With only 13 days left until I am on American soil again, I thought I’d write a blog to help YOU at home with my transition back into “normal life.” 

 

Below, you’ll find some topics to start discussions, and questions to ask me that are specific. This will lead to better conversations, and a fuller picture of what I’ve actually done this year. 

 

Beware, if you ask me “how was your trip?” I will most likely shut down and may or may not cry on the spot. The World Race is much more than a trip- it’s been my life for almost a year. I’ve been living and doing all the normal “life things” all year, so I have way more to say than “my trip was great!” Imagine if I asked you “how was your year?” Super hard to answer, no?

 

I know that you don’t know exactly what I’ve walked through these 11 months, so I’m here to help you out! Feel free to ask your own questions, and know that I may have a whole lot to say, or maybe not so much to say. I may get really excited, I may go off on a tangent or ten, or I may sob my eyes out. All of those are totally normal and okay…don’t be scared! This year has been so many things to me and I’m so excited to share them all with you! 

 

Please understand that I need grace as I transition back into being an American. This year, we have been all things to all people, so assimilating into the culture of each country has been critical. With that, I have definitely forgotten what it’s like to live in The West (as we call it). I will need grace and forgiveness from you when I forget something that’s common sense, when I talk too openly about bodily functions, when I eat food with my hands instead of a fork, and when I get overwhelmed by the muchness of America.

 

America is my Month 12, so I will once again become all things to all people- reintegrating back into American culture. I will be REassimilating and learning all the customs and social niceties again. It may sound strange that I’ve forgotten how to be an American, but I’ve become 11 different cultures this year. I am part Indian, Nepalese, Thai, Cambodian, and Vietnamese. I am part Ethiopian and Rwandan (I even have a Rwandan name!). I am part Bolivian, Peruvian, Ecuadorian, and Colombian. So now I am fractured – in the very best way – into 12 different cultures and I’m excited to learn how to make them all work together. 

 

I want you to know that I’ll also give you grace. We’re both going to relearn how to connect, communicate, and grow together as people. I’ve been away and I’m different. You’ve been in America and experienced a year of life and incredible things, and so you’re different too! I promise I’ll give you grace if you unintentionally say or do something that is hurtful. I’ll give you grace because Jesus would too. And until you’ve gone and done the World Race, there is so much that you might not understand. And it’s really okay. 

 

In advance, please let me apologize for the following things:

 

I’m sorry if I’m crazy about conserving resources (food, water, lights). Most of the world goes without one or all of these and I have learned to read in the dark, take a 3-minute bucket shower, and eat everything on my plate, even if I’m full. 

 

I’m sorry if I complain about the price of things. Around the world, the least expensive food is always vegetables. You can buy a big bottle of shampoo for less than a dollar. You can feed an entire family for an entire week on less money than it takes to fill up a hybrid car’s gas tank. American prices are going to shock me. Just talk me off my ledge!

 

I’m sorry if I talk about my/your poop, or ask you if it’s okay to flush the toilet paper. I’m sorry if I talk about hot showers every day and marvel at the fact that you’re clean and smell good. Smelling nice is a complete anomaly. Life is hard on the mission field, and most everyone smells funky.

 

I’m sorry if I constantly say “this one time in Inidia/Cambodia/Rwanda.” Or when you ask me where I got my shirt or shoes, “I got them in Peru/Thailand/ Nepal.” I promise I’m not trying to one-up you or rub my cultural experience in your face. I’ve lived in a lot of really cool places and I want to tell you EVERYTHING about them! 

 

 

 

So here are some broad things you can ask me about my entire trip. 
a photo you’ve seen or a story you’ve heard about

who I was before the trip and who I am now

where I started with prayer and where I am now

my teammates, squad mates, or squad leaders 

my year of cold showers

the constants (things, food, smells) around the world 

specifically about a month that you have found interesting

 

India: 
our food in India and how it’s made

butter cookies and Chai Tea

what my team looked like in India

the kid’s medical care, doing VBS, and what the hospitals are like

our adventure home from church during a monsoon

what I learned about my future

what I learned about prayer

 

Nepal: 
the “5 Minute Hike” 

our hilarious host, and his “Dum Bass” hat

the bathroom in Nepal- It was quite a unique experience 

our food – don’t forget the ketchup 

the nights we spent on the roof

my quiet time with God (sk me what he was teaching me)

the bus rides with a thousand sweaty Nepali men 

what our ministry was

when God gave me a vision to speak to someone…and it ended up being a squadmate

 

Thailand:

our hosts

Soi Cowboy and what it was like knowing what went on behind the velvet curtains

organizing a textiles workshop, and how many beads we picked up and rearranged

doing a leadership training with the rescued sex-trafficked women 

taking care of their adorable kids (Chris and Bible specifically)

celebrating my birthday in Thailand

how I bought (probably) real Birkenstocks for $12 

the Lady from the market by our house

our vacation to Krabi


Cambodia:

our Thailand/Cambodia border crossing
our ministry and our daily schedule

our host’s family

the kids in the Buddhist school

swim class

the food that we ate 

the rice fields, crocodile farms, and the killing fields 

Thanksgiving in Asia

how we dealt with team conflict

our debrief and how I was ready to go home

eating good Mexican food for the first time in 4 months 

my teammate going home

 

Vietnam: 
my initial feelings when we arrived in Vietnam  

our hosts Kelbin and Alyssa

our English students and playing Mafia

the coffee struggles

Christmas

my time in coffee shops with the Lord

our Kitty adventure

riding on the backs of lots of motos

the beach

Hoi An

the Christmas pageant, our Christmas party, and decorating the pastor’s house

my OTHER teammate going home

Christmas with the squad

 

 

Ethiopia: 
our housing

our Ethiopian mom

how God kept showing up 

the stars

the nights of spiritual warfare

the 90s dance party

how I fell in love with 25 kids and bawled my eyes out when we left

Worke Spaghetti

African church

 

Rwanda: 
our OUTSTANDING HOST and how she forever changed my life

our long, but good days

the 7 miles we walked every day

the Rwandan Genocide, and the survivors I know

what I learned this month

seeing my parents at PVT!

the safari we went on!

Yohanna

our layover in South Africa

 

Bolivia:

our layovers in Brazil and Chile

the burger I ate at a random cafe in the Chile airport with the Dutch guy

the telefarico

El Alto, and the freezing temps

weekends in La Paz

the girls I fell in love with at the drug/alcohol rehab center

the Bread Lady

my new best friend, a scruffy dog

bathing and laundry

the Germans

the bluest skies I’ve ever seen

The warehouse

 

Peru: 
our host and their kids

our cleaning lady

my stomach issues 

Machu Picchu!

another teammate going home

lazy days and “rest ministry”

manistry

movie nights

the abundance of Jesus and communion

the open top bus tour, and weird mountain shamans

some of the hardest news I’ve ever received

when God asked me if I wanted to be a squad leader

our 24 hour hostage situation

the Andes Mountains and our climb up

 

Ecuador: 
our extremely long travel on our first day of ministry

our ministry hosts, and our local hosts

Chester

Mother’s Day and the baby shower we crashed

our broken Spanish 

our local hosts date night

our bunkbeds and my fortress of solitude 

the dogs (specifically Monster)

Building a church foundation

Public transportation, in general

The time we rode the bus for too long and ended up in a different town

The last all-squad travel day

 

Colombia:

About the Venezuelan family we got to love on

About helping Marisol in the kitchen

About the time my water bottle leaked all over my bed and drenched all my blankets

About freezing in the basement of the church

About teaching English 

About doing lessons on virtues in the school

What it’s like when they don’t speak English and you don’t speak Spanish 

ATL/beach ministry

Final debrief

FLYING HOME!!!

 

 

 

Thanks for reading! I CAN’T WAIT TO SEE YOU! 

 

 

Momma, Dad, Sarah, Liam, Austin, and Skout- LESS THAN TWO WEEKS UNTIL YOU ARE IN MY ARMS!!! Get ready for movie nights, coffee dates, eating ALL the Mexican food, and the best road trip home of all time! I love you and I miss you and I’m DYING to see you.