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As a kid, I owned a two-story Barbie penthouse decked out with spacious bedrooms, pink accessories, and an in-ground swimming pool. I logged countless hours rearranging the miniature furniture, making the beds, and setting the kitchen table with tiny cups and saucers.
Ironically, as an adult, I wasted far too many years doing the same. I bought the big Victorian house lined with lilacs set in the safest part of town—doorways framed with cherry molding and antique crystal doorknobs.
I spent more money in the last ten years at TJ Maxx than I care to admit.
But something inside was never satisfied.
It didn’t matter how pretty my house was or how many accessories I added, a part of me longed for more.
It’s a more modern day consumerism can’t buy.
A more 2.5 kids, a white picket fence, and a yappy dog can’t fill.
I never could put my finger on this more until my first trip to Uganda.
We roamed red-dust covered roads—hugged orphans, handed out Dollar Store flip-flops, and watched street kids play soccer with nothing more than a wad of plastic bags formed into a ball. They were so happy—so free—barefoot with hand-me-down T-shirts two sizes too big.
They had nothing.
Yet, they had everything.
I had everything.
But, it felt like nothing.
When it was time to say goodbye, I blew up one last red balloon and sent it out the bus window to the children lined up along the street to see the white mzungus off.
In that moment, I heard Jesus whisper:
“If I called you to move across the world and love these kids, would you?”
As the bus rolled away, it felt as if my heart was the Stretch Armstrong doll being yanked in opposite directions. I fought back the tears—tears which only result from a heart divided. Part of me desperately wanted to do what God asked of me, but the other half clung to the comfortable life I had grown accustom to.
In that moment, I made a choice.
I’ll do whatever you want, Jesus.
Although I was willing, Jesus never asked me to move to Africa. It was less about the question and more about my response.
That day I said, yes to whatever God had for me.
It was as if Jesus had been waiting my whole life for this yes—a moment of complete surrender.
He’s waiting for you, too.
You see, you can’t follow Jesus if your faith isn’t going anywhere. And God won't move you without your permission.
Maybe the reason you're unable to figure out God’s will for your life is because you have never said yes with tears welling in your eyes and your heart tearing in two?
This kind of yes moves mountains.
Maybe it’s not as complicated as we want to make it?
Maybe God’s will is one yes away?
Your yes is the key that unlocks the door God is calling you to walk through.
My yes has changed everything, and I promise yours will too.