On this Thanksgiving Day, I am very thankful for the 65% of my support that has been pledged/raised!
Thank you to those that have committed to supporting my ministry in Peru with Scripture Union through both prayer and financial support.
On this Thanksgiving Day, I am very thankful for the 65% of my support that has been pledged/raised!
Thank you to those that have committed to supporting my ministry in Peru with Scripture Union through both prayer and financial support.
All thanksgiving comes from God’s forgiving.
Just something to think about as we enter the Thanksgiving week…
Over the past few months, I have been taking care of three little girls after school until their parents come home from work. Usually, it’s a couple hours each day, meeting them at the bus, doing homework, getting snacks, and taking them to various activities like gymnastics, soccer, and Wednesday night church events.
Every once in a while, when they have school vacation, I stay with them all day, planning activities, making lunches, and everything else.
This week, the Dearborn Schools have a particularly unusual schedule, with a half day on Monday, and a full day on Friday. That’s right, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, there is no school.
Since the two older sisters (7 and 9) were away on a business trip with their father to Chicago, it was just the little one and I today.
We had quite a busy day, starting with riding bikes the few blocks from their house to the church, a visit to the park, many games of chess & checkers, another trip to the park with the dog, games of bingo, and the library.
During the second trip to the nearby park, we walked along the sizeable river that runs through the lower portion.
As we walked towards the playground, a flock of ducks floated on by down the river. The little 5 year old I was with was quickly mesmerized. We spent a good twenty minutes watching and talking about the ducks.
After a few minutes of silence, and watching the ducks go up and down the river, I heard:
“I wish I was a duck.”
I asked if I understood her correctly, and she said again, “I wish I was a duck. I like how they just swim up and down all day, playing in the water. They are going on field trips!”
I started to think about how life would be if we were ducks. Were they watching us, standing on the bank of the river, thinking “I wish I was a person. They have fun.” After my runaway thoughts caught back up with me, the little 5 year old was tugging on my jacket, and said “let’s go, the ducks can’t play on the playground.”
I guess it’s better to be a person.
I attended a funeral for a well-loved man of my congregation in Dearborn earlier this week.
On the back of the memorial service bulletin, there was a creed, which happened to be the mantra that this man tried to live by. A simple Google search showed that this is an excerpt from Forest Witcraft’s poem, “Within My Power” and is commonly used to recognize teachers.
“One hundred years from now, it will not matter what kind of car I drove, what house I lived in, how much was in my bank account, nor what my clothes looked like. But the world may be a better place because I was important in the life of a child.”
In my opinion, this man did not just try to live by these words, but outright succeeded in all efforts. He wasn’t a teacher in the traditional sense, he worked for Ford Motor Company for 31 years and then devoted his retirement to serving his community through being an active member and leader in Kiwanis, advisor to the Dearborn High Key Club (Kiwanis Educates Youth), actively served within our congregation at First Dearborn as well as many other things.
As I prepare to begin a full-time ministry with abandoned children in Peru (this is even applicable here in Dearborn as I serve as the Interim Student Ministries Director within my congregation!), this philosophy is an important thing to remember. In this world we live in that is filled with wants, desires, and “needs” (different from the true needs), it is very easy to get caught up in that. The most important thing we can do is build positive relationships with the generations to follow and be important in their life.
I found out today that Gap and its sister companies now ship internationally. At first reading, this was excellent news since I am moving to Peru in the near future, tend to be taller and bigger than most Peruvian women, and most importantly, love Gap clothing!
But, after playing around on the Gap website, I quickly discovered that any old $20 shirt would cost $102.80 to send to Peru. That’s right, $102.80 US dollars, not Peruvian soles. That figure includes a $62 shipping fee from FedEx and another $23 in import taxes. Taxes would be more than the actual price of the shirt and it would take up to three weeks to arrive!
Like it could get any better, if you do not like the items you have purchased, they have to be returned by mail because clearly there aren’t any local stores to go to. That means, for that $20 shirt, I would only get $20 back from Gap, which I probably would have to spend sending it back to the States.
I could justify paying $20 in shipping, but the added taxes with the above and beyond shipping fee, is just too much.
Not cool Gap. Not cool.