Tuesday, December 23, 2025

More Thanksgivings


Here we are almost to Christmas, and I still haven't posted what I wrote about Thanksgiving. I was sick for a while and then just busy. Here is what I wrote a while ago:
After Asya and I got back from Kherson, I had a really busy week of working on my to do list--details for an upcoming Christmas trip to Poland, Sunday school planning, Capernaum club, and more. 

Then on Saturday (December 6) we were planning to have our family Thanksgiving a little late, after a winter Capernaum club meeting. I had prepared food most of the day before. Power outages reached the point of more off than on, which is my personal limit for when they start to seem hard, but I tried to work around them. We had a wonderful club, even without electricity. Towards the end I started to feel like I had a fever, though, so I hurried off as soon as I could and went to bed. The rest of our family pulled together all the food--what I had already made and their own additions, too--our guest came, and I joined everyone at the table. We had a very good meal, talked about what we are thankful for, and enjoyed being together in the candlelight. 

(Apparently this is a second Thanksgiving with especially heavy outages. Not to mention the Thanksgiving when we were evacuated from Kherson after several weeks without having electricity at all.)

Photos from both our Thanksgiving and that day's Capernaum club in the dark:



Jaan kept his buddy happy with phone light on swirling glitter.


The darkness didn't stop Bogdan and his buddy.

My buddy twins were fine in the dark.

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Residency update


Here's an update on Asya's document process: after the miraculous visa trip, we didn't stop working on what was next. Finally we figured out that we needed to apply for her residency in Kherson. Will pulled together the documents we needed to turn in, and I got tickets and permission for her to enter the city. (Several times along the way here, I've gotten compliments to whomever was doing all the writing, it was obviously done by professionals. Um. Thank you very much.) 

Again, we had almost miraculous interactions. Getting into Kherson can be complicated, but it wasn't hard at all this time. We went to Migration as soon as we could, and this is where we ran into complications. We got there first thing in the morning, to find all the workers standing around, unable to do anything. Because of shelling the night before, their phones and computer system were out. No one had any idea when it would be fixed, or what we should do. We went to another office, in another part of town. They gave us a full consultation and checked through all our papers, but couldn't accept them, because we're not in their district. 

So, for the rest of the week, I called every morning to get an update. We spent time with our friends and helped out around church some. Finally, on Friday they said yes when I called. Asya got a call from the other office then, too, telling her that our branch was back in business. She had plans to help with a children's program that day, so she was not happy that we had to rush across town and turn in her paperwork right then. But we did. It took a while. She did make it back in time to be with the kids, though. 

Her residency card should be ready right around Christmas. We'll probably go back to get it and register her at the beginning of the new year, and then we'll be done with this until the end of martial law. Please keep praying about it until we get to that point. Thank you!