Posts Tagged ‘changing the world’

Lessons from a Starfish

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010

Starfish Long

The orange burst of color jumped out and took me by surprise.

I was walking along the jetty watching sea lions play when something below the surface of the water caught my eye. A single orange starfish was clinging to a boulder a few feet away from me.

It was breathtaking.

The morning was overcast and there was a gray tone to the oceanfront setting. Everything around me was blue, white or brown. But there, nearly hidden from sight, was this bright burst of color that lit up the entire scene around me. I scrambled for my camera and silently hoped my mediocre photography skills could capture the moment.

In life we all have dreary seasons where it seems like we are pushing our way through shades of gray, white or brown. A little color could make a lot of difference in our perspectives and our attitudes.

Just as this orange starfish cheered a tired place in my soul, I realized I have the potential to be a bright burst of color in the life of someone who needs it. Bright things aren’t always big things, and in many cases they are actually small things that make a huge impact.

▪Quick phones call just to say hi

▪Handwritten notes

▪A favorite candy bar

▪Hugs with an extra tight squeeze

▪Time to listen

Little bursts of color. They can be the difference between a bad day and a good day. Used strategically they can turn an enemy into a friend. Small acts that mark big turning points.

Each of us have the potential to be like that starfish and make somebody’s day.

How has a “starfish moment” changed you? Was there a time when someone did something small that made a huge impact on you? Who have you blessed with an unexpected act of kindness recently?

Lessons From the Poor

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

Shannon & Girls

I have glitter in my hair.

This morning when my team and I arrived for our first visit to an actual Compassion project we were greeted by rows of children holding up signs welcoming us. When we entered the center they shot off party poppers that rained glitter, confetti and streamers down on us like it was New Year’s Eve. Immediately the children began reaching out to touch our hands like we were celebrities and they were diehard fans greeting us at a movie premiere.

When one little boy found out I was from California he began speaking to me in such rapid Spanish that I thought something was wrong. A translator told me he simply wanted to know if I knew his sponsor—John from California.

The children had prepared a presentation for us that consisted of singing and dancing. As soon as we sat down we had children climbing in our laps and nestling down comfortably. To them we were not strangers. We were sponsors. In the minds of children involved in Compassion programs something as simple as writing a letter saying you care is enough to make you a hero.

One of the Compassion staffers in Colombia put it to us this way:

“You are proof that sponsors exist. When they see you the children realize they are writing to real people who care. They look at you and want to be like you when they grow up.”

Every home I’ve visited, every child I’ve talked to, has resulted in somebody thanking me for coming such a long way. Nobody is asking for a handout. When my friend Lee met his sponsor child today he gave him a Caramello bar (a rare treat) and Miguel instantly broke it into pieces and shared it with his friends.  

There is no sense of entitlement here. These kids want nothing from you but love.

This afternoon I visited a classroom at the project and a beautiful little girl caught my eye. Every time I looked at her she would smile shyly and hold my gaze. A few hours later I was invited to her home to meet her family.Olga's House

Olga is the youngest of ten siblings in a home with a diligent mother who works in domestic labor and a father who only makes an appearance when it’s convenient. While their home has electricity (a light bulb dangling from a dangerous looking wire) and running water, one wall is made out of carpet and the ceiling consists of scrap metal. Her mother told us their biggest problem is that it often rains inside their house. They pay monthly rent to live in a shack that doesn’t even protect them from the elements. 

The entire family sleeps in one room. A bunk bed made for two is shared by six people. Yet Olga invited us into her home with smiles and jabbered away.

“Sit down. Please sit down,” she said as she went to a drawer and pulled out letters from her sponsor and the few family photos she owned. She wanted us to see her entire family.

Her brother Nicholas was forced to drop out of middle school after being jumped by a gang. Yet their mother still has dreams for her children.

“I want them to live in a nicer place and get away from here,” she said. There was no shame in the way she said it. Only hope. The opportunities Compassion offers Olga make a different future possible. She can be the one to break the chain of poverty in her family.  Michael and Olga and Laura

As we were leaving Olga’s mother looked at our group and said, “I will pray that God illuminates each of you and makes you even better at what you do so you can help find more sponsors for children.”

In that moment I was undone. Instead of asking God to change her circumstances she asked Him to bless me and my career as a writer so that I will be able to help more children. She wants other children to benefit like Olga and have hope for a brighter future. Again I witnessed someone with nothing give what she had.

It’s women like that who truly deserve to have glitter in their hair.

It Only Takes One

Monday, August 16th, 2010

Lopez Family

Today I stood in the middle of a neighborhood unlike any other I have ever seen. In a mountainside community in Bogota, Colombia, people who have lost their homes have sought refuge by building makeshift houses out of whatever material they could find. Broken bricks, shards of glass, rotting boards and pieces of scrap metal were all melded together to make living spaces.

First, I visited the Lopez family. They are a family of five living in a two room shack with no running water and limited use of gas for cooking. Their floor was made of rotting boards stretched over a large hole in the dirt. When I stood on it I could feel the wood bow beneath my weight and I feared their house might literally collapse around me.

Christian, their fourteen year old son, is enrolled in the Compassion child development program. For the last six years he has had a sponsor who writes to him and sends plenty of pictures from her life in the snowy eastern United States.

His face lit up and he beamed with pride as he talked about her and showed me the special place he and his family display her letters and pictures.

“It makes me feel good when she writes to me,” he said in Spanish.

When I asked Christian what he wanted to be when he grew up his answer was immediate: a professional soldier. In the bright eyes of this boy who knows nothing but poverty I saw something I recognized: hope.

Someone had instilled in Christian the power to dream. I caught a glimpse of something written in his sponsor’s handwriting hanging on the wall:Cristian

“God has wonderful plans for you, Christian. You will do great things.”

He believed every word.

My second visit was to the Via Tella family. The first thing I noticed when I arrived was the kid’s faces. Their cheeks were burned and blistered from the harsh sun and the blustery wind. These children, who have to bathe and use the bathroom outside, have no protection from the elements.

Alejandra, the five-year-old daughter of a single mother, has been on the waiting list to receive a Compassion sponsor for two years. Nobody has bothered to instill the power to dream into her young and fragile heart. There were fewer smiles in this house and more blank stares. The oldest daughter, a 12 year old, was quiet and withdrawn. She had already seen enough harsh realities to know life wouldn’t be easy for her.

One family had hope. The othVia Tella Familyer didn’t.

I left these homes to have lunch with my team wrestling with the reality of what I saw. Can a sponsor really make that big of a difference in the life of a child? Are words sent with love from the other side of the world really that powerful?

Before I had time to answer those questions Leonardo, one of our translators, pulled up a chair and began to tell me his story.

“I wasn’t a Christian when I first started working for Compassion,” he said in English almost as good as my own. “I became a Christian by translating letters between children and their sponsors. As they would quote verses back and forth and as sponsors encouraged children to believe God had good plans for them, I could hear Jesus calling to me. He was calling me to be His disciple.”

For once I was speechless. I let him go on without interruption until I heard the entire beautiful story. When he was finished I knew.

One letter can make a difference.

Sometimes one letter is at all it takes to make a little boy dream of a bright future. And, sometimes, one letter is all it takes for a lost soul to realize his or her need for a Savior. One sponsor, one letter, can literally begin to change the world by impacting the life of a child.  

You can write your first letter today.