Posts Tagged ‘Tea Drinkers’

The Two Sarah’s Arrive!

Saturday, October 3, 2009
posted by ssmith

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After riding Adirondack Trailways bus from Kingston, NY to Port Authority, New York City, on Thursday, October 1, 2009 Sarah Bird and I made our way through the bustling terminal with the help of a Trailways luggage porter to the Airport Shuttle pick-up on 42nd Street which transported us to JFK International Airport. Our Korean driver navigated through massive traffic in Manhatten and the borough of Queens with impressive driving skill getting us to British Airways Terminal 7 at 4:45 a bit later than stated in the shuttle schedule but plenty of time for us to get to the ”Fast-check Luggage” counter and receive our boarding passes for the 6:55 p.m. departure for Heathrow Airport outside of London.

The six hour flight through six time zones on BA174 went smoothly as the Aircraft 747-400 was nearly full. My seat assignment was 41c, an aisle seat, next to a helpful young man from Sofia, Bulgaria who lifted my carry-on to the overhead locker; Sarah was nested back four rows and on the other side of the aircraft. Our travel specialist, Regan Murray, had pre-ordered my dinner, Asian Hindu Vegetarian, which I thoroughly enjoyed  and recalled eating the same meal on my inbound trip last October. I do not sleep, generally, on flights, and not a wink was had on this one through the night but I was relaxed and comfortable nevertheless.

Our landing was smooth and after processing through immigration and customs with no problems, we took the elevator down to luggage carousel #10 and, to our delight, claimed all five of our luggage pieces. So far so good. Our Coventry host, Mike Holt, met us in the reception area at 7:45 a.m. and after some morning tea from Chistos we were off of for the two hour ride to Mike and Jen Holt’s home in Coventry. I am enjoying Jen’s scrumptous cooking, lively conversations about Literature, British politics, and World War II with both Mike and Jen who are retired school teachers. More about them and what we did today in my next blog.

Sarah A. Smith

I sat earlier writing this at the kitchen table drinking my umpteenth cup of tea today.  I know why they (the British)  drink it so much! To keep their bones from over chilling, never mind the influence of the Chinese.  I can see why the idea stuck around.

Along with the tea, I’ve heard all the infamous words you hear in the movies: smashing, gobsmacked, brilliant, fantastic, crikey! (sp.)….and we’ve only been here for two days.  And you know what they say, right?  When in Rome…so when Sarah and I and our host, the Holts, sat talking, hunched over a huge ancient, but fantastic map of London, and I mentioned that I’d like to visit a teashop on Monday, they asked, “Along with your fish and chips?”  I said with perfect enthusiasm, “Brilliant!”

Of course, when mentioning the guided running tours of London, all I received in return were blank stares.  No one can understand a running junkie like one of the same; and I suppose I am the only addict in the house, crazy enough to actually want to lope through the streets of London to see it, rather than ride a bus or amble slowly like other normal tourists.  Since reading about this smashing idea on the plane, I have been practically drooling about the possibility.  Knowing my luck, however, I’d be gazing into a tree at a magpie and run head first into the Queen or a prince, ruining all chances of making a good impression.  We all know curstying is not my forte.

So perhaps running through London may not be on the list of things to do while in town, I’m fully content to just be here, making the most out of this God-given journey one step at a time.  Already He has done so much for us; our trip from Kingston to Coventry has gone amazingly well.

By the way, did you know that the word “squash” does not always mean vegetable?  Indeed!  It also finds it’s meaning as “yes, this fruit drink is very powerful, so you might do well to put some water in it”.  Who knew?

Sarah J. Bird

“Why I Go to India?”

Monday, September 28, 2009
posted by ssmith

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I cannot answer that question in one blog posting but I will tell you that my heart has been enlarged to embrace the women of India. Look at the faces of these women. I met them in October, 2008 and listened (through an interpreter) to some of their personal accounts of both dealing with hardship and also celebrating what is good in life. All cultural limitations vaporized as we did what women do – we laughed together and cried together and experienced a meshing of our hearts. I can tell you that time did not allow me to experience enough.

In seventy-two hours I am planning to leave our home here in upstate New York, USA and begin my journey to visit them in their homes and villages and cities. HOPE FOR CHANGE is doing just that…bringing HOPE for CHANGE through food distribution programs, homes for bereft orphans and “street” children, and educational opportunities.

Follow my blog as I attempt to bring India to you.

Warmly,

Sarah A. Smith

Tea with Tia

Wednesday, June 3, 2009
posted by ssmith
In the summer of 2008, I began “moving forward” with my dream plans to visit my firend, Tia Ao, in Mokokchung, Nagaland. My travel dream began in May, 2001 while Tia and her husband, Chuba Ao, visited with our family for the third time in our New York home. Chuba then wrote in precise detail instructions for obtaining an Indian visa and recommended air travel from London to New Delhi to Assam to Mokokchung, Nagaland which is located among the Northeast states of India. I kept those sheets of handwritten instructions in a known place for seven years hoping, hoping & praying that one day. one day I would sit with them in their home two continents away as they had sat in ours. I would see with my own eyes the children’s residential school they had founded together and their other projects aimed at improving the quality of life for the residents of their beloved region.
Tia & I were close instantly when we first met in the mid-nineties. We shared spirituality, vision, and our love of tea. I was thrilled to introduce new blends to her from my collection of Celestial Seasonings teas perched above my kitchen stove. Drinking tea together afforded her time to remember and talk of life in Mokokchung . I listened to her heart as we drank tea together and wondered if I would ever see the places she described to me.
 
Time on this earth ran out for Chuba and he passed on to his eternal reward in July, 2005. The sad news reached us via email from their contact in Coventry, England, Mike Holt, whom I’d never met.  How my heart ached for Tia that summer afternoon and my attempt in consoling her through a telephone call made my resolve to go to her ever more constant.
An ancient Hebrew proverb states that, “Like cold water to a weary soul is good news from a distant land.”  This idea became my motive when telling friends about my desire to visit Nagaland. Refreshment was my purpose and water was my theme.
Fast-forward to October 2, 2008 and motive met opportunity as I boarded BA Flight 0116 at JFK Airport with final  destination of Mokokchung four days later. It was an arduous journey of over eleven thousand miles by auto, aircraft, and Land Rover. And I made it! I was now in Tia’s home, in her kitchen, at her table drinking tea from her tea pot and cup brimming with some of the Celestial Seasonings samplings I had brought for her.
Before I settled into her guest room that first night, exhausted physically but elated in my soul, Tia’s sweet voice called my name, opened the door and brought in a case of bottled water for my stay. “That is so much!” I exclaimed. She replied, “Sarah , you have come all the way from America to see me the least I can do is give you cold water!”
Tia and the Case of Water

Tia and the Case of Water