Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Home is wherever we are if there's love there, too.


Sam. 
A 7 year old little guy.
Who came to us in May with his little brother, Elijah.
Sam.
A 7 year old little guy who’s past is, at the moment, beholding a lot of unknown and unanswered questions for us.
Sam.
A 7 year old little guy who came into an unfamiliar home with a lot of unfamiliar kids -- his only familiar face being his little brother who came to this crazy house with him.
Sam.
Well, Sam just began as most kids do in their natural resilience and ran around the yard and played with the other kids a little bit.
Slowly warming up to his new surroundings.

I wonder all too often what this must feel like.
You see, for me as a child I sometimes felt a bit awkward jumping into new scenes at school or other social settings, but I always knew that I had home to go to afterwards.
I always had home.

And here here was, another child that didn’t have a home to look forward to after being introduced to a strange place.
This strange place for now, would be his home.
And so he did what he knew.
He adjusted.
Quiet, he was. 
But he was adjusting, nonetheless.
And my oh my was he cute.

Day by day, he continued to grow and to love.
And he found a new best friend.
Walter.
This is one thing I love about Ekisa.
Although, they do not desire for ANY child to stay an any sort of institution or orphanage long term, they do the best they can.
They turn this place into a family.
Into one big house of dear friends.
And Sam found his buddy. And Walter found his buddy.
And a little innocent 7 year old boyish friendship was developed.

When Sam was admitted into the hospital last week, Walter immediately kept asking where Sam was. 
He was missing him and making sure that he was coming back.
When I went with Erika to stay with Sam at the hospital for a couple of days, Walter sent us with some toy trucks to give Sam to play with.
I wish you could have seen the look on this little boys face when we gave him the trucks.
And the fact that Walter gave them to him.... his face literally bursted with joy.
And the trucks haven’t left his side on that hospital bed yet.


The boys had a skype date at the hospital.
And they mostly just waved and shared long stares.
I guess that’s what you can expect for two 7 year old boys to do on skype.
Stare, and show off their toy trucks to each other.
But this little skype date.. you see, it made both of the boys gleam.
Because they know now what its like to have a best friend.
And they know what its like to love.

Two little boys brought to Ekisa by pretty horrendous circumstances.
But both were brought here at two separate times for a purpose.
They would meet, and slowly without even knowing it begin to heal each other’s hearts.
Because friendships are healing.
We were created for relationships.
And they are getting a glimpse of that now.

So I could sit here and tell you all of the insane things I’ve been learning in the past couple of days.
And I could type out every little thing that’s been happening lately to remind myself that we can only rest in grace alone apart from any circumstance on earth.
I could sit here and tell you all of the incredible things going on here.
And I will.
But in this post I just want to take a moment to praise this place that I’ve gotten to spend the past year with.
Ekisa.
It’s a home that turns strangers into friends.
A place that literally turns sadness into dancing...lots of dancing.
It’s a place of healing and a place of hope for most of these kids who never knew hope.
It’s a place of love, a love of such magnitude that it can overwhelm me sometimes.
It’s a place where kids are protected and loved when all they were exposed to prior in life was abuse.
It’s a place that restores starving bodies, but also by the sheer Grace of God restores starving souls.
It’s a place that’s not perfect.
And it’s not even claiming to be.
Running a house for 23 special needs kids is not so easy.
Not so easy, at all.
But its a place that does the best they can day by day.
And never goes a day without smiles. And laughter. And dancing.
They are doing the best they can one day at a time.
To use this home they have to shine a greater good to the world -- and the community here in Uganda.
To shine THE only good.

So I just wanted to put it into perspective a bit for you.

Sam now has a best friend thanks to God’s perfect placement of him in this home.
And Walter now has his best bud, too.
And even though Sam is going through immense unfathomable pain in the hospital, he know that he has a whole army of people fighting for him.
He knows that even when the shots hurt him, he has someone now beside him holding his hand.
He knows that when he’s hungry, he has people around him ready to help him eat.
He knows that even when he has to go to the bathroom and can’t walk, everyone around him with help him do even that.
Sam knows love.
And by that, he is showing all of us way more about love than we can ever show to him.
His love is raw.
real.
and pretty amazing.


I don’t typically like to ask for money, but I do know that we need your help.
Help with medical bills.
And other expenses as well.
So if you would like to donate, please email me at jakins92@gmail.com
or just go to www.ekisa.org/donate and the instructions are there you can follow for a donation.


It’s not about money.
It’s not about numbers.
It’s just about what we are all representing, giving, and showing in this life.
Whether it be by giving a check or by giving a toy truck as a gift, it’s all the same since its about the heart behind it all.
And its just about lives -- being lived under the surrender of the author that’s telling everyones story, afterall.
So thank you thank you thank you for just prayers.
They are needed and they are so so heard.

much love :)

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