May God-our-Father release blessing for you in this new year-of-the-horse. May he go before you and watch behind you, bringing you close to his heart. May your eyes be brightened and enlightened, that you can appreciate Joy like never before, even in places you didn't expect to find it.

Chúc mừng năm mới! We love you!

~Tim and Janet



Today is the day after Tet Holiday, or the second day of Tết. (By the way, I’ve begun to learn to type with Vietnamese diacritical markers, so if I toggle to my Vietnamese keyboard—Win+Spacebar—I can type “T e t e s” and it puts the hat on the e and adds an upward stroke. And I feel very cool about it.)

In this email I just want to unpack the screenshot above a bit.

This is a message sent to the woman who worked for the professional service they hired to clean the house we’re living in prior to our move-in. She’s named Nhung, and she agreed to come once or twice a month to help the house get a periodic deep clean—we’re so grateful!

The message is sent in an app called Zalo. It’s created by the Vietnamese government, for the use of the Vietnamese people, and if you’re a privacy advocate you can read into that statement anything you want to. It’s an easy guess that if the “winds” ever shift here, like they have in China, all the other messaging platforms could lose access and the people would need to use Zalo to communicate. In China the 微信 app is also the one they use for banking and paying each other, so it makes for lots of … transparency. We enjoy using Zalo with local friends and consider all of our comms, regardless of encryption, fully transparent.

I sent the blessing message to her on the evening of the first day of the Lunar New Year. February 17 is the basically the latest date for Tet that we’ll ever see.

Next 9 Years (2026–2035)

  • 2026: February 17 — Year of the Horse (Ngọ)

  • 2027: February 6 — Year of the Goat (Mùi)

  • 2028: January 26 — Year of the Monkey (Thân)

  • 2029: February 13 — Year of the Rooster (Dậu)

  • 2030: February 3 — Year of the Dog (Tuất)

  • 2031: January 23 — Year of the Pig (Hợi)

  • 2032: February 11 — Year of the Rat (Tý)

  • 2033: January 31 — Year of the Buffalo (Sửu)

  • 2034: February 19 — Year of the Tiger (Dần)

Nhung gave a heart to my message and replied with a blessing of her own. She’s home with teenage sons and extended family this week, and we’ll see her again next week.

When we saw her for the last time before Tết holiday, we handed her an envelope with “lucky money” inside. I have more to learn about lucky money, but what I know so far is that any time someone enters my home for the next two days, I should have a red envelope with clean/crisp money inside. The luck that I’m extending isn’t based on the amount of value, and the luck is luck for them as well as for me. But if you’re a kid in 2026 you definitely track which of your uncles gives a better payout when your family visits their house.

I have a friend here in Đà Nẵng, an American war vet, who gives out Lucky Money envelopes all year long. I try to get coffee with him (and/or a bowl of phở) every week, so I see him giving red envelopes A LOT. Someone selling hair bands or cigarette lighters or lotto tickets will walk through the cafe we’re in, and he gestures them over and hands them an envelope with cash inside, and wishes them a simple blessing from God. He gets his red envelopes printed with a tièng Việt Bible verse on them, and he buys them 5000 at a time. It could be wrong, and I know about lots of the inherent dangers of coupling spiritual things with financial charity, but I’ve been with this guy enough and seen the interactions enough to validate that what he’s doing is deeply right on so many levels.




Tết Bánh chưng

Dear Mom,

For the past week we've been seeing wood-fired simmering pots in unused lots and on sidewalks, and today we finally got an inside peek at what's been cooking. It's a holiday food called bánh chưng, and people love the nostalgia of making it together. It's an all-day, all-night affair. The rice is soaked in water all night, then the ingredients are packed into banana leaves and tied tightly. They boil in water over an open fire which has to be tended for 10-12 hours! This results in a sticky-rice-pork packet that doesn't need to be refrigerated for up to 10 days. You can see how this would have developed in times pre-dating stovetops and refrigerators, when markets closed for two weeks and everyone rested from work and ate bánh chưng and hung out with family and friends. Young people have mixed feelings about actually eating it now, but they still speak with excitement about the tradition of making it. 

We didn't stay for the long cooking process of the ones we helped to pack, but other friends brought us some they had purchased from a famous place, and we shared it tonight with a Vietnamese friend who wasn't with her family. It was actually pretty tasty!

Enjoy the photo journal below from our day making it with friends.


It's the day before Tet (Lunar New Year) and we've been invited to a family festivity in which we'll learn to make bánh chưng.


These are the "small" banana leaves.  


She's teaching the process of folding the leaves.



Fold and cut to make a leafy box.


Rice and mung beans and pork.



The rice is carefully packed so it's on the outside of the other fillings: bottom, sides, and top.  Then the package is folded up.















On another corner, same day:














Conflict Resolution

Dear Mom,

I'm hosting tonight and next Friday night at Vision English Club.  I get to choose the discussion topics, and I've got "Conflict Resolution" in the hopper for both Fridays.

https://www.facebook.com/groups/VisionEnglishclub/

Tonight at 7:15 I'll help language learners, usually about 16-20 people, know to introduce themselves and get a feel for who's at their tables.  If the tables aren't balanced, I'll do a little shuffling to make sure there isn't any table that just has 4 beginner-speakers and nobody with good speaking ability.


Not every advanced English speaker has been invited to join a group called "Vision Volunteers" but about 10 of them are recognized for their faithfulness to the English Club and their ability to use English to help their peers get practice speaking English.  In the photo above we got six local Volunteers and two from Holland together for a game night.  It was fun, but more than that it helped the group create a friendship bond.  We're looking for ways to enlarge the group and deepen the trust/friendship they feel toward each other.

Then at 7:30 tonight I'll introduce the topic and help each table create a vocabulary list for themselves.  "If I knew that the conversation topic tonight were going to be on Conflicts and Conflict Resolution, what vocabulary words would I want to have access to?"  I'll give them a chance to brainstorm first, then I'll hand out a crib sheet of vocab that AI helped me generate on the topic.

https://chatgpt.com/share/6985450d-a2f0-800b-9691-ae0bd038efc9

I'll probably also give AI a chance to create an English/Vietnamese lexicon for the topic, but I haven't done that yet.

Oh, that's too funny.  I just now went to the Facebook page for Vision Cafe and expanded the post about tonight.  Please read it, and as you do keep in mind that I only told them I was going to open up and explore the topic of Conflict Resolution.  No spilling tea or "throwing hands."  Wow.

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1GtQzA9TQH/



But it's a good topic.  They'll talk in table groups of 4-5 with various discussion prompts, then toward the end we'll have several people stand and share out to the whole group.  

I find myself looking forward to tonight!

Love,

Tim/Janet