Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Drew's First Soccer Game

Here are some pictures of Drew's first soccer game. And so the years of sporting events begins...

Drew's First Soccer Game

Monday, July 21, 2008

Drew's 4rd Birthday Party - KC

Drew had a wonderful time at his Dinosaur Dig Birthday Party with his friends.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Canada Fishing Trip

I went on a Fly-In Fishing trip to Canada with my my dad and two bothers, along with two more family friends. I am not a big fisherman, but had a great time getting away, being in nature and spending some time with family. Here are a few pictures:


Saturday, March 22, 2008

Crazy Hairs!

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New Year Update

You know you have had a busy year when you sit down to prepare your taxes and you are asked to check all the boxes of major life changing events for the year – and you check all the boxes. Moved from a foreign country, had a baby, found a new job, bought a new house. Not your typical year!

We have been State-side for 8 months and are just now starting to feel like we are getting settled. Many of you are aware of our time in Bulgaria – we were there for 18 months and just came home in June. We had a wonderful experience, filled with good, bad and strange events – but experiences we hope to learn from for a lifetime. We often reflect on our friends and experiences we had in Bulgaria – they greatly impacted our lives and they gave us memories we will not soon forget. We cannot summarize our journey in one letter – but we would love the opportunity to share with you if you have interest.

In August we welcomed our beautiful baby girl – Adison Jean. She is our little “Markovche” (little Marc.) We now realize how spoiled we were with Drew. Not that Adison is a “bad” baby – she just requires a little more attention. However she is showing great signs of improvement lately as she is now showing great interest in her toys and giving mom a bit more rest at night.

Adison is now sitting up by herself and eating stage two foods – she loves the Gerber Puffies. She is also very vocal – a lot of noise comes out, but you can’t really understand what she is saying – a lot like her mother. ;-)

Drew is resilient - bouncing from place to place until we arrived in our new home. When we moved in he asked if we could live there “forever!” He now has a lot of new friends and many new influences – some good, some not so good – so now the “fun” part of parenting begins! Drew is excited to get a new bike and start playing in his new big yard. He is also excited to start pre-school this coming fall – what a big boy he has become.

Marc is back with IBM at Sprint. He has a similar project management position, but is now on a smaller team, whom he really enjoys working with. We are still trying to figure out what God has in store for us in regards to our future profession – but for now He has given us our place.

Lisa’s workload has increase as a full time mom of two, along with managing the home. As time will allow she hopes to get involved with some design projects on the side to keep her connected to her profession and serve as a creative outlet. Drew and Adison remain her top priority and we wouldn’t have it any other way.

We were blessed with a wonderful new home this last fall in lovely Overland Park, KS. Yes it is suburbia – but a nice resting place with many wonderful amenities and a great place to raise little ones. We always have an open guest room for our friends – please come see us.

We are looking forward to the coming of Spring – warm weather, bike rides and meeting new neighbors. We feel extremely blessed with the opportunity to re-establish our family’s foundation – as we work to nourish our family and prepare to live out God’s great adventure for our lives.

Monday, January 28, 2008

October 2007 Update


“The Lord has His way in the whirlwind and in the storm…” Nahum 1:3b



A friend shared this verse with us and we find it very fitting for our situation. I can’t say we are facing any Storms – but our life right now very much feels like a “Whirlwind.” And just like the storms of life, we are very comforted to know that the Lord’s ways are with us in the middle of this whirlwind.



It has been awhile since we have touched base with a lot of you – and a lot has transpired over the past few weeks. As most of you may recall, we returned from Bulgaria in June, spent some time in Illinois, moved into a missions house in Iowa in July, welcomed the arrival of Adison in August and I started a new (old) job in September, back in Kansas City and started house hunting. See what we mean about a “whirlwind?”



Adison has been a pure joy and growing like a weed. She has continued to keep the long black hair and dark brown eyes. She has begun to smile and coo as she studies the faces of those in front of her. Drew still enjoys being a big brother – letting others know this is “his baby.” We have not yet witnessed much jealousy, however he is very vocal that he does not like “crying babies” – including his!



My job: I was on a two year leave of absence with IBM at Sprint in Kansas City for our term in Bulgaria. Returning to IBM/Sprint was always an option, just not at the top of my preferences. I talked with a lot of people about different job opportunities from ministry positions to corporate positions. I sent out a lot of resumes and had a number of interviews – most of all – we prayed hard. We have been praying for the past year that the Lord would lead us to where He wanted us, to the job that He had for me, to the city He wanted us to serve. We were very excited to see where the Lord would lead.



We felt the Lord speak when we went to Bulgaria, so we had expectations that He would “speak” again in similar fashion. As time went on – no jobs “spoke” to me. I didn’t really feel the Lord “speak” to me either. A wise mentor of ours shared this advice with us over a year ago: “Continue to walk the path the Lord has set out for you, but be willing to deviate from the path if the Lord were to call you off.” For the past year we have followed that advice. We knew we had IBM to return to, but were ready, and almost expecting the Lord to pull us off that path.



As we have continued down our path, the return to IBM/Sprint is the path the Lord has sustained. Not just sustained, but has lined it with some nice blessings as well. I am returning to Sprint with a similar position, but more customer facing (a good thing). It is with and old manager/friend of mine who is very flexible with my schedule. We have the great blessing of staying with new friends (friends of friends) who are adopting a baby in Guatemala and living in Guatemala – thus their house in KC is open for us to stay in. Okay – maybe the Lord does speak and I’m just not a good listener.



The transition back to the corporate world has been difficult. I find myself putting a lot of time and effort into tasks that at the end of the day seam to not have much significant value. Many have had to remind me that my ministry continues in the people I meet and the fact that the Lord did not send us to Bulgaria to just “return” to our old life. We return renewed, we return with a new outlook and a new desire to serve. (Easier said than done, I’m finding)



Between living part time in Des Moines and Kansas City and starting a new job – we also need to find a new home. This too provides its own number of challenges. My biggest concern is for our little guy – Drew. Many times he asks “What home are we going to?” – the mission home, the “peoples” home, papa and Jejes, Granddad and Nanas – which home? My little boy does not have a home right now and that tears me up.



God will provide – He always does. We need to be faithful and patient. We are tired and we are longing for a place to call home. We will persevere because God is our God and the four of us are together and healthy. We also have all of you. You and your prayers have been such a blessing to us.



We would appreciate your continued prayers and we hope to share good news soon about a new home.



We love you all.



Love,

The Sheps – Marc, Lisa, Drew and Adison.

Bulgaria Entering the EU

This is a Bulgarian Made video on their take on Bulgaria entering the EU.

Free Hugs - Bulgaria



You may have heard of this "Free Hug" campaign. Young people travel the world and walk cities with signs that read "Free Hugs" in their native languages. Here is their experiment in Bulgaria...

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Introducing: Adison Jean


Introducing:

Adison Jean Sheppard

August 6.2007 at 12:47 pm
8 pounds 1 ounce And 21 inches long

Every good and perfect gift is from above… James 1:17



We would like introduce you to Drew's little sister - Adison Jean.

Mom and baby are doing great!

Lisa labored for 3 1/2 hours and pushed for 30 min - she did Awesome!

Adison came in at 8 lb 1oz (3674 grams for our European friends) and 21 inches (53.3cm) long.

Adison's middle name came from her grandmothers - the late Dorthy "Jean" Sheppard - Marc's grandmother, the late Wilma "Jean" Moeckl - Lisa's grandmother and Betty "Jean" (Jeannie DeHart) Moeckl - Drew and Adison's grandmother.

Some Bulgarian names were in the running for middle names or even an additional fourth name, such as: Sofia, Nadeshda and my favorite - Marcova. In the end we decided to avoid some future teasing and stayed with the family names - we think the name fits.

We know we are so blessed and we are very greatful!

Thank you so much for your prayers - each and everyone has been answered.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

Drew's 3rd Birthday Party



Pictures from two (2) of Drew’s Birthday Parties – one in Decatur and one in Des Moines.

Can we say “Spoiled!”

I guess since everyone here missed his partly last year in Bulgaria, so it must be okay to have two parties this year? We just can’t let him think this will be an every year occurrence.

Andrew turned 3 on July 2nd.

Friday, August 03, 2007

Bye-Bye Bull-gera (VIDEO)

Drew - saying his "good-byes" aboard a plane from Bulgaria, to Rome and then home to America.


Thursday, August 02, 2007

A Grandson’s Remembrance

“… And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.” Romans 5:2-4


Perseverance – that is a great word to describe my grandmother. A woman of few words – yet preached the message of “love” throughout the actions of her life.

Grandma past away Tuesday June 3rd, 2007 at the age of 91. She lived a good long life and she will be deeply missed.

Growing up the only girl of seven younger bothers – becoming their mother at the age of 13 when her own mother passed away with complications from childbirth – grandma lead a challenging life from the beginning. Through the great depression and many life challenges – grandma persevered.


Grandma would have never complained and would have considered herself blessed as she later married my grandpa and had two beautiful children: one girl and one boy – she would have described them as the perfect family. A God honoring family, who grew to serve the Lord and exemplify that same love that she demonstrated.


And those summer vacations at Grandma and Grandpa’s. Fishing with grandpa and coming home to fry the fog legs with grandma. Well… maybe grandpa did the frying, but the baking – those pumpkin pies – that was all grandma.


Unfortunately grandma had to bookend her life on a bit of a down note, as she had to persevere though the last 14 years alone, as grandpa had gone on to be with the Lord. Grandma had to move to a nursing home and her short-term memory started to fail – but she persevered – many would have quit.


I returned home from Bulgaria to see my grandma a few days before she passed. She had recently fallen and was in the hospital. When I first visited, mom asked grandma who I was? After a few dazed blinks – her eyes lit up and a smile came to her face as she said “It’s Marc!”


We chatted just a bit and I went to kiss her on the head and I said “Goodbye grandma, I love you.” She looked right at me and said “I love you too!” Those were the last words I heard my grandmother say – how blessed am I!


July Update


Wow – what a crazy, adventurous, exhausting and joyous past few weeks we had in July. To summarize our first 5 weeks home: we said goodbye to our friends in Bulgaria, visited Rome, got hit by a motorcycle, debriefed in Michigan, reunited with family, traveled 15 hrs each way in an RV to Amarillo, TX, buried my grandmother, celebrated Drew’s 3rd birthday, moved to Des Moines and are now setting up a new temporary home. And I thought we were coming home to “relax”?

Although we have been very busy, as you can see, we are all doing very well and we have really enjoyed reuniting with friends and family. God has continued to prove Himself faithful as he has protected us through our travels and has kept us healthy through all of these transitions.

On a sad and happy note, my grandmother of 91 years of age, past away a day after we arrived back from Amarillo. It was not unexpected as grandma had lived a long, challenging and good life and her body and mind knew it was time to go “home.” I am saddened she is gone, but rejoicing that she will experience the joys of eternal life with her Lord and family.

Drew has done remarkably well as he has had to make a number of transitions in a short amount of time – leaving his “life-long” friends in Bulgaria, making new friends in Decatur, IL and now moving onto Des Moines. He is doing great – but we appreciate your continued prayers for him.

Lisa’s belly is nice and plump, but she is as beautiful as ever. We could go any day now. We just had a doctor’s appointment in Des Moines and all is well. We also toured the brand new maternity wing of Mercy Hospital – the baby will definitely arrive in style!

We have arrived in Des Moines, where after visiting the grandparents for a few days, we moved into the church’s mission house. The house is a very nice 3br ranch that sits on 3 acres of land (which I don’t have to mow, praise God). Many members of the church have worked very hard to get the house ready for us – we are very grateful for their sacrifice for us and the greater work of God’s mission.

It has been great catching up with fiends and family – we have even had a few take some road trips to come see us. We are very blessed to have the friends and family we do.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Providential End

Our departure from Europe came with a traumatic end. We had just lived the last 18 months in Bulgaria – a country that does not value safety standards. We have many traffic and construction stories to illustrate this point. Yet by God’s grace we were always safe and healthy. We were blessed to travel Eastern Europe and only have positive stories to share. Not until the last two hours on European soil did we experience the scariest moment of our journey.

On our way home from Bulgaria we “decompressed” during a four day stop-over in Rome, Italy. We had a wonderful and relaxing time in Rome and started our journey home early Sunday morning on June 10th. It was 5:00am and we had just got out of the taxi at the airport. Drew was asleep and I just placed him in his stroller and set it to the side. I pulled out our two large bags and set them near the stroller. Lisa was gathering her things and moving over toward Drew and the luggage as I started to pay the taxi driver. As I was pulling money out of my wallet I heard a high pitch whine coming from a distance behind me. All of a sudden the taxi cab driver’s eyes became as large as eggs as he started to yell. I turned to see a motorcycle weaving, loosing control, and then laying down his bike as he crashed into my family.

The motorcycle hit Lisa, the bags and the stroller. The stroller, with Drew inside, was jettisoned into a nearby car and then into the concrete embankment. I took off in a dead sprint to the stroller. For a split second I experienced every parent’s worst nightmare. Approaching the stroller I saw Drew fall out of the stroller to the ground – but to my relief he was crying. All I knew at that point is that if he was crying – my nightmare had not come true. I picked him up, checked his body and all seemed okay. As all this was going on I heard screams in the background “My baby, my baby” – so my attention quickly shifted to Lisa. Lisa has been hit in the lower leg, however she always kept her balance and never hit the ground, nor was her belly (baby girl) ever impacted in any way. Her screams had been for Drew and not because of any trauma she had experienced.

Once the damage was surveyed – besides shaken up nerves and emotions – Drew did not have a scratch and Lisa only a bruise on her leg. Paramedics checked out Drew, Lisa and baby girl - all were well. The emotions of the morning finally caught up with Lisa and I – but through prayers and tears of thanksgiving we have been able to move on. Your prayers were heard and answered – thank you for your role in intercession for my family!

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Rome

On our trip home from Bulgaria we were blessed with the opportunity to visit Rome, Italy. We had a wonderful time, with exception to a near fatal incident I write more about later - but besides that - it was a nice time to "decompress" and reflect on our time in Bulgaria. Below are some pictures we took when we visited the Trevi Fountain, the Colosseum, the Forum, Vatican City, St. Peters basilica and the small village of Ostia Antica.

Drew says Good-bye

The last evening before leaving Sofia we had dinner with our team and Drew was able to say good-bye to his friends. Pictured are Austin, David and Steven (the boys) with Laurn, Erin and Cathrine as they all play in the rain. Drew will miss many of his wonderful friends! (Drew and his friend Jacob is below)


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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Reflections on Istanbul, Turkey

Last week Lisa, Drew and I took a trip to Istanbul, Turkey. It was a 9 hour bus ride from Sofia. The trip had three purposes for us – one we needed to be out of Bulgaria for 5 more days to allow our 90 day tourist visa to take us to our end date of June 6th. We were also able to visit and stay with some of our new friends living in Istanbul – they have 4 kids and Drew loved his time with them. We were also blessed to see our good friends, Chris and Holy Justice from Kansas City, who were there at the same time, visiting their brother Scott, who is a journalist living in Istanbul. It was a great long weekend and a blessing to see one more unique part of this side of the world.

Istanbul was very different than what we had expected. I don’t know if it was better or worse than expected – just different. For some reason in my mind I expected Turkey to be more like a middle-eastern Arab country – given their strong Islamic culture. However the parts of Istanbul I saw reminded me very much of Eastern Europe. They actually had more in terms of shops and restaurants than Sofia does, but it still had more of a European feel, than I had expected. The stark differences being a Mosque on every other corner and the large number of people. Istanbul is a city of over 16 million people – and there were people everywhere. As an example - we went out to a popular square on a Friday night and when we came home at 1:00AM the streets were still packed with cars.


We spent a day seeing the sights of Istanbul – highlighting the Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque. They were nice, yet it made me wonder how a Christian stronghold – St. Paul’s original mission field, Turkey being home of the 7 churches, the previous Christian capital named Constantinople – is now, in relatively a short period of time, a Muslim mini Mecca, with 98% of the population being Muslim. The multiple spires in the air over the city are a constant reminder of that fact.

I have become more interested in the events occuring in Turkey, give we now live so close, as Bulgaria is a neighboring country. We have become very aware of the instability there. Just a month ago three believers (one German and two Turkish men) were brutally murder in Malatya, Turkey. (for more information, Google: Tilman Geske - the German who was killed.)

Two days ago a bomb exploded in a mall in the capital of Ankara killing six and injuring over one hundred people. Political elections are about to happen and everyone is concerned. Tens of thousands march in protest against the ruling party.

So I admit, my experience was not that of your average tourist. We still enjoyed the trip and had a great time with all our friends. I guess you could say my perspective is changing - which could be a good or bad thing... I'm still working that out.