Trails to Run in Uganda
Comparison can totally be the thief of joy, right??
And really, comparison might not be the right word. It's more perspective. And here is where this blog begins.
Last year, when we came over during our summer and volunteered with 60 Feet, two months seemed like an incredibly long time. From the perspective of folks like us, who had been on several "mission trips" of the week/two week kind, two months was quite a stretch.
Then, we commit to a year. A year seemed like forever when we set off...until we arrived and started meeting other Americans (or Australians or Brits or Dutch) who looked a bit incredulous when we said we're here for "just a year". "Why, you are barely getting to know the place after a year!" was a common response we heard (their perspective!). In talking, we've found so many ex-pats who haven't just committed to 3-5 years, but are here indefinitely. Sold their homes, sold their stuff, sold their lives back home to create a life abroad. Their children go to international schools or are at boarding schools in Kenya. They've taken the time to hang pictures on their walls (a big sign that you are settling in) and accepted the fact that once-a -year furloughs back to wherever they call home are all they get.
So what seemed like a big commitment to us now, honestly, seems to pale in comparison to what technically could be called "real" commitment.
Oh....I could get bogged down in the details of that crack-crazy, slippery-slope concept. Are we really sacrificing enough? Are we staying long enough? Have we done ENOUGH?? Good grief. Thief of Joy. My husband sometimes has to give me a good shake when I start to wallowing about nonsense like this....
What I know is I am absolutely certain the hills of Kampala are a gorgeous sight to see,
but from the perspective of the kids inside these prison walls below.....
they represent something much more than aesthetics.
Comparison at home in America (bigger house, nicer car, better job...) can definitely hog the happiness. And even here, where a friend once wisely said it's a lot of "us dying to us", sometimes prestige is placed on who is staying longer, who is working in the more 'dangerous' places....and the guilt of whether or not to go or stay. I find it's absolutely crazy what we humans can do to ourselves mentally!
My daughters and I had a morning bible lesson about the rich landowner who gave his three employees money to use wisely. One buried it with no gain, one invested small and profited, one invested large and smartly and received back enormous gain. That parable can translate pretty easy .... don't squander your gifts given from God. One gift is your abilities. The "investment" isn't about length or danger or in-country or out-of-country, it's the investment of your heart to the work. The reward will be great if you give your heart - all of it -to what you've been called to do, in whatever country, town, or home, in whatever form, and with whatever amount of time and sacrifice you can give.
The mission of Sixty Feet is still the same.
Bring hope to the imprisoned children of Uganda.
And that comes in many forms...justice, medical, counseling, education, etc.
And the workers give of their time & hearts.
And the profit is Large.