There And Back Again: A Coster Tale
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FIVE years!!

7/26/2014

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Believe it or not, this past Friday was our fifth wedding anniversary! It's so fun to look back on all we've done in the last five years and see how we've grown individually and together. It's hard to believe that five years from now we will just be finishing our time in DC, whereas our first five years were spread out over three countries!

Our exploration of the city has slowed down a little as Dylan had increasing amounts of homework for his summer classes and I started working part-time at a French-immersion preschool. On our anniversary we took time out for dinner at La Liguras, an extremely good Indian restaurant (it even rivals India Palace in Wheaton). 

So glad that God brought us together and has led us through so many adventures. =)

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4th of July on The Mall

7/5/2014

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We read and heard a lot about the crowded chaos of going to see the fireworks on the Mall, but figured we should at least go once and then we could decide whether or not to ever go again based on experience. Now, based on the experience....we're still not sure if we'll do it again. =) I will say it was really cool to see the fireworks up close and right behind the Washington Monument; I think we're pretty spoiled with that view!

We headed towards the Capitol building around 6pm and the metro was pretty full, but not any fuller than I've seen it at rush hour. We went to a friend's house for a barbecue (yum!) and then walked the mile or so to the Mall around 8:30.

There were a LOT of people there. The lines for the port-a-potties were 20-30 people long. The grass portions of the Mall were completely covered with people sitting and when we arrived the roads cutting across the Mall were just starting to fill up with people standing. We actually had a really good spot  on one of the cross streets looking straight at the monument over the people who were sitting! 

The fireworks and the canons started at pretty much the same time - and the canons were directly behind us and much louder than the fireworks. We were at the east end of the Mall where there was also a concert and I think the canon blasts were part of ending that? The fireworks were great and people clapped especially for shapes - a couple burst into smiley faces and a few others were stars!

When the fireworks ended, everyone started moving pretty quickly. We were on the edge, so we were able to get off the Mall and start moving north pretty quickly, but we also had to walk west pretty much the whole length of the Mall as we were aiming for the metro red line. As it turned out, we walked more than half way home before we got away from the huge crowds around the metro stations - and by then we figured we might as well finish walking rather than try to stuff ourselves into already-full trains coming from downtown.

Thus we trudged into our apartment just after 11pm, still debating if we would want to do the same thing again next year...
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Students again!

7/4/2014

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It's so nice to be a student again! Although we've had a lot of life lessons and cultural lessons over the last few years, we haven't really had any academic lessons. The great thing about classes is that they require you to read and think about materials you otherwise might never pick up. Here's a sampling of things we've read (individually) and discussed (together) in the last couple of weeks:

  • Dylan read Savage Inequalities, by Jonathan Kozol, for his education class. It takes a very pessimistic outlook on education in America, noting especially the policy of paying for public schools through property taxes which leads to already advantaged neighborhoods having the best funded schools. This system is notoriously difficult to change because of course no one wants to give up any of the money coming into their school or pay extra money that would go to some other unrelated school. Hm. 


  • Christiy read Purple Hibsiscus, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, for an Africa focused summer reading assignment. Adichie, a Nigerian, has written several award-winning novels set in both Nigeria and America. Purple Hibiscus tells the story of a young girl raised in an abusive home who learns to open up when she goes to stay with her aunt and cousins. The backdrop is a politically unstable and repressive Nigeria, which eventually forces the girl's aunt to immigrate to America. Beautifully written.

  • Dylan read "A Mathematician's Lament," by Paul Lockhart, for a math class. This article laments that modern culture has turned math into a series of uninteresting formulas to memorize rather than the art it should be. He compares the loss to what it would be like if we required everyone to take music classes not to learn to play but to learn all the notations and rules without sound. Click here to link to the article. I read just the first five pages and found it really interesting.

  • Christiy read "Making it in America," by Adam Davidson, for an economics class. Did you know that in the past decade manufacturing output in the United States has actually gone up by one third and yet, at the same time, employment in manufacturing has gone down by a third? Davidson explains that the level of technical ability required to work in a factory has drastically changed. Gone are the days when you could be hired to do a simple push-button job and then rise up through the company. There are some simple jobs left, but to jump from there to the next level, you probably need a degree in computer science. As Davidson says, this is good news for anyone in America with a degree. Not so much for everyone else.
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    Christiy & Dylan were born in the States, grew up overseas, met at Wheaton College, married in 2009, and are currently exploring the world together!

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