She had so many children she had to travel far . . .
To see them. And she did!
In August Tim and I began a new five-year MCC assignment, sharing the role of representatives for MCC work in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). This new assignment allows us to take turns living in North America and DRC, one of us working from our Michigan office and the other from our Kinshasa office. This fall I am at the Michigan desk and Tim is at the Kinshasa desk. In December Tim will return to Michigan and in January I will go to sunny Kinshasa while he continues in snowy Michigan.
Family visits have been short and sporadic the past few years, so I decided to make a trek to see my closest relatives this fall.
It all began with a trip to Indianapolis for a beautiful, warm, breezy visit with son Jon in his new house near the river. Gardening, walking, sidewalk caféing and seeing his lovely new home complete with Congo cloth curtains was a heartwarming reconnection and start on the Family Trek.
On another beautiful early fall day I set out for Bluffton, Ohio to see my Hilty sisters Rachel and Judy. I stayed with Rachel and Ivan Friesen in their home on Spring Street, and also visited our old farm home which Judy and Phil Kingsley are gently renovating, improving the condition and size of the house while keeping the settled beauty of the entire farm.
While in Bluffton we all participated in Swiss Day at the Swiss Historical Society house -- a great day! I felt the happy spirits of our sister Ann and our dad Herman enjoying the fruits of their labors with the SHS for many years. And the spirit of Mom, happy to see us together, was as always present. Rachel, Judy, Suzanne, and friend Deanna serving cider, Swiss cheese and break baked in the historical house oven:
Next sortie was to Austin, Texas to see the Myers branch of my clan. A wonderful weekend in the gracious home of my birth sister Katie (Myers) Laine, together with our half-sister Barbara (Myers) Tarpley (whom I had not seen since she was a very young girl) was delightful and hilarious, with moments of significant pondering of the power and wonder of family ties. George, Katie, Susie:
A highlight of the weekend was a dinner with our brother George Myers, half-brother Eric Myers, and Katie’s son Brett, his wife Monica and daughter Abby. Those three men are shaped very much like my sons Jon and David.
On I went a few weeks later to Harrisonburg, Virginia, where daughter Elenore and son-in-law Kurt had just purchased a new house. I got to help clean it before they painted the inside -- and now they are living there! Happy Holsopple Home. Their lives are full of good work, friends, family – and at last they have a house where more people can visit and be entertained by this charming couple.
Next stop, Hatboro, Pennsylvania, on the outskirts of Philadelphia, and the home of daughter Maria, son-in-law Jeff, and granddaughter Kaylah. We got to take rides in the new Carr car. Kaylah is a talkative, imaginative, acrobatic, affectionate little ball of energy who embraces you with a non-stop blend of chatter, song, dance, and intensely interactive play. One favorite activity was sitting on my lap “writing” to Grandpa in Kinshasa, mostly in the form of weird funny faces from the drop-down menu.
Heading home, I made my way to Johnstown, Pennsylvania, where Rose is spending a year in the Mennonite Mission Network-sponsored Service Adventure program. What great fun to interact with Rose, Joey and Julie, the three young adult participants, and with Randall, Kirsten, Anya and Emma Schlabach, the leadership family! I love the big three-story house in inner city Johnstown, and had a great tour of the downtown area with a very knowledgeable Rose as guide. We attended two of the nine Mennonite congregations which support the unit on Sunday, and I visited the Head Start classroom where Rose is an assistant teacher. It’s a busy life and I think it’s a good place for Rose at this stage of her life.
Then it was time for a little road trip with daughter-in-law Kendra Yoder. While our dogs Lily and Daisy stayed with David and Tavi (dog) and the two cats at the Yoder-Lind home in Goshen, Indiana,
Kendra and I headed to Indianapolis to celebrate Jon’s 31st birthday with him. He grilled a fantastic meat and vegetable supper and hosted us overnight with his usual graciously hospitable style.
As we were driving from Goshen to Indianapolis, on Saturday, November 7, Kendra received a phone call from Jilma, the lawyer who started the Our Family Adoptions agency with which David and Kendra have been working over the past few months. Jilma was calling from Kinshasa, DRC to tell Kendra (she had already talked with David) that TWIN BABIES were ready to be placed for adoption with them!!! A little boy and a little girl, born October 31, have, over the past few days, become David and Kendra's family, and our newest grandchildren. Tim has been able to help care for them, holding and feeding them daily and falling totally in love with the tiny, beautiful children. David and Kendra have named the little boy, who weighs 6 pounds, Desmond Likabo and the little girl, who weighs 4 pounds, Amari Kitoko. The happy parents will go to Kinshasa soon to meet and care for their babies until all the paperwork is finished and they can all come home to Goshen.
And here is Grandpa Tim with Amari;
We then went on to Columbia, Missouri where Kendra is doing research for her PhD dissertation and where my uncle Addison Myers and my aunt Darcy live. Addison became my “broncle” (and I his “sniece”) many years ago when his mother (Lenore Myers) and my mother (Eleanor Keeney Myers) were killed in a car crash. Dad Herman became Addison’s guardian, and then my adoptive father (hence combining uncle-brother and sister-niece). We have seen each other infrequently over the years, but the affection and the teasing have continued and visits are a joy tinged with some sadness for the sorrows of the Myers story. Addison and I spent a lovely day together, making soup, chatting, and looking through old family letters. Darcy and Kendra joined us at dinner time for more good conversation. Addison and Darcy gave Kendra the old Myers cradle which has been in the family for over a century.
My red Tracer has also become re-acquainted with the roads of Michiana this fall: encasing the longer trek are the more frequent and wonderfully enriching visits to family closer to the big red house.
Weekly visits with Mark at the correctional facility in Coldwater, Michigan (an hour from home), usually together with his wonderful friend Becky Hodges, are a good time. I am amazed at Mark’s ability to become a self-educated person through this experience. It is a special joy to take Mark’s son (my grandson!!) Fekile to see his dad about once a month.
Fekile and his sister Noelle live in South Bend, Indiana with their mother Kirsten Schipper, and I love to go see them as often as I can. Noelle and Fekile will spend ten days with me over Thanksgiving. Yikes! I must put on my best grandma behavior.
Becky and her daughter Makenna will join us for some of the Thanksgiving break. Sleep-over at Grandma's! Left to right in the photo below: Fekile, Noelle, Makenna, Kaylah.
I also have a weekly meal with Tim’s dad, Millard, at Greencroft in Goshen, which is always fun. Sometime I also visit Tim’s Aunt Ruth, and am finding there are a lot of people at Greencroft that I would like to visit with on a regular basis, so I could probably spend a day a week there. Millard on his 90th birthday:
HOWEVER, I am also working while I am here, and my travels have included visits to and presentations at MCC headquarters in Akron, Pennsylvania and the MCC Great Lakes offices in Goshen. Since my colleagues in Kinshasa are six hours ahead of our time here, I try to be on the computer as soon as possible after 6:00 in the morning to check in with them and communicate before they go home for supper! There are also a lot of leaves to rake and wood to bring in, so days go by very quickly.
There was an old lady who wore the Birkenstock shoe,
She had so many children she didn’t know what to do . . .
So she went round to see them and ate up their bread,
Kissed them all soundly, then away she sped.

Grateful greetings to all.