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Welcome to the real life of a full-time adventure seeker and part-time superhero. Will always love Chicago. Currently resides in Bangkok. Enjoys biking through the city and eating too many noodles.

Friday, November 11, 2016

November 9th: A Reflection and Revolution

I am heartbroken. Crushed to the core. Bones are heavy with sorrow. Soul weighed down with fear. This election was a weird one, emotionally and spiritually. The manner in which Trump continues to talk about women brings flashbacks to my experience of sexual assault- feeling so small and insignificant and out of control. Spiritually, I hurt for the way in which the Church is grossly divided and I really can’t align with it right now. The way fear spread like wildfire was a smack in the face of what’s at the core of this country. This is a somber reminder that America is built on racism, fear, and discrimination. But I had such shinny hope that there was change happening! Obama is in office! Gay marriage is legal! The working class have healthcare! We’re making progress.

But also when I think of the heartbreak I experienced watching video after video of young black boys and men being gunned down by those sworn to protect us, I shouldn’t be surprised. Fear continues to plague the streets of Chicago, the banks of Wall Street, and the hearts of those who make the laws.

I confess that this election made me look at my personal bias- I am much more a ‘woman-ist’ than feminist because I think women are way above men. We deserve our time at the top! Let’s crush the patriarchy and then sit on top of them, reviling in our victory and inflecting the pain and fear caused to us women. Make those men pay. This is the most vexing bias, personally, because I really don’t want to calm down or have equal power or be treated the same. I want to be better, stronger, and more respected than men ever were! So I’m working on this.
A giant tear to represent the fear and hurt of millions due to the election of Donald Trump
Additionally, I am just now learning of the full scope of intersectionality and how it affects millions of Americans in subtle yet very calculated ways. I am privileged to be a white, cis, able-bodied, non-convicted, Christian, educated, middle class woman with a passport from the USA. There’s no questioning what it means to be black and a woman, a woman with a disability, or a woman waiting for a green card. My personal experience of intersectionality is non-existent and as I listen to others’ stories- those of my friends’ or on podcasts- I felt burdened by this privilege to move, to act, to make sure the black trans woman is no longer the individual facing the highest about of domestic abuse, that the Mexican day laborer is making high enough wages to feed his family, and the young Muslim immigrant has affordable health care. And while I feel sympathy, I cannot personality empathize with a family fleeing from guerrilla warfare in Columbia who’s terrified if they will be deported. I am not afraid to leave my house and see racial slurs written on my car or have a cafeteria of children chant ‘build a wall’ as I sit and eat my lunch. Yet this is the reality that we’re created.

This loss is partly my fault. I didn’t share enough podcasts, post enough articles, or engage in tough, painful conversations. I shied away from meaningful discussions with my parents and relatives because I didn’t want to shake any feathers or make people uncomfortable. I didn’t ask friends outside of those who share the same worldview as me who they were voting for. I didn’t do my part and I’ve let immigrants, blacks, Mexicans, refugees, LGBTQ+, women, single mothers, disabled individuals, and all others’ sidelined by society down. Oh and this hurts- to know I didn’t fight as hard as I could have.

But I’m ready to act now. I have enough understanding that even if every person in my family voted for HRC, the outcome remains the same. This striking divide is rooted in the history of America- in the voter suppression, forced eugenics movement, and felon discrimination. So what’s there to do? Lots. Just so much.


First, start getting to know those you fear most. Tutor someone learning English, learn how to cook from a newly resettled refugee, volunteer to mentor a young student, share your talent of art, sports, cooking, reading with a local after school program, a school/work collection for food, winter coats, or furniture to donate to a refugee family, visit or donate to the North Dakota pipeline protest, or visit a place of worship that’s different that yours.

Educate yourself! Knowledge is power! Read Between the Worldand Me, Americanah, The New Jim Crow or Why Are All the Black Kids SittingTogether in the Cafeteria. Listen to podcasts. Write your senators and lobby for causes you care about. I will remember this feeling of hopelessness, confusion and hurt and allow it to propel me forward.  Grapple with the reality that America was built on systematic discrimination, dehumanization, and suppression AND that America exists and thrives even today. I’m still learning. Oh I have so much to learn. And in the midst of this learning and continued fight, I expect to uncover women of the past who’s stories will propel me forward. 


November 9th: A Reflection and Revolution

I am heartbroken. Crushed to the core. Bones are heavy with sorrow. Soul weighed down with fear. This election was a weird one, emotionally and spiritually. The manner in which Trump continues to talk about women brings flashbacks to my experience of sexual assault- feeling so small and insignificant and out of control. Spiritually, I hurt for the way in which the Church is grossly divided and I really can’t align with it right now. The way fear spread like wildfire was a smack in the face of what’s at the core of this country. This is a somber reminder that America is built on racism, fear, and discrimination. But I had such shinny hope that there was change happening! Obama is in office! Gay marriage is legal! The working class have healthcare! We’re making progress.

But also when I think of the heartbreak I experienced watching video after video of young black boys and men being gunned down by those sworn to protect us, I shouldn’t be surprised. Fear continues to plague the streets of Chicago, the banks of Wall Street, and the hearts of those who make the laws.

I confess that this election made me look at my personal bias- I am much more a ‘woman-ist’ than feminist because I think women are way above men. We deserve our time at the top! Let’s crush the patriarchy and then sit on top of them, reviling in our victory and inflecting the pain and fear caused to us women. Make those men pay. This is the most vexing bias, personally, because I really don’t want to calm down or have equal power or be treated the same. I want to be better, stronger, and more respected than men ever were! So I’m working on this.
A giant tear to represent the fear and hurt of millions due to the election of Donald Trump
Additionally, I am just now learning of the full scope of intersectionality and how it affects millions of Americans in subtle yet very calculated ways. I am privileged to be a white, cis, able-bodied, non-convicted, Christian, educated, middle class woman with a passport from the USA. There’s no questioning what it means to be black and a woman, a woman with a disability, or a woman waiting for a green card. My personal experience of intersectionality is non-existent and as I listen to others’ stories- those of my friends’ or on podcasts- I felt burdened by this privilege to move, to act, to make sure the black trans woman is no longer the individual facing the highest about of domestic abuse, that the Mexican day laborer is making high enough wages to feed his family, and the young Muslim immigrant has affordable health care. And while I feel sympathy, I cannot personality empathize with a family fleeing from guerrilla warfare in Columbia who’s terrified if they will be deported. I am not afraid to leave my house and see racial slurs written on my car or have a cafeteria of children chant ‘build a wall’ as I sit and eat my lunch. Yet this is the reality that we’re created.

This loss is partly my fault. I didn’t share enough podcasts, post enough articles, or engage in tough, painful conversations. I shied away from meaningful discussions with my parents and relatives because I didn’t want to shake any feathers or make people uncomfortable. I didn’t ask friends outside of those who share the same worldview as me who they were voting for. I didn’t do my part and I’ve let immigrants, blacks, Mexicans, refugees, LGBTQ+, women, single mothers, disabled individuals, and all others’ sidelined by society down. Oh and this hurts- to know I didn’t fight as hard as I could have.

But I’m ready to act now. I have enough understanding that even if every person in my family voted for HRC, the outcome remains the same. This striking divide is rooted in the history of America- in the voter suppression, forced eugenics movement, and felon discrimination. So what’s there to do? Lots. Just so much.


First, start getting to know those you fear most. Tutor someone learning English, learn how to cook from a newly resettled refugee, volunteer to mentor a young student, share your talent of art, sports, cooking, reading with a local after school program, a school/work collection for food, winter coats, or furniture to donate to a refugee family, visit or donate to the North Dakota pipeline protest, or visit a place of worship that’s different that yours.

Educate yourself! Knowledge is power! Read Between the Worldand Me, Americanah, The New Jim Crow or Why Are All the Black Kids SittingTogether in the Cafeteria. Listen to podcasts. Write your senators and lobby for causes you care about. I will remember this feeling of hopelessness, confusion and hurt and allow it to propel me forward.  Grapple with the reality that America was built on systematic discrimination, dehumanization, and suppression AND that America exists and thrives even today. I’m still learning. Oh I have so much to learn. And in the midst of this learning and continued fight, I expect to uncover women of the past who’s stories will propel me forward. 


Sunday, September 4, 2016

Dear Diary

The one-year mark is upon us! Since I love marking millstones, reading old journals, and reminiscing on the past, here’s a peek into some real journal entries I wrote around this time, last year. Some very real, honest, vulnerable (haha**) entries about transition into this season. 

9/1/15
Lord, how come you’ve called me to do community in a totally unknown place with factors I’ve never even considered when I can’t get my community right here? Like why go abroad when I’m leaving messes here? What about community are you going to teach me?

9/5/15
Every part of my body is swollen and I am so disoriented. My body doesn’t feel like my own. I feel as if I’m walking through a dream.

9/6/15
I’m sweaty, nauseous. Hot all the time. Stinky… I’m waiting for this to become my normal.
9/7/15
Exodus 3: 11-12
“Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh and bring the children of Israel out of Egypt?” He said, “But I will be with you…’
This man [Abram] is considered a father of the faith. He’s in the hall of faith [a reference to Hebrew 11] And here he is doubting the voice of God like fighting with him and arguing. So I think it’s okay that you’re having hella doubts about this season. You’re wrestling with the hard questions of why me. Why this culture, why these people. Take heart! God can sue even the most doubtful heart!

9/8/16
Exodus 9:15-16
God COULD have sped up the whole process. But he didn’t he wanted Pharaoh to come to terms with the full extent of God’s power, majesty, and might. To recognize that the LORD deserves to be served and to be worshiped.

9/19/15
Reality: coming to Thailand didn’t solve my problems. I thought it would.

9/24/15 || 24/9/15- will I naturally begin to write my dates like a Thai? Who knows! (It took a month, see date below)

10/3/15
God. What. I cannot wrap my head around this. How good you are! In this past month, you’ve taught me: to be will, to be alone, to slow down, to recognize what I need, what makes me feel safe and seen and the crazy part is that this is only beginning of all the ways you’ll teach, grow, shape, and TRANSFORM me! Thank you!

4/9/16
Things that have stayed consistent this past year:
Feeling like a swollen marshmallow. I’m 100% confident my ankles have been double size since I landed in Bangkok. 
I still don’t understand community and still make messes with people.
I don’t have perfect relationships! (See above) In fact, being away from friends and navigating friendships here has brought to light both life giving and destructive friendship patterns. We’re all a work in progress, right?
It’s still always hot and I’m perpetually smelly. Just kidding I do shower often but you will usually find me with a moist brow and sweat-stache.

Coming to Thailand DIDN’T solve my problems like you would think I would have known this already seeing there’s an entire book of the bible (Jonah) dedicated to what happens when you try to avoid God and run away. While a whale may not have swallowed me, God did create the perfect storm (loneliness, depression, anger, dissatisfaction, overeating, culture shock, etc.) to throw me overboard and cling to him as a life raft OMG that’s so corny I can’t even. All bad Christian puns aside, there were times this past year where I was so uncomfortable and sad and full of doubt that going to God was my only option albeit my least preferred option.

As you can see from last year’s journal entries, Exodus was a key part of the first months here in Bangkok. My heart verse for this season is Exodus 36:2. It’s on my desk and I look at it whenever I doubt God, which is a daily occurrence. It says, “I have stirred your heart. I have given you skills. Do my work. I am with you. –God.” And it is with this confidence, this anchor that I approach this year. God is faithful and I am forgetful. God has a purpose larger than I can understand. He’s put Bangkok on my heart, he’s called me to do work with CLF, he’s stirred my heart for these people and he is faithful to continue doing good work in and through me.   
  
** Side note cliché ‘christian’ lingo makes me giggle so in my head I was saying this word in a slightly sarcastic voice partly because it’s funny and partly because I hate vulnerability and making it goofy makes it easier for me. Lol.

Monday, August 22, 2016

Weird things to do on your own: an ode to extroverts

Things that are slightly terrifying, perhaps a little strange to the outside world and potentially the worst of your and extrovert to do on your own:

Go to a bar and order a drink
Go to the movies
Live without a roommate
Travel
Browsing museums
Eating out in restaurants

This solo-outing game has been a new challenge since I moved here/will be something that’s a challenge for an extrovert for the rest of my life/something my introverted friends are amazing at. Keep it up guys- we need more people like you to model different types of self-care!

I started my solo-self journey officially when I drove up to Bloomington, IN in 2015. The whole family was celebrating Esther together at Elise’s little house and Mom and Dad rented a car for me! Honestly, I picked the most obscure places to stop at along the route- the John Deer museum, an old candy store-turned bar that was suppose to be famous but I don’t remember for what, some awesome robot graffiti and, my favorite, the Indiana State Dunes. It was an empowering little trip because I had to spend 10 hours in a car alone and it was all up to me of what I would do and see during this trip! Not actually that impressive perhaps but this was a first step in the solo-outing game.
The first of a long series of self-timer solo shots! Yay Indiana Dunes!
Since moving to Bangkok, I’ve lived alone (it was scary and not fun), traveled to and around India by myself (and planning another solo trip to Vietnam because it’s actually a blast being able to choose your own adventure), gone to the movies on my own (which I’m not sure what took me so long to get to this place because going to the movies is the most freeing like you can be sure as hell I cried the entire length of Finding Dory), eaten alone (mostly just eating street food alone but there have been a handful of solo nicer restaurant visits), browsed museums, art galleries, and wats without an adventure buddy and just last night I grabbed a drink at a super hip bar alone and ignored all the pity stares because guess what I am confident to know that being alone doesn’t define or dictate my value as a human or as a woman.
Being alone in the sense of being single is really not a looming sense of doom in the same way that being alone because your friends are busy, your roommate has moved back to America, and you don’t have someone to hang out with. Can all my extroverts relate to this?! I get sort of panicky and flustered when my biggest desire is to be with people and the circumstances just don’t line up. And it feels even worse when all you need is people and see a bunch of buds hanging out on Instagram can I get an amen for the FOMO! 

But seriously, I think it’s crucial to become comfortable in your own skin- to learn more yourself, have solo dance parties (thanks for in inspiration Erin!), and create new memories or experiences where it’s just you. I think it sets you up for success down the road because first off you have a killer sense of confident and self-worth and second you stop seeing people as fillers or bodies or conversations and start to see them as their own individual entity. I know when I feel the need to be with people, this desire to connect to someone can overshadow their personality and quirks and all the other awesome stuff that makes me want to be their friend because all I’m focused on is hearing myself talk. But when I check my intention and keep my extroverted self in line, I find I am able to remember more about their live/what we talked about last time, ask more in-depth questions, and just be fully present at the conversation AND I leave feeling totally filled.

Being alone is hard (maybe not as hard for introverts? Tell me what it’s like for you!) and being alone makes you strong because you there’s no one around to hide behind and you have to deflect all the strange stares from other people like I’m still fabulous leave me alone with my book and plate of food. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a brunch date with myself. Cheers!

Monday, August 8, 2016

A peaceful fiery fighter

Eleven months in

One month until it’s been a year

One month until the count down begins

Time has just started to feel like a soft spring of water passing through my life

Unlike the crashing waves of transition, homesickness, loneliness

It’s almost as if I woke up on the 5th of August without the cognitive recognition that this day is in fact different from yesterday because it is momentous in that I’ve resided in Bangkok for 11 months

This marker isn’t even Instagram worthy

Because it just is

Life is hard and frustrating and ever changing

And I have my people here I have my support





And I’m learning about myself what I need what emotions I channel what calms me down how to have confrontational meeting without crying or being a bully how to listen how to fight for what is right how to take initiative how to say no how to be


That’s why life passes easier now because I can be

I feel safe

This is home

I am my own home

There’s a comfort in this- knowing I’m completely at ease at peace with who I am

I get to wake up every morning fully owning all the actions I did yesterday being able to admit mistakes ask for forgiveness see mishaps as points of learning

Understanding that it’s key for me to know how people best receive love so I can be more intentional about showing how I care for those around me knowing that though I feel anger as my primary emotion this doesn’t have to make me a resentful person no in fact it makes me a passionate person fiery and ready to fight fight for myself fight for my work fight for my people

I’m owning that I’m a fiery fighter which I think I was scared to admit

Fighters generally clash with people no one wants to be disliked

But that’s not me I’m a fighter who’s no good at being quiet

When I’m quiet I forget who I am when I don’t address a problem a miscommunication a point of disagreement with an individual that’s when the resentment builds

I resent the person for the conversation I will never bring up I resent myself for not taking that first step

I resent myself for not being strong

Now I can own that I’m a fighter I fight for my people I learn how they receive love and fight to show it I fight for communication and I fight for stillness

Something that’s been revolutionary is this fight for stillness because everything about me wants to be moving

Always on the go always doing never still

Fighting for stillness within my soul is perhaps the greatest duel of them all, second only to vulnerability

Yet the biggest victory comes when I say no and take time to dive into who I am as a human, as a child of God, as a female

During this time of stillness I learn more about who I am what comes easily to me what areas of life are a challenge what makes me explode with joy what brings me life

Candles watercolors clouds lifting weights discussing politics homemade food feminist literature

A few of my favorite things

See it’s in the stillness I become more attuned to the core of my being am refreshed and can keep up the fight

My stillness is my greatest strength

My only mightier force is vulnerability

This force is only strong with I’m first vulnerable with myself

I’ve been running for vulnerability for a while 2 months in fact

See some of our staff left and it’s begun the wave of people I’ve learned to love and fight for returning home and away from me

What’s the point of loving and fighting for and being vulnerable with if you’ll just leave?

Vulnerability with myself brought me face to face with the realization that I like being in control and when my status quo shifts I am unprepared to adjust

It just takes me longer to find a new rhythm

Having staff-dear friends really- leave was hard it is hard

Despite the sweet dear friends still here in Bangkok my heart longs for those who have gone back who have followed the calling of their hearts and returned to chase their passions

My heart would really like to be back in Chicago chasing my passions but I’m still here

Vulnerability showed me that part of why people leaving made me so sad is because some days my heart does not understand why I live in Bangkok when my heartstrings are so clearly attached to Chicago

It was only when I got so honest with myself about this truth that I was able to both mourn not being in Chicago and celebrate the gift and opportunity of living here

Stillness made room for vulnerability with my soul and created time to meditate and think through these conflicting feelings

I can own this dichotomy and connect with community in Bangkok and learn how to fight for and love the people and city here and look forward to being called back to Chicago

It’s taken 11 months

And I’m finally at peace with who I am

I am a girl called to Bangkok by a Mighty God who knew this city this job this community would cause me to question everything

Who am I what am I passionate about who is God how do I react to stress why do I love people how do I show I care what does communication look like what is self care what would it look like if I actually loved myself what is my vision what brings be joy what is community

 Stillness let me answer all these questions

And own my fiery fighting spirit

And create peace within the contract to contradiction the confusion