Here, There, Everywhere….
We’re already more than halfway through an unrelenting Provencal summer (think mid-90-degree, stagnating temperatures and no fans or A/C) and I realized I haven’t updated this blog since spring. May, June, July, (and now, almost August too!)…. they slipped away so fast! I’m just disappointed in myself for not making the time. It’s been a whirlwind in every sense.
May was a month of epic highs and lows: I was still seeing my tutor regularly, progressing in French, getting into town here and there, meeting up with old friends and making some new ones, learning vast quantities of new things about international life, myself, others, and how small my horizons still were (is there ever a point where we just “arrive”? Eh. I’m thinking maybe not.). Then, in mid-May, God worked a vast number of things together so I would be able to leave my first family and find a new one. Cue: family search!! I talked with probably 10 or 15 prospective families in total, but was quickly able to narrow down the possibilities. During the first week or so of the search, I met with a family living in the suburbs of Aix in a small village called Le Tholonet. When I left their home after the interview, they basically got a 9 out of 10 on my list (which brought them instantly to the top). I was ELATED and pret-ty sure they were the ones.
The month ended with a fun train trip to Cannes (during the week of THE film festival, but we just went to enjoy the sights), and a weekend stay in Nice (which was, well, nice. Har de har har. I wish I had a penny for each time someone said, “You went to Nice? Cool! How was it?” to which I responded with a blithely unintelligent, “Ooh! It was NICE!” Heyyyy, it wasn’t on purpose!! Je suis Américain. It’s a default descriptor. ;) ) And then finally, 5 fun days in Toulouse (“TOULOOOOUSE, FOR THE WIN!!!!” I was moderately obnoxious on this point…. But it seemed funny at the time. Heh.)
Here’s Nice: (or, well, one street of it)
Here’s Toulouse at the Pont-Neuf: (it was daytime there too, occasionally….) ;)
On June 1st, I packed my entire life this side of the Atlantic — one big, luggy suitcase, a rolling carry-on, a cardboard box, and a cotton grocery sack for my tennis shoes and laptop — and left my first home. I boarded a bus bound for Aix, not exactly sure of the next step, but certain that there could only be better days ahead. The day started out cold and blowing and miserable, with rain pouring down like nobody’s business. I dressed in heavy layers, knee-high boots, and a hat. As the bus groaned itself Aix-ward, I watched the rain stream down the windows and prayed it would stop by the time I had to unload everything and haul it through the city.
Be careful what you pray for. When we stopped in Aix, the sun was shining in all its south-of-France fury. Wheeee!
A friend met me at the bus stop and helped me drag my belongings a kilometer or two to their place and told me that if it came right down to it, I could have a bed and a place to keep my things until I figured out what was next in my plan (I was also considering a 1-or-2-week volunteering stint at some organic farms across some of the southern regions of France, among other things, none of which actually worked out in the end.). Thanks, Jesus, for generous-hearted friends!
Unfortunately, my suitcase was ancient: borrowed from my parents, who may or may not have owned it for the past 30-odd years (kidding! Maybe….) and had none of those nifty wheels or the extendable handle that makes travel less of a figurative dance through purgatory. My friend pushed the suitcase (which weighed about 56 pounds — HEAVY, but mostly just UNWIELDY) on all four, rattly little wheels until one-by-one, they melted (yes, MELTED) and fell off. I hauled the box and the bag on top of my little carry-on suitcase and huffed and puffed and sweated my way down the steaming, broken-up sidewalks until I had blisters on both hands and was pretty sure if I took one step further, I’d have to make good on that “in case of death, your body will be shipped back to your country of origin” promise I had on a piece of paper, stuffed in some folder somewhere.
Finally, some blessed, blessed kid on a scooter saw our sweaty, red, death-march expressions and stopped and asked if we needed help and we said, “Oh, yes please” which is really the only way we managed to get everything to the house without summarily dying. Thanks, whoever-you-were! You were a lifesaver. Like, literally.
Home sweet home (at least, for a few weeks):
On June 13th, my new family came to the Villa (above) to pick me up. We drove to a beach in Marseille for the day. No bathing suit for me! I’d kind of spaced that morning, I think, from all I had to prepare. But as I waded up to my waist in the freezing, freezing Mediterranean and watched my skirt float up around me, and as I pushed two sandy, tanned little bodies through the water on their surf boards, I knew I was finally in the right place. And you know what they say…. sometimes you just know that you know that you know…. ;) It was a good feeling. Like I finally belonged somewhere for real.
I quickly settled into a routine. The schedule was always the same; my expectations, clear. I basically was expected to take care of everything concerning the kids: laundry, ironing, cooking their meals, grocery shopping, if necessary, cleaning their room in particular (the house, in general), packing their school bags, picking them up and dropping them off at school or the centre aere…. anything they wanted or needed was basically my business. We even managed to sneak in some English practice on the side (since they only speak/understand French and Italian) by playing some English memory games and reading Dr. Seuss books.
July…. more of the wonderful, wonderful same. I can’t tell you how blessed I feel to be here: living in this old stone house at the base of La montagne Sainte-Victoire: donkeys braying in the front yard, olive trees begrudgingly bearing their harvest in the back…. The language barrier was (and maybe still is) and a bit of struggle here and there, but when I don’t have an experienced French-speaker in my audience (well, besides the kids), I think we communicate really well. I’m slowly picking it up!
Romeo (5) and Cesar (4) are both very, VERY active, demonstrative kids who know their own minds…. and how to keep you on your toes! ;) But it’s good! I feel stretched by the difficult moments and totally warm and fuzzy and sappy during those moments when I get a great big bear hug or kisses before bed. It kind of makes it all worth it!
I don’t know if this melts your heart like it melts mine, but…. **happy sigh**
The only difficult thing this summer has really been the absence of, well, people in my life. Church closes down for the summer (it won’t resume until September 11th) and some days, I just feel a little like I got stranded on my own, scorching little planet. ;) Well, better days are ahead! I’m really looking forward to the rentrée of church and arrival of more students and interns. It’ll be good to officially start up my studies again too! I’ve tried to do some in my own spare time, but it’s not always easy without accountability!
August…. I was blessed to spend two weeks this month in Germany, visiting a friend and their family. I haven’t had time to really sort through all the pictures yet, though, so I’ll have to do a separate post about it later, I think.
But anyway, here I am, back in France! Surviving, occasionally thriving, hoping to outlast the heat, and living with expectancy for all God has in store for the remaining months ahead!
Thanks so much for reading this, but thanks especially for your prayers! I love and miss you all more than you know.
À bientôt!
Jenn





































