If he's this excited for fake snow, just imagine if he saw the real thing! |
Here are a few replies from my question of the month.
If he's this excited for fake snow, just imagine if he saw the real thing! |
Exciting things coming up - We are having our Family Fall Festival October 23rd! We missed last year due to COVID, but we're hoping to bring back the excitement in community with lots of trunk games, candy, food, music, and raffles. One thing we definitely could use help with is candy. If you would like to donate candy to 2nd Mile, you can ship it to:
1650 Margaret St. Suite 302, #339, Jacksonville, FL 32204
Or, you could make a donation on our website at 2ndmilejax.com and in the comments write, "candy for Fall Festival".
Other ways to get involved or even see more of what's going on with 2nd Mile.
-Check out our facebook page (2nd Mile Ministries)
-Follow 2ndmileministries on instagram
-Follow block_brentwood on instragram (our middle school program)
I’m sorry. This blog will be about sports. You have been warned.
Take a moment to remember a time when you worked so
physically hard that afterwards you were so worn out that you were dripping
sweat, sucking air, and could barely move. What was the activity that caused
this reaction? What was the reason behind throwing your body into such
self-destruction? Say your answer out loud to yourself.
I used to run track and cross country in high school, and
continued to play basketball recreationally in college. However, since college,
I’ve lost most, if not, all of my physical endurance. I’m still active, but for
much shorter periods of time. I guess that’s somewhat to be expected with age.
This past February, wanting to do something different, I went out for a run. I
went to a park that had about a two mile loop bordering the edges. I could
barely “run” a couple minutes before being out of breath and stopping to walk. Thoughts
of “Well, I guess running’s not for me” ran through my head, and at a
much more convincing pace than I was I might add. The more I forced myself to
run, the more I could see the progress. I’ve been able to play with Max longer,
able to do more work, able to play more 1v1 basketball games at the church.
This past month has been an amazing month for viewing sports
for me. First off, the Milwaukee Bucks. Wow! Regardless of your own team
allegiances, this was huge for the city, local small businesses, the franchise,
and in my opinion, the NBA. One thought that crossed my mind was that it was 50
years since there first championship. 50 years! That’s ten years longer than
the Israelites wandered the desert before making it to the promised land. If
that victory can arouse an entire city to celebrate something as trivial as
being the best in the world at a child’s game, imagine the joy and jubilation
from the anticipation and eventual coming of the Messiah for God’s people back
in the day! I’ve dwelled on the word “hope” a lot in regards to the Bucks.
“Calm down Andrew, it’s just a team.” No, YOU calm down! Just kidding. In my
life, I’ve gotten used to the Bucks being just good enough to get kicked out of
the first round of the playoffs each year. Them winning a championship in my
lifetime, especially them being a small-market team where any all-stars tend to
leave Milwaukee to join bigger teams with bigger money, seems unlikely, seemed
improbable. What I love about this team is just how hard they play…on every
possession. I understand why Giannis takes so long at the free throw line, to
gain just a few more seconds of rest.
I might get some flack for this, but I have enjoy watching the
CrossFit Games way more than the Olympic Games this year. I’ve never done CrossFit, never
plan on doing CrossFit, but I have a tremendous respect for the athletes that
do it on a professional level. If you’re unfamiliar, the point of the CrossFit
Games is to crown the fittest man/woman in the world, not the strongest, the
fittest. Athletes from all around basically compete in exercising. Sounds
silly, but when you watch an athlete just absolutely crush weightlifting just
as easily as handstand walking, jump roping, swimming, biking, running, you
tend to wonder what they can’t do. They compete in about three or four
workouts/competitions each day and gain points based on their results. Each
event ends the same way, athletes race to cross the finish line and then lay
flat on their backs gasping for air, hands on heads, trying to recover as
quickly as possible before the next competition. Why? Why do this to yourself?
In many interviews, these athletes will talk about the desire to push the
limits of what humans are capable of.
This year's CrossFit Games winner |
1. 1. Breaking
2. 2. Broken
3. 3. Healing
4. 4. Healed
5. 5. Strengthened
6. 6. Strength to heal others
I feel many are still in stages 1-3 of this pandemic. The difference between this pandemic and a successful athlete is that one of them happened to us unexpectedly and the other was a taken-on struggle. Both hurts will produce strength. One reaps mourning; the other, glory.
Are you letting life happen to you or are you making life happen? In what ways has God equipped you in your life to help strengthen others? Who do you have the capacity to encourage, love, and acknowledge today? Spread the love. Do you yourself feel empty, alone, broken, in need of encouragement, love, and acknowledgement? Tell God about it, ask him for healing. It will not fall on deaf ears.
Romans 5:13 says, “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.”
Thanks for reading! I promise there will be a more update-like blog next month.
Try to match the quote to the person:
1. "I got back on zoom all by myself without any help!"
2. "I don't go to church but I've been more interested in God since quarantine."
3. "I'm scared of the halfpipe but I'm going to be brave."
4. "Can you please leave?"
A. A high school student who designed and helped paint our Nutritional Garden fence
B. Max, my 4 year old
C. One of our elderly participants in the As We Gather Program
D. A middle school student in our BLOCK program.
Answers are at the bottom of this blog.
BLOCK Middle and High School Program - Looking back, the relationships that have been built for many years with our older students definitely took a hit when the pandemic forced things to be more virtual. What was brought evermore to light as the months passed on was that teens just want to be around each other in person. As I took over the already unraveling program in January, an overall goal I had was to be more fun and interactive in the virtual meetings, but also create a safe in person activity or event each month to get us back together and out of our isolation funk. And although the quantity of the program was less than ideal, I believe, looking back, that the quality of what we were given to work with made for an enriching and welcoming program for those who attended. The silver lining was that we got to know a few kids very well and give them more attention than they would've otherwise had with a big group. For an end of the year celebration, we brought 3 students to Adventure Landing in Jacksonville, FL. It reminded me like if Wisconsin Dells water parks had a little brother. We enjoyed the water park with a wave pool, lazy river, and some awesome water slides (one including a huge halfpipe), some go-karts, batting cages, and some much needed slushies and pizza on the hot day. Seeing these kids up close rather than behind the screens of their computers and phones was a welcome change to the day as well. Adventure Landing, a great exclamation point ending to a book I never want to pick up again.Brayden attempting to hit 70mph fastballs |
Other random snapshots from ministry and life last month - The As We Gather program, which is a virtual community of isolated elderly folks learning technology, socializing, and growing together has been a real hit. Although it has taken a lot of handholding to get participants comfortable with the process of logging in on zoom, from what I've been told, they are loving this program and what they are learning. I believe they do daily devotionals, daily exercise, and a daily activity, whether it's art, cooking, or having a guest speaker. Pray for continued growth and interest in this program. This is a need in our community on which we've just begun to take notice and action.
Summer Day Camp starts next week. We will be in person. It will be small, but I believe very impactful in the life of the students and ministry. I'm sure you have your own experiences recently where being in person with either friends or family has been a welcome breath of fresh air. I'm excited to reprise my role of leading Challenge Circle a couple times each week. I'm not sure if there's a way to word search "Challenge Circle" in my previous blogs, but if there is, I know I've expressed my love and excitement of the very existence of this outdoor camp activity.
One Saturday in May, a kid named Tyler came to the garden to help me help him execute his design for our garden fence. What started out as a fun "Design our garden fence" activity on a piece of paper to keep participants in our Garden Day from getting bored turned into a kid taking an idea and running with it. Interested in graphic design and just finishing his sophomore year in high school, Tyler sent me this in April:
Not bad if I do say so myself. It's not completely finished yet, but every time I go to the garden, seeing the fence just makes the experience of the garden just a bit brighter and happier.
Speaking earlier of silver linings, I'll start off by saying it has been a stressful month health-wise. After traveling to North Carolina for a wedding weekend, Max came down with a fever. A routine Monday morning doctor's appointment eventually turned into a 6 night stay at the hospital. With strep and a blood infection, Max was not looking his best energetic, always happy, always goofy self. There were moments where it was unbearable to hear his raspy achy voice and lethargic demeanor. Missi stayed with him in the hospital and I stayed at home with my own leg infection, bad reactions to antibiotics, and painful attempts at walking. This picture of Max might be the most silverest of silvery linings, for this indicated the turning point in the hospital where he was able to stand, smile, and begin again to goof.Thank you for taking the time to read this. If you'd like to help out the ministry in any way, here are some simple ways how:
-Pray, like actual pray to God for us.
-Donate for our Open Court (we could always use new basketballs, ball pumps, and new games)
-Follow 2nd Mile Ministries on facebook and instagram
-Follow block_brentwood on instagram to see my fumbled attempts at social media in real time for the BLOCK program.
-Give a donation at 2ndmilejax.com
-If you shop on amazon.com, shop at smile.amazon.com instead and choose 2nd Mile Ministries as your organization of choice. Amazon donates a percentage of your purchases to us.
Love y'all. Hope this will be a great summer for you! (Answers below)
Adding some more color to the garden |
Big ol' pile o' mulch |
Companion planting sweat peas and basil |
I love music. I love listening to music, all kinds. But listening to classical music, especially string quartets is possibly the most enjoyable for me. I not only listen to these other musicians making the music, but I can see and feel what it would be like to play that music myself. When I play the music myself, I enter the world of that song along with all others who have played it in the past. Music has been a place to express myself emotionally and mentally.
I love sports. I love playing sports, all kinds. But watching basketball and disc golf is my favorite by far. I can share in the experience and love of the sport because of the way I feel while actually playing those sports.
There's something about doing rather than watching that has hit me for the past year of covid. I've consumed a lot of media, youtube, sports, tv shows, and movies. I've gained an appreciation for people who do gardening, people who run, people who take care of their physical health, and even writers who come up with some very good tv shows. However, I feel a whole lot better when I am the one making things happen, when I stir the pond (I feel like that's an expression?).
I remember a game growing up called Steal the Bacon. There were two teams lines up at opposite ends of the gym/court/field. Each person had a number assigned to them. The judge called out "Three!" or some other number, and that particular number from each team ran to the center and tried to bring back the football or bowling pin from the middle without getting tagged by your opponent. This knowledge that your number could be called at any time kept me on my toes, brought the adrenaline of becoming a doer, not a watcher, partaking in the game and possibly making something happen for our team.
In leading BLOCK for the first time, I didn't want to create a bunch of watchers in the middle and high school students. I feel that their entire day is made up of watching. Watch your teachers and listen, come home and watch tv. Although zoom meetings are pretty much watching a phone or computer screen, I've been convicted to make it more interactive and allow the students to partake more, knowing that at any time I could ask them a question, or want their opinion on a topic, or ask them to share about their lives, or ask them to balance a book on their head.
Since January 12th, I feel that BLOCK has been more interactive and less of them coming to watch and see how I am going to teach them, entertain them, etc. Sure I can share about my own life, and yes, there is something to be said of wisdom, but I gotta be able to let the students try to do things, let them make their own mistakes, and be there for the times they are going through new things in life. So far, we've gotten to know some awesome students (emphasis on some, because attendance is currently low), but I'm optimistic and feel momentum for an improving program is close at hand.
If you are reading this, I'm going to be direct and state the obvious....you are reading a blog. If I were to encourage you to be a doer, here is something very practical and not very time-consuming that will be beneficial to you, to me, and to us.
What you can do right now:
-Pray that God will use zoom to extend our reach to more students than we could have ever predicted or expected in our own limited minds.
-Pray for our country. If you lean politically one way more than the other, pray for the other side, not like the Pharisee in Luke 18:11 ("God, I thank you that I am not like other people.") but like the tax collector in Luke 18:13 ("God, have mercy on me, a sinner.")
-Follow or "Like" us on Facebook, 2nd Mile Ministries.
Thank you to those who have used smile.amazon.com and designated us your charity of choice when ordering things on Amazon. I think we made like four times as much last month than in the previous month.