Onward, March

24 January 2012 ~ Comments Off

Path

As the road goes on, we must decide whether it is best to accept it or decline it.

Driving home, I suddenly realized my life would drastically change from college student to post-full-time student. No, I had not graduated yet. No, I did not leave a life of academics behind because of smarts. But, it was time for student teaching. The two years of shock and wonder was now at my doorstep. I had everything packed and ready to leave Sydow House, the place I stayed at for merely four months. My body told myself it was time to press on; my heart told me never let go.

Emotionally, it is was tough for me to picture myself no longer an on-campus student. I was only 23 and had only been going on to my 10th semester of college. For all I knew, college lasted 300 semesters and never got old. I was never the kid who wanted out of Spring Arbor because there were not enough “challenges.” I loved my job as a student because it was comfortable and easy to be one. As a student, I could hang out with the people I liked; I was not forced to eat my small lunch with people I never talked to before. I could be late for class and no one would care, and when my roommate asked me if I wanted to go to Denny’s, I would hop up and go without considering the workload I had the next day. I was a college student at Spring Arbor University, and learning could last my entire life if I wanted it to.

Then the day came. I got placed in an elementary school and would begin on schedule. For those who do not know, “placed” means I had been noticed by a teacher and asked to be a student teacher in their classroom. To me, this meant a required semester of waking up at 6am five times a week, dressing professionally, and abandoning my friends to educate 5th graders. While all of the drastic changes were good for my professional life, it was still tough to leave the wonderful world of Spring Arbor for it.

Although the change has been rough, I am thankful for the opportunity to be student teaching at a time I expected to be. I still miss being an on-campus student, but I also recognize the timing of my situation and could not ask f0r better. Sometimes I imagine having my placement getting postponed and I shudder thinking about it. All of the hard work has paid off, and to miss my deadline for student teaching would only signify that I did not accomplish what I had originally set out to do: prepare to be an effective teacher. I am now in my last stage as a college student preparing to go out as a potential teaching candidate, and while it is scary, it is my last stop in my college journey.

I am still young and enthusiastic, my mind is still in college student mode, and I still treat 5th graders as if they are my friends. I still have many things to learn about the education field, and I am sure there will be things I will learn the hard way and the easy way. However, there is no better time than to start now.

Start writing your life today,

Josh

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Farewell Readers!

06 June 2011 ~ Comments Off

The beaches of Normandy (site of DDay Landings during WWII)

Dear Readers, this will be my last SAUspace blog; I am not returning next year as a SAUspace team member, as my schedule is pulling me every which way, I am not able to give this position my full attention. I have loved being able to share my thoughts, pictures, dreams, and experiences at Spring Arbor with you for the past two years. As I have shared personal dilemmas and asked for your prayers I thank you for doing so.

I plan to continue at Spring Arbor University and graduate with a degree in Secondary Education and English with a French minor. I feel called to teach English somewhere overseas, maybe in a French speaking country in Africa; only God knows! This summer, I plan to travel a little, work on campus, and babysit and housesit.

After my cross cultural experience ends on June 6, I will be staying on for a home stay that will last an extra three weeks; the family I’m staying with lives outside of Paris, France. I’m so glad to be at a school that grants me such opportunities! Thank you so much for being a faithful reader and may God bless your journey as much as he has mine.

Angela

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A Journey

01 November 2010 ~ 1 Comment

I’m on a journey, a journey that doesn’t have an expected destination. This is crazy that I’m blogging about a subject such as this, but I’m letting the whole world know that I am looking for my biological parents. Shocking right? Well it is, if you didn’t know I was adopted in the first place. My mother, because of mental instability reasons, had to give me up for adoption when I was a baby, along with my sister, Emily. We were both adopted by the same family, praise the Lord! My birthmother was the one who gave me my name and insisted that I be placed where my older sister was.

So here I am, 20 years later, with a great childhood, a great family, and a great life. I am looking for my biological parents, not to fill a void in my life, because there isn’t one (not one that any earthly being could fill anyway). I am looking because I am aware that people die every day; there has always been some part of me that was comfortable in knowing someday I would meet them, but usually when I thought about it I always thought it would happen sometime in the future, and not at that current moment. But I recently realized  I don’t want to look years down the road and find out that they’d passed away a few years earlier. So I’m starting the search now, going off what little information I have, hoping it will lead me somewhere. More updates to come!

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