The Great Rift Valley, where we'll pedal for a large portion of our journey. |
Well, we’ve done just about everything we can do to get ready to pedal 600 miles in Kenya.
We board international flights on May 6 (next Sunday), arrive in Nairobi
on the evening of May 7, and take an initial tour around the Kenyan capital on
Tuesday, May 8. That begins twelve
straight days of covering between 40 and 70 hilly miles per day in a loop that
takes us west and north of Nairobi.
We hope
you will follow our journey via our blog. Here’s the address: http://bikekenya2012.blogspot.com I intend to post photos, videos and updates
each day. I also plan to share tweets
from Kenya. If you use Twitter, follow
@BikeKenya2012, or you can view all my comments and photos at www.twitter.com/bikekenya2012. These are our sincere attempts to bring
friends along for the ride, to share the experience, to thank you for your
prayers and support and, somehow, to plant seeds for understanding, vision and
growth among us all.
There are
a thousand details to sweat for planning and leading an excursion like
this. As for training, our team members
are making a real attempt at getting ready for riding at mile-high+ altitudes
and anticipating major ascents and generally hilly terrain. But there is a preparation of mind and heart
that matters as much to me as logistics and physicality. Here’s what I’m thinking about that.
I am
contemplating the Christian faith precept that in grace God goes before us and meets us where we
go. With that, I am free to bracket my
detail orientation and penchant for on-timeness and plan follow-through in
order to be open and empty enough to experience and receive what no one can
anticipate. I can set aside
presuppositions regarding cultures and faiths in
order to observe, take in and appreciate the diverse dynamics of people,
relationships, communities and faith we may be privileged to experience. I am conditioning myself even now to slow
down, focus on being there (a FISH principle) and, as much as possible within
my role as team leader to practice what in Swahili is known as “hakuna matata”
– no worries. I am extending my practice
of contemplative prayer – making/taking more time than usual to consider and pray
reflectively through the daily experiences of life.
So, this
is more than just a fundraising cycling event (it IS that; have you yet
sponsored us with a per-mile donation to build the new ICCM school?). It is something of a spiritual journey. We invite you along for the ride. We welcome your prayers. We welcome your support. We welcome your responses. And we hope not to return unchanged.
-- John Franklin Hay