Tuesday, May 8, 2012

This Road That We Travel...



My first ever photoblog post to communicate the end of my time at UNCG.


Friends. 






Saying Goodbye to my job. (Tuesday)




Last Hoorah with my Roommate (Wednesday).














Packing. (With Tonisha)




Graduating! (Thursday).



























Driving Home (Saturday).


















Thanks for reading/looking or whatever you do in a photoblog. I may get on and write actual words later.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Life at Home: Monday

Mine are way more professional.
"All you need is a Little Faith to ease this old world's aches and pains."

These are the words on the poster that hangs on the ceiling. I have been looking at this poster every six months to a year since I was four. The shaggy old dog lying in the grass with a small kitten on his head have lost their color. The green grass, and fur of the orange tabby have all but disappeared into shades of grey.

There's a jump as the chair begins it slow lowering back and Kelly's smiling face appears above mine. I have had the same dental hygienist since I was four (except once–I ended up with my neighbor who works in the same practice). I stare up at the faded, tired old dog while she scrapes the small metal hook against my teeth. I watch his forlorn eyes as she turns on the small buzzing toothbrush. Grape toothpaste, every time.

As she finishes she hands me a magazine and tells me it might be a few minutes, but she'll tell "Doc" I'm ready. I flip through the pages of Self magazine. Dr. Volmer comes in at a pace paramount to a slow drip of a faucet. He says hello at the same pace and asked how I am at the same pace. He pulls the chair over at the same pace and lowers my chair so far it feels like I may fall back on my head. He runs his metal hook over my teeth at the same pace. Every visit he has a little less hair and his faucet drip pace is a little slower. He mumbles a slow, "Beautiful teeth" to which Kelly enthusiastically concurs.

I am released and they both stare as I stand up. "Am I good? My teeth not falling out?" I put forth an effort to extract something new from him. A slow laugh (same pace) and a shake of a head. I follow Kelly to the front desk where the ladies who run the bills give me the thumbs up. They'll just file my bill with my Mom's insurance card.

I go back through the familiar waiting room with the old Andrews High School yearbooks and dated Highlights magazines and pull open the solid red door. The old brown outdoor carpet covers the three steps down to the parking lot. I throw my free floss in the purse on my passenger seat and pull out, headed for the library, not for books but for the librarians....but that's another story.

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Sunday, May 6, 2012

Till My Lungs Give Out

If you look at the sidebar of this blog you will see the amount of posts I had last semester is vast in comparison to the three I have had this semester. This is in part due to my increased business of schedule and in part due to my apathy.

Mumford and Sons has a song called, "I Gave You All" and in that song there is a line, "...if only I had an enemy bigger than my apathy I could have won...". This semester I won in so many ways. The Lord blessed my socks off in many relationships that have encouraged me and in many ways changed my outlook on life and myself...it's been fantastic. But I lost in a huge way when I stopped actively pursuing my personal relationship with God. I began to realize this about a month ago and began to plan how to fix it. This is wrong on so many levels, you don't plan to fix, you just fix. There is a certain level of disgust that I have with myself over this, but this morning God just began to remind me of His Grace. As soon as I stopped planning and turned around to face my shadow God is here, fighting with me.

Today I sat out in my hammock to sketch about these thoughts and ended up writing a poem that in effect sums up my semester. I have failed (see past thoughts on failure here) but God takes me failure and all and it is indescribable. I am sharing this with you all so that you know even more that anything awesome in me is God and God's grace alone, because when I leave Him, I am nothing. My life means nothing. The blessings in this semester in the midst of my failure is a testament of His unfailing love for me. Indescribable.
   
"You see the depths of my heart and you love me the same, You are amazing God."

I lie awake.
I turn it over in my mind.
The lie processed into truth.
I'm wide awake, and still dead asleep.

They pass by.
They see the smile, the tear.
Another pass and they see lips and eyelashes.
By and by, they see my face, but its behind a veil.

Inside, chaos reigns.
Inside, my eyes see into my head, my heart.
Finding chaos, my eyes focus out, to you.
He supremely reigns, but I am immigrating away.

Called firmly back.
Called with love and care.
I firmly believe it is best to return.
But I'm back against a wall, refusing to step.

Stunned by Freedom.
Stunned, as my ground begins to shake.
Truth by a lie is no sort of foundation.
Screams of freedom escape my lungs.

Leading the attack.
Leading me with a strong hand.
Obliterating the fear in my "safety".
We go attack the lies.

Till my weak soul lives free.


Stay tuned for a photo blog of my last bit of time in Greensboro. (Still working on getting images off three different cameras)

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Saturday, April 14, 2012

missing capitalization friendship with ray lamontange


good evening.

right now i should be writing on the twenty page portfolio that i have to turn in next week. or the article that i failed to turn in on wednesday (for the first time all semester–it doesn't feel good and yet i have yet to fix the situation). instead i am writing this blog, maybe i'm hoping some focus will come from it. like if i write something low pressure like this i can get some work done on serious stuff.

i have also decided capitalization will not happen this post. go figure.

right now i am sitting in the prime corner booth of tate street coffee house listening to elijah ogden go to town with his acoustic guitar. i love coffee shops. each are unique and i could sit all day in this environment. let me clarify, individual coffee houses, starbucks is only delightful to meet someone in, it feels something akin to a office space to me. too uniform. too commercial. it doesn't have to be a hodge-podgey mess inside like tate street (which is full of very random, and in some places regrettably awkward art and a delightful mish-mash of chairs and tables: example, before i got the booth with they upholstered top i was at a half-moon shaped table with a sun painted on it) but it does need something unique, that someone in a office didn't decide should be there (like in coffeology, there is an odd painting of a man in a black hoodie in front of a gold sun behind the register, and one day i saw him stopping in for coffee. i don't even want to ask about it because the mystery is too fun).

tate street's samoan latte, and coffeology's baci latte are competing hard to be my favorite.

right now i am sitting the back of the long room that makes up the sitting area in tate street. i am sitting watching all the people coming in and out and feeling nostalgic. i love this. this way to spend an evening. this city. there are so many places that i would love to live, i never figured greensboro would be one of them. i have maintained the position that i could never be happy in a city and maybe greensboro, being small of size and full of green loving hippies that have established nearly as many parks as parking lots, has spoiled me. maybe i'm just overly content and can find something to love everywhere i go, but if i am not living here next year i will miss it.

i think the large in-house latte is smaller than the to-go one. i have considered feeling gypped, but decided there are more important things to be up in arms about.

right now i am thinking about the idea of missing. we miss people, places, things. what does that mean? what is the logic of missing something? does it imply discontent or just a love that wants to defy separation? you miss something when you don't have it, but you want it, so i suppose it could be both. i aspire to miss things not out of discontent, but out of the deep love. i have talked to people who believe that relationships are somewhat ended or at least majorly affected by distance. whether that be physical or emotional distance. for example if someone moves across the country but you still talk not much will change, but if you live down the road from each other and work in the same place and go to the same church but don't talk then that is emotional distance. i will not disagree completely, i will also not disagree whole heartedly. i have friendships that remain just as strong though there has been nearly a year with little to no contact. i can't explain that. i also have relationships that seem strong but all but dissipate over the course of a few months with no clear assignment of blame. what is the qualifier? this is something that has never bothered me much because i have from a young age resolved within myself to be a friend to whoever i meet for as long as i live. i may have no contact with someone for years, but if they called and asked for help or wanted to catch up, i like to think that i would do my best to be there for them. the problem with this mindset is has left me with a somewhat one-sided view of friendship. i just don't think about many other people's side of the friendship, or rather i don't think about anyone else wanting to be my friend. i have a hard time imagining that. not necessarily as some form of low self-esteem, but out of a basic assumption that hardly any one (and believe me there are a growing number exceptions to this so don't feel slighted if you are reading this...because i have so many people in my life that bless my socks off) appeared to care as much as i did. then i got to thinking outside myself and how apathetic i know i can appear and decided that i probably look pretty uncaring to a lot of people when i'm really not because people don't go around with the words, "hey, i'm your friend unconditionally" written across their foreheads. it is something that many people wouldn't buy even if it was written there, because friendship tends to be best shown in action and if i went ten years without contacting a friend they would probably have little reason to call despite my honest intention to be there for them because i have done little to prove it. so its cyclical. and my friend is not very wrong at all about the basic, just maybe not as positive about the mechanics of the idea.

that did not end up being so much about missing as it did about friendship. whoops. who knew?

right now i have not written a word for my homework. but i cleared my head a little of thoughts (about friendship? no idea that was up there) so now i will close with an ode, in prose, to how much i love writing and how it almost always gives me more than i gave it. that was it (the ode). now i'm going to wrap it up and decided whether i want to stay in this booth with ray lamontange for the next hour and attempt homework or decide that it is saturday and its okay i've ignored it then write my own stuff or go home, watch some bones and hit the hay.

final sidebar: what people chose to wear is quite simply fascinating. 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

The Dichotomy of Transitory Phases of Life: or "Wow, I'm moving."

I can not begin to fill in the gap that my months long absence has left on this blog. Let's just say I have missed it and my semester has been a ridiculous trip. And now, its starting to end.


For those of you keeping track at home, I am in my final semester of my Bachelors of Arts in English at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. For all the mediocre hours of my first year and a half here, this last semester has thrown them back full of work, school, and some fantastic people I don't have enough time with.

For the first time in my life I have experienced the sensation of having too many people I want to see and be with. My cup is overflowing.

Beyond this I have been challenged nearly every where I turn. Which will be the topic of my next post and the reason I am back on this blog.

But I digress:


I never thought I would love this city as much as I have. I am leaving it in five weeks for an unforeseeable amount of time and am struck by the frustrating feeling that I am only on the very rim of the awesomeness to be found here. This could be on a list of things I have the discovered about myself over the course of the "Greensboro Years."

1) I adore investing in people but I am lazy about it. I need to force myself through the first few steps of a relationship (i.e the going out to meet people and saying yes/inviting out myself the first few times). I spent an unfortunate amount of free time with myself and thought I was perfectly happy. In reality I was drowning in my own inabilities.

2) I am not universally adventurous.  Sure I have learned more routes and back ways to more parts of the city than three of my fellow students combined (due partly to my job and partly to my ability to memorize directions and form a map in my head and hold on to it), but I pointedly avoided whole sections of the city, namely downtown because I thought I would dislike it. Less than ten minutes from are whole streets of coffee shops, stores, art museums and basically a ton of stuff that would interest the heck out of me that I have not even begun to explore.

There are countless more little things, but these were the ones that surprised me. They have inspired my own version of a Greensboro Bucket List, which I will put at the end of this post.


Quick outline of my life.

I am finishing my degree and moving out of my apartment of two years in the same weekend.  I am moving home for about two weeks then its off to Georgia for the next three months of camp madness. Then my life is open.

The last step could be an entire series, but let's focus on the first two.


The first side of my dichotomy comes with step two of my outline. Home to Camp. I have not been home since Christmas, the longest I have ever been away. I have not been to camp since December and this summer brings the exciting (albiet intimidating) switch from cabin staff to Head Counselor (for the girls). I adore camp and the work that it does and the people there who do it. I am so excited to be there again.

The final side to my dichotomy falls on both sides of the happy/sad realm of leaving Greensboro. A huge part of me wants to be done to graduate and another huge part wants to slow the time down every day and appreciate the power walking to class because I'm late,


                      the discussion with my classmates,


seeing two students playing shadow tag for no apparent reason,


          the birds singing on the top of the trees,


     the way the trees hang over the road on my way to work,


               the way my five year old nanny-ee looks at me when she's think she's done something incredibly smart and mischievous


        or the way her brother paces while talking emphatically with his voice and hands every time I mention      football/Peyton Manning,


                                       the way my 2 1/2 year old says my name,


        the way his sister listens intently while I explain concepts way above her learning level,


     the way I walk into BCM and instantly see at least seven people I want to hug and talk with,


                            the way I come home to the old wooden floors and overly painted cracked walls of my seventy year old apartment,


          the smile that comes to my face every time I welcome another precious child into my sunday school classroom,


                           the feeling of being recognized by people you know have no real reason to notice you,


       the way I can talk to my roommate for twenty minutes with a toothbrush in my mouth just because we got caught up in an unexpected conversation,


                 my neighbors and their quirks, including the one who has a 70 pound, hairy 'goldfish' in our pet-free complex,


                                             the man who sits and drums in the park across the road from my house,


                   the way I hear the bells of the Catholic church half a mile away when the windows are open,


       listening to my nanny kids "rap" along to the clean versions of Eminem songs in my backseat,


                               the way I can sit and not run out of things to miss.

This seems an appropriate time as ever to post my six-week bucket list.

1) Go to a Grasshopper's game with Katie G.
2) Go thrift shopping with Logan, Katie C, Tonisha, Zack, Grace and whoever else.
3) Go to the dollar theatre/dinner with Jovantae, Tevin, Brandon and whoever else.
Elm Street
4) Spend an afternoon wandering Elm Street etc.
5) Have coffee at the Green Bean,
6) Pull another closer at The Coffee Break, handwriting whatever story I want.
7) Eat at Postiano's and go to frozen yogurt at Taste/Red Mango least two more times.
8) Order Chinese delivery with Megan from Panda Express.

This may not seem like much, but I will be gone for the next two weekends which puts a little press on time. If you see your name on this list, I hope dearly that I will fulfill my goal.

And to those other readers, I hope to be back to soon with one of the following topics:

Why I am back.
Camp Preparation.
Things I have learned.

I am now off to BCM to hug some amazing souls. And officially renaming this post, "Ode to Greensboro Life" but not really because I love the word "dichotomy".


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Humility Topos

I like this picture - and its raining out. 
The humility topos is a element of different writing styles that we have been studying in my English class this semester. It is characterized by the writer's claims to a certain degree of incompetency on their subject and the purpose is to further themselves in said subject.

This is not humility.

Today I discovered that God has been teaching me about humility. I say that I discovered I was being taught because today God drew a line connecting lots of random observations from the past month, or rather even the past three years. Here is what I've learned.

First let me tell you a little something about the canvas God was painting this truth on (i.e. - me). I have always had a built in confidence and self-esteem that got me through the 'insecure' middle and high school years with minimal damage. It also prevented me from seeing my own arrogance. I do not believe that this arrogance often came to the surface in a way readily recognizable by people around me, but I know it was inside me. I struggled with the idea of humility because it always seemed to be just a lack of confidence, so my life up till recently I believe was largely characterized by a humility topos. I practiced it, but I did not feel it.

I think I can credit my experiences at Strong Rock Camp to starting my endeavor into examining my own humility. I remember distinctly, my second year going back, I had a phone interview with James. I was sitting in the parking lot of the cultural arts center where we practiced a play I was the stage manager for. I remember him asking me about my strengths and weaknesses. I gave him some of what I perceived to be strengths and then blanked on weaknesses. I don't know what I had told him my first summer, or even if he had asked that question, but I'm pretty sure up until that point I had this list in my back pocket of weaknesses because I knew I was supposed to. At that moment though, staring out at the empty gravel lot next door, God shattered my list. I don't remember the answer I gave James at that moment, I may have even recalled some of the former list, but at that moment I stopped believing it.

This was something was occasionally poked and prodded at in my head and heart for the next two years, then this summer God completely leveled me. Pretty much anything I've written in the months of June, July, or August will tell you more about this, but to sum up after three summers getting to know camp and how it runs I was absolutely terrified going into first session because over the course of staff week God just stripped away all pretenses that I could do this job. All summer, and it was the greatest I've had as far as personal growth and I believe my performance as a member of the team and family that is staff (though not without some major flaws) I knew that all the good that I did, was God.

Flash forward again to these past few weeks. I believe I mentioned in one of the last few posts how exceedingly grateful I am that God's voice is not quiet at this time in my life. Not that He is all the time speaking about big life plans (though he's totally weighed in heavy) but that in every day life He has had the grace to teach me. His spirit has called my flesh into check multiple times and that, in and of itself, has been so humbling. Recently he has been stopping me more and more from making life about me. Sometimes this is calling me out when I start to feel superior, sometimes this is calling me out when I start to play the victim, sometimes its just calling me out when I need more patience and love, even I'm not feeling it.

Last night a new, but dear friend spoke for BCM about things that she has learned from God over the course of her years at college. One of the first things she spoke about was how she learned and still is learning the importance of giving your plans to God. Suddenly I started feeling smug that this was something that I have hardly ever struggled with, but praise Jesus, the spirit almost immediately spoke up, reminding me that I was in no way superior and to just forget about myself and listen. He gave me the strength and ability to do so and I discovered that yes, I have a better grasp on the concept of giving my plans to God than most people my age that I've spoken with, but guess what else? They have a much better grasp on so many other concepts like living radical for Jesus, or how to study His word. I learned that from the speaker last night.

So jump up to riding in the car today. About half the time I do this, I don't have music, so I often end up reflecting on my life, which is why so much of my writing starts with, "Today as I drove home." I began to reflect on Humility. It was then that I realized how much God had been slowly teaching me, and this may sound incredibly obvious to most of you, or even all of you, but I learned today, really learned in my heart so that it is now a part of me, not just a knowledge, that humility is not a lack of confidence. I have confidence in my relationship with God and His leading in my life, that's not wrong. What's wrong is assuming that makes me more mature than those around me. We learn things at different times. The concept that I am more mature in is the same one my brother or sister may be just learning, and the concept they have been living for years, is one that I've barely beginning to brush.

Humility, for me, is living in the confidence that God gave me strengths to and weaknesses and then placed me with people who will benefit from the one and strengthen the other. The important part of that is, is that its not me doing it. My strengths are a gift, and my weaknesses are a gift. Strengths are the tools that I use to help people and weaknesses are the reminders that I fail without God. I adore my weaknesses because when I know I am weak in something and succeed anyway - I know that it was God working through me to accomplish it. And that is humbling beyond words.

Another important aspect of humility I have learned is just a basic attitude of gratitude. I have recently been been looking back on my life and been so grateful for the experiences I've had, and the places I've been put, and the people that surround me. I could literally write a book on it. The family I was given, more-so the parents I have, that have shaped my family. They are amazing and huge reason they are is my whole life I heard honestly that their successes in life were from God working and their failures were when they tried to take the wheel. Honestly, imagine being six years old and having your mom come apologize for getting angry and tell you that God has been teaching her a lot about controlling her temper. I remember that, more than once. To be surrounded by those role models who throughout the years of parenting became better and better, by their own concession, because of God's work in their lives. I am floored by the gift of my parents.

Camp has had a huge affect on me too. Not just Strong Rock, but Snowbird, the camp in my hometown. I never worked there, or attended as a camper, but I spent a significant amount of time in that environment. It was when I first began hungering for a relationship with God. I would go to services and visibly see the light of Christ in the faces of the staff. They were younger people that I would have looked up too anyway, but to have them be so obviously in love with Jesus, it made me begin a search for my own faith, not my family's. One reason that I am floored by the gift of getting to work at Strong Rock is that I have the opportunity to influence lives in that way and I know it doesn't take fancy words or intense heart to heart conversations. I believe that I have never had more than a passing conversation with  most of the people I so admired, but their impact on my life was huge.

Not just this, but the combined radical honesty of Snowbird and my parents made me, at an early age, very comfortable with the concepts of a life completely sold out to Jesus. For the leaders of Snowbird and the leaders of my family lukewarm faith was not an option. They never spoke to make you feel good - they spoke to tear apart any false conceptions I might have about Christianity and broke it down to moment by moment decision to follow God, not just a prayer and a dunking under water.

None of those things were by any stretch of the imagination me, or in my control. I am literally, eternally grateful for them, and I can honestly say that I am humbled so much because of these overview aspects of shaping me (there are million more - believe me) into who I am.

Therefore I will say, with great excitement, that God is teaching me.

And now I am floored and humbled again, because the God of the freaking universe cares enough to teach me.

Pardon the somewhat tacky pictures of this video, but please listen to the song. It is my song for this lesson.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Amazing Grace

Tonight a girl from my dance class last semester sat in front of thirty people and shared her heart for Jesus.

This rocked my world.

Everyone of those thirty people I want to know more, because they are my brothers and sisters. The body of Christ is the most amazing grace. All I can do is stand in awe.

A girl I met Tuesday told me about the gathering tonight. Correction 30 seconds after she met me, she told me that she believed this was something I would love.

30 seconds.

This meeting tonight was one of the biggest desires of my heart, answered.

Not only was this meeting amazing for the sheer fact that a group of college students meets in an old house on a street that is usually home to drugs and parties and just worships Jesus with abandon and talks real about Him, but what was specifically said tonight, by that girl from my dance class perfectly added to the post from yesterday*.

The first thing said (discussion based on 1 John 4:19) that we don't love people, we let God love us and the overflow of that is what is given to others.

That perfectly embodies what God wants me to do for my kids. I know it.

The second thing said was that Satan's favorite thing to do was take away our memory. Two things about this. One: In only three months I had nearly forgotten everything God had taught me this summer. Two: My faith is based on a relationship with Jesus. Relationships are based on experiences. What better way for Satan to destroy my faith than take away my memories of God's work.

Praise the Lord He pursues me hard enough to conquer that.

This song is the song of my heart right now. Listen, and let it wash over you. (Thanks Angela for the CD)




*It was brought to my attention that in yesterday's post, my "manifesto" might have been misconstrued to discount the awesomeness of Strong Rock Camp. I do not at all. When I said camp was just building and shells of souls, I meant the institution of Strong Rock, not Strong Rock itself. My heart was to say that, that camp could happen anywhere, with any resources and still be just as amazing because God is at the heart, much like my life. I am in no way discounting the way God has blessed that camp with some of the most amazing buildings and people to work it. I apologize if it was taken any other way. 

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Year-Round Camp

This past summer, one of the biggest things I learned was the significance that everything I have, and am, that is truly good has come directly from God, even more, God working through me. It was wonderful, but it is one thing I have since been trying to forget.

"Trying" not in the sense that I am consciously putting it out of my mind, "trying" as in I have let it disappear.

Camp is a huge element of my existence. The two components of camp I love the most are the community of brothers and sisters that surround me there, and that every morning you wake up with a pressing knowledge that you will not survive the day without Jesus. But here's the thing, I seem to have left that at camp.

I think what God is teaching me this semester is that "camp" is not bound to camp. Camp should be year round.

I have always admired my sister-in-law for the fact that she is very honest that she does not survive without time with Jesus each day. I aspire to have that yearning. I want to collapse without Him.

This week God's grace has addressed two things,  and wouldn't you know? They are the same things I love about camp. Community and need.

Community.

Last night, through no plan of my own, I had an amazing night at my school's BCM meeting, simply because I had the opportunity and privilege to begin and build on several relationships with my brothers and sisters in Greensboro. It reminded me of the fellowship of camp. There were several moments of instantaneous connection. As I was driving a newly acquainted brother back to his apartment he asked me how long I had known the two girls that had been in the car moments before. I told him two weeks. He was shocked because we had seemed so close. The only response I had was, "That's the power of Jesus."

I have been crediting camp with creating those instant bonds of friendship. Camp doesn't do that, God does. What camp does is mercifully eliminate so many distractions that keep us from seeing that.

Need.

A biggest motivation I had in pursuing dependence on God this summer was the realization that I had been charged with caring for and leading so many impressionable children. I don't know how people do that without God. There are so many things to do wrong that we don't even think about. My head counselors, program directors, and directors over my three years in the cabin have been amazing at helping me see areas I need to work in and God has been amazing and making me see I can't work on them, I can only give them to Him.

This year I am a part-time nanny, regular babysitter (there's a difference), and a Sunday School teacher. I feel strongly that God has placed me with the family I nanny for, for a purpose. Up until today, I had selfishly thought it was because they needed character traits that I have (still true, but those traits are only there because of Jesus). Today I realized I need them. These kids are amazing, but they challenge me. Not my authority ( or very rarely), but we don't have an instant connection. We struggle to understand each other, and to communicate well. My youngest is constantly pushing boundaries to see where I let her cross. Today I realized that I am with this family for a lot of purposes, but the one I have been ignoring is that I need them. I will never be able to do real good for these kids without Jesus. He created everything about them that I can't see, everything about them I don't understand, everything about them that they hide. I am running blind without Him.

God has used kids to teach me so much throughout my life. Not just things like listening, and patience, but things about me. One big one is that I have yet to find a mountain that I do not want to move for the sake of a child. Any child. Children are the most amazing, fascinating, and awe-inspiring gifts God ever made and its terrifying. A child is a developing adult. Things they experience under my care, influence their entire lives. I can never ever make light of that. Which is why the knowledge that I am in charge of a child often shows me see a slew of my problems.

Both of these aspects that I cherish about camp, and long for when I'm not there are things that do not make up my relationship with God, but rather are the most effective tools for getting me to see the half life I live without Him, and Jesus knows it, and I can not thank the Lord enough that He does.

Camp is still one of the most amazing experiences and times of my life, but I think I need to learn know how to make it year round. Not just the fellowship with the staff, but energy, the fervor, the love, that I have experienced for the past three summers. There is no doubt that when I am at camp I am at a all time high, in every aspect of my life, but I need to be dependent on God alone. So her is my final manifesto:


     
  Dear Strong Camp - I adore you. God has used you in countless ways in my life and quite clearly still does. I will, Lord willing see you next summer (#5!!!) and I will adore it, but I refuse to be dependent on you anymore. You are just buildings and earth and shells of souls. You are dead without God and God is everywhere. God brings you alive with His Spirit, and His Body, my brothers and sisters; therefore, I am resigning you to just a place. I am sorry, but the role of state of being will now be given to God so I can live the life I love at camp all the time. I think it is for the best. Take heart in knowing that you are one of the dearest, funnest, places ever! But a place nonetheless. I am confident that this will only better our relationship, so take heart. See you in May!!!
                                               Love,
                                                    Me.


"Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen." -Ephesians 3:20-21