Remember Who You Work For

As I get older I realize that life moves ever more quickly. Each passing day is a smaller percentage of our time here on earth. Still, each day counts. Each day gives us new opportunities and chances. In the past and present I have looked at my jobs more or less as means to an end (with the one very large exception of teaching). The truth is there are some positions where it is easier to remember who we are representing in the world. It’s simple, yes. But I hope that as each of our days passes and every time we clock in or out thinking we are being taken advantage of, that we remember who we ultimately belong to, and that any corporation or boss we have to deal with is not bigger than a God who can forgive us and love us and see through our entire being simultaneously. Regardless of our position, power, or job title, we aren’t working for ourselves or just a company, we are working for our Maker. Representing him in a world that often acts out of fear, rejection, or reaction. We can’t let our stories and our work say the same. What does it seem that our Savior has then saved us from? He has saved us (probably from even more than we would be comfortable sharing), and we need that to be evidenced in our lives.

We ARE Jesus to the world, in our workplace, every place where our identity is known it should also be known some of that identity: love, forgiveness, acceptance despite flaws.

My jobs might not be glamorous or even fulfilling in a worldly sense, but I am not there without a purpose.

Let every detail in your lives—words, actions, whatever—be done in the name of the Master, Jesus, thanking God the Father every step of the way. Colossians 3:17, The Message

Popularity: 1% [?]

The Cost of Being Silent

Being silent. I think it often means there is something you’re not saying. Something you hold in, either for the benefit of yourself or others. Yet usually we find no benefit at all. Usually we find some form of loneliness, desolation, or fear.

Perhaps the cost is loss of intimacy, ability to move on or a loss of what you KNOW to be true. Last night I was depressed, probably NOT clinically, but it was one of those moments in which I felt genuinely bad about myself. I felt that somehow I had let myself down and was suffering a reversal of sorts from three simple days of “holiday eating.” Perhaps you can understand this, maybe not, but something so small (coupled with only one workout last week) changed not only my mood but my mindset. I have done so well lately- staying positive and letting myself feel full of love. Love for others, love of life, love for God.  And then suddenly it’s there, and I’m feeling like a detached failure, and with silence, it just stays inside. It’s not always a cure to let it out. It doesn’t always make everything, or anything, better. But keeping silent, doesn’t either. And I cannot revert back to the child I once was, nor can I risk the toll it would take on my relationship with my husband, God, and myself. It’s just too much.

Popularity: 1% [?]

I want to be the best person.

Dun dun dundun, dun dun dundun, dun dun dun dundundun, dun dun duuuun

(Yes, this is a bride who had a life sized replica of herself made into a cake…)

I do not want to get sucked into wedding mania.

I do not want to think about every little thing that can go wrong.

I really cannot afford to thank every person helping out in this shin dig, but feel I must.

I really want to properly thank every single individual!

I don’t want to remember myself having any semblance of familiarity with the women on “Bridezillas.”

I want to be the best person, calmest person, most together person, ever seen walking down that aisle.

Finally, I want to love Andy forever. I think I can, I just hope I can do it without all the moodiness of the last couple days.

I want this to end. :( But also, I want to be married. :)

Popularity: 1% [?]

God really does rock

Amen and amen. So, before all this wedding craziness began I think you could ask anyone who knew me and they would say that I was bored, or that I felt my life was lacking impact since I quit teaching. I did not really know which way to turn or what to do. It was like this winding road where all of these ideas were popping up, but none of them really had the potential of panning out.

Tonight I think I found a way of impacting students, being able to encourage and make an impact, without working for the public school system. Okay…so I still work part time for the public school system now, but that is beside the point!

I found…..dun dun dun…. Are you ready for this?

Night School!

This is where people who are taking their own initiative to learn go. People from various countries and walks of life who all want the same thing- to learn English and learn about the American culture. It was wonderful. As I sat in the classroom my heart was actually beating faster. And I knew, in a real way, that I will always have a heart for people who are coming to this country seeking a better life. That no matter what people have to say I will never support armed border patrol. That the difference between them and me is nothing other than the luck of the draw of where we were born. And that if our forefathers had thought it startling to enter a strange new world without filling out the proper paperwork they sure didn’t show it. (I am sure the Natives WOULD have had paperwork if they knew what was coming). I know that our country is in economically difficult times. I know that jobs are needed everywhere, and I know that citizens need jobs just as much as the immigrant. But what if for one minute we took away greed, we put to place fair wages, and we gave all who should earn disability or social security the right to have that and be able to live on it. Would there really be a problem? Or is the problem the way our system has taught us to operate? The jobs that are being eliminated that could be replaced with better ones. The companies that could ramp up the stakes rather than shutting doors. Can we say “go green” Ford Motors? Perhaps then we would see real change taking place. Until then though, God is taking care of me. And giving me the chance to show others that even a white girl from the South can say I love you no matter what, I accept you no matter where you’re from. There are more than they realize out there, I know, and I know some of you wonderful people, but they don’t always see it, and they don’t always feel it. So, I am going to try to spread the love. Hopefully in night school.
:)

Popularity: 1% [?]

Mother Teresa says (Mondays)…

Simple and true….

It is not how much we do,
but how much love we put in the doing.
It is not how much we give,
but how much love we put in the giving.

Sometimes we burn ourselves out thinking of all we must do and trying to care and do ALL things right (at least I do). Then I realize in concerning myself so much with all the things I lose myself or the love I am putting into what I am doing along the way. You start looking at the days as something you have to get through. Not an opportunity to live out the love of Jesus. So DO…but don’t forget why. And if you need to take a little rest for yourself to regroup and feel that love so you can give it. Don’t feel bad, that is why God invented Sabbath (and maybe even massages).

So far this is one of my biggest travesties in life. Because I have learned big from the down times….but when everything is going right and I get stuck in just that, having everything go right, I start to lose the reason behind it all….

Oh Father, save me from myself. You know I need it! :)

Popularity: 1% [?]

Just do it, take some action that is

Today is Blog Action Day 08. Over 8,000 others are taking the day to write about the issues, namely the issue of poverty. Unfortunately this issue encompasses many poverties. But, I talk about “traditional” poverty on this blog a lot. Sad that there is such a thing, but I know you all know what I am talking about. If you want to learn more about sex trafficking, slavery, hunger, or Haiti read through. You’ll find it. So instead, I want to address the wonderful ways poverty IS being addressed. There are some cool people out there doing some wonderful things. Maybe you have heard of them, maybe you have not. If you are from Atlanta, I am trying to keep it local with some of these. :)

  • International Justice Mission seeks to serve justice in the world to those who might not feel they have a voice. Their social workers, investigators and lawyers seek to make the justice system do just that: give justice to those who have been victimized or oppressed. They operate on four points that bring greater purpose and meaning to what they do; first, they seek to relieve the injustice, second they seek to bring about accountability for the perpetrator, thirdly they provide victim aftercare, and last they look to prevent abuse from occuring in the future and strengthening the community around the issue(s).
  • Kiva is loans that change lives. Through KIVA you can invest and lend in entrepeneurs around the globe. You choose the project and the person, your small loan can help make a huge difference in seeing their dreams come through and helping them to break out of their circumstance, often one of poverty. Kiva doesn’t just give away money, it’s an investment: in a life, in a person, in a business, in a dream. Check them out to see what you can do, even if not now, it is something to keep in mind when you get that bonus check or tax return.
  • Mission Grounds is a GA based mission that sells delectable coffees from around the world to benefit children. The moneys earned through the sale of the organic beans goes to building and serving orphanages in the countries where the coffees are from. They are partners with orphanages, daycares, shelters, an org providing formula for babies and a resource distribution non-profit. All of this abroad and in GA means if you buy their coffee online or in local Krogers in GA, your cup of coffee is making a difference. They also sale wholesale to churches and missions to make an even greater impact, allowing your markup proceeds to benefit your mission.
  • Partners In Health Paul Farmer is amazing! IF you would like a model of a totally people centric non-profit, PIH is it. Started as a clinic in Haiti, PIH has, in the last 15 years, grown to be one of the leading pioneers in reaching those who cannot be reached with healthcare and treatment for preventable and treatable diseases. They do too much to list, they started in Haiti and with Paul Farmer as a doctor set about to save a region, from there they went to Peru and discovered a form of TB that was resistant to the meds being given by World Health. Then they were approached to help in Russia’s prisons with the rapid outbreak of TB there… You get the picture. They stretch the limits of what it means
  • Refugee Family Services Refugees enter the U.S. often because it is dangerous or unsafe to be in their home country. Some of the children arrive in the U.S. never having a home- they were born and raised in refugee camps on the fringes of lands. The families are assisted for 3 months, but most of the services go to the father to help secure a job. RFS exists to provide a multitude (past 3 months) of services to the women and children of these families- in home tutoring, after-school programs, job training, crisis intervention and more, helping them to reach self sufficiency and security in their new home. I happen to be a volunteer, so I know they rock!
  • Wellspring is a home for girls and women (they have 2 separate age groups) that allow victims of childhood trauma to come into a safe place and learn, grow, and realize value on their value on their lives. Located close to Atlanta, these homes house women who have been trafficked, been forced or entered into prostitution, endured violence or rape, or undergone other traumatic experiences. They are truly a wellspring, for their employees and volunteers as well. From stories to books to articles I know they pour into everyone they meet.
  • Compassion is perhaps the most popular, but no less impactful. Like WorldVision and BreadfortheWorld, Compassion seeks to spiritually and physically feed the children of the world. Through your sponsorships and contributions, change can take place in the lives of children. Children that perhaps live in conditions we would find unimaginable. I always love to remember that love and justice are not American commodities (as some might want you to believe), they are gloabl commands. EVERYONE is worth the same, and the child born in Atlanta and Mexico City should both be taken care, sometimes God’s provision is in our hands, but we miss it.

Remember, these are just a few. But, click around on these sites enough you will learn an abundance of facts and stories about poverty today, as well as get an idea of how you might want to get involved. From global to local, there is a way for each of us to be Jesus to someone in the world.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Being a "PK"

So, sometimes I try to think of how being a PK, a pastor’s kid, has affected me. Many times I try to view it as all bad. but I know it’s not. There has been good stuff that has come from it as well. Seeing how open and giving people can be, having the opportunity to meet a varitety of people over the years that walk in the church doors, some that will be there a few months or even years, some that will be around a lifetime. I remember as a child being babysat by older women in our church and taken to Dairy Queen, a big treat for me at 5 and 6 years old. Now I realize that they were probably not getting paid to babysit, and so they were actually spending their time, effort, and money to do these things. I remember one woman, I think her name was Phyllis, that would let me help her make stringed popcporn one Christmas and spend the night. I really really thought I was big stuff- special because I was “hanging out” with someone older and I had a purpose (stringing popcorn is hard work!) She had cookies, hot chocolate, everything just to make me feel special.

As I got a little older it became harder for me. I would make a best friend only to have her gone a year or two later, after their parents had some disagreement with my father over the way things are done in the church. I lived behind the church for 9 years, so it was in reality my entire life. One of my good friends, her name was Autumn, was not allowed to see me at all. Although she lived in the same place, her father would not allow it. I was Phil’s daughter. There are times this has served me well, and other times, as a poorly self-imaged 4th grader, when it did not. I never understood why people left. To me it meant that people did not like us. Now I know that the issues were probably much bigger, but at the time it seemed like we would only get close to people to have them leave. Aaron was another example. His family came to all of our family parties, he taught me how to play video games and get the most out a slip and slide, and then they were gone. I see now that in a lifetime, these situations will happen, people move or friends simply drift apart. But I never really got to say many goodbyes. It never felt official, and I was never given any good reasons. One day, they just weren’t there anymore.

As I grew into my teenage years I had begun a certain protection of self. Not getting invested in every single person that took an interest in my family, making sure I knew that my friendships inside the church would survive outside of the church. I know longer wanted “church” friends. To me, there was no security there. You also learn that there are things that church people don’t like. Especially if you are the child of a pastor. So hiding certain aspects of your life, likes and dislikes, begins to suit you well. Unaware of the mask that most people are most certainly wearing, you begin to feel like maybe you are the only one.

So, now, as a grown woman, I struggle. I struggle to see people leaving churches not as a personal attack, but as a preference or a convenience issue. I struggle to know if people really care about me the person, or are self-serving by serving me, to gain a place of greater importance in the church. Then, there are those people I may want to know but it takes that extra effort because some people just don’t like someone in the pastor’s family knowing that much about them. I envy the people in the church who are “normal.” Who do not have the ingrained sense of looking picture perfect or acting like everything is fine when it isn’t. Heck, I envy Andy, who is able to fully be himself, and people love him (for good reason of course)!

As I am becoming who I was called to be, and listening for God’s direction, I pray that my journey continues, and that I continue to grow. Help me to focus only on what is good, what is from you, and love others with my whole heart, regardless of their situation, for that is what you have called me to do. And also thank you, thank you for the experiences I have had, the wonderful people you have had me meet, and the face of love I have seen more often than any other. Amen.

Popularity: 1% [?]

You had a little compassion… Gerry is sponsored!

    Name: Gerry Abao (PH6420076)  

Birthday: April 8, 2004    Age: 4

Gender: Male

Region:  Asia

Country:  Philippines

Program:  Child Integrated Development Center

Woo hoo!! It is Friday again. This is quickly becoming one of my favorite days on here. Today’s featured child is 4 year old Gerry. Gerry lives with his mother and father and is responsible for cleaning, errands, and taking care of the animals. His father is sometimes employed as a laborer and his mother stays at home. Gerry is not in school right now but he loves to sing, play with marbles, and swim. He attends Bible classes and church activities reguarly. Please pray for Gerry and think about making a difference in his life. For just a small amount per month (about a buck a day) he could know someone cares about him. We all take care of each other.

“Whatever you do to the least of these you do to me.”  -Jesus 

Pray about it, pray for Gerry, and think about the HUGE impact you could make. Gerry has been waiting longer than 6 months for a sponsor. It is so cool to have a relationship with a relationship through letters and pictures, even if it’s from afar. You can let him know that not only do you care, but Jesus cares too. That is all at once giving investment, encouragement, and love. Wow. It’s so cool to think about.

If you would like to sponsor Gerry click here. Or, to sponsor another child who has been waiting for six months, click here

IMPORTANT: A CREDIT CARD IS REQUIRED as payment because this child has been classified “HIGH PRIORITY”. This child has been waiting more than 6 months for a sponsor. Help make a difference in the life of this child, who is anxiously waiting for a sponsor.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Mother Teresa says (Mondays)…

If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other.

Sometimes I want to be selfish. Sometimes I am. Especially about the little things that do not matter. When driving, there are those moments when you literally want to kill the car in front of you, the guy that cuts you off, or the person that shouts “Idiot” out their window when you accidentally turned the wrong way and then needed to make an immediate left into the next parking lot. Okay, so this happened to me. And I wanted to cry, I did not want to forgive him. I wanted to go back and tell him that I made an honest mistake and defend myself for this little inconvenience.

Even deeper than this are our senses of entitlement. We do not want our taxes raised because we don’t like where the money is going. We don’t want to give $5 to the homeless man on the street because we work for our money. We want the prisoner who made a horrible, even fatally injurous mistake, to be put to death. And finally, many want whole groups of people or nations wiped away because they are “evil.” Yet, we are human, we are all the same. We share so many things, yet can find so many differences among the similarities. The idea of “western” and “eastern” seeps its way into our subconscious and we began judging based on things that are cultural or religious, things that are really a matter of where we were born or who we were born to. We decide to breed and hold onto our hatred.

Yet, many of us claim to be Christians, believers in God, or followers of some religion or set of moral codes that teaches to love one another. Jesus commands us to love, not specifying which certain people to show this love to. Why? Because Christ came to die for everyone, to show his immense love for all the people around him. People that were despised, Jesus loved them anyway. Many times his love even acted as a catalyst for change. Once people know there is something more, that they are cared about, they realize their old life does not matter. I know this isn’t true of everyone. But why be cynical when you can be faithful? Why spread discontent when you can spread love? We are one race, humanity, created in the image of God. So, try to remember what Jesus says about others, and try to accept his imense love for you so that you have the capacity to love others. It is not easy for us. Daily we must die, so that we may live like Him. 

Popularity: 1% [?]

Da Da Da Da D Word

This is somewhat of an old writing, about 3 or 4 months, when my parents first decided to divorce. Or rather, when it was revealed to me. But after sitting down for coffee today and hearing someone almost nonchalantly tell a friend that her husband told her on Sunday that it was time for him to move on, and she was not what he wanted, I started pondering, and wondering, just what divorce is, or means, especially in this country. I was saddened as I heard her talk of immediately moving in with a friend and startled by how everyday she seemed to treat the situation. I pray that I and my friends who are embarking on committed, lifelong relationships, may have the faith, patience, and love to see things a little differently. So, here is what I wrote in response to my own experience with divorce, just a few short months ago…

 

I don’t feel like being poetic or having anyone say “Well said Andrea.” What I do feel like doing is driving off into the deep end of the pool and sinking to the bottom until I can escape, air burning in my lungs, and feel something stronger than this. Dream something bigger than this. Hope something greater.

My dad says he used to love my mom, but was never in love with her. My mom says she had always loved my dad, but now she can’t anymore. I always thought that love was simple and that if one person felt in their heart something was right and the other person agreed, then it probably was. Not so says….well…people. I have to believe in love though. I have to give in to my optimism where my love is concerned. Or I will be haunted by things that cannot define but seek to control me for the remainder of this short life.

How though, can persons be so compassionate for the masses and so dispassionate towards those they know personally? How can people love, then hate, and walk away? I have done it myself- one time. And it is an action that never wants repeating, never lacks repulsion in its aftermath, and can create pain for more than only the selfish person who caused it. Sometimes you are lucky and you can come back. Other times you are not.

But say you think you never loved in the first place? Will both parties be better off from one’s decision to walk away. Or will someone always remained scarred. Not only haunted by the things that were said to them, but killed by the oppressive stench, air hanging in the rejection of that person who left and wears a smile, or did not offer remorse, or did not even turn around to glance back in the rearview mirror. How is hope passed down when such pain exists? How do marriages survive when one person always has a problem that seems bigger than themselves? I don’t know, but I have to believe. I have to believe, because I love more than I could have ever imagined. I want greater things for another than I want for myself. And I believe that is possible. And I believe that you don’t have to give up yourself.

I have to believe.
In Love.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes