All right, this post is going to be long. It will cover the
last year or so of my life and what has led me to this point and to Door of
Hope. Read what you want and skip what you want.
I have always been a dreamer. For as long as I can remember
I have dreamed of my perfect job, what my family will be like one day and the extravagant
house we will live in. Some of these dreams I really do believe and hope come
true but others will forever be dreams. One of my life long dreams is coming
true and in a matter of weeks in fact! I have had a dream to go to Africa and love
on the orphans of that continent for as long as I can remember. After much
prayer and many years of planning this is going to be my reality. On November
5, 2012 I will be leaving from O’Hare Airport at 7:10PM to head to Zurich
Switzerland and finally to Johannesburg South Africa where I will be living for
the next 6 months.
While in South Africa I will be volunteering with Door of
Hope Children’s Mission. Door
of Hope is a ministry that takes in abandoned babies from the ages of 0-2 in
Johannesburg when the mother cannot care for the baby. The goal is then to
reunite the baby with other family members who are able to care for the baby or
to start the adoption process for the baby. The ministry was started by Berea
Baptist Church when the pastor noticed that many babies were abandoned by their
mothers because she was unable to care for the baby. The church put a baby drop
box in one of the side walls so that mothers could drop off the babies anonymously
to be cared for instead of abandoning them in the streets. Today the ministry
can care for up to 60 babies at a time to be cared for. The baby drop box is
still used but the ministry also gets babies from the hospital and the police
when they are found. I will be helping to feed, bathe, play with and love on
the babies with the other volunteers and staff.
I
found Door of Hope through an internet search during my senior year at Hope. I
emailed them to see if I would be a good match to volunteer with them. I found
through communication that I loved what Door of Hope was doing and really
wanted to be a part of the ministry. I started the long application process the
end of the school year and beginning of the summer. I was almost finished with
the application and was ready to send it in and commit to volunteering for the
school year. The great plan was then to come back to the States and start my
teaching career. There were some things that came up during the summer and I
had a feeling that leaving was not what I was suppose to be doing. I did not
have a job to start the year but I also did not feel as Africa was where I was
going to be. I continued to pray and decided to start applying for teaching
jobs in the Holland area for the year. After a few interviews and being turned
down for each job, I was a little nervous for how the year would turn out but
knew that I was where I was suppose to be. Then through connections I was
offered a long-term substitute teaching position to start the school year off.
I was thrilled and excited to start my teaching career! I subbed in the third
grade classroom from the beginning of the year until the end of October. I was
sure that other long-term positions would turn up and thought that I would
spend the year long-term subbing. I was excited about this to meet so many kids
and see so many grades. I did not get another position after this one ended so
I just started to sub on a day-to-day basis. I started to look for other
possibilities. I found a nanny position that was supposed to last for about 2
weeks for a little 7 week old girl. I applied and was offered the job. I loved
this job! I have always loved babies and my biggest dream in life is to be a
wife and a mom. When the 2 weeks were up the nanny that was supposed to start
full time called and notified the parents that she found a different job. I was
called and offered to stay on with this family full time. I accepted this job
after prayer and was so excited to watch this little girl grow up. It did not
take long for me to get very attached to this little girl, K, and her parents.
Both her mom and dad work from home for the same company based in Minnesota. I
loved the daily conversations that I had with her mom and I loved playing with
and caring for K everyday. I was not at all how I dreamed that life would be
for the year but it was great. During the entire year I was able to be part of
a supportive friend community and continue to build friendships that were
centered on Christ. Never once did I think about how I thought at one point
that I was supposed to be in Africa. During this time I also accepted a
position on summer staff at Camp Geneva for a 5th consecutive
summer. I continued to nanny for K until May and then started looking ahead to
my summer. It was during this transition that the longing to go to Africa came
back and in full force. After trying to push these thoughts and feelings away,
I decided to start the application process again see what happened. The
application process took the entire summer because I paired it with working at
camp. I was during my last week at camp that I was accepted to volunteer with
Door of Hope. I prayed and talked with family and friends about the decision
and just after camp ended I accepted and agreed to start in November. I had
about 10 weeks then to get updated on immunizations, fill out a visa
application, start fundraising, book flights, begin a blog, figure financial
things out with the bank, get prescriptions for six months, and the list
continues on. But I have not looked back once. I know that this is where God
wants me to be from November until April. I have not idea what this adventure
will hold but I am excited to find out. I have to continually remind myself
that this is happening, that my dream is coming true. So there you have it.
That is just the beginning of my journey so far.
The
purpose of this blog is so that family and friends at home can be part of this
journey with me. I cannot make promises on how often it will be updated, if
pictures will accompany every post, that the spelling and grammar are always
correct or that the words will make sense and be eloquent. I can promise that
it will be honest and it will be a team effort with Christ. I am so excited for
this journey and so glad that you have all decided to take it with me.
Em! What an amazing story so far--I can't wait to see how God continues to use you for His purposes!
ReplyDeleteYou will be dearly missed here, but we understand that you have been called to Africa so we will be your cheerleaders and prayer warriors!