Friday, April 23, 2010

Memo to the disintegrated: Integrate

Memo

To: disintegrating people

From: disintegrating person

CC:

Date: April 23rd, 2010

Re:


Typically this weekly blog reflects the happenings of the Tacoma Rescue Mission youth program, but I wanted to change it up this week and address a goal we have with each youth we work with based on our own shortcomings as a staff.

The goal can be summed up in one word: integration. Integrating not only ourselves (mind, heart, & actions) but also our communities & especially our relationships is vital to our lives.

My need for integration is being revealed in reflecting through my recent trip to India, trying to catch up with everyone, and a great question from a good friend that was asked of me regarding integration. I am sad to say that I am fairly dis-integrated. If this were taken literally, I am not intact or solid, but instead deteriorating. This doesn't sound so good and I have a sneaking suspicion I'm not alone either. So, if I'm not alone how do we bring our relationships together so that we will see our church friends at our workplace, our neighbors in our homes, or our work friends outside of work???
I won't pretend to solve on a blog one of the biggest problems facing the middle class.

However, I will tell ya some things we're doing. It is both deeply internal and deeply external. Inside & outside. First, take care of your whole self: mind, spirit, and body. This means thinking critically, being connected to your emotions, and taking care of your body. Second, we are trying to connect kids to their community. Connecting them with other kids from their schools, their churches, and past schools. When kids are taken out of the shelter and into activities and adventures with other kids they already know integration begins to happen naturally!

Lastly, as we attempt to integrate at any level we can be left feeling pretty hopeless and incapable. In our pursuit of integration, I am feeling hopeful and capable in the ability of God through Jesus Christ to bring my circles of friends closer together and becoming more integrated with His help! Whether we realize it or not, when we forgive, when we serve, or when we love: those choices affect every person we know bringing unity and integration to our community!
~James Leet

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Take Me Out to the Ball Game

Last Thursday, families from the Tacoma Rescue Mission enjoyed the home opener of the Tacoma Rainiers baseball team. Tacoma’s Youth For Christ provided the tickets, we provided the transportation, and the Rainiers provided the entertainment, fun, and fireworks. Despite the loss for the Rainiers, it was a gain for family memories. It was supposed to rain the entire day but fortunately it held off for the game. However, the wind was freezing but we brought plenty of blankets to shield us. The game had plenty of great hits and catches but the best catch came at the beginning of the game in the first inning. The mascot for the Rainiers, whose name I am forgetting but I’m pretty sure is a moose, was tossing some souvenir baseballs to the stands. One of the fathers we brought reached out and caught one, among many other fathers, for his four year old boy. Neither one of them stopped smiling the rest of the game and not even the fireworks at the end could distract them from reliving the catch over and over.

Here at the Mission, we are blessed by so many organizations that provide opportunities for the families to spend some quality time together and laugh. Whether its skate night once a month at Wheelz, Tuesday family nights, father/child events, or just the random outing to the park, without local organizations and volunteers many memories would be lost. Thank you to the community of Tacoma for caring about your neighbors and thank you to the Rainiers and Tacoma’s Youth For Christ for making last week memorable!
















Friday, April 9, 2010

New Life

This week, our theme at the Afterschool Program surrounded EGGS. We used eggs for art activities, science experiments (or EGGsperiments), games, races, riddles, and more. Eggs were significant this week because they represent the spring season and the Easter holiday since eggs symbolize new life.

With the spring season, we see new life with the sprouting of plants and flowers (an image soon to be seen at Tyler Square after all of the hard work put into our community garden). With the Easter holiday, we see new life in commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Even though Jesus' resurrection was a historical event that happened in the past, this event of rebirth can still have power in our lives today, similar to how we can be affected by the beauty and power of nature's rebirth via plants, images of which are easy to notice in our day-to-day lives during the season of spring.

It's important to feel reverence for the beauty and power of Jesus' resurrection too. This event shows us the power God has over death. Only God has power over death and only God can give the gift of life. At Tyler Square, this is so important to remember because the whole point of the Family Life Program is to help people transform and to start new lives. But if God is the only one with the power to defeat death and grant new life, then this act of transformation cannot happen apart from God. We need him. Desperately.

Below I have included pictures of an egg activity we did this week. Some of you probably have done this activity before--it's an egg toss. The whole point is to throw an egg back and forth between partners without breaking the egg. The kids and the volunteers had a lot of fun with this.

Even though we had a lot of fun, this game is challenging. Eggs are fragile, so, obviously, it's not easy to throw this fragile item around while not breaking it. Similarly, the lives of these kids are fragile. They've been thrown around by life's circumstances, and they desperately need the cushion of God's loving hands and the power of His healing to bring the pieces of their life back together, to build a new life.

I pray that the After-school Program acts as a medium that transmits God's love, creating an environment where the kids are nurtured and are able to transform from past hurts into new and exciting beginnings. Thanks to all of the support we receive from volunteers, from donors, and from the local community in general. We can't do it alone!








Monday, April 5, 2010

Reigniting the soul: Spring Break @ TRM

If you're not around kids or don't have kids it's easy to forget about something as wonderful and relaxing to our soul as spring break. Although our spring break mission trip to Mexico has been moved to August, we still took every opportunity to keep our kids active & involved. Most kids at the mission weren't relaxing though, we kept them busy either with backpacking, an art camp, or making Easter crafts in an effort to reignite their soul. This spring break it was especially clear how much we rely on other organizations, churches, and individuals to re-create the path laid out for our kids. The teens backpacking went with Peak7 into the wild of the Olympics for 4 nights, more than 20 miles, and adventure that they will be telling their grandkids about. To reignite the adventurous souls of our teens we sometimes take them away from all the distractions, so that they begin to see who God is and who they really are.

Reigniting the soul often involves art, music, and dance and 10 of our elementary kids participated in an art camp all week at Urban Grace church to explore these. The kids were able to have time and space to explore art and had a lot of fun doing it! They learned break dancing, graffiti art, music, fashion design, and many other forms of urban art that speaks to them and who they are as artists.

Thank you Peak 7, Urban Grace, and our volunteers during spring break that helped our kids to reignite their souls with adventure, art, and Recreation!

More pics to come of our kids roughing it in the Olympics...