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  • Thanksgiving!

    So I always seem to forget exactly how wonderful Thanksgiving has always been here.  I think I tend to focus on the fact that I am not home the days leading up to it.  Then I remember quickly how my LBOM family never disappoints in the holiday department!  We had a wonderful Thanksgiving Dinner with over and above all the trimmings!  Really, it was quite wonderful! 


    My whopping 9lb turkey, that was done by 11am! :)  


    Stuffing in the crockpot……I could eat this alone and be totally content….so good!


    Jana cookin up a feast!  (Isn’t she cute? :) )


    Decorating the Lackey’s tree!  I loved that Jana had the interns help decorate her tree this year.


    Ashley and Mmpula doing a ballet show.

     
    Andrea….oh how we’ll miss you next year. :(  


    I didn’t get a photo till after the meal…..looks like we tore it up doesn’t it!?

    All down the isle and even on the island on the other side.  If you didn’t find something to fill your belly, well then you were crazy!


    Watch out for Brenda! :)  


    Piper and Cree!  Piper was modeling the little handmade Shrug sweater that Linda knitted for her granddaughter who is just a month younger than Piper.  I loved it…..she has an “order” for another one. :)  


    Piper enjoyed the crack in the Lackey’s leather couch……she also enjoyed mashed potatoes!


    Hanging out with Theresa……I love this face!  She’s really checking out her glasses!

  • Trimmin the tree…….

    Well we didn’t put our tree up this year since we are leaving in one week.  That didn’t stop Andrew from helping trim the Lackey’s tree! 

    **Thanks Ashley for this great photo!**

  • One more……

    I just read this and thought I would share as it’s so true today!  I also had to smile, as I know I am not the only one wishing I could be around an American table with family today, but it’s all what you make of it and I am thankful that I am with others that make it special! 

    No Matter the Soil on my Soles

    Autumn

    Photo by Nicholas

    When we first moved overseas not quite three years ago, we didn’t know many people in our new country.  In fact, we knew two couples, of which the only connection we had with them was that we were all American expats.

    As we’ve settled more into the groove of being foreigners in a foreign land, we’re less dependent on our similarly-cultured comrades, but our relationships with them were still a catalyst for our making-or-breaking during our first year.

    Before we moved, one of my sentimental concerns about living the cross-cultural life was holidays.  You know, the traditional American celebrations, ranging from Independence Day to Thanksgiving.  I’ve always been a bit Rockwellian, but it intensifies during the last few months of the year, when we’re hit with holiday after holiday like a rapid-fire machine gun.

    It’s no different living in another land.  In fact, this illness is a bit more aggressive, seeing as we miss out on the everyday life of our homeland, from Rudy’s barbecue sauce to cherry limeades from Sonic.  So Turkey, dressing, and cranberries?  Don’t even get me started.

    I wanted a Thanksgiving.  I needed that extra-chairs-around-the-table, six-kinds-of-potatoes, whip-out-the-kids-table kind of moment.  Even though it’s a holiday devoted soley to giving thanks for our American heritage, I knew I needed that day to separate itself from the daily cultural and linguistic pressures of this strange land.  I craved football, crunching leaves, pumpkin pie.

    Autumn leaves

    Photo by Dominic Alves

    Turns out my expat friends felt similarly.  So we made plans to host Thanksgiving at our place, a first for me.  We said the more the merrier, spread the word to any long-lost American living abroad that you know. 

    My husband went to our local food market.  We’d never seen whole turkeys here before, but their purchase was rumored possible.  He asked the butcher, in his broken language skills, if he could buy a whole turkey.

    The butcher said he’d order one to be special delivered next week.  How big?, he wondered.  My husband said as big as you can get.

    The next week, it was there, waiting for us at the store, in all its six kilo glory.  As a long shot, he asked if the butcher had another one.  If he came back that afternoon, the butcher said, he’d have it ready.

    We had no brining bags, but we wanted to try this delicious-sounding apple cider brine we’d read about online.  So we makeshifted some brining bags out of gigantic ziploc bags, they themselves being worth their weight in gold, since resealable bags are an import-only luxury.  Since we reuse them here until they fall apart, we had to tape all the holes shut.

    Thanksgiving morning, we shoved the turkeys in the oven to start their business of wafting aromatic sentiment.  Ovens here are miniscule compared to our American monstrosities, so the two turkeys sat slightly overlapped, both sides crammed against either side of the oven walls (the crust on the walls are still evident today).

    We didn’t know who, exactly, would show, but we were ready for anywhere from four to sixteen.  Turkey leftovers never hurt anyone, and we’d certainly enjoy them for the next few weeks if we had Thanksgiving by our lonesome.

    Then the doorbell started ringing.

    Including kids, there were nineteen of us.  Nineteen people, mostly Americans, but also the random German, Turk, and a few kids of Ukrainian descent who were recently adopted by Americans.  I’m fairly certain there might have been a Canadian or Aussie in the mix as well.

    We knew most of the people, but not all.  Together, we jostled together in our small apartment, armed with six kinds of potatoes (no exaggeration), actual pumpkin and pecan pies, stuffing made from Pepperidge Farm bread crumbs brought over from the States, the classic green-bean-and-crunchy-onion casserole, and of course, our turkeys.  Our delectable, fall-off-the-bone turkeys.

    Thanksgiving pies

    Photo by Cameron Nordholm

    It was one of our favorite Thanksgivings of all time.  Here we were, Americans abroad celebrating together that we are free, both as nationals and as followers of Christ.  No matter what soil our soles touched, we had much to be thankful for.

    We crashed in bed that night, happy and thankful.  Thankful that God blessed this girl’s desire for a classic Thanksgiving in a foreign land.  He didn’t have to do that, but He did, out of His goodness.

    We Christ-followers have an endless list of reasons to give thanks — from eternity in Heaven, to God’s creativity in the changing seasons, to good old pumpkin pie and the UT versus A&M football game.

    I am thankful.

  • Looking back……

    I found this post this morning from my blog last year and it made me smile.  I felt the words were just as appropriete this year as they were last year……….

    Thursday, 20 November 2008

    Giving Thanks and Turkeys……

    This will be my third Thanksgiving in Botswana.  I am a huge Thanksgiving person……it’s almost as important to me as Christmas.  I think the main reason is that it’s about the one tradition that has stayed the same in my family since I can remember. While family members have passed on, or been added it’s the familiar that makes me thankful.  It’s that familiar that I crave during this time of year…….my Uncle David’s fried turkey, my mom’s broccoli and cheese casserole and pistachio salad, my Aunt Bernita’s stuffing, and my Aunt Dorthy’s Carmel Brownies (if you don’t grab one or two right away, you loose out……she could make five batches and they would all be gone!).  While “craving” usually means food…..and I’ve done my fair share of listing those things, I also crave my family.  To just sit among them and soak it all in. To hear my Uncle Jack’s voice, my Uncle Bob’s silly laugh, or to just fall into a deep embrace of my Aunt Melodee…..those are all things I treasure (as crazy as a Cameron Thanksgiving can be at times! :) ) and things that I miss the most this time of year. It’s in these moments though that I am truly thankful.  Thankful that I have the memories of all of this, memories that I can wrap around me like a warm blanket or like a hug from home.

    On the flip side though, I am also grateful for my “family” here.  While we often times get a bit glum this time of year, my Thanksgivings here have always been filled with just as much food and fun as they are in the US!  You can get pretty darn creative when it comes to making sure that your favorite Thanksgiving dishes are around the table.  While the sweet potatoes might not be “orange” like they are in the US, or the green bean casserole doesn’t have those crunchy onion things on top…….we still manage to have something similar.  I have three big cans of pumpkin my my cabenet just waiting to be used for a pumpkin pie that I’ll most likely have to make a hand made crust for….no ready made pie crusts here!  But the funny thing is the main dish…..the turkey!!

    While grocery stores in America are probably boasting about their prices or showcasing their birds, we here in Botswana have to get a bit creative.  Turkey, as you can imagine isn’t exactly a preferred meat around these parts.  (It’s like a holiday ham……and for the record, I have never seen a ham,(other than yucky lunch meat ) in this country……this is totally fine with me as you can ask my mother, I am not a fan of the “damn ham”. )  Botswana boasts BEEF BEEF and more BEEF (and an occasional chicken here and there! :) )  Thankfully a local butcher and friend in town can get their hands on some turks for us…….please note that I said Turks Plural!!  I went shopping for the birds today.  While you might be picking out a plump 15lb bird, I on the other hand am having to pick out a few birds to make our holiday feast.  Turkey’s here are SMALL……think a roasted chicken and double it….that’s about our turkeys!  I bought three turkeys today…..all at just over 7lbs each.  I bought one for our family so I could cook it in December (Kev and I love our turkey!) and it weighed the same as Andrew did when he was born….3.1kg……7lbs on the nose!  So trust me when I say……be thankful for your plump Turkeys!!! :)

    ****This year I found almost 9lb turkeys and my bird is already in the oven!  I am longing to be with my family today, but once again I am still with family!  I am thankful that I have my little family of 4 here with me, but also thankful that I have my mission family to celebrate with too!   My heart is thankful today……..

    Happy Thanksgiving from Botswana! 

  • Two little blessings……

    Today I am thankful for these two cuties! 

    There are days when as a mother I want to pull my hair out.  When if I have to say “no please don’t touch” one more time it might actually come out as a scream!  Days when I feel like I have nothing left to give them because I am tired from the night before because they were in my bed and I hardly slept! 

    While those days happen…….they are rare moments. 

    There are many more happy and joyful moments to mommyhood and I am oh so thankful for that!  I am thankful that there are many more good days than bad days! 

    Last night Andrew and I sang and entire song together and when we finished he looked and me with a huge smile and said, “Hug mommy!”  Like he was so happy that I sung that song with him. 

    After feeding Piper her bottle  these days she is so content to just lay in my arms and just “talk” to me.  I love these moments….soaking them in like a sponge because I know they are quickly passing by. 

    When Mma Adjei comes to pick Andrew up in the mornings, he’ll blow kisses till the van turns the corner.

    Sometimes Piper will just grab my face with both her hands and our heads will touch……I love that. 

    Andrew’s first report card boasted about how good he was and smart…….I love that he is smart! 

    The joy that I feel when I look at these two is so overwhelming.  Even on those hard days there will be a moment where all is right……God’s way of getting me a second wind. 

    So today, I am thankful for my kids!  I thank Him that He has trusted Kevin and I with such a huge responsibility! 

  • Oh give thanks unto the Lord……

    So the past few days I think I’ve had a bit of a pity party with myself.  You see, I should be home, celebrating Thanksgiving with my family.  I mean, that’s the routine right?  Sarah goes home every other Thanksgiving……that’s just the way it is.  Except this year, that’s not the way it is.  Instead, we are returning a week and a half after Thanksgiving and our furlough is looking much different than the normal.  I thought I was okay with this little change, but as T-Day gets closer, I realize I am not really okay with this little change.  Partially because I hear plans being made and I think, “I should be there!  I should be doing that too!!!”, but I am not and all I can do is grumble. 

    I remember Pastor Jerry preaching a sermon not long ago when he said that in times of trial or when you are down, “Just start giving thanks!”  He encouraged us to look at all the blessings that the Lord has given us and that when we start naming them there is just something that rises up in us that forgets all the trials!  When you give thanks, there is no room for grumbling. 

    A few weeks ago Andrea loaned me the “Hiding Place” by Corrie ten Boom.  Let me chase a rabbit here for a bit……..if you have never read this book……go and get it and read it.  It will change the way you think forever!  I tore through the book in just two days!  There were times where what she wrote was SO good, I had to just put the book down and “chew” on it for awhile.  Very few books have made me cry, but this one, I teared up in so many spots….not with tears of sadness, but tears of gratefulness of how the Lord protected her and encouraged her.  When I finished, I talked about it so much that Kev had to read it and now the interns are reading it. (I am actually in the process of reading her next book!)  Okay…done chasing the rabbit. :)

    In the book Corrie talks about their time in the concentration camp.  As you can imagine it was hell on earth.  Corrie and her sister Betsey were in their late 50′s and the conditions were horrible!  700 women crammed into a room with thin cots on different levels.  They discovered the fleas were so bad.  Corrie talked about how she had read 1 Thess 5: 16  “Be joyful always, pray continually, give thanks in ALL circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Jesus Christ!”  Her sister Betsey said they needed to thank God for everything, so they just began to thank Him for keeping them together, getting them through check points, their bible that they smuggled in, their thin blankets and so on.  Then her sister said, “And even these fleas!”  Of course Corrie was like, “What!  We are not thankful for them!”  She reminded her in ALL circumstances.  Weeks later they found out that the main reason that the guards wouldn’t come into the barracks (security was very heavy everywhere else!) was because the fleas were so bad!  As a result, Betsey and Corrie were able to minister to 100′s of women, many of which came to the Lord!  Had the fleas not been there, they would have had security and not been able to share the gospel. 

    I was reminded of that this morning as I was grumbling……..I need to be thankful in all cirucumstances.  I need to remember that I have SO much to be thankful for.  While during this season it’s easier to reflect on these things, I am also reminded that I need to remember them all year around!  So while I might not be home at Thanksgiving with my family…..I sure am thankful that I will be joining them in just 4 weeks! 

    Moreso, I am thankful for my salvation!  I am thankful that I am a daughter of Christ and that His promises are for me!  That it all situations and circumstances that He has it all under control!  That even when I mess up, He still loves me, forgives me, and gives me another chance.  I am thankful for all He has given me and for that, I will lift my hands and Praise Him……..for He is Good!!!!

  • Sarah’s Top Ten things she’s looking forward to about going home!

    In honor of our two week away departure here are my top 10!

     

    1.  Seeing family……see previous post!

     

    2.  Disney World!  We’ll be heading to Mickey’s House just two days after we arrive in the US.  I can’t wait and I can’t wait to see Andrew’s face when he sees it! 

     

    3.  Choices!  This is overwhelming at first, but I find I quickly adjust! J

     

    4.  Christmas!!!  The real deal.  No 8o’s decorations at Shoprite! No 100 degree weather!

     

    5.  Celebrating the kid’s birthdays in the US with grandparents!

     

    6.  Celebrating Easter with family for the first time in a very long time! 

     

    7.  Food Favorites…….I will not gain weight this furlough, BUT I will be enjoying a few food favorites in moderation of course! 

     

    8.  Catching up with old friends from all over!

    9. Snow!  There better be some! I like gloves and scarves!

     

    10.  Target…….ah, I love that place! :)


  • So just two and a half weeks from now I’ll be home in the good Ole USA!  People are already beginning to ask me, “So, are you getting excited to go home? ”  I always chuckle a bit inside when people ask this (and let me be the first to say, I ask this question to people too!) because really it’s sorta silly.  Of course I am excited to go home!!!!  Stars are already filling my eyes of things that I am looking forward to and I’ll be honest…..I sometimes have a hard time focusing and remembering that I have A LOT to do before I go home.  That’s always the hardest.

     

    People also ask, “What are you most looking forward to or what’s the first thing you’re gonna do when you get home?”  I always joke and say that I am gonna grab a Starbucks coffee because literally, there is one right as you clear customs in Washington Dulles.  It’s like a month to a flame and after 2 days of traveling with two tots, well we’ll need it! 

     

    Putting the Starbucks aside though, I am really just looking forward to being with our families!  I am excited that soon I’ll be able to give my mom and sister a big ole hug.  (Yes I love everyone else too, but really my mom and sis are like my buds!)  I am excited that soon Andrew will really get to meet and understand that he has Grandparents and Aunts and Uncles!  I am excited for them to see Piper for the first time.  And I am excited that they are all just as excited for these things as I am! 

     

    You see…….for me, this is the biggest sacrifice of doing what we do.  Being so far away from those you love.  Suddenly you start to feel how big that ocean is that separates you. 

     

    I can live without the Starbucks, the Cold Stone Ice Cream, the Mexican food and all those other favorites that I miss, but there is something about coming home to the open arms of family that makes all of that not even matter…….and that’s what I am most looking forward to!         

  • Lovely Lady, Lovely Blog Award……

    So last week I was given a Lovely Lady Lovely Blog award by a fellow missionary mommy in Bolivia, Angie!  Due to my internet, I am just now getting around to “accepting” this award and passing it on.  Angie thank you so much for this award…..you’re pretty lovely too! 

     

    So without further ado, I would like to award the Lovely Lady, Lovely Blog to the following……. let me just say it was HARD to only choose 5!  I could have gone on and on!

    Andrea who serve right along side me in Botswana.  She’s actually my neighbor!  Andrea’s been serving with LBOM as an educational missionary for the past two years.  You’ll be inspired as you read her stories of how God is touching the Youth in Botswana!  Andrea was even a boarding master for the girls for almost two years!  Andrea will be heading home at the end of the year and I will miss my coffee buddy! 

    Amy who is also a fellow mommy missionary serving in our neighbor country of South Africa.  Amy has two adorable kiddos, Silas and Alece!  She’s standing in for a ministry called Thrive Africa who is lead by my good friend Alece.  Amy talks about her kiddos and just being a missionary in a different land! 

    Layne who is a good friend of mine who is just starting her journey into full time missions with her husband (also a good friend of mine who served with LBOM) Jon.  Layne is just too cute, but also just really “real”.  I love that she blogs from her heart! 

    Rose is a friend of mine that I haven’t met in person yet, but hope to soon!  I connected with Rose in a fellowship group and she’s really blessed my heart.  She has two TOO CUTE boys Colin and Henry.  She’s a hip momma and always has great ideas! 

    Nancy is a friend of mine who was a TL with me our first trip to Botswana in 2000.  She has four children, two of which are twins!  Her kids are beautiful and always saying the funniest things!  Nancy is also a hip momma who does things very simple.  I’ve learned so much from her! 

    Go check out these lovely ladies…..you’ll be blessed! 

    To accept this award, recipients should do the following things:


    1) Save the IMAGE and upload it to display in your sidebar.


    2) Present the award to five lady bloggers.


    3) Publish a post presenting the award which names your 5 recipients and tells what you like about each of their blogs/websites.

  • Time’s almost up…….

    Well well well……Miss Sarah is back up on line in her house!  Praise the Lord!!!! 


    (Isn’t she cute! :)

    Just wanted to let you know that you have one more day for the Candle in the Corner Giveaway!  Have you checked it out yet?  All twelve prizes are listed now! 

    Here is what I put up, just in case you didn’t link over from my last post……


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    Natural Arrow: 9. 5 in across

    “Hearts”: 9.5 in across…..more like a trivet.

     

    Second row:

    Natural: 7in across, 2in deep

    Brown Swirl: 7in across, 2.5 in deep

     

    Last row:

    Purple swirl: 6in across, 2 in deep


    Pretty aren’t they?

    Hop on over to Heidi’s site at Moms, Ministry and More and look for the “Chip in” button!  You’ll be blessing some missionaries….including me! :)   Don’t forget to check out all the missionaries blogs if you have time……they are all beautiful ladies…..I know I’ve been blessed!