Sunday, April 27, 2014

The Struggle is Real.

It tends to go in this order. One day you are on top of the world it seems, you pray at the drop of a hat, you thank Him for the tiniest things, you see Him in everything and then the very next day its like you're having to cut through fog. Its like you are having to remind yourself that He is here and the He does still love you. Today was one of those days.
I felt rushed, I missed a shower for my cousins wedding, I lead devotion on the conference call and was unsatisfied with how it turned out, I finished the call by talking about spiritual warfare and how hard the enemy is going to try to keep us questioning everything, worrying and doubting our calling. I told the team to cover themselves in prayer, to rebuke the enemy.
&& what happens not 20 minutes later I can't sleep due to the enemy completely trying to attack me. I finally fell asleep and then woke up in a panic, I lost two hours. I doubted everything, I questioned everything, I worried, I gave up. I talked to a friend who seems to be there a lot for me, who is always a phone call away and I questioned 'going off the grid' just to catch a break. But then in a small voice I heard 'Uganda'--
I got off the phone, parked my car and walked around praying, I was quickly reminded of how minor my 'bad' afternoon had been. I was quickly reminded how much Jesus loves me. I was reminded of how much power I just gave the enemy. Power that he did and does not deserve ever. I am a warrior, a princess to a matchless King even and the fact that I let the enemy hold that power over me makes me sick to the thought. I was quickly reminded in just my few minutes of prayer and resting how many promises Jesus has promised me. How many things He has yet to reveal to me. I was reminded about my trip coming up, of those kiddos who face real problems each day. 
I had a reality check and it was a good one. It was powerful and I am thankful. 


"What can wash away my sin?
Nothing but the blood of Jesus
What can make me whole again?
Nothing but the blood of Jesus.

Oh! precious is the flow
That makes me white as snow;
No other fount I know,
Nothing but the blood of Jesus."


Saturday, April 26, 2014

A good challenge

Today I got to mark something off of my bucket list. I had the opportunity to speak at a ladies retreat. After this long week of preparing and writing 75 different speeches to say at the event, I finally gave up. I started asking Jesus if he really wanted me to speak because I wasn't 'feeling' it. I was worried that I wouldnt say the right things, that I wouldnt give the children justice, that I wouldnt give those women a 'wow' factor. I had told my mother that I just wasnt sure about it and then Jesus hit with bricks, not like a ton of bricks, but I'd like to think that he threw a brick right at me and then in my high pitch voice i said 'are you kidding me'?!

I always advise people to look for Jesus in the small things. Yet, I fall short to doing that; however, this week He showed me some very special small moments. One morning I woke up to take my friend to her car, the sun was rising (sunrises always remind me of Africa) I started thanking Him for things in general and then I went to what I call my field and walked around just praying. I turned on All Sons and Daughter and watched the sun peek over the trees. I started praying for my friends and my family, not just small prayers but proclaiming things over their life. I prayed for this weekend at the retreat. It was the start of Jesus showing me small things all week. As the week progressed I took things for face value, I didnt search for many big things I simply smiled at the small things and it wasnt until two days ago that Jesus hit me again with a brick. 

I made my friend a scrapbook when we got home from Africa the first time and I asked to borrow it, not really to show the ladies, but for me to go back to that first trip. I figured looking at it would bring back some sort of journal entry that I had forgotten to write. I started looking at it while sitting on my front porch as the sun was setting and started sobbing. It was like a tidal wave of emotions came to me and Jesus spoke to me so clearly 'you are going to do this'.
 So I started preparing, I knew that I wanted to give each lady a picture of a child that I had met, I knew that I had to share my testimony (which is very nerve racking, you dont want to share too much) I knew that I wanted to give those kiddos a story, make them real. I started writing and freaking out, going over it and over it in my head.The next night I walked into the retreat only to see a girl who helped me during my Invisible Children days sitting at the retreat amongst all of the other ladies, there she was. It was like one clue after the next. Saturday mooring rolled around and I watched the sunrise over the field from my bathroom window and I started praying, Im pretty sure I was in prayer all day. I had a few great people pray over me that I would deliver my testimony and story of Africa. I looked at my phone to check Facebook before heading over and I saw that Joseani (my little girl from Africa) tagged me in photos the hour before, she had not been on Facebook for 5 months and today of all days she took photos of herself and sent them to me for me to see. A bunch of other little moments throughout the day just gave me a peace of knowing that Jesus was with me. My nonna kept telling me that whenever  I would step up to the podium outstanding peace would come over me. I was very worried that it wouldn't. 

I walked into the retreat and as the ladies were having brunch I stepped out the back door to really just have that one last one on one time with Jesus, I stepped back and he told me again that He had this. I walked inside and the music started, we sang a few hymns and then it was my turn to step up... my nonna let go of my hand and I closed my bible, took one last look at Joseani's picture and walked towards the podium. I placed my Bible down and opened it back up to see her sweet smile. Then it hit me, I had no notes, I didn't have a speech written out, I didn't have a journal entry to read and it was in a small whisper He said 'FAITH'. I looked up and through a shaky voice introduced myself, cracked a joke and then opened in prayer. The last word I said was peace and then it started. My nonna was in the back corner and she was my 'break pedal' she would give me signal of when to slow down because I tend to talk really fast when I am passionate about something, like really fast. Three minutes in she gave me the signal and then I took a deep breathe and it started flowing. It was like an outer-body experience. I talked about things I had not even written in a journal, I talked about my past, my present and my future. I talked about Jesus and how much he truly tore down walls that first time in Africa. I had the crowd laughing, I had the crowd crying, they were plugged in and I was loving it. 

As my mom passed about the pictures of the kiddos and I talked about each one of them and their beautiful lives, I made it real for these ladies. && at the end of the talk I challenged a group of women way older than me. I challenged them?!!? Who am I? I challenged them to pray for these kids, to pray for missionaries. 

Today was yet another challenge, but nothing I didn't have to face without my Saviour. 

70 before im 70


1. Fly in a plane
2. Move out of my parents house
3. Live in a big city
4. Have dinner on a rooftop
5. Catch fireflies
6. Get a tattoo
7. Learn to start a fire 
8. Learn to change a tire & do it
9. Get a medium sized dog
10. Learn to ballroom dance
11. Inspire someone
12. Visit Africa
13. Watch a baby be born
14. Start a blog 
15. Ride in a hot air balloon
16. Visit Italy
17. Visit Romania 
18. Visit New Zealand
19. Visit India 
20. See my sisters graduate high school
21. Meet a man with a sweet heart & big dreams.
22. Work with or start a non profit
23. Have a child
24. Adopt a child
25. Take my mom to Africa
26. Own a kayak
27. Write a book
28. Make a small documentary
29. Hike in Colorado
30. Teach children 
31. Live in another country
32. Purchase my own car
33. Read the Bible cover to cover
34. Start a small garden
35. Gather eggs from a chicken coop
36. Send a message in a bottle
37. Visit all 50 states
38. See where 'Friends' was filmed
39. Bungee jump off a bridge
40. Be a missionary
41. Speak at a church/retreat
42. Sing on stage to a small crowd
43. See South America
44. Visit Canada
45. Make my own wine
46. Plan a  benefit show
47. Help build a house for someone 
48. Buy a strangers groceries
49. Do an annual outreach program
50. Marry the man I previously mentioned
51. Cook every meal for a week
52. Big road trip 
53. Get 're' baptized in another country
54. Talk to Bob Goff
55. Put my feet in the Pacific Ocean 
56. Have a pet that has babies
57. Travel alone
58. Get LASIK surgery
59. See California 
60. Sponsor a child
61. See New York 
62. Kayak
63. Learn how to work a sewing machine
64. Make jam
65. Thrift shop all day
66. Cut a strangers lawn
67. Plan a friends wedding
68. Build a school in Africa
69. Be in 4 states at one time
70. Travel in an RV





A tiny bit about my life.

I often wonder why God placed me here, I mean who doesn't? If you are a person who can truly say that you have never thought about this question, please tell me your secret. Growing up, I lived simple, you know, in a trailer (loved it) with my mom & dad and momma cat with all of her babies, yes there was a momma cat. I miss her. Life brought two little sisters and they changed my world completely, but in ways that I never expected. At the age of ten I was protective, quiet and wondered a lot.
Growing up through high school I searched for my place just like anyone else does. I searched through multiple friendships, boyfriends and groups. I had a friend who stayed true since the 3rd grade, Claire, but we 'hated' each other in high school. I use to be the cool kid (you know the one who is super hipster, but gets offended at the label of being called a hipster) I watched foreign films in which my high school maturity only merely understood the top coating of it, I listened to indie music and I wanted to be a band manger.. so I could see the world and be surrounded by music. I decided to switch up my movie choice one night, instead of going to the typical Sundance Film Festival section on iTunes, I watched a documentary. It was called Invisible Children, I'm sure most of you have heard of it, but basically its about the war torn Uganda. I watched it and never felt those emotions before. I felt spoiled, I felt scared, I felt a burden, I felt weak at the idea of having to walk miles just to sleep in safety and even then not being really safe. I was unsure what to do, how to react, what could I do next? Simple. Help. Help them in their despair. Help their need and want for education. I went to school the next day and told everyone about it only to get a few weird looks and a joke about the name. Until I found my friend who led me to watch this documentary. 
Lacey is her name. She was older than me and loved life. She always smiled and seemed different than any other girl I had ever met. She liked John Mayer- I liked John Mayer, I knew it was real friendship. I went to her and poured my heart out to her, telling her all about how I wanted to help. She said okay lets do a small screening. The next week I put up flyers to have a small screening at my house. Not expecting many people to show up, I had at least 15 people, some people I had never even spoken to, some people I had treated wrong, some people I simply didn't have the desire to get to know (I'm going to be real in this blog). I had no clue what I was doing when I put the film in. I didn't know the reaction I would get. So I put it in to see that 20 minutes into the movie they were crying. Did they care? Did they want to help like I wanted to help? After the movie was over, Lacey called Invisible Children and we had a rep & her name was Holly. It was fast and quick and within the next three months anything and everything I talked about was either about collecting books, Uganda, or children in Africa. 
I carried on the Invisible Children fundraising throughout my senior year. I was known for it! I loved it, I loved knowing that I was inspiring people to help others. I was getting calls from the IC rep and she was telling me how excited she was to know me and know our team. After we collected the 1,000 books my parents so selflessly took me and 5 friends with the books to Atlanta to drop them off! I knew it was something I would be passionate about forever.
A couple years passed and I slowly forgot about the children in Africa. I forgot about that passion that was so strong.
Until one day, around Christmas time, I was cleaning my room and I opened the drawer, I remember feeling my heart stop and I giggled then tears began to flow. My excitement while seeing everything about Invisible Children was like a child on Christmas morning.

Something stirred inside me that day and I couldn't just forget about it. I promised myself that I wouldn't, only to wait another whole year before looking into going to Uganda. I knew I was supposed to go. I knew that I wanted to go. I signed up for my first trip and it fell apart. The team didn't form and the leader didn't end up going. But then there was Visiting Orphans and it was like Jesus just flew the doors wide open and I was going to Africa. I think I may have had 4 panic attacks while a friend & I were signing up at Barnes and Noble the next week. The next few months were different. I was learning new things about myself. I was raising money and telling people about my passions and heart like I use to and it felt so nice. The thought of me being in Africa and accomplishing one of my biggest dreams in life had not hit me yet, it actually didn't hit me until --
We landed in Africa and  I got off the plane, breathed in the cool crisp air and I forgot about what was at home. I was there fully. I was giving it my all. I was giving it me. I was still so bashful. I remember us getting to the airport and me thinking "I do not want to be here, I want to go home." But I was there and I was there for two weeks. We got to the first orphanage and I remember feeling so worried about these children, about their health and about their well being. I got over my selfishness of not wanting to be there fast, mainly because it was my turn to make bracelets with little girls. I was lead back to the back of this little hallway and turned the room to see a room full of girls sitting all quietly waiting for me to enter, I entered the room and they said it, they said 'teacher, teacher' I felt something in that moment that I had never felt before. I almost collapsed, but I felt something stand me up and lead me into the room. I taught them through a cracked voice and teary eyes and giggled the entire time. I was nervous. I had never done anything like this before. We couldn't speak the same language, but they understood me. After we made the bracelets, we moved over to the corner to bounce the ball. I was wearing a  long skirt and they do this bounce thing where they bounce it between their legs. So I tried it and just like that my walls came down, they laughed. They loved me for me and that was all I needed. I was no longer worried about what was going to happen there, who I was going to be anymore. Because I was being me, I was finding her. 
During my trip I noticed that my heart for Africa was bigger than I thought it was, that my heart for people was much bigger than I thought it was and my heart for Jesus was much, much bigger than I thought it was. I was ready to go out into the field everyday. I was ready to be around kids, because those kiddos brought me out of me. In the middle of the trip a friend looked at me and said ' I feel like I am seeing a Callie that nobody has ever seen before' and no other statement had ever been so true. I was being me, the real, raw organic me.
I had the opportunity to visit Rwanda again and I didn't feel everything like I did the first time. I was searching for that old feeling. I was searching for the answers to everything. I was wanting to come home a new person, but I had to realize that Jesus had already changed me and now he was trying to polish me to become more like Him. I knew what I wanted with my life when I came home, I wanted to be around children. To teach. To ignite passions. To help guide people in the right direction and to love people and to love Jesus.
 && in this past year of being home from Africa the first time I have been in school and quit, I have taken over the preschool curriculum and then given it back so I can just teach, our church has moved into a building, I have bought a jeep, I have sold a jeep, I got a new job as a massage therapist, I have had some of the best days of my life and some of the worst, I bought a paddleboard, I have gained friends and lost friends, I have met new people, I have welcomed my best friends baby into this world, I have inspired people and I have let my words hurt people, I have loved my cat, I have prayed over my sisters and argued with my sisters. I have named my imaginary children and then said I don't want children when preschool goes bad.  I have questioned Jesus, I have yelled in my field at the top of my lungs for the enemy to leave me alone, I have cried, I have laughed, I have been a best friend and I have been a bad friend, I have been a daughter to my parents and most importantly I have been a daughter to my heavenly Father. I have loved Him each day and I have wanted to be who he has wanted me to be since he created me a mere 21 years ago. I know my calling, I know my passions and I know that I want to serve Jesus with every step I take.  I am human. I am love. I am His daughter.  

Thank you Africa for opening my eyes, thank you Jesus for grabbing my hand and pulling me out of my mess, thank you for reading.