Fishing in the Shire River
Elephant Family
An Infrequent Flyer’s Guide to Using Frequent Flyer Miles – Part 2
Earning and Keeping Miles
We’ve learned a few tricks about using airline miles, and decided to type them out for all our friends. I hope they’ll be helpful for some of you, and maybe other readers will be able to suggest some tips we’ve missed (let us know in the comments). Part one, written a few transcontinental flights ago, is here: Part 1: Flyer Miles: What to Expect
Pick Miles with a Long Shelf Life
I’m assuming most of our readers are, like us, folks who fly the occasional really, really long trip. If so, the most important feature in a frequent flyer program is most likely the life expectancy of the miles. Many miles will expire 1.5 to 3 years after you earn them.
Earning Miles Intentionally: Determine Your Top 2 or 3 Airlines
This can take an hour or so, but I definitely recommend it. I wish I’d done it years earlier.
- First, make a list of all the airlines you already have miles with. For chronic mile-wasters like me, that means digging through your desk drawer, email archives, or passport holder and finding cards, welcome emails, and notes torn out of SkyMall. If you can find your membership number, write that down too.
- Second, add any other airlines that would be a logical addition to your list. Applying for work in Alaska? Add Alaska Airlines. Also factor in the airlines which have a hub in your city. (If you aspire to be an over-the-top mile collector, the folks at FlyerTalk have a forum for you.)
- Then for the hard part. Answer each of the following questions for each airline on your list. I recommend typing it.
- Expiration: How long before miles expire? (On a good plan, the miles never expire)
- Activity: How often do you need to fly to keep all your miles active? (Even if your miles don’t expire, your account can be cancelled if it’s inactive for a period of time)
- Partners: What airlines can you fly and still earn miles with them? (Write down the ones you might fly someday.)
- Login:Â What is your username, password, etc. for the airline’s website?
- Balance: What’s your current mileage balance?
- Pick your top 2-3 airlines. Once you see the above info side-by-side, it should be pretty clear which program will give your miles the longest shelf life. My #1 airline choice is KLM, because they partner with airlines I fly often (Kenya, Continental, Delta), and their miles last 20 months as long as I fly once every 20 months.
- Keep this list handy. I have mine saved on my computer so I can refer to it whenever I book a plane ticket online. Just because I have a Continental OnePass card doesn’t mean I should use it for my Continental flight. This list shows me that I should put those miles on KLM instead. I keep a 3×5 card with all my flyer mile numbers on it in the back of my passport.
Keeping Miles
- Never refuse miles. Even if you don’t think you’ll ever fly Aeroflot again, get the miles. If they’re not a partner with any of the programs you already have (refer to the list you made above to check), sign up for theirs. It’s easiest to do it on their website before you fly.
- To keep track of all my miles, I love AwardWallet.com. It can check all my balances in one view, and shows me when they expire. If I see that one of them is going to expire this year, I’ll schedule a reminder for myself to revisit it the month before they do.
- And when you see that your Lufthansa miles are expiring this month, you don’t have to fly to Frankfurt quite yet. You can often get an extension on your miles buy spending a few of them. We’ll cover redeeming miles in part three.
First Day of School
Today is Matt’s first day of school… in a long time. Â He kindly submitted to having his picture taken to commemorate this event.
California Here We Come!
We leave for the States in just over 30 hours! Â There’s a lot to do before we leave, as we’re leaving behind the GCC team of 26 in our house, and trying to get things organized for another team to arrive the day after the GCC team leaves – all while we’re gone. Â Oh, and we have to pack for our trip too…
But we wanted to let you know that we’ll be sharing about Malawi a few times while we’re in the States. Â All three events will take place at Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, CA:
Sunday, July 10th
During the 10:30am Crossroads Fellowship Group
Sunday, July 17th
During the 8:30am Cornerstone Fellowship Group
Wednesday, July 20th
A dessert reception at 7:00pm hosted by a couple of the Bible studies from Crossroads
If you can come to any of these, please do! Â We love talking about what God’s doing in Malawi, and we’ll have lots of pictures to share – lots more pictures than the internet will let us upload from here! Â Come if you can!
GCC High School Team
We thought we had a big house until the Grace Community Church High School Team showed up! Â It may have been a little ambitious to add 26 people to our house, but it seems to be working. Â There are a few cold showers, LOTS of shoes in the hallways, and laughter throughout the house. Â Most of them are gone all day working on construction projects with Brian Biedebach, but two of them hang out with us every day for KP duty.
Feeding 28 of us three meals a day has been quite the endeavor. Â We’re feeling pretty organized now though, with all the cups labeled, and everyone broken into the routine.
We’re enjoying seeing these guys in action. Â From playing with village kids to singing special music at church, they’re ready to jump into anything! Â You can visit their blog to see what they’re up to!
Mouse for Dinner
Kitchen Prep
Our biggest team of the summer arrives tomorrow, the 1st of July. Â All 26 of them are staying at our house and we’re in charge of food. Â Needless to say, our house and kitchen have undergone some major transformations. Â Here’s what the kitchen looks like today.
Mountains of fruit and vegetables. Something like 80 bananas, 60 apples, 50 pears, 30 clementines, 10 avocados, 10 heads of lettuce, 50 tomatoes… and that will last us until Wednesday, hopefully. We wash it all in filtered water with a little bleach so that it’s safe to eat.
The counter looks almost normal. Â Just spaghetti sauce thawing for tomorrow night and 5 large baguettes for garlic bread. Â But the cupboards are so full the door won’t close all the way, and the overflow on top of the cupboards is making us a little concerned about whether the cupboards will stay on the wall! Â Good thing this team is bringing a carpenter!
Not only are our cupboards and counters full of food, so is our large deep freeze. We leave for the States next Thursday (!) and this team will be here a week without us, so Rachel cooked ahead and froze meals for them after we leave. Â The freezer’s so full that we took 6 batches of food over to the Biedebachs’! Â But it’s all ready. Â The Floreen Bed and Breakfast is back in business!
Guest Blog Post: Ryan Lovel
In addition to capturing little Abigail’s heart during his time here in Malawi, Ryan had the most unusual visit of any of the TMC students. This is one experience we don’t recommend and, in fact, work hard to avoid, though we know there are no guarantees. Â Ryan handled it great though, and we’re all thanking the Lord for His protection of Ryan and all of us over these weeks. Â As the sign at the clinic says: “We treat, God heals.”
(Ryan Lovel)  As we walked out of the clinic Rachel asked me, “So what’s the verdict?â€Â I told her, “The doctor prescribed me some malarial medication and told me that if the symptoms that I had been experiencing should persist, I should come back immediately.â€Â I was significantly “out of it,†and ready to crawl right back into bed for the rest of the day, but I vaguely remember seeing what looked like surprise in her expression as she processed what I had just said. In hindsight, I am really thankful for the perfect combination of Rachel’s stellar composure (that comforted my worries and concerns) and my own exhaustion that led to my being able to relax and go right back to bed. Before I get to my recovery period though, let me first describe to you the early stages of my experience with malaria, and hopefully through all of this you will be able to understand the change that has occurred in my perspective with regards to this epidemic.
The first thing that I remember about being sick is that the sun had never looked so bright. I was driving with JP and I think that my eyes were closed just about the entire time, and I was thinking that there was no way that I could make it through the rest of the day. The sun seemed to be concentrating all of its energy directly upon my eyes. My body was in such a weakened state that it could not physically bear the power and radiance that the sun emanated. This was definitely a new feeling for me.
There could be a narrative here that describes the symptoms of malaria in great detail, drama, and length, but I feel that the only logical conclusion that any American could draw from this list would be that I had the flu or just “some bug.â€Â As I recall, the symptoms went something like the following: fever, cold chills, body aches, sensitivity to light, and general discomfort. As I considered all of these things and tried to figure out what was going on, I was almost positive that I had the flu or a stomach bacteria. I was hoping so badly that I wouldn’t have malaria, yet I knew nothing about what having malaria actually meant.
Matt had come into my room the morning of the day that I went to the clinic. I remember him talking, but in all honesty I don’t remember what he actually said. Here’s what I do remember though, it sounded like he had a plan… I liked that. After he was done talking and I was done trying to listen I felt comforted… I also liked that. I don’t know if I said something funny or embarrassing but he had a smile on his face… I liked this as well. After what I assume now to have been a both productive and somewhat mutually enjoyable conversation, Matt left and I moved all the way from laying on my side to laying on my other side. I definitely felt sick, but I knew that there was nothing I could do about it except to relax and trust in the Lord and the people that He had placed around me.
It was around eleven or so when JP gave me a ride to the clinic. The irony still makes me laugh. It was probably less than a week before this point in time when I was walking around the “Partners in Hope†clinic, witnessing Dr. Koleski input information into the same kind of blue “Health Passport†notebook that the receptionist was making for me. As I sat in the ABC medical clinic I don’t remember thinking much, except that I was trying really hard to listen for my name so that when one of the Malawian nurses called me I would be ready. Sure enough though, instead of hearing Ryan I heard, “Ree-own.â€Â Luckily, they didn’t just pass me up but they called my name again in five minutes and I picked up on it this time. From the waiting room I was taken to have my temperature measured (102oF), and then allowed to lie down on a hospital bed. The nurse took my blood and I remember being thankful that regardless of the outcome, there would be some sort of a definitive answer. Up until this point in the trip I had been faithful in taking my malarial medication as well as wearing bug spray if I was out past five in the evening. To a certain extent, this led me to have the mindset that there was no possible way that I could have malaria.
Now we reach the climax of my medical experience in Malawi. At this point, I don’t think that anyone who hasn’t had any experience with malaria would have observed me and concluded that I had contracted the feared epidemic. I simply lay there in my hospital bed with my eyes closed, falling in and out of sleep. As I drifted in and out of sleep the doctor was in the process of analyzing the results that the lab technicians had found. I opened my eyes at one point to find the Doctor standing above me, waiting to give me the news. The lab had not found any visible signs of the parasite in my blood smear, but my platelet count was low, a common sign indicating malaria. The final confirmation that I had contracted malaria didn’t come until I had finished taking the prescribed medication and I was feeling close to one hundred percent. (Side note from Rachel: many of the malaria cases this year have turned up a negative result on the malaria blood smear tests, but the doctors had been through enough of those cases this season to diagnose Ryan’s symptoms very early on.)
It’s actually somewhat funny to me now as I look back upon the situation. Based on the time frame of malaria and the time at which I became ill, I would have been infected close to exactly when we arrived in Malawi. As I came to grips with the fact that I had contracted malaria I realized that I had two choices. I could react dramatically and question why-oh-why I had been infected and I could focus on all of the things that I thought would change in my life. The second option that I saw was to react in light of the fact that regardless of everything that I had done to avoid being infected by malaria, I had in fact contracted it. In light of this, my response to the disease would be to be thankful that I was healed and to be thankful for my newly gained perspective.
Before coming to Africa my thoughts concerning malaria were composed of nothing but fear. This is not to say that everyone should get malaria in order that they won’t fear it. That is definitely not something that I would recommend. However, as I’ve been able to have conversations with both doctors and Malawians I have come to realize that for many people, malaria can be a part of everyday life. As long as the proper measures are taken to diagnose and treat the sickness, people will remain healthy. I am so thankful for the recovery that God gave me and for the wonderful people that encouraged me back to health. There was an endless amount of love demonstrated to me at this point in time and I am so thankful to my teammates for bearing with me through this and having patience with me, and especially for the Floreens, who converted their ‘bed and breakfast’ into a rehabilitation clinic for patients suffering from malaria.