dreams for musa [a video of major substance]
Posted on February 26th, 2008 @ 5:25 pm

since our internet in uganda was maybe 14.4kb/s at its quickest was being consumed by fifteen passionate bloggers desperate to sponsor children, some of us are just now getting a chance to post some videos and other stories from the trip. including me.

first: watch this…

on the second day, we drove into a more remote area of the country to visit a project especially for educating and taking care of pregnant mothers and their children up to the age of three. each mother has a case worker who visits and checks in on the health, well-being, goals, and dreams of the caretakers and their children.

shannon, shaun, brian, and i took quite a journey on foot through this rural village until we reached the home we were to visit with the caseworker.

the home was immaculate.

way cleaner than my house has ever been.

carefully laid lace cloth graced every bit of furniture. another sheet of lace served as the front door.

the caseworker asked such detailed questions…taking notes in a very full, but organized folder.

she was asking about musa, the youngest child.

is he playing well with others? (yes…he loves to play ball.)

has he had fevers? (no…he’s been healthy)

have you made him any toys? she showed us several toys she made for musa. handwoven dolls and balls made from dried banana husks.

we asked what dreams she had for her children.

“i dream someday…my children will become doctors…”

when you trip over the toys in your house today, i pray you’ll think of the toys this mother made for her son. when you lock your door tonight as you get ready for bed, i pray you’ll think of the delicate lace sheet blowing in a small, ugandan doorway. these sights and sounds and thoughts have never left my mind…and i pray they’ll always remain with you, too.

we have so much. and these children need so little in comparison. just a little bit can truly make the biggest difference in the life…and the dreams…of a child.

over 350 children have been sponsored as a result of this trip. don’t let it end now.

it’s not too late. if you haven’t yet, please sponsor a child today.

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Compassion International · Uganda 08 Trip

ugandan demonic bats [a video of minor substance]
Posted on February 25th, 2008 @ 5:54 pm

it was really, really late on our last night in uganda. shuan, brian, keely, boomama and i needed to get to our rooms…but bats swarmed the outdoor hallways.

boomama, you see, is terrified of bats. and they didn’t like us a whole lot either. especially after shaun popped one in the face with his computer…

we made a mad dash for it…and we were dive-bombed…twice.

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Compassion International · Uganda 08 Trip

pull up a chair, have a seat…
Posted on February 24th, 2008 @ 8:04 pm

so, i’ve been dealing with some stuff over the last few weeks that i haven’t really talked to too many people about. it started just a bit before africa, intensified while i was there, and has lingered around my heart since returning. los wrote a little bit about what he was experiencing tonight, so i figured, what the heck. i’ll share too.

i’m twenty-eight years old. i’ve moved thirty-two times. you can do the math. seven major school changes as a kid. and as an adult, in 2001 i left texas for kansas. in early 2006, i left kansas for texas. in late 2007, texas for oklahoma.

i know beyond a shadow of a doubt god has put chris and me here in oklahoma. no question. but, can i be completely raw with you? this has been the hardest move of my thirty-two. and there were some really difficult ones in there.

i’m not sure why. everyone here is great. we’ve been here almost two months, and we’ve had some really good times with people who have opened up their homes, kitchens, ears, and arms.

i think it really struck me watching the nashville group of bloggers that went on the africa trip interact and talk with each other (that sounds creepy…sorry, guys).

close friendships…those that develop over time. decades of time. and i can’t imagine having friends that close. it’s kind of hard when you’ve never lived somewhere for more than four years.

i know i keep referring to this post on finding my tribe, but i’ve yet to find a better way to express those longings.

intimate relationships terrify me.

but i am completely incomplete without them.

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Authenticity · Confessional · Moving

lessons in marital communication #439
Posted on February 24th, 2008 @ 10:44 am

anne has just rolled out of bed, has thrown on some clothes and stares in the mirror. her curly hair yesterday is now resembling something like a 1970’s afro. two bobby pins later, anne turns to chris:

anne: do you think my hair looks really big?

chris: (pauses) not really big…

anne: too big to go out?

chris: (pauses) …. (pauses) …. (pauses) ….

anne: is it too big to go out?

chris: (pauses) …. no …. (pauses) …. well, you might want to …. wet it down a little bit or something.

lesson: husbands, lie to your wives. it will give them confidence.

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Lessons in Marital Communication · Marriage

girls and porn
Posted on February 22nd, 2008 @ 10:02 am

because of the africa trip and all the link love we’ve been passing around, i’ve noticed there are a lot of new readers over here on flowerdust. so i’d like to say welcome! you probably think the only thing i ever write about is africa (and trust me, there are many many more posts to be written about the trip), but i wanted to share an article i wrote for relevant magazine a little over a year ago. it has absolutely nothing to do with africa, but has everything to do with the girl behind these words.

porn addiction is an ugly thing, and stats show over 1/3 of porn viewers are female - and that is just the number of women who are courageous enough to admit to it. stigmatized as a man’s problem, after this article was published, i’ve received literally hundreds of emails from women who are desperate to confess and be restored.

it’s been a few years since this monster has reared its head in my life, but that doesn’t mean i don’t think about the grace and the healing every day of my life. saying goodbye to this addiction IS possible. if you read this and it strikes a chord, please feel free to contact me. i’d love to help in any way i can.

DIRTY GIRLS, THE NEW PORN ADDICTS

The last place you’d expect to see a porno would be the living room of a pastor.

But in between my family’s Christmas portrait and a broken, dot matrix printer sat a computer screen. Little did I know the place where I typed up book reports or instant messaged my friends would also become the doorway to an endless amount of forbidden fruit—and an endless amount of guilt.

Growing up the daughter of a Baptist preacher-man, I was the 16-year-old poster child for naiveté. My family had just moved from a small, secluded west Texas town to Dallas, and within a matter of days in my new residence, I was bombarded by the prevalent sexual culture of a big city.

Strip clubs and billboards lined the highways. There was a giant sex store just a few miles from our house. Ignited teenage hormones and the temptation to give in to my curiosity proved to be a dangerous combination.

My parents and brother were fast asleep as I connected to the internet one night. I searched for the word “sex” and within seconds had access to a sea of well endowed platinum blondes doing things with guys (and girls) that I’d never seen before.

Because I lived at home and the only computer was in the living room, there weren’t many opportunities to do my “sexual education research,” but whenever I was alone, I’d quickly satisfy my interest.

I graduated from high school my junior year and moved out when I was only 17 years old. I had my own space with my own computer, and all the free time in the world. I’d go to work (at a local Christian bookstore), come home, and look at porn almost every night.

I frequented erotic chat rooms, watched movies and browsed through hundreds and hundreds of pictures. Soon my porn binges started affecting my performance at work and my relationships.

Of course I never mentioned my struggle to anyone. Looking at porn was typical, even expected, for guys but a girl? A girl who likes porn? I often questioned my sexual orientation.

Why did I like looking at naked women? Was I gay? Bisexual? A pervert? I hated what I was doing so much. I knew it was wrong, but I couldn’t stop.

The cycle continued for years. Binging, feeling guilty and swearing I’d never do it again, only to give in a few days later. I prayed for God to take the desires away. That’s when I realized it was more than just looking at pictures.

I couldn’t stop thinking about it, and I had more than enough pictures saved in my memory to reflect back on, even if I was able to stay off the computer for a while.

So, why do women struggle with this? Although stereotypically we’re not as visually stimulated as our male counterparts, we’re not blind either. There is something about a woman’s body that is beautiful and mysterious and even forbidden, and that toys with our psyche and tempts us.

At least for me, viewing these outwardly flawless women fed a huge emotional need. I was able to put myself in the role of what I was seeing, and by doing that, it made me feel beautiful and accepted.

I was transformed into a perfect, sexy body, and I was desired and wanted. I was able to escape my own flawed physical appearance and be transformed, in my mind, to this perfect woman.

My online activities also played out in my daily life. I was engaged for about a year and cheated on my fiancée. After that, I “dated” several new guys a month, getting physically involved with them in some regard.

According to everything I had seen, to be accepted and loved meant a sexual relationship, and what girl doesn’t need to be accepted and loved? I gave so many pieces of my body and my heart away during those years.

When I was 21, I was in a serious car accident that caused me to reevaluate how I was living my life. At the time, I was pretending like there was no God, except for when I needed His forgiveness, and only then would I come running back to Him. After the wreck, something finally clicked, and I realized that love does not equal sex.

It was at that moment when I decided to turn around—to change my thinking—and then my actions would eventually (and hopefully) follow. I had to say goodbye to my online habits, and to my offline ones as well.

It’s been close to 10 years since my first encounter with online porn, and I’d like to admit I’ve had a perfect run at purity. I wish I could say I’ve always lingered on the right thoughts or shut down the computer when the temptation got to be too much, but the truth is, I haven’t.

I’m still a girl who struggles. I’m still a girl who lives one day at a time, depending on a God whose design for sex and love is so far beyond what I could even imagine. So each and every day, I pray for God to first direct my thinking and then redirect it as necessary.

And I’m grateful that He is faithful to meet me somewhere between the mouse and the computer screen.

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Sex

any questions about compassion international?
Posted on February 21st, 2008 @ 5:49 pm

i realize we threw a lot of stuff at you guys last week and because our internet was so sparse, i haven’t caught up on all of my email or comments yet. i thought i’d leave this question out and hanging for a few days to collect any questions you might have about compassion international - any questions at all. don’t hold back. ask the hard ones. i’ll answer them early next week.

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Compassion International

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