As on most Friday afternoons, I was at my desk in the church office, making the English bulletin for Sunday. Eloise, a church member, had stopped by to go with Hitomi-san, the church secretary, to buy the supplies for the homeless ministry for the next day. One of Hitomi-san's friends from Tomobe church had stopped by to visit after a doctor's appointment in Mito and Atsushi, the minister, had come up from his office on the first floor to chat with everyone for a minute.
And then the building started to shake, which is not altogether unusual, so we all paused for a moment to see how big this earthquake would be . . . maybe a little bigger than any we had recently . . . and then things started to fall from shelves and the photocopier started to shimmy across the floor. I decided maybe the cluttered office, full of rickety bookshelves, was not the best place to be. I noticed that Eloise had gone outside, so I decided to check on her. And the wide-open space of the parking lot seemed an acceptable place to wait for the end of the earthquake in relative safety.
The shaking was continuing to get stronger, as I made my way outside. I was concerned that the way the ground was rippling would make it too difficult for us to stand, so I urged Eloise to kneel with me. On our knees, we prayed together as everything around us shook.
The whole earthquake lasted about 5 mins -- which is long for an earthquake. Afterwards, the others came outside. There were some small aftershocks and a couple of rather large aftershocks that had us all down on our knees again. We listened to the radio in Hitomi-san's car and heard that the epicenter was off the coast of Miyagi, and we heard that there was a tsunami, but there was no way that we could imagine what was really happening. But I started praying for all my friends in Miyagi, and hoping that they were all okay.
There were people from the offices in the area around the church waiting along the street and gathering in parking lots. And I remember a group of men from a nearby newspaper office, who had set up their laptops on a little patch of grass in the parking lot across the street from the church. Every few minutes, one of them would grab a camera and dash off toward the station or the downtown area. From them we overheard that there was some bad damage to some of the businesses in the older buildings downtown. Lots of broken glass.
We tried and tried to get through on our cell phones to friends and family, but were basically unsuccessful. So around 4:30 we decided to try to make our ways home. I had taken the bus that morning, but the buses weren't running after the earthquake, so I walked. Because I was still a little out of shape after gradually building my strength back up since my accident in January, it took me about 2 hours to walk the nearly 4 miles back to my house.
Along the way, I noticed more and more of the damage. There were cracks and holes in the roads and sidewalks. The streets were lined with piles of ceramic roof tiles. Some older houses and buildings had partially collapsed. Most businesses were closed, but the convenience stores were full of people frantically buying anything that was left. And there were crowds of people, who had been left stranded because the buses and trains were not running, walking to pick up their children from school or meet their families at home.
On my way home, I saw that a whole chunk of the sidewalk cracked, had been pushed out and had been flipped over by the earthquake.

I was thankful to get home just as it was getting dark, because when there is no electricity anywhere -- it really gets dark! And upon arriving at my house, I found Gaku and another friend from church sitting in Joel's car in the driveway. (Joel had left for Singapore that morning, so he was actually in an airplane at the time of the earthquake.) In fact, most of the people in our neighborhood were waiting in their cars, listening to the radio and waiting to see if another big aftershock might come.
By then, it was 6:30 and none of us had eaten dinner, so by the light of my cell phone display, I went into the house to find some food. Since it was already pretty dark, all I could really tell was that stuff had fallen down off walls and shelves all over the house -- I couldn't see to tell how bad the damage was, so I just grabbed some stuff from the kitchen and some blankets from my room. The three of us spent the night in the car, trying our best to sleep despite being shaken awake every 5 to 10 mins by the aftershocks.
As you can see, my closet basically exploded, but (you can't see it so well in this picture) nothing fell onto my bed, so if I had been sleeping during the earthquake, I would have been safe.

This is what we saw in our kitchen the next morning.

So we spent the next couple of weeks cleaning the house, and then cleaning the church and helping to clean up the homes of church members, and trying not to be stressed out by the hundreds of aftershocks. And during that time we kept working on finding out whether friends in Sendai were safe, and trying to find a way to get the volunteers who were supposed to leave for a mission trip to Cambodia the following week to the airport in Narita. Then we began the massive undertaking of fielding requests for information and offers for help from overseas, and we were so thankful for those outside of Japan who stepped in to distribute information and answer questions on our behalf.
I know that many foreigners in Japan struggled with whether they should leave the country, and I do not want to pass judgement on those who struggled and those who decided to go. We all had to follow the guidance of the Holy Spirit in a very difficult situation. However, I do want express my appreciation for all of you who trusted that I was following what God wants for my life and my service to him, when I did not even consider leaving. Thank you for not putting pressure on me to return to America. Thank you to those of you who encouraged me as I struggled to heal and recover from the shock of being in a natural disaster. Thank you for covering us in your prayers. Thank you for your support and your understanding. Thank you for your love.