How God Loved Me on A Random Tuesday


Hello beautiful friends and family.  After two years of blog silence and for many of you, complete silence for quite a while, I am finally sharing my story.   It has been an incredible 2 years that is quite difficult to begin to describe.  I would like to try, however, to share with you all a bit of my experience.  I am incredibly grateful for the Lord’s call to go and for the support of so many- in prayer and through donations.  It would not have been possible without you all and I hope that my failure to be a better communicator will be forgiven.  The Lord has loved me in countless ways, through many different channels, and pushed me to love differently and hopefully better in the last two years.  It took two and a half years- filled with much reflection, music, prayer, dirt, driving, self analysis, yoga, hours of Excel and data entry, pizza making, reading, rat trap setting, children’s hugs, and conversations exploring the big questions of life- for me to come to a better understanding of God’s love in some new and beautiful ways. 

Part of my missionary class as we took our first steps in Honduras. Looking rough after hours of travel...
Here, I’d like to share a day in my Finca life with you all.  This is not one specific day but a series of experiences that very easily could have all occurred throughout the course of a day.    This project of writing down my story has become about as long as a book so most of you probably won’t read this whole thing (but please check out the pictures!). Thank you for indulging me as I continue to process God’s love. Special Note of Thanks goes to all the missionaries and friends whose pictures I stole for this blog.  I hardly took any photos and am so grateful to be able to share the images that you all captured. 

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It is Tuesday morning at 5:50 am.  My alarm is now going off for the third time.  I am grateful for my roommates, Emily (also an intense sleeper) and Kiddissa (an early riser), who put up with it.  I role out of bed in a groggy, disheveled state and step out into our garden, heading to the bathroom.  I hear a “Buenos Dias” from behind me and I throw up a peace sign of greeting to a community member (not sure which one because I am not awake yet).  After brushing my teeth and throwing on my signature scarf (for comfort, not fashion!), I begin the walk to the chapel.  Kevin M comes up to me with a random question about the new missionary application process and midway through the question, he remembers.  “O wait, you are still invisible right now.  I’ll ask you later.”   I am loved and understood by community even when I am completely out of it until way after prayer. 

The Holy Family Chapel

I enter the chapel, grabbing a cancionera and making my way to the back row sitting with the teenagers.  We begin laudes, led into song by House 1, our youngest girls.  We sing/shout “Alegre la manana que nos habla de ti, Alegre la manana”. Their voices, although not in key most times, begin to lift me out of the fog of sleep.

 House One girls marching in their dance costumes in the iIndependence Day Parade

After prayer has ended and the children begin to head home to breakfast and school, I take a few precious moments to sit.  I offer a quick prayer to God, offering up my day and asking for grace.  I know I will need it today.  Today’s prayer is quick because it is Tuesday- chicken day.

I start to walk towards the bodega, our food warehouse that I have been in charge of during my second year, purchasing all of the food and provisions and supervising their distribution to the 70ish people who live at the Finca.  Seidy is from house 1 and although I have never been very close with these little girls, Seidy and I have formed a special bond because she is the responsible one sent to bring the meat back to her house on the days of the week when I take it out of the back deep freezer.   We enter the bodega hand in hand and I find Brayan, a house 3 boy, ready to scare me as he loves to try and do.  He does his typical lion roar giving me a hug around my middle. We all unlock the back room and these two precious children help me put out the frozen chicken for each house.  They love to feel grown up, responsible, and I love to give them a chance to help, soaking in this small moment with children I don’t see very much throughout my day.

Brayan enjoying his haul from a birthday party pinata

After breakfast of scrambled eggs and amazing Amish Baked Oatmeal (one of the many ways that Laura loves our community through her baking), I take my time getting ready for the day, resting for a short time back in bed, knowing that this will mostly likely be my only “me time” today.  I am not interrupted on this particular morning- no one comes looking for me with a question or emergency meeting about an accounting issue and I revel in the small blessing of a whole chapter of my current book, one of many worlds I have been able to escape into over two years. 

The beautiful garden I step into from my bedroom

The work morning begins and I find that all of the wonderful women of social work, psychology and the clinic are also in the office.  On this particular Tuesday, their weekly meeting has been cancelled and everyone is taking advantage of newly found office time while the kids are in school.  I get to play Santa today. We just received some donations from a visitor and my role in administration means I get to distribute these little presents.  Haydee jumps out of her chair when I come in with colored post-it notes and new pens and Erin Marina talks about how she will use the new things for the discipline system, her not-so-slight obsession.  They LOVE office supplies and their joy over this small gift permeates the office. 

I then settle into my corner office, shutting my door and finding my work playlist on iTunes.  Data entry morning!  Cuentas, Quickbooks, reimbursements, checks, etc.  I secretly love this paperwork- many of my fellow missionaries not understanding why I feel the way I do about it all.  I have plenty of opportunities at the Finca to organize and be a little bit OCD, although I marvel how my type A-ness has decreased over the years, most especially because of my time in Honduras.  As I belt out some Sara Bareilles and Ingrid Michaelson, I look out my window to see our dedicated maintenance team drive past with a car full of leña ready to be burned in our outdoor stoves.  I am reminded of how hard they all work and I am grateful for the relationships I have with these men and the men of our security team.  I hand out the paychecks so they are all nice to me but I know that they are always kind, generous with their time and dedicated to their work.

My personal jam session/ office work is over as I watch several blue and white uniforms heading home from school.   On Tuesdays, most missionaries eat lunch in the houses.  As the only one who can usually cook lunch on Tuesday, I am typically in the missionary house.  But today was special because there were spots for everyone!  I head to House 6, our oldest girls, my special friends.   Dynia, the tia who lives with these girls and my friend, has made a typical but delicious lunch of rice, beans, chicken and corn tortillas.  Julitza is the oldest, a Finca girl since she was 3.  We have developed a close relationship, sharing a love of reading and a preference for hanging with the guys.  She is preparing to graduate 8th grade and I pray for her transition. Nelsy, when she sees me, lets out a loud squeal, comes to give me a hug, burying her face into my shoulder.  Miriam and Belgia are calm as usual- responsible 6th graders who tend to go with the flow of the house.  We sit and eat, teasing each other about random things that have happened and laughing about the fun Finca Olympics we had the past weekend.  Rocking our maroon shirts (the color House 6 wears during these Finca wide competitions organized by the activities rock star Kit and held bi-monthly), we had enjoyed each other’s presence even though, yet again, we were not the most successful group.   God’s love is palpable at the table as the girls show each other love and love me, allowing me to feel so incredibly comfortable in this house.

House 6 Ladies- Riccy, Miriam, Julitza, Myself, Nelsy and Belgia

Its 1:30 pm, which means it is time to do the sale at the bodega.  Sigri, another beautiful house 6 resident, and I head out.  I have on my usual bodega attire of jean cut offs, a razorback tank and my apron.  Sigri turns to me and makes sure I have brought my music.  We like to jam out during the two times she is with me for her work hours.  Dancing, laughing and singing out loud, we pass the boys who are preparing for their afternoon work hours doing maintenance work.  Rony, flashing his infectious smile gives me a high five and Jairo lets out one of his weird but endearing shrieks. 

Rony, Jose Daniel and Jairo working in PAVI

At the venta, our employees and a few women who do odd jobs around the Finca for a food credit, can come to purchase items at cost that we keep in stock for distribution.  Maria, a woman who has been a neighbor to the Finca since the early stages, works with Sigri and I, weighing and bagging flour, rice and collecting other items.  Petronila walks in with her daughter who is a student in our school.  Her presence is my weekly reminder of life outside the fence of the Finca.  She and her family are poorer than I will ever be able to imagine and she works so hard to provide for them.  She is grateful for the food credit that she receives for cleaning our chapel and the clinic.  Today I sneak a couple other donation items into her bag that we have received and I know we can spare.  She is so creative and I know will use every item to benefit her children.  Today, I choose not to despair in the face of this poverty.  I have chosen to do that in the past and still try grapple with the justice of this world.  Today, though, I will be grateful for how the Lord is providing for this woman and her family, grateful that I get to play a tiny role in that, hopeful that with her education Cyndy, Petronila’s daughter, may escape the extreme poverty and help her family. 

I am also happy today because of a some other special people who walk into the bodega.  We help out a few families with monthly food credits and Cristina has walked 45 minutes from Trujillo with her grandson.  She gives me a joy-filled hug and I receive God’s love through this woman.  We find the items that she would like to take home this week, including a box of soy rice from Stop Hunger Now.  Today I am especially grateful for God’s providence because I already had a town trip planned, which means Cristina does not need to walk back with a huge sack of food balanced on her shoulders.

Closing up the bodega, Sigri and I walk back to her house and I make a quick change of clothes, knowing that jorts are not acceptable attire for the booming metropolis that is Trujillo. 

Well, Sigri doesn't like her picture taken but we snuck this one in of the two of us...

Grabbing the keys, I hop up into one of our Landcruisers, putting it gear and backing out of the maintenance workshop.  I love driving these cars, having learned to drive stick upon arrival 2 years ago.  It is a good thing I like it, because I have made this trip to Trujillo hundreds of times, as my schedule and job responsibilities make me one of our main drivers.  Dodging potholes, passing cows and bikes, driving through 6 rivers, Cristina and I chat about her daughter’s new job cleaning the house of an ex-pat near town, probably a Canadian since our part of Honduras seems to be a little hub for them.  I drop her off near her home and head to the bank.  The guards out front know me quite well and certainly seem to like when I come in.  Hola, hermosa. Que tal?” Hello beautiful, how are you?  Deslin the teller, is not quite as overt in his flirting, but as always is very friendly.  I pick up the previous months cancelled checks from Yarino in the back and Emilio and Miriam wave a greeting.  I’m sad that I won’t get to see these friendly faces for much more time but am grateful to know these people and feel so well taken care of by my Trujillo community. 

I leave the bank and head to grab a quick Coca Light from Ivan’s mercado.  I walk in and he makes a comment that I look skinnier today.  Every time I see him, he comments that I look mas gordita or delgadita.  I have learned that comments like this are extremely normal, acceptable in this culture.  God has loved me through these honest comments from a man who started as just my meat and egg provider and has because my friend, looking out for me, worrying about my safety and even generously gifting me with diet cokes every so often, knowing they are my favorite.  Vertin is his assistant and Ivan teases him mercilessly about his crush on me.  Vertin, however, is extremely respectful and shy- uncommon in this town where I have been whistled at more times than I can count and even received several marriage proposals.  Nos casamos y me llevas al norte? Marry me and take me to the states??”   I have gained confidence and feel extremely at ease in Trujillo, where I know there are several wonderful people watching out for their little gringa friend.

An great visiting priest captured this shot of the Trujillo Cathedral where we attend mass each weekend

I make the drive home to the Finca, happy that my town trip was short today.  Flexibility is the key to life here and a short town trip without any unexpected stops is rare.  I head back into the office and meet up with Pat for a short time, as he was in the school this morning for other training.  Patrick, Natalie, Noelle, Curtis and Tiffany are the newest missionaries.  As I get to know them, I am so sad that I won’t get to live with them longer.  Their energy and love for the mission have reenergized so many of us.  Pat has been an unexpected surprise as he steps into his role as my accounting shadow.  He makes me laugh every day in the office and I know he is going to kick butt as the financial administrator (the new name for my role). 

Tiffany, Natalie, Noelle, Curtis, and Pat enjoying time in Guatemala before traveling to the Finca 

As Pat gets acquainted with the joys of file folders and archiving, my cell phone rings.  Virginia Gomez is a dear friend from Trujillo who I met as our fish vender.  Her family has been connected to the Finca for years and years and she blessed me in July, asking me to be the godmother for her youngest, Misael.  He is 2 1/2, extremely shy and very attached to his mom.  Over the past months, I have made many stops at their house in town, buying fish or just stopping by for a quick coffee or chat.   Virginia is one of the most generous people I know.  She has been dealt some real struggles in life but her desire to help those even worse off than herself is an inspiration to me.  She is worried that she will lose her house because she can’t make some payments but is calling me today to ask if I can bring her another box of soy rice.  I know that she delivers bags of this rice to several people.  A woman named Dominga took in a young pregnant woman a few months ago who abandoned her precious new son, leaving Dominga to care for him in addition to her own hoard of children.   Virginia also visits an old couple up the mountain. They can no longer work and are routinely without food.  This couple loved me on the one visit I made to their home, offering a glass of juice that I know is extremely rare for them to have and probably a gift from Virginia.    The entire Gomez family has welcomed me into their lives, showing me more of the Lord’s love than I deserve.

I am holding an exhausted Misael during his baptism and stand with his godfather and his mom, my wonderful friend Virginia

Finishing up work with Pat, I choose to spend some time in my favorite place at the Finca.  Walking through maintenance, greeting the guys as they wrap up their day, I make my way to the back porch of house 5.   Juan Carlos is on dinner duty and that means baleadas made with home made flour tortillas.  After he stokes the fire of the fogon, he grabs a fresh one, still hot and tosses it to me.  He knows that they are my favorite snack.  Suyapa, the house mom for this oldest boy’s home, makes her way out.  She has become my Honduran mother and I love her dearly.  She sits down next to me on the bench, takes my arm, rubbing it with love and asks how my day is going.  We laugh about an inside joke.  Jose Isabel comes running up from the campo, sticky with sweat after some futbol. I get a huge hug from him because he knows the sweat grosses me out.  He then heads into the house to shower and eventually makes his way back out onto the porch. Duncan, the youngest in the house, is still working on his chores but continues to wander in and out of the conversation just because he wants to be included.  Jose Daniel, a house 4 boy now but hopefully moving up to this house soon, wanders over on an errand for his tia. She is looking for a large pan.  Daniel stays as long as possible soaking in time with his friends, guys that he looks up to.

Cesar is brilliant when it comes to English and today we practice the tongue twister I taught him, which he repeats with perfect pronunciation.  “How much wood could a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood? A woodchuck would chuck all the wood he could chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood.”  This kid has opened up to me and I treasure our relationship.  Rony, Suyapa’s husband of 24 years, is finally finished with his work with our maintenance team.  He joins our little gathering and the conversation turns to relationships and love, a topic that comes up quite frequently when Hondurans know that you’re single.  Rony is lamenting, again, that his oldest son already has a mujer and a little baby because he thinks we would make a wonderful couple.  I laugh while secretly wishing and praying for future in-laws as wonderful and selfless as the two people I find in front of me.

Wilmer and Riccy have now come home on the bus from Trujillo where they have been studying all afternoon.  I get a quick hello from Riccy, who is off to house six swinging the umbrella she uses on the sunniest days.  Wilmer goes into his room and comes out to show me his latest artistic creation. This talented young painter is bursting with pride and my heart melts when I think about the kid I met two years ago whose anger issues were a constant battle.

I sit, surrounded by a beautiful group of people who have formed a strange little family and decided to welcome me undeservedly into it with open arms.  My heart is full and I have been loved again today.


 Most of the House 5 Gang (Duncan is missing): Rony, Wilmer, Suyapa, Cesar, me and Jose Isabel with Juan Carlos in front

As I make my way to my house for dinner, I realize that I am just in time to see God in one of his coolest forms.  Grabbing the key from inside our house, I open the gate and walk right out onto the beach, speechless, knowing there are no words to describe the beauty I see. 

 There are no words for the beauty of my home.

Wizards in the kitchen, Ashley and Kevin K were on dinner and I can smell the delicious fried chicken they have prepared for us tonight.  It is a real gift because I know both of them have been super busy all day and went right into cooking dinner 2 hours ago.  We gather around the table, the first time all of the missionaries have been together since breakfast.  I look around the table missing the three members of this particular year’s community who are not present.  Sara has been home with her family for a few months- her joy radiates through the phone the few times we have been able to chat since her departure.   I get excited because I remember that next week I get to see both Allison and David, living 3 hours away with some of our teenagers who are part of Phase II of the Finca, studying in high school.  Pat and I have a buying trip planned for San Pedro Sula. Our director, Ysmary, and I have been preparing for this trip as we are renting an 18-wheel trailer to pick up mattresses and other donations.  I can’t wait to show him the ropes as we drive across the northern coast of Honduras, stopping to see our Finca family in Phase II and have some road trip adventures on our way to pick up the donations and buy supplies.  

2013 Missionary Community with visiting priest Padre Marcos (missing the lovely Sara De Phillips)

Our dinner table discussion turns to something about food. This is inevitable, a very typical conversation.  The lack of smart phones- computers in our pockets that are a staple in the States- makes us seek out an answer to a scientific question about a particular food in an actual book from our library (one of my favorite parts of our house). 

After doing the dishes at the pila, we all make our way to the chapel.  Each weeknight the Finca community gathers in an intentional way.  Tonight is rosary and our Franciscan sisters are on to lead.  Sor Elda, Sor Inocencia and Sor Mirna are all here, a rare occasion as Finca and their own congregation work have at least one of them traveling constantly.   They have recruited the ladies of house 2, our middle girls house, to lead a lot of the music.  I see fellow missionary Margine, the sweetest of us all, sitting with these girls and I am reminded of Mary’s gentleness.  As we pray to our mother, asking for her intercessions, asking her to take our prayers to the feet of her son, I take in the large Finca community and am grateful once more for this project that I am blessed to be a part of. 

After rosary has ended and the houses have left one by one, most of the missionaries stay for the missionary holy hour, time to sit in our Lord’s presence and pray.  On this night, Harrison and I have our act together and brought the music binder and guitar.  He begins to strum and I think through the day, praising Jesus.  He used so many people and moments to love me today.  I am currently sitting next to one of my best friends with whom I have made some of the most beautiful music I have ever been blessed to be a part of.   More of my best friends surround us- my family to describe them better. A family that has loved me despite my failures and have taught me more than I ever thought possible. 

One of my favorite Finca memories- a spontaneous night of praise and worship after Talent Show 2013

Taking a sip of my now cold but still great Good Earth tea, I savor this little bit of heaven- a chapel filled with love, memories, candlelight and mostly, the Lord who called me here.  A call I still can’t wrap my head around.  My Creator and Father chose me to serve and love here but more accurately, chose me to be loved, served by and saved by him through the family that is the Farm of the Child.

Harrison starts to play a familiar tune, a song that speaks volumes to my heart every time I hear it.  He nods to me and we begin to sing about a truth that I have lived for 27 incredible months.


He is jealous for me, Loves like a hurricane, I am a tree,
Bending beneath the weight of His wind and mercy.
When all of a sudden, I am unaware of these afflictions eclipsed by glory,
And I realize just how beautiful You are,
And how great Your affections are for me.

And oh, how He loves us, oh,
Oh, how He loves us,
How He loves us all

Yeah, He loves us,
Oh, how He loves us,
Oh, how He loves us,
Oh, how He loves.

And we are His portion and He is our prize,
Drawn to redemption by the grace in His eyes,
If his grace is an ocean, we're all sinking.
And Heaven meets earth like an unforeseen kiss,
And my heart turns violently inside of my chest,
I don't have time to maintain these regrets,
When I think about the way...

 That He loves us,
Oh, how He loves us,
Oh, how He loves us,
Oh, how He loves.

El nos ama,
Oh, El nos ama,
Dios, tu nos amas,
Oh, El nos ama…

Yeah, He loves us,
Oh, how He loves us,
Oh, how He loves us,
Oh, how He loves.