Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts

Monday, November 12, 2012

My Story...and why it matters

A long while ago, I learned of the anti-gay marriage bill being considered in the Ugandan parliament.  It actually wrecked me.  Being a liberal, lesbian, urban-dwelling, woman social worker in the third largest city in the United States (Chicago, for those of you who didn't know!) I'm usually pretty nonplussed about being OUTRAGEOUSLY opinionated and advocating for the rights of myself and others who are similarly marginalized and oppressed.  When I found out about this bill (see this recent article in the Huffington Post and/or google "Uganda Anti-Gay Marriage Bill"), I literally was speechless.  I barely, if ever talked about it, and felt generally hopeless about the situation.  When I fell in love with the country of Uganda, I started to build my life around the idea of being able to work, learn, live, and love there.  I eventually did just that for a summer in my undergraduate college life, and felt equally nonplussed about continuing my exploration of my sexuality there.  While there, I came to learn about the vast danger with this openness.  As a British colonized culture heavily influenced by the American Evangelical movement, they took these pastors doctrines as universal truths, and have since become what I see as the ultimate experimental ground (and thus highly praised in the evangelical church) for their beliefs.  I had no clue of this when I went there.  I thought I'd share my coming out story here after reading this article because I still miss the freedom and adventure of Uganda, but now I know I will not be able to safely go back there without massive structural changes.   Fair warning...this is a long post and I'm really sorry but I'm terrible at editing because (as stated earlier) I tend to feel like I have a lot to say!

Myself (right) and S (left) in Uganda, Summer 2009

*****
It was the summer after my freshman year of college.  I had come out to myself the semester earlier, after falling in love with one of my close friends.  I attended a Christian college in the Midwest known for it's non-acceptance of LGBTQ people, and I had bought into it while attending a small group Bible study that only furthered this non-acceptance in myself.  I told myself that I would never tell anyone about my feelings for women, and I would force myself to date men.  To please God, and my family.  I even promised I wouldn't write it in my journal.  That way, if I died (by whatever means), no one would ever know.  I had always wanted to go to Uganda, or more specifically, since I saw the documentary Invisible Children in my sophomore year of high school.  It became clear (to me) that the best time for me to go and fulfill that dream, was now.  So I went.  I raised the money all on my own, found an organization to volunteer with, and I went.  I remember my best friend (at the time, no longer) advised me to go "...and not think about boys.  Christian women go into the mission field all the time searching for a husband, go for yourself, and God."  I nodded and agreed, that would be easy.  But I also decided to try to forget about what I had learned about my feelings for women as well, and just focus on myself, what I was doing, and God.  

I arrived in Uganda in June of 2009.  For a month, I kept my pact with my friend, and myself.  I remember at the one month mark saying to myself, "wow, I haven't even thought about any of that shit!"  I absorbed myself into the culture (as much as I could) and fell in love with the country and friends I made there.  

Then, right at the one month mark, trouble came to Africa in the form of a woman: S.  One of the American volunteers who had been there starting in May told me that she had invited a friend of hers from college to come because she was a videographer and the organization wanted her to create promotional videos for the organization's website.  I paid no mind to this at the time, and just nodded and said I was excited to meet her.  She arrived on the day that the girl I had become closest with had left - so I truly didn't really pay much attention to her.  And, I learned, that she didn't pay much attention to me either.  At the time, my hair was plaited with an African weave in little braided dreadlocks and a hoop nose ring adorned my freckled nose, and she wasn't looking for love either.  This was a job for her.  

At first, I really disliked her.  I hadn't planned on going on safari while I was there, because I didn't raise enough money.  However, my mom offered to pay for it at the last minute, because I was in Africa, and when was that going to happen again?  So, I signed up to go with a group of people I had really connected with and everything seemed to work out fine.  Then I found out that the organization wanted S to go on safari too, to make a video, but there were too many people in the first group.  Because I was one of the last people to sign up for that weekend, they told me I would be going the next week, in the group with S, and none of my friends.  I made plans to room with one of the other girls so I could stay away from S, who I was very upset with!  


A few days before we were supposed to leave for safari, we were invited to be bridesmaids in one of the Ugandan women's introduction ceremonies.  (Basically an engagement party, but it is a MUCH bigger and more traditional ceremony than the wedding).  Per tradition: we were not allowed to have our hair in a weave.  So, my dreads had to come out.  I spent the night before with the whole house pulling fake hair out of my head and sleeping on my 80's rockstar style hair: crimped, frizzy, and greasy.  The next morning, I washed my hair for the first time in 4 and a half weeks and used a hairdryer and straightener.  S tells me this was when she really noticed me, and decided she wanted to pursue me.  Apparently it was one of those Megan Fox moments, where I walked out of the bathroom a totally different woman, flipping my hair back and forth wrapped in my towel, with the sunrise behind my head.  All of a sudden, S was at my hip the whole day.  Helping me with my hair, painting my toes, I helped her with her makeup.  I remember the way she looked at me made me want to know her better, and made me want to be around her all day long.  I decided to give her another chance too.



Throughout the ceremony, I felt her eyes adoring me, and I felt a familiar feeling rising in my gut, I desperately wanted more time with her, alone.  In the car ride home, she rested her head on my shoulder and I whispered in her ear, "do you want to share a room on safari with me?"  Yes, I totally ditched my friend.  I couldn't help it!  She nodded and smiled, and went back to resting on my shoulder.  

The weekend of safari was one of the most magical I've ever had.  (In efforts to make that sound less corny, it was magical for more reasons than just S!)  We spent the days sitting in the warm sun on the roof of safari vans roaming through the African plains, and the nights in an authentic African hut, our beds pushed together and our mosquito nets tied to drape over both of our beds.  She took the video like she was expected, but all the time with me by her side taking photos with my fancy camera.  I told her it was nice to have someone to hang back with as we did our art forms.  She told me she appreciated my help, and ended up putting me in some of her shots.  Then at night, we stayed up all night laughing and talking.  She told me everything, even that she was gay and had dated women before.  I told her that I understood, I had wondered some of the same things myself.  

After that weekend, we were inseparable.  Everyone knew that where one of us was, the other was too.  I moved into her dorm room, and chose to sleep in the bed under hers immediately when we came back.  At night, she would sneak down the bunk-bed ladder and cuddle with me under my green mosquito net.  One night, she kissed me on the cheek, and it sent shivers up my spine.  I kissed her back on the neck.  After a few weeks, a few people started being suspicious that our friendship was just "too close."  One even made a comment, "If you two were a lesbian couple, Emily would be the feminine lipstick one, and S would be the more masculine one."  We laughed half-heartedly, worried about being found out, even though we hadn't even talked about it yet.  

Finally, one night, I told S that I had wanted to sleep outside on the front porch since I got there, but hadn't been able to yet.  I told her I didn't want to do it alone.  She told me she would do it with me, she just wanted to be with me.  We put our pillows and blankets on the mattress on the porch outside and waited until everyone was asleep to go out there.  We watched the sunset over Kampala, and then I nuzzled my head into her collarbone.  She kissed my forehead and I reached my hands under her shirt, caressing her body underneath.  After a few moments of this, she stopped me, "We have to talk about this...do you have feelings for me?"  I was terrified of all the things I was feeling, so I broke down and cried while having a panic attack.  I told her I did, but I wasn't sure if it was ok for me to have those feelings.  She just hugged me closer, "I know."  I woke up and told her that I didn't believe it was ok for me to have those feelings, and she was heartbroken.  We continued to be inseparable, and doing the same things as before, because even though I didn't think it was ok for me to have those feelings - I did, and I couldn't help myself.  Neither could she.  

When I left a month later, she came to send me off at the airport.  We cried and looked at each other knowingly.  I told her we needed to talk once she got back to the States, she nodded.  After a month of skyping between Michigan and Africa, Michigan and Wisconsin, she came to visit me at my college.  There was so much left unsaid, but all those feelings came rushing back again.  The first night she slept in my lofted twin bed, there was so much tension, the air was full of it.  She held me as close as humanly possible, and I let myself fall into her.  Then, she kissed me, for real this time.  I thought to myself, now I understand.  This is what love feels like.  I also came to the realization of just how happy I was.  I had a clarifying moment spiritually soon after, I knew God was rejoicing at my happiness, and at the great relationship S and I had that was always supportive of the other.  It was going to be ok.  

After that, we continued dating long-distance.  I started slowly coming out to friends at school, many of whom are no longer my friends because of it.  I joined an underground gay support group and started meeting other people at my college who were like me, and who I could talk to about S.  S visited me, and I visited her all throughout the  year.  She even moved to my college town for a short while because she needed a way to get out of her hometown. She then got a job in the Chicagoland area, and that was when our long-distance relationship truly stabilized.  She was establishing herself in Chicago, finally being open about her sexuality with her new friends in her new city, and I was doing the same in my small-town college.  In August, we will have been dating long-distance for three long (and beautiful) years.  But this August will be different.  In May I will graduate with my Bachelors degree in Social Work.  A few weeks ago, I got my acceptance letter from the University of Chicago's Jane Addams College of Social Work for the Masters in Social Work program.  I sent in my "Intent to Enroll" letter and deposit immediately.  We've started looking for apartments in the neighborhoods we love in North Chicago, and she's started collecting furniture. In August, we will finally be together, in the same city, the same home, and sharing our lives like we've wanted to for three long years.  I'm coming home.

*The story that I've written above was submitted to What Wegan Did Next's "Love Stories" section, but has yet to be published there!  So, if you follow them and they post it in the future and it's word for word...now you know why.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

flying back...

So I’m sitting here at the Amsterdam airport, realizing I haven’t updated in a very long while. The reason for this is because I have been wanting to spend this last week with the people and in the country I have fallen in love with as much as possible, without feeling like I have to update my blog. I have just wanted to enjoy life.
Also, I read my last post just to get my bearings on what all I would like to cover / the last thing I wrote about, and realized that I still have a lot to learn about letting go of my plans and that this might be a lesson I will be trying to learn my entire life.
Disclaimer: this post may not make much sense, and might be a little scattered because as of right now I can’t really figure out what’s going on in my head.
Anyways, this week we did our usual projects, and I went to most of them, all while having the most amazing time with the most amazing people. It has truly been a blessing to meet and be friends with all of them. There is something so special and unique about living with people who are all striving towards one purpose, who have one goal, one passion, one love: Christ. I feel like this is what makes summer camps so life-changing, mission trips so unique and inspiring. It is on these “getaways” that you don’t have to search very hard to find someone you really grow to absolutely love, someone you want to know and talk to about everything for the rest of your life, much less simply find someone you’re compatible with. The people who are living right beside you are the people you've been searching for your entire life, the people who's passions and dreams match your own and make you even more excited to carry on with life and fulfill these dreams, to live passionately. This is a feeling I already miss. I miss waking up and walking through the cockroach-infested kitchen, and while preparing my breakfast getting hugs from all my amazing friends and answering their questions about my night, positive they all genuinely would care if something had went wrong. I miss the beat of the African drums calling us all to worship before we humble ourselves in serving our God. I miss the feeling of shamelessness as we all moved and sang in whichever way the Spirit led, because we all felt that same tug on our hearts. I miss being at the projects and catching one of my teammates watching me with proud looks on their faces, or capturing my precious moments on their cameras, as I did the same to them. We really loved each other, and saw so much joy and love in the work we were doing that we couldn't help but be encouraging and supportive of one another.
This is automatically the first thing I missed as I walked out of the comfort of my beautiful, amazing, inspiring friend's arms and into the cold, westernized airport. This is the first thing I thought about as the tears fell from my face while reading the letters that they had wrote to me.
I'm about to board my next flight from Amsterdam to Chicago so this is the last thing I will leave you with. I will update about the best and worst day of my 2 months later, and probably a week after I have been back I will update with my thoughts on America, we'll see how that goes.
[Nkwagala Uganda and all that comes with it.]

Thursday, July 30, 2009

SAFARI!

Well, to put it briefly, safari was absolutely amazing.  It was exactly what I needed.
There was a group of 9 of us (including the driver) who went this weekend, all of which (except for maybe one or two) I haven’t had the chance, or taken the opportunity, to get to know very well.  So I was definitely nervous, but also excited at the same time because I could tell that this experience would really bring us closer, even if only a little bit.  It ended up being a lot more than that, and I made a friend who I hope, and pray, will be there forever.  I’ll explain more about that later though. 
We left early in the morning on Sunday and drove the absolutely GORGEOUS 6-hour drive to Murchison Falls National Park.  Seriously, the drive itself was incredible.  The scenery and the jokes we shared just really relaxed me right away.  It felt like such a luxurious vacation.  (Thanks Mom!)  We stopped in Masindi, a small village town, for lunch, and it was so nice to have some recognizable food that I would honestly want in the States.  A real cheeseburger and french fries.  Seriously, every time I leave the country, this is what I crave, and it was amazing to have that after a month of being here without it.  We then continued on to the final two hours of our drive, and started heading into the park.  On our way to the hotel, we were following a car and we watched him swerve off the incredibly bumpy dirt road, hit a ditch, start to flip causing all four-wheels to leave the ground, before smashing into a tree.  I didn’t see it happening, I just saw the car smashed around the tree after it happened, but nonetheless, it was definitely scary and a huge reminder that every minute we have here is a gift.  Luckily, the driver was the only one in the car, and he was completely fine, just a little shaken. 
Before we went to the hotel, we arrived at the point where we were going to hike down to see Murchison Falls.  We got out and began hiking uphill first, to be able to see the falls from the top of a cliff.  The view was incredible.  I had a very familiar feeling in this very unfamiliar place.  I felt the same way I felt when a few good friends and I went to the Bowl during Spring Semester and ate dinner while watching the sunset.  Total peace.  I don’t know that I can completely explain it, but I was completely at peace.  The verse and song that ran through my head the entire day, and in fact, the entire weekend was John 3:8, and the song “Wherever the Wind Blows” by Pillar.
 “The wind blows wherever it pleases.  You hear it’s sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going.  So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.” 
Every time I would start to get anxious, I would simply close my eyes and listen to the sound of the breeze.  I would feel the goose bumps rising on my arms, I felt enveloped in the wind, a part of it, and as the wind passed over me, my anxiety left with it. 
We took a bunch of pictures at the top of this cliff, and it was really fun because the girl I have made friends with is just as big of a photo geek as I am, probably bigger, so she helped me out a lot.  Then we took a hike down the cliff to the bottom of the River Nile so we could get some more shots of the falls.  It was really cool to just sit on a rock in the middle of the Nile, looking in awe at His incredible Creation.  I am so blessed that I got to do that.  We then took the terrible trek back up the cliff, which nearly took my breath away, and not in the way that the beauty of the falls did.  I got to follow my friend around while she did some video and in doing that I got some pretty cool shots myself.  It was really fun to finally have someone who I could lag behind the group with in order to get a perfect shot. 
We left soon after and checked into the hotel, and it seriously looked like a honeymoon spot.  We had one “hut” per two people that had two beds and a shelf set and mirror inside, and a bathhouse outside.  My friend and I stayed in hut #2, otherwise called “Simba.”  It was so much fun!   On the drive up, this girl and I discussed how we were both really big cuddlers, which pretty much sealed the deal on our friendship for me.  That was when we decided to room together, which was a really great decision because I got to hear a really cool testimony and gain an amazing friend who has now become probably one of the closest friends I have made here.   
The next day we woke up really early for breakfast and headed for the ferry that would take us across the Nile for the game ride, meaning the ride where we would see all the animals.  Once we got across the river, we all piled into the van after popping the roof up so that we could all sit on the roof in order to be able to see everything around us a lot better.  This in itself made my weekend.  I got to sit on the top of a safari van, while driving through the African grasslands, with a view of the Nile and various African animals in their natural habitat.  Excuse me if this whole post is completely cheesy, but it was absolutely amazing.  Again, the wind against my face, pushing my hair behind my ears, the stillness of the scenery, the feeling of my bare feet folded underneath my legs on top of the safari van, the absolute freedom as I lifted my head and hands to the sky while driving down the dirt road through the reservation, was extremely exhilarating and peaceful at the same time.  Again, my adventurous spirit soars. 
We saw everything from water buffalos, to giraffes, hippos, crocodiles, elephants, birds, antelopes, warthogs, and gazelles.  It was amazing.  We then boarded another boat that took us down the Nile near the falls, which was where we saw the hippos, and I took some really great pictures of the Nile.  We went back to the hotel and took a swim in the pool, yes the pool, it wasn’t anything like an American pool, but it felt luxurious despite the horseflies nested in the jets that were above the water level because of the leak in the bottom of the pool.  Our last day we just drove home, stopping for a decent lunch once again, and returned to the house. 
This weekend was everything I needed.  The Lord provided me with a weekend devoted to drawing closer to Him.  I honestly felt refreshed and renewed, and coming back to the house was exciting because I was really eager to get back into our ministry. 
The wind blows wherever it pleases.  You hear it’s sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going.  So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”  

Sunday, June 28, 2009

harsh realities.

Yesterday I got my head braided, or as they call it here, plaited.  This was simply for conveniences sake, because now I don't have to shower as often, and when I do I do not have to wash my hair, shortening my showers, and saving money on shampoo and conditioner.  The person who did my hair was a friend of one of the Ugandan volunteers who works with Empower-A-Child named Rita.  It was my first time using what the Ugandans call a boda-boda, which is basically a motorcycle taxi where you sit on the back a motorcycle and pay the driver once you have reached your destination.  Most of the volunteers here are scared of taking a boda-boda because the people here simply do not follow any sort of traffic laws.  The boda-bodas weave in and out of cars the entire way, without ever stopping.  However, I don't know what it is here, but I have had a sense of peace in every situation I have been thrown into.  The ride was incredible.  It was so cool to be able to see a part of this beautiful country in that way.  I felt completely free and adventurous.

This leads me to another thought that I may have mentioned before, my adventurous spirit is absolutely flourishing here.  Each time I step out of the gate there is a new adventure to conquer.  First of all, the gate in itself reminds me of a secret passageway leading to a strange and exciting place I've never seen before.  It is a sheet of iron with a tiny door in the center that you have to duck under to get out.  To get to the city you must wind through rows and rows of houses and shops, climbing the red dusty piles of sand and rock, jumping over potholes, bricks, or merchant's items.  I absolutely love it.

Backtracking now, after sitting with my head in Rita's friends lap for five hours while she plaited my hair, I asked Rita to show me her home.  I keep forgetting that our way of life is so different from theirs because to me, I do not see them as any different from myself.  So when I stepped into Rita's home and noticed the lack of electricity, the kitchen being the size of my pantry, the bedroom that once housed 4 boys at one time being as big as my brother's room, and each room only furnished with what was necessary (a mattress, some bowls, and clothes) I was shocked.  How quickly I forget that it is not only these children that are less fortunate than myself, but also the people I work with and love like brothers and sisters.

I know it has only been two weeks here, but something I'm struggling with is the fact that I cannot truly invest in every kid I meet.  We go to so many "projects" during the day and we meet so many awesome kids, each of whom I remember their names, and I may never see them again.  I think this is different for me though since in my first week we went to Gulu, and we will be leaving again for Luwero next week.  I have talked to a few people who have been here for a while longer, and they have been able to invest in the same kids at the different projects for a while, but they do agree that it is so hard to do this effectively when our time with them is so limited.  However, I have been reassured that I will see some of these kids many times again.  I long to see Lydia, little Josephine who I met today at church, Irene at the Remand Home, and Yella, but I won't have the chance to for at least a week, if at all.  

I think that will be all for now, but again, there is much going on in my mind that I have yet to sort out.  I will continue to try though.
In Love-
Emily  

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

welcome home.

"Welcome home!"  

This is the phrase that I hear from the minute I step off the plane.  It stuns me into silence the extreme hospitality that the Ugandans practice.  They ask if I am tired, I say I am, though it is not only my physical tiredness that keeps me so silent. I am simply stunned at how spiritually rich they are.

This morning I met a man named Joseph, I have already been deeply blessed by him, and I know I will continue to be in the future. He is truly cloaked in the joy that can only come from Christ. One of the girls commented on his demeanor, and asked him if why he is so joyful, and if he ever isn't. He responded with no, he is never un-joyful. The reason: because this morning, we get to discuss the love of Jesus Christ our Savior and praise Him together as brothers and sisters! I look back at my earlier posts, and much of my walk with Christ so far and I see Him teaching me to live presently. Present being right now, not worrying about the future, past, or anything but now. Present also being in His presence. I can already tell this is something He is going to teach me here.  I have never felt this sense of peace that I feel here, except maybe that day in the park.

As an update on the past days, my flights went well.  I sat next to a professor of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at Michigan State University on the flight from Detroit to Amsterdam.  I was definitely blessed by him, as he told me of the orphanage in Rwanda he was planning to go to.  He explained that his friend started it just a year ago, and it is already flourishing, this is such an encouragement to my dream of my own orphanage.  Then on the flight to Entebbe I sat next to a beautiful girl from London who had the cutest accent.  We hit it off right away, and I believe I will see her again when we visit the place she is working at on one of our projects - Watoto Babies Home.  

Today we are simply preparing, it is a very relaxed day.  Tomorrow we leave for Gulu.  I am praising God at His impeccable planning!  This city has been in my heart and mind for years now and within the first two days here, He has already given me the desires of my heart.  The people here are hilarious and beautiful.  Soulful and deep.  I cannot wait to be deep and intimate friends with them.  They prepare me for Gulu, because they know that what I am expecting is nothing like what I will receive.  I ask that you pray that He will lead me in every endeavor in the next five days in Gulu and that His Spirit would strengthen me and give me confidence in Him.  Also pray for the children of Gulu, that their hearts would be prepared for what He has in store for them.
In His Perfect Love-
Emily

Lastly, I was given a request to put my address on here to continue to make donations, if you send it to my home address with directions on what to do with  it, my mother will take care of it.  She will either put it in my account to pay for amenities here, and gifts for the children, or she can donate it to Empower-A-Child to help pay for child sponsorships.  

[8666 Buffalo Dr.; Commerce Twp., MI 48382]

Saturday, June 13, 2009

20 hours and counting...

It still hasn't hit me yet.
~
I can't even wrap my head around the idea that tomorrow I will be there.
~
The place of my dreams will be my home.
~
Well friends, I guess this is the first post of my literal "journey." So far, I have only spoken of the preparations for this trip, and the path that has led me here. Which, now that I look back at them, it makes me laugh to see how intimately planned and unsuspected they were. A year ago today, I was preparing for SpringHill, the 3 weeks that changed my life around. I would NEVER have guessed that within that short time God would lead me here. Africa. Uganda. Gulu. Kampala. Children even. Can you imagine?! A year ago today, I could not STAND being around kids! Now, I am fascinated by them. I look at babies in restaurants and imagine myself years from now (yes Mom & Dad, years...im not ready for this too soon) with a round belly and a little baby bouncing on my knee. I dream of a life in a country where time doesn't matter. Where the days pass, and we take what comes minute by minute, moment by moment. We don't try and spend our moments planning out our weeks. (Why I'm using the plural tense, I'm not sure, but it seems to fit.) I have this image in my mind of me standing outside a beautifully worn clay building, my orphanage. Watching my hundreds of little orphaned children running and playing. I look down at my round pregnant belly and dream of my own child soon to come into the world, and am reminded of how blessed I am. In this image, I never worry what comes next. I never worry where I got the money, where I will get the money, if I will be a good parent, if I'm doing it "right," how I will manage if something terrible happens. I am just there. If someone would have told me a year ago today, that this was my dream and this is what I would be doing a year later, I would have laughed in their face. Now, I can't think of anything else I would rather want.
~
As I continue with my last minute packing & preparations, I wonder if I will ever learn to live in the present moment. Does anyone ever "get" to the level of mental maturity to be able to live out that discipline? My mind races from one dream to another of things I would like to do, people & places I would like to see, things I would like to see God do. Each time my mind veers off it's focus, I try to bring it back to this moment, this day and the blessings that have been a part of it. But I'm not sure if this is even the "best" thing to do. I've been trying to have as little expectations for this trip as possible, because I would like to be able to take whatever He sends my way without questioning or doubting. But I am a dreamer. That is one of the gifts He has given me. My mind creates these dazzling images, and incredible dreams, that it is so hard for me not to expect anything because I have now spent months dreaming and wondering. I am torn between embracing my gift and letting it fly, and just "being."
~
Well, just an overview of the last minute things that happened today. I am (almost) fully packed, and am confirming my flight as we speak. I just returned home from a going-away party my Mema threw for me with some friends and family members, and it was lovely just to sit and eat a home-cooked meal and talk on my last night in the States. I also got to speak with one of the ladies at Empower-A-Child via skype this morning, which was very exciting! It is so amazing that technology is allowing us to verbally speak to one another on completely opposite sides of the globe! She asked me which places I am most looking forward to seeing, and I told her the orphanage and Gulu. My dream of my own orphanage is what propels me to want to spend as much time as possible there, as well as other dreams that He has blessed me with which I will mention in detail later when He delivers. My heart is also drawn to Gulu simply because that was the first place I had ever even heard of in Uganda from the Invisible Children documentary. (By the way, if any of you want to do some catching up on how I got involved in this, and why I am drawn to Uganda, go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cTyOL4waE0Q. This is the documentary that propelled my passion 4 years ago. It is in 12 parts on youtube, so after part 1, you can click on part 2 listed on the right-hand side of the screen, etc. It will change you, guaranteed.) Back to my chat with this wonderful woman, when I told her these things, she informed me that I might be able to go to Gulu as soon as Wednesday, because there is a group of people who are already there and are leaving for Gulu on Wednesday. Wow. For starters, this already exceeds my expectations, which is another reason why I want to keep an open mind. I guess we will see what He has in store.
~
Yes, we will see.