Sunday, June 6, 2010

Beijing...The Great Wall


"The Great Wall of China, as it is called, is undoubtedly one of the most wonderful monuments ever made by mankind. Stretching approximately 6,700 kilometres from east to west of China, the Great Wall snakes up and down across the undulating topography, like a gigantic dragon."

Souvenir shopping

Lovers Great Wall graffiti.

Me trying to not look to exhausted on the 4k walk UP along the wall (ok, some of it was down hill but there were a lot of stairs and climbing to get up that mountain)

some one dressed this Budha statue. I thought it looked like he was wearing a shower cap.

People buy these locks and hang them on the chain at the Wall as a remembrance of their visit.


Weekday crowds. Lots of tour buses... I'm glad we didn't show up on a Saturday!

This is day one of my trip to Bejing in May 2010

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

We Love Family visits...

Like all great travelers, I have seen more than I remember, and remember more than I have seen. ~Benjamin Disraeli

I am a little slow in getting pictures posted, but still savoring the memories of two great weeks with our girls and their spouses coming to visit us in Korea. Here are some photo's of a few of the things we did. Lisa and Krista posted some photos on their blogs as well...

Dinner with Dr. James Lee and his wife Anna.
He is one of the Directors for the company and works a lot with Lyle. He got his PHD in the U.S so he and his wife speak great English.!

My kids looking really excited to dig in...actually it was steak with all the Korean trimmings and even Lisa liked some of it.

Lisa and Krista pondering enlightenment no doubt, at the Buddhist temple in Gumi.

Nate also pondering...or showing off those $20.00 shoes he bought in Sangju

Lunch in Seoul with one of the advisors to the Chairman, Mr. Cho.
Best Chinese food I think I have ever eaten, and someday we will forgive the girls for letting their crab go to the garbage. Mr. Cho gave the girls jewelry boxes and scarfs and "Woongjin" ties for the guys. (Oh and the color pink has no gender in this country...it is worn by both men and women.)

Temple day in Seoul.

Nate wondering if he should spend his hard earned money on a one-of-a-kind hat from Korea.
(In case your wondering "dong bang" translated means..."south room". Don't ask me why you would want to put that on a hat!) He didn't buy it, but I think I detected some regret later on that he hadn't made the purchase.

Cherry blossom time! (Notice how I have learned to flash the "V" sign~true Korean photo-posing style)

So many grasshoppers...so little time to eat

Free samples anyone?
Fried or raw, a hopper still tastes the same. Nate said his was too juicy, and Mike isn't hiding that "I think I want to barf" look on his face either~yuck!

Peeking in on a Buddhist cemetery.

Jejiksa temple grounds.


Me and the girls trying to make Buddha a bit more modest. (He looks like he's enjoying it just a bit too much.)

Post lunch jet lag. The advantage of having your own room to eat in, and eating on the floor is it makes taking a nap so much easier. Lyle didn't have jet lag, but that doesn't mean he won't nap with the rest of them.


Haeundi beach, in Busan. A bunch of foreigners jumping on the beach created a bit of a spectacle for some Koreans who also started taking our picture! We have high hopes of being in the next travel brochure.

Stay tuned...there's more to come!

Sunday, April 4, 2010

HOPPY EASTER!



I found a small quilting shop in Sangju last fall and started taking the beginning quilting class. They hand sew EVERYTHING! No sewing machines. Lisa said I should start posting some of my projects.
In the Easter spirit here is my contribution to the bunny population. The original pattern had no face but as these little critters kept multiplying like rabbits and I just couldn't leave well enough alone. My fellow Korean quilting sisters think I am so darn creative. It's not brain surgery, but its hard for them to think out of the box. I find alot of them are programmed to just follow instructions and if I ever suggest an easier method they look at me like I am crossing a forbidden line and need permission from the instructor before proceeding. I do it any way. I just can't help myself. I guess that's just the Korean in them and the American in me.

Easter in Korea is not commercialized like it is in the U.S. so you hardly know the holiday is here. Mostly due to the fact that only about 23% of the population is even christian. We celebrated by attending church (we don't watch general conference until next week due to the fact that we are a day ahead of the U.S.) then we came home, had pot roast a la crock pot (I can't buy a good ham in this town) watched a byu.tv show on Christ followed by Desperate House Wifes. (Note to self...we need to be more righteous.)

I will close this post with an email Lyle's brother Lynn sent. I thought it was an excellent Easter message, and I hope he doesn't mind my sharing it.
Happy Easter everyone!

Facing our own kind of "Saturdays"

I have often wondered what might have gone through the minds of those gentle men of Galilee who were witnesses to the awful events on Golgotha that Friday afternoon so long ago. As any writer does, I have attempted to place myself there and to recreate in my own mind what must have been the emotional cacophony they were experiencing throughout their entire beings as they watched their precious Master being lowered by loving hands from the grave that was His cross. What must they have felt as they watched His lifeless body being covered with myrrh and linen as it lay on the cold limestone slab inside Joseph's borrowed garden tomb. A terrible sense of finality must have coursed through their bones as the giant stone thundered into place as both a seal and a barrier.

He was gone. He was dead. It was over.

What now? Where? How? Many questions were being silently formed for which there were no ready answers as no voice could even give utterance to neither query nor response. Stunned silence hung like a dark cloud, broken only by occasional distant whimpering and long hopeless sighs.

Sundown had brought the Sabbath. For the rest of Jewry, it was time for the Seder. Homes had been prepared, loaves of hallah had been baked, tables had been set with bitter herbs and salt, an empty chair for Elijah was added to the rest. It was a time for remembering the promises of God and rejoicing for His deliverance. Most importantly, the Pascal Lamb had been slain.

Far too busy about preparations for the feast, no one even stopped to take notice of the similarities of the events that had transpired just outside their own homes that day. A sacrifice had been made by another lamb that same dark afternoon. One they could not, or would not, see. For many, they also could not see beyond the busyness of the Passover into the symbols it stood for. Nor did they even care to ponder those symbols in their hurry to be simply exact in their lawful annual compliance. Moses had taught them how, but they had forgotten why.

The now lonely men of Galilee had already celebrated their Passover. It transpired in an upper room the night before, but had been like no other Seder service they had experienced. They were taught yet another new thing that night by the master teacher who had taught them many new things over the past three years. Even they, could not make the connections that we, with many hundreds of years of both hindsight and insight find now so obvious.

But now, He was gone. He was dead. It was over.

A sleepless Friday night turned into what became a depressing and lonely Saturday. The complete and utter silence of the authors of the synoptic gospels about that Saturday speaks volumes to us about the state of mind of the disciples. Words are lost of that historic day most likely because there was a complete loss of words to describe it. Crying within, not knowing where to turn, ships without rudders, lost at sea and tossed by waves of uncertainty and deep, debilitating despair.

Many among us are having their own kind of "Saturdays" right now. Souls of men and women are crying within, not knowing where to turn, lost and tossed by their own waves of hurting and trouble. The followers of Christ in His day could not help each other all that day. As they cast their gaze upon those around them, they saw the mirror of their own pain and sorrow. They were helpless themselves to give help and comfort.

Saturday was a terrible day.

What they didn't know was what the dawning of Sunday morning would bring. The gloom of Saturday was about to be overshadowed by the triumph and majesty of Sunday morning as the sting of death was gone forever and the grave could no longer claim victory. Life…hope…joy could now reign in the human heart replacing doubt and despair.

Whenever we become burdened with sorrows during an awful "Saturday" of our own, and turn to thinking that all is lost, that nothing could possibly bring help or comfort, we have only to look to that most glorious Sunday morning for relief. The dawn of resurrection promises us life, gives us hope, and brings us joy. Saturday gloom is gone…forever.

He is risen. He lives. Forever more.

Michael L. Wuergler
March 29, 2007

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Monday, March 29, 2010

This Blog's Not Dead, Its Just Been Hibernating

Hibernate: v.i., to pass the winter in domestic seclusion.



Its the best excuse I can come up with.


But spring is begining to arrive and we are starting to wake up around here.



This is our new pocket pal... Kia.
I told Lyle with no home, or yard or busy church callings to attend to after work, and being the project
kind of guy he is, he needed a new frustration to keep him happy.
I'm seeing lots of happiness on his face and hardly any frustration.
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