Friday, June 30, 2017

Horse Progress Days, Day 1

A buggy parking lot
Friday morning brought hundreds of horse-drawn buggies, bicycles, scooters, walkers, and hired vans full of Amish and Mennonite folks, who to my untrained eye all looked the same.  Later I could notice differences in dress patterns, head coverings, men's hats and suspenders, etc.  We had gotten up and out of our tent quick because I didn't think there were many events the boys would enjoy, but certainly the first two would be entertaining for them.  People continued to pour into the grounds and gathered at the main outdoor arena to watch the kick-off event: the bull whip cracking demonstration.  A couple guys walked around the arena cracking different types of whips.  It certainly was interesting, but it was more interesting to me how quiet the thousands of people were that had gathered to watch.

While we listened to the whips and learned fun facts about bull whips and the people cracking them, close to 40 buggies had lined up at an entrance to the arena.  These buggies were drawn by ponies and driven by children!  This event was called the "Pony Express" and allowed kids to have center stage driving all different types of buggies and carts, with between 1 and 4 ponies hitched to the front.  Most buggies also carried siblings or friends of the driver, who usually all wore matching homemade clothing.

While Nico went around to a few different seminars, the boys and I found a petting zoo and not a sandbox but a cornbox, complete with buckets, shovels, and diggers the children could manipulate with levers.  When a lot of people who have a lot of children get together, let me tell you, there are really a lot of children.  They had eight full-size playgrounds donated and set up near each other in a field.  Children could ride around and around behind a horse pulling a "train" of barrels that were each laid on their side and cut like train cars.  I interacted with some of the other mamas and felt their gentle humanity.

I have to admit, I was pretty nervous to be surrounded by Amish and Old Order Mennonite folks.  Other than seeing these quiet, keep-to-themselves kind of people on the train, my only real interactions with Plain/Old Order folks had been a bit distressing.  I felt really judged and unwanted.  This, coupled with experiencing other religious groups that have strict rules about men and women not touching (as in hugs or handshakes) or even allowing eye contact between men and women... I didn't know what the rules would be here and I just didn't want to break them!

I watched to see what kind of interactions happen between Old Order folks themselves, and whether men would talk to me or women would talk to Nico.  By the end of the weekend I was sure they were all just normal people!  To my surprise I even saw innocent flirtation among the teenagers!  All my interactions with people were pleasant and I found myself getting comfortable around these "strangers to the world".  I didn't feel any judgement from anyone and had a few meaningful young mother conversations.

About mid-morning on Friday we ran out of water.  As we walked up and down the vendor tents failing to find a water spigot to refill our water bottles we ran into a friendly face, Ryan Deramus, at the Tillers International booth.  He helped us find the fabled drinking water spigot, which turned out was not potable.  Poor Moisés was near tears with thirst and I had no money on me to purchase a water bottle, so as I slowly tried to think through our next step toward hydration, Ryan threw his hands up and declared, "Oh I just can't take it!" and bought Moisés a bottle.  Thanks Ryan!

We met up with Nico and scouted out some shady spots to eat our lunch and nap since our tent was in the hottest and sunniest field around.  Nico struck up a conversation with some folks nearby our picnic location and learned some Pennsylvania Dutch phrases.  The look on their faces was both tickled and puzzled that this man from "society" would be interested in learning bits of their language.

Moisés riding a horse!
Friday afternoon, besides wanting to ride the horse-drawn barrel train 100 more times, Moisés wanted to actually ride a horse.  Nico took him to a seminar about horse-powered logging with Jason Rutledge from the Healing Harvest Forest Foundation, and on the way they asked one of the event staff on horseback if he would take Moisés on a short ride, a request to which the rider happily obliged (see photo).  Later we hung around the pony barn where two small girls had hitched up their pony and were racing another girl riding on a pony's back.  Moisés was delighted to ride in the buggy with the girls, up and down the field.

That evening we caught dinner with Ryan.  After aiding in our bedtime prep, Nico met with Ryan and his two colleagues from Mozambique near their tents.  Sitting outside on the grass, they talked and sang into the night.  A man and a woman, the Mozambicans were both master oxen drovers, working with Tillers International on agricultural development in Mozambique, and had come to do a learning exchange at the Tillers site in Michigan.  They taught Nico how to say "Moses" in Portuguese, which sounds like "Mo-ZAY-eesh", a new nickname for our firstborn.

In the cool of the evening, the four had started their time together by singing a few hymns in Shona, an indigenous language spoken in Mozambique and Zimbabwe.  Nico already knew and loved one song they sang: Hakuna Wakaita.  Later, as they talked about politics and the state of the big changing world, Hakuna Wakaita gained deeper meaning for Nico, see the English translation below.


Hakuna wakaita

Hakuna wakaita sa Jesu
Hakuna wakaita sa Yee
Hakuna wakaita sa Jesu
Hakuu hakuchina

Nda manya manya, kwese, kwese
Ndatenderera, kwese, kwese
Nda tsvaga tsvaga, kwese, kwese
Hakuu hakuchina
English translation

There's no one, there's no one like Jesus
There's no one, there's no one like him
There's no one, there's no one like Jesus
There is no other name

I have searched everywhere
I have run around everywhere
I have looked around everywhere
There is no other name

Thursday, June 29, 2017

The Travel Begins!

Wednesday afternoon, June 28th, the Melas Blanton adventures officially began as we piled our backpacks, on loan from the Youngs, into the Wettig's van with Nichole at the wheel, making our very departure a community effort.  Goodbye Madison Street!

On the train between Staunton and Philadelphia
Our train was running late, which we were privy to via Julie, Amtrak's congenial automated telephone teller, but even Julie couldn't have predicted the true lateness of this train.  Halfway through our ride the train backed out of the Manassas train station and parked.  Interesting.  An attendant walked down the aisle announcing, "There has been a car strike ahead.  We have to wait until further notice to move forward."  Imagining picket lines I wondered what on earth that meant.  I giggled to myself and pondered, "Car strike?  Hmm, well I guess I'm into the general idea of that, but what's the logic of delaying a train?"  Then, slowly, over the next several hours of waiting, the magical internet waves floating around us brought news to our fellow passengers' various shining screens.

Vine and Fig Tree community house
in Philadelphia
Someone had died.  On the road at a train crossing?  On a train bridge?  A woman?  Two people had died.  Train conductors?  Teenagers?  In a train station?  Rumors were flying.  All we knew for sure was that we were parked as long as they needed to do an investigation on the tracks ahead of us.  Early on I had put the boys to sleep so I spent the quiet waiting time thinking about mortality and why some of us are so lucky to still be alive.  We're so vulnerable, how are any of us still here?  How many times has God spared me from death that I'm aware of and how many more that I don't know about?!

Finally the train began to move again and delivered us to Philadelphia around a bleary-eyed 2am: 6 hours later than our tickets claimed.  We walked up the stairs from the platform to find cheery Jenna Bryant offering to carry our bags!!!  How lovely it is at any hour to pile into her roomy car, hear her current news, and visit Vine and Fig Tree, the community house where she lives.

In the daylight we got a tour and heard a brief history of Vine and Fig Tree, a large house with families, singles, and couples "experiment[ing] in intentional Christian community, urban farming, and shared family living" (taken from their website).  Jenna had organized a brunch, complete with delicious quiche and homemade green smoothie, which we shared with Will O'Brien and Dee Dee Risher, the couple that had visioned the community house.

On the train between Philadelphia and Lancaster
All too soon our Philly layover was dwindling and we were headed back to the train station, bound for Lancaster.  Our train arrived in Lancaster 10 little minutes later than expected, a refreshing kind of late compared to the previous night.  This time we found another joyful face: Alice Wheeler, who enthusiastically (haha, Enneagram joke) took us to her favorite Aldi to stock up on no-cooking-necessary food for a weekend of camping at Horse Progress Days.

Alice in her Lancaster home
We visited with Alice in her cheerful town home while the boys napped, then she graciously drove us 8-or-so miles out of town to the big event.  We thought more folks would arrive Thursday afternoon to camp out for the Friday-Saturday event, but in place of other campers we were surrounded by vendors setting up their booths.  Eventually we were pointed to a camping field with only a handful of RVs and no other tents.  We set up camp, ate a simple meal, and fell asleep to the sound of buzzing and humming RV generators all around.


Monday, June 26, 2017

Here's our Itinerary! (Updated 11/12)

Wednesday, June 28th
Leave Harrisonburg, Amtrak to Philadelphia
Hang out with Jenna!

Thursday, June 29th
Leave Philadelphia, Amtrak to Lancaster
Hang out with Alice!

Friday, June 30th - Saturday, July 1st
Horse Progress Days

Sunday, July 2nd
Leave Lancaster, Amtrak to NYC
Leave NYC on overnight bus to Nashville

Monday, July 3rd
Arrive Nashville
Drive to Caneyville in rental car

Tuesday, July 4th - Wednesday, July 5th
Visit Caneyville 

Thursday, July 6th
Drive to Riverside (name changed)

Friday, July 7th - Sunday, July 9th
Visit Riverside (name changed)

Monday, July 10th
Drive back to Nashville to return the car
Leave Nashville on overnight bus to Harrisonburg

Tuesday, July 11th
Arrive in Harrisonburg
Drive our car to DC

Wednesday, July 12th
French Embassy Appointment

Thursday, July 13th
Greek Embassy Appointment
Drive our car to Midlothian

Friday, July 14th - Sunday, July 16th
In Midlothian for Rachel Sarah's cousin's wedding weekend!
(Congratulations Ann and Gregg!!)

Monday, July 17th - Saturday, July 29th
Visit with RS's family

Sunday, July 30th - Friday, August 11th
Visit with Nico's family in DC

Saturday, August 12th - Tuesday, August 29th
Visit Harrisonburg
(Matt and Hannah's wedding!!)

Wednesday, August 30th - Monday, September 4th
Visit RS's family

Tuesday, September 5th - Sunday, September 24th
Visit Nico's family

Monday, September 25th - Saturday, October 21st
Visit RS family

Sunday, October 22nd - Tuesday, November 14th
Visit Nico's family

For more, see blog post: Movin' out!

Monday, June 19, 2017

Joys, Apprehensions, and Prayer Requests

Reasons we're joyful

We are hoping that God is leading us toward a new expression of monastic Christian community in and near Harrisonburg, Virginia.  We have visited many communities across the United States and have great respect for each group we've encountered.  This community in France is integrating several aspects we can find all over the US separately, but have hardly found all together:
  • Christ-centered world view
  • Transitioning toward living fossil-fuel-free (with previous experience living as such)
  • Economically self-sufficient
  • Funded by land- and craft-based cottage industries
  • Practicing monastic prayer and liturgical rhythms with singles, couples, and families
  • Taking direct action for peace and social justice, in solidarity with the most marginalized
AND, they have a couple decades of experience integrating these pieces in the "mother" community in southern France!

Reasons we're apprehensive

  • We don't speak French!  (Yet...)
  • I, Rachel Sarah, am a ball of emotional needs and require physical-world communication with other people who are not afraid to cry about anything, and I don't know anyone like this in France.  (Yet...)

Prayer requests

Everyone
- To overcome the language barrier!
- Connection with the folks there despite initial language barrier
- Visa appointment July 12
- That there would be a room for us on a boat August 12th or September 7th
- Health

Nicolas
- Spiritual growth and maturity
- Wisdom as a father
- Fruit of the spirit in child training
- Receptive mind to the apprenticeship
- Praise God for healing Nico's arm injury last year!!

Rachel Sarah
- A friend that speaks English and has a child Moisés' age
- Peace and joy in re-creating family systems
- Insight with homeschooling

Moisés
- Friends his age
- Fun in the transition

Yanni
This guy has no idea what's about to happen to him!  For all he knows he's already in France.
- Transition to a new place
- Transition back to the US after France becomes all he's ever known
- To remember family and friends! (Send us photos of yourself doing fun things!)

Address to write us!

[One or more of our names]
Communauté de l'Arche de Gwenves
Le Guenvez
29720 Plonéour-Lanvern
France

Sunday, June 11, 2017

You're doing what?? For how long?!

Mid-January 2016
"How would you feel about going to France for a year to apprentice with The Ark?"
"Uhh, I just had a baby a couple days ago and I can't think about anything else.  Ask me in a month."

30 days, 2 hours, 4 minutes later
"Hey so... how would you feel about going to France for a year to apprentice with The Ark?"

And so began the biggest Melas Blanton family adventure to date.

Lanza del Vasto
Image found in
online search.
Why France?
In the Fall of 2015 we traveled across the earth to visit Nico's grandmother in Greece and since we were over there, why not go to northwestern France, right?  We wanted to connect with The Community of the Ark or Communauté de l'Arche de Lanza del Vasto. The Community of the Ark is a major inspiration for the Missouri-based Possibility Alliance, a petrol/electric-free experiment in restorative community living, from whom we ourselves have drawn much inspiration.

We arrived in Quimper, the last train stop on the line, late one Tuesday night in November 2015 and looked out the train station windows to see the empty streets of the small city.  Soon enough, headlights turned into the parking lot and Robert (pronounced Ro-bear), one of the founders of l'Arche in Guenvez, arrived to pick us up.  We met for the first time in person, loaded our giant packs in the tiny trunk, and off we went.  After pulling out of the parking lot and winding down the first several streets, Robert remarked in his thick French Canadian accent, "Wow it is very dark... oh!"  He chuckled and flicked on the headlights.  "I don't drive much."  More chuckling.

Our family joins a communal lunch
at L'Arche in November of 2015.
For the next four days we stayed in the middle apartment of a former chicken grow-out house, converted into three beautiful yet simple living spaces.  We had a foretaste of a future we didn't yet anticipate as Nico worked in the market garden and joined Robert for each step of his entire 24-hour bread baking routine and I plugged in with the community meal preparation and explored the farm with Moisés.  We moved with the daily prayer and communal meal rhythms and aided in the seasonal task of squishing bushels of apples into fresh apple juice using a gigantic, all-30-bushels-at-once cider press that had come with the farm.

We were invited to share two dinners with Robert, his wife Christiane, and their two teenage children Toby and Carmel.  During those dinners we were able to talk openly with the family about community life and we felt welcomed into a peaceful, down-to-earth lifestyle Robert and Christiane had practiced for the better part of their adult lives.  We helped clear up a friendly father-son debate on the pronunciation of "guacamole" and Toby played some popular music and shared some dance moves with Moisés, who sponged up the attention from a teenager.  Nico asked Robert if the l'Arche community would be willing to take in someone from our budding New Monastic community for a year-long bread baking apprenticeship.  "Yeah, well, maybe you could learn that in one year," he responded willingly.

I'm fairly certain we weren't the ones Nico was thinking of, in fact he tried to get the other, more qualified couples excited about the opportunity, but it wasn't meant to be.  So, surprise!  Off we go: researching visas and European health care, quitting old jobs and gaining new jobs to save money, "regretfully declining" about six weddings, making trips to the Greek and French embassies, packing up our house, holding a pancake fundraiser, learning French, and starting a blog.  One of the obvious ways I am reminded of God's presence and plan is when I have to humble myself and let go of my (sometimes desperate) need for security and patiently wait to see what will happen.  What experiences will I be given now?

One experience is feeling deeply supported by a lot of people.  I have felt encouraged beyond words by New Community Project/Vine & Fig standing by our side, likening our time away to a "sabbatical year".  I have found this perspective very touching and see it as a helpful framework for our time away.  Early Church has surrounded us with prayer and encouragement, and allowed us to feed them (and quite a few others!) delicious pancakes to help raise an impressive sum of money for the trip.  Many folks have given us the invaluable gift of childcare so we can pack and plan.  Our families are so steadfast in their love for us and they bend over backwards to help us in any way regardless of how weird we are or what ideas we come up with next!  Knowing that "thank you" is not enough, we still want to extend our deepest gratitude to all of you, and you know who you are!

Fresh loaves that Nico watched Robert make
in November 2015.
And finally, I want to share the fun about the word "companion", as used in the title of this blog.  With Latin roots com "together with" and panis "bread", the Old French word compaignon literally means "one who breaks bread with another".  In the original L'Arche communities, this was the word chosen to describe their committed members.  And so we find ourselves uprooting for a temporary transplant across the ocean to steep in a community where the culture of baking and breaking bread runs deep!