to post regularly, so we'll see if I can keep it current. It's getting late, and I have to work in the morning, so I'll just post a picture of us to start off the site. Enjoy!