Friday, November 28, 2014

Thanksgiving and Black Friday in the UK...?

Yesterday was Thanksgiving, as you all know. I woke up feeling warm and thankful for electric radiators, as our boiler broke two days before. And I woke up with that feeling that it was a holiday. I can’t describe that feeling. Maybe it’s excitement, but it feels like something more.

But the day wasn’t easy.

Repairmen were working in our kitchen, replacing the boiler, from 8 am to around 5:30 pm. For about and hour or so we didn’t have any gas, so we couldn’t use the stove. At one point they said we weren’t going to have any water, but we kindly explained to them it was Thanksgiving and we had a lot of people coming over, so they worked very hard for us. The kitchen was absolutly atrocious. If you know me, you know I can’t stand messes. At one point I had to leave the kitchen and not think about it. But in the end, the boiler was fixed an hour before guests arrived, and we got all the dishes cleaned and everything ready on time. We had twenty people in our dining room. Everyone had a great time, and I think the Brits wish they had Thanksgiving. It could’ve been super stressful getting everything ready and for me it was at times, but it also went really smoothly.

We went around the table and shared what we were grateful for, and this is what I said (except I said it in a sentence or two at the table. When you’ve got twenty people to get through, you keep to the point).

I'm thankful more and more everyday for my wonderful, beautiful family who have always supported me in everything I do. I'm so blessed to have a close relationship with them. When I describe my mom and I's relationship to others, I tell them we're like the Gilmore Girls. It's very, very hard to be away from them, and I know it's hard for them too.

This year was my first (and honestly, hopefully only) Thanksgiving away from home. Yesterday all I wanted to do was watch the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. It’s a tradition. I searched on the internet for nearly an hour going from this site to that, trying to live stream the parade. Sites kept telling me two different places I could watch it, but everytime I went to the sites nothing was there. It was really frustrating. But I called home and got to see part of the parade, and as much as it was good for me to call home, it was emotional too, and I’ll be honest and say I broke down at one point.

Family and family holidays are super important and special to me. I love cooking with my mom, and I enjoy being there to help make everything go smoothly. I like creating cut-out turkeys with my sister and niece or making sure the drumsticks from the turkey are saved for my brothers. I like the excitement of my dad deep frying the turkey. I just love family togetherness, and I know a lot of people don’t have the relationship with their family like I do. And I am immensely thankful for mine. And I’m very excited to get to be home for a month over Christmas. Let it snow!

The day wasn’t bad, but it was different. I loved sharing Thanksgiving with others and seeing how much they loved and enjoyed it. I loved making pumpkin roll for the first time (don’t worry, aunt Ann, yours is more special) and hearing people say how good it was. It was a great experience and I’ll cherish it. Anyway, there is my Thanksgiving from the UK.

Now, the Brits haven’t adopted Thanksgiving, but they have begun to adopt Black Friday, and I think they should just stop… Check out these articles and feel free to be in awe at the sheer madness of it all. I mean, I know we say Black Friday is pretty crazy, but I think this is a whole new level of crazy. I’ve been Black Friday shopping three times, and it was never this chaotic.



Friday, November 14, 2014

You Qualify

I'm alive! Sorry, that was a bit dramatic...

I’m sorry it has been a month since my last blog, but it feels so good to be sitting here writing again. A lot has happened since I last wrote, and we’ve been quite busy over here in England. The team went to Albania and Italy for nearly two weeks for two different conferences. It was great to serve people all over Europe at both of the conferences and to see all sorts of people from different places coming together in unity. It truly was beautiful. It may have been stressful at times, but it was worth it.

It was also super neat to see some of our partners I’ve already met and catch up with them. It’s fun to think that I know people from different parts of Europe now, whereas before I came here, I’ll be honest and say the majority of people I knew came from Indiana, which isn’t a bad thing, but how cool is it to know people from all over? And to have the opportunity to build relationship with them and serve them and give them resources to help them reach their communities truly is a blessing.

In Albania our hotel was right by the Adriatic seaside. It was absolutely beautiful. Every night we fell asleep to the sound of the waves hitting the shore, and we had so much fun hanging out on the beach. I’ll never forget our last night and morning there. During our last evening, we sat on the shore and watched the sunset and we took a lot of pictures and enjoyed each other’s company. Before our flight left on our last day, the team and I hung out on the beach. I’ve never spent that much time on the beach because I’ve never really been, so it was a lot of fun to experience it. I still prefer the lake though. Sand gets everywhere. 




Italy was beautiful. Sam, Krista, and I got to spend a day in Rome. Sadly Darbi wasn’t feeling well and wasn’t able to join us. It was crazy to think I was in Rome though. I mean, that’s somewhere people usually just dream about going. But no, I was there. I saw the coliseum. I even went inside it. We went to the prison Paul was supposedly in when he wrote 2 Timothy, and we went in the Pantheon and the Vatican and we ate gelato twice and just had so much fun. It’s honestly still hard to believe I was there.




In short, my job is pretty awesome. I get to travel and meet other believers around the world and serve them. I love when we come together as one in unity. We’re not Baptists or Pentecostals or Catholics or Presbyterians, but we’re all disciples of Christ.

But I’m writing to share with you something that has really helped me, especially recently.

Christine Caine is one of my favorite speakers. I think we all have those people that can really speak life into us and challenge us, and Christine Caine is one of mine. I bought her daily devotional before I left the States, and it has been such a blessing to me. If you haven’t read her book Undaunted, I really recommend it, and the devotional as well.

Anyway, I don’t know about you, but I’m the first person to be hard on myself. And it’s not because I’m not confident or I don’t think I can do well, but it is because I expect a lot of myself. I expect myself to do well and to try and go above and beyond what is expected if possible. So if I don’t feel like I’m living up to that, I beat myself up.

No, it’s not a bad thing to want to do the best you can, but it can be detrimental to constantly be pushing yourself too hard instead of taking a deep breath and trying again or trying a different approach. Stress doesn’t help anything; it only makes you frantic.

Since I’ve been a part of the CreativeLab, a lot of tasks have been thrown my way. I’ve created a handful of flyers, conducted research and presentations, created slideshow transitions and ran the projector for one of our conferences, and I’m currently hard at work in putting our website together, and so on. Really, I do whatever comes my way. I’m even being trained to do a little videography.

While I absolutely love learning and stretching my abilities and challenging myself, sometimes I just don’t feel qualified for the task I’m given. I’ve never created a website. I’ve never run a projector, and the only presentations I’ve done were for a grade. At times it can be stressful and while I’m up for the challenge, I sometimes feel pressure because I don’t know if it will turn out as good as I want it to because I lack the experience I think I need. Pay attention to the word think there.

Take a look at this portion of scripture:

For context, remember that God just asked Moses to go to Pharaoh and demand him to free the Israelites.

“Moses said to the Lord, ‘Pardon your servant, Lord, I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor since you have spoken to your servant. I am slow of speech and tongue.’ The Lord said to him, ‘Who gave human beings their mouths? Who makes them deaf or mute? Who gives them sight or makes them blind? Is it not I, the Lord? Now go; I will help you speak and will teach you what to say.’” Exodus 4:10-12

Moses didn’t feel qualified for the task God gave him. And what did God do? He basically told Moses he had no right to tell Him about who Moses was. And even though Moses believed he wasn’t eloquent and couldn’t speak well, God told him he would teach him and help him through it. As Christine Caine says,

“God doesn’t call the qualified. He qualifies the called.”

No matter what God has asked you or I to do, no matter how unqualified we feel, we are always qualified because God says so. Maybe I’m not an expert at public speaking or creating websites or videography, but God knows how my mind works. He knows that I like to create, and I have an eye for design. He knows despite the fact that I don’t necessarily enjoy speaking in front of people at first sometimes that I enjoy it after the fact and get a high off of it.

Five years ago, even two years ago, I would’ve thought you were crazy if you told me I’d be planning on going back to school to get a masters in English so I could teach creative writing and literature. I probably would’ve laughed at you. And even now, I wonder about the details and I wonder if I can even teach. But I’ve seen glimpses. In Italy, the CreativeLab did two different presentations on the MyStory program: one on KnowMyStory as a whole, and the other on a new app that is in development. Our Director, Darbi, gave the reigns to me on the app presentation because I created the Prezi (it’s like a fancy PowerPoint for those who don’t know), and she believed I could do it on my own. It felt a little nerve racking at first, but I actually enjoyed it.

In life there will always be moments where we feel like we don’t have the skills to do something. Instead of dwelling there and letting our thoughts and emotions guide us, we need to remember that God will help us because he qualifies us. And every time something new comes our way, we should embrace it because it is an opportunity to learn and grow.

I absolutely love learning, and I think I’ve only within the past year realized this about myself, but I really do. I love random facts and bits of knowledge. Expanding my knowledge and skill set is fun and enjoyable for me, but I have to work hard to keep it that way. It can be easy to be like Moses and say meekly, “Pardon me, Lord…” However, let’s rip those buts and ifs from our vocabularies because every new challenge and is an opportunity to gain a new skill or learn something new, and we just never know when that skill or knowledge could come in handy down the road.

I hope this encourages you as it has encouraged me. Every morning I try to spend time with God and ask him to help me through anything that comes my way, and I truly notice a difference in my day when I make that declaration. So go and make yours. Go tackle that mountain in front of you. Go build, write, create, teach, and learn. Know that you’ll never be alone in it. God is always there waiting for you to ask for his help and guidance, and he is so sweet to give it.