We enjoyed having John Dennison with us this past week for Environmental Literature. He encouraged us to try to interpret nature, rather than to simply describe it. Students worked in groups to write poems, focusing on this goal. Rather than coming across as a human trapped in a chicken's body, Melissa (Westmont), Betsy (Messiah), and Sarah (Biola) wrote the following poem to embrace and convey the chickenness of the chicken:
The Convent Chickens
The warm light ball is here
We sit and wait
Done
head….foot…head…foot
head, he, heaaaaad. foot.
Here come the freedom stealers
Like a tree, with naked wings, and the inner beat.
head. foot. head. foot!
What will it be?
Nibbles or taking my shelled chicks?
Peck, Peck. Head…foot. oh! a squirmy…peck. mmm. peck
We'll give the odd one a bad time
Peck…Peck…peck, peck, peck.
head…foot…head…foot…head…foot
For homemaking this week, Courtnay taught us some crocheting techniques. Some (including myself) were learning for the first time, while others took on the challenge of learning more advanced "granny squares." You will find a flurry of yarn and hooks at the Old Convent if you take a look around.
Allie (Wheaton) volunteered to cook us an amazing Moroccan stew for dinner on Wednesday. Everyone, including the Chirnsides, Allie's homestay family and guests of the evening, enjoyed the meal.
John has had a part in helping to organize a Christian environmental conference called "Lament, Hope, Action" held in Wellington this past weekend. Courtnay was able to attend the conference, hosted by A Rocha, the Otago University Centre for Theology and Public Issues, and Caritas Aotearoa New Zealand (the Catholic social justice agency). Towards the end of the week, John organized a service of lament for us to take part in. It was a time to reflect on the harm we've caused the environment, realizing the consequences of our actions, and inviting God to work in restoring the creation.
On Friday afternoon, the CureKids challenge stopped in Kaikoura. Sam (Eastern), the Tui, and I (Kristen, Staff), the kiwi, welcomed and assisted 35 teams of competitors dressed as such ridiculous things as smurfs, inmates, Shrek, cows, and superheroes. The participants were all part of a three-day contest to raise money for children with life-threatening illnesses, traveling from Auckland to Queenstown on $10 and completing challenges along the way. Sam and I instructed the teams how to complete the craft challenge and ended up judging who the winners were. It was a lot of fun and heartening to see those involved to support the cause. The Flight of the Conchords conducted interviews with children about how we can raise money for the sick children, and arranged their responses into a kiwi star-studded fund-raising song. Check it out!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ca4ty7tz9x0
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| Kristen (Staff) and Sam (Eastern) pose with competitors in the CureKids challenge dressed as nuns. The closest we've seen to real nuns since we started living in an old convent! |
We ended the week with a night of poetry and prose readings and charades! The room was filled with an air of mirth as we watched one another act out the mannerisms of scorpions and snails. John put on a good show for everyone, including a particularly exquisite impersonation of a prairie dog.
We welcome Pauline Stevick to Kaikoura for next week's Environmental Lit II course. While we muse about Dickinson, Wordsworth, and Thoreau, we'll also be getting ready for to depart for our adventures during the close and coming Term Break!