27 December 2011

Is Christmas Over Already?


Hello Blog.

I was going to write this on actual Christmas but I'll be honest, I was feeling too lazy.
We had our annual family braai in Kerikeri again, it was meant to be in Whangarei this year but because of unforeseeable circumstances it was changed to Kerikeri. I think it was better that way.
Firstly: it meant only one hour of travel for those from Kaitaia, as opposed to two hours. And the Whangarei-ans only had to travel an hour as well! WIN WIN WIN!

This year has actually been the most un-Christmas-iest Christmas I have ever experienced!
I think this is definitely due to the fact I didn't make it back home until a few days before Christmas.
Usually I start decorating the house in early December. I put up Christmas lights all around the lounge, chuck a few pieces of tinsel here and there, and of course put up our tree and over-decorate it with heaps and heaps of random sparkly things and Christmasy objects.

But not this year!!!!!
Because it was only a few days before Christmas I really couldn't be bothered decorating the house. It takes a whole afternoon to put it all up, and then another whole afternoon to take it all down.
Can't. Be. Bothered.

I might do it next year though, seeing as I had a break from it this year.

To be honest though, the whole "decorate your house all Christmasy" seems a little strange to me now.
None of the decorations really have anything to do with the birth of Jesus.
That is what Christmas is about, after all.
For that reason I'm kinda glad we had a very minimalist Christmas. I only got a few chocolates as presents, but you know what? I am happy about that.
I don't need more stuff.
At least chocolates can get eaten in a matter of days (or hours, depending on who you are). I cannot even tell you the amount of times I've gotten things for Christmas that I've never been able to use and it just ends up cluttering up my life.

I think I'd just prefer not to give or receive any presents at Christmas time, unless its food. Food is always good. Hahaha.

Anyway though, the braai in Kerikeri was fun. And very civil.
I think my cousins and I are all maturing.
There were no outbursts or dramas this year. We all just sat around and talked to each other like... well... adults!
Its pretty strange. But good.
All in all, pretty decent Christmas though.
The fact that its not about us but really about Jesus was very apparent to me.
So for that I'm glad. Its easy to forget it sometimes.



21 December 2011

Back To Doing Nothing


Hey Blog,
So I couldn't write while I was in the middle of my summer craziness but now that I am back in good ol' Kaitaia I will try to fill you in on what's happening.
As you probably know I just finished an INTENSE three week film project with Student Life, the week before that I was travelling to Auckland by bus (took 6 flippin hours, pretty draining), and then by vehicle to Taupo for a very good friend's 21st. It was really fun, and I'm glad I was able to be there. After that I got another ride down to Wellington and stayed with a friend until the next day when I flew down to Dunedin!!!! My story already sounds pretty crazy, but it gets crazier because I spent the next week watching One Tree Hill DVD's and packing up my bedroom in the Gables flat I now FORMERLY lived in (since I am officially moved out).

Creative Media Project eventually started and that was a wild adventure in itself. I met some really fun people and had a great time learning heaps of stuff about film and then actually getting out there and filming stuff and editing it and putting it all together.
I'm not going to pretend like it was always fun though, I found it hard to cope sometimes because I desperately crave alone time. I also didn't have my guitar with me :( Usually I relieve stress by jamming out to angry songs, but I was unable to do so. Surprisingly I didn't have as huge of a meltdown as I initially expected.
I had a bit of a cry on my 21st birthday when my Dad told me our dog Sheba isn't doing so well but I managed to suck it up and carry on so that's all good!!! Dad isn't the most tactful person I've ever met...



We had so many laughs on project though, I'm super happy I had the opportunity to go and be part of it. Now that its over though I am pretty keen to spend the next two months with my parents and the dogs, and maybe try to figure out what I'm going to do my dissertation on next year too (that could be helpful).
I have been playing heaps of guitar since I've been home but I am yet to pick up the songwriting that I was working on before I left Kaitaia over a month ago.

I also can't believe its Christmas in a few days! Since I wasn't at home no-one bothered to put up any Christmasy things (because apparently that's MY JOB). I told my Mum I wasn't going to do it though... I'm too lazy... haha.

Oh yeah, yesterday I had my third 21st. I got one of those sweet as wooden keys with your face on it. Cecil never got one (because he's lame), so I'm pretty happy with it, haha :-P The party was pretty hilarious, it was 7/8ths older people and only very few that were even around my age. Couldn't have asked for much better though. My first 21st was on 30 September, second one was during project and on my ACTUAL birthday (it was really special because my friend Pen made me cupcakes and everyone sang to me a number of times) and my third one was 2 weeks after that. I feel pretty grateful I was able to have three 21st's, because I didn't even expect to have one!
Just goes to show that people can surprise you :-)

Anyway, so Christmas is in Kerikeri again this year. Should be good, but a bit weird because Emil won't be there :( It'll be good to see the extended family though. I have no idea what I am going to do all of January and half of February up until I head off for Dunedin again...

Guess we'll have to wait and see.


16 November 2011

Two Weeks In Kaitaia Already

Hello Blog,

This is my first entry in Kaitaia since last summer, and its already been two weeks!
What do I have to show for it? Not a lot. Haha...
No but in all honesty I have been spending most of my time by myself/with the dogs/with my family and its just what I needed.
I am leaving for Auckland in two days, at which point I will be travelling to Taupo, Wellington and then Dunedin. I won't be back in Kaitaia for a month.

Its good, its definitely the right thing to do. Briar, a very good friend of mine is having her 21st on Saturday that's why I'm going to Taupo. Since I have Creative Media project in Dunedin a week after that I figured I may as well just make my way back to the deep South from Taupo, as opposed to coming back to Kaitaia and then leaving again. That just seems silly.

I could have stayed in Dunedin til the project, but I honestly couldn't have handled it. Stress levels in the flat reach fever pitch around the time of exams and the full force of my homesickness kicks in. So I couldn't stay, there was no chance. The morning after my last exam I got on a plane and got the heck out of there.

Haven't really talked to many people since I've been back. I don't really leave the farm either, the most productive things I do is help my mum out with burning stuff/planting trees/odd jobs around the place like cutting down chinese privet (its a weed).
I don't go on Facebook much either because last summer I was on there WAY TOO MUCH! I don't want to be that girl who sits on the computer all day wishing she was somewhere else. I want to embrace the fact I am back on the farm, its awesome here!!!! So much space and its so green and beautiful. I can wear my shorts and gumboots and just walk around with the dogs. I get splattered with mud and the dogs scratch up and bruise my legs but its not even a problem.

Hopefully I can keep this "positive" attitude up when I get back to Kaitaia and the novelty of being home wears off. The fact I have started listening to Evanescence with the volume turned right up reminds me that my inner angst is still there and will continue to show up every now and then if I don't keep it in check.

But one good thing about the angst is that it is good fuel for my songwriting, which I have started to get back into now. I'm hoping to have a couple more finished songs under my belt by the time I go back to University in February.

I think that's all from me at the moment. Who knows when I'll be writing again! Cheers to anyone who read this, you're cool. :-P

09 October 2011

Third Year Is Almost Over

FLIIIIIIP!!!!!
I haven't written a blog entry since July, but technically it was before that because in July I just put my short story up. Man, it's been a crazy few months.

I know people always say that, "Oh my life is so crazy!!!!" But it really was, and a lot of it I can't write about because I don't wanna dwell on the past and bring it all up again and bla bla bla.
But to be fair, weird stuff always happens in my life, and I wouldn't have it any other way because at least it keeps things interesting.
And its potentially song writing inspiration.

Speaking of which, I haven't written a song since I left Kaitaia, it's flippin hard!!!!! Sure there is a lot of stuff I could write about but it just seems like such a massive task. I only know so many chord progressions, I should just shift the capo around a bit more on my guitar, no-one would know the difference...
I'm hoping to get back into songwriting when I go back up North, its easier up there. No distractions.


I'm feeling particularly nostalgic this morning, we had the Mothras last night, it didn't live up to what I thought it would be (in comparison with last year). Some of our team weren't able to make it, and it just wasn't as exciting as it was last year. But it was still pretty fun, it sucks when things aren't as good as you remember them though.

I feel like my time in Dunedin is coming to an end, but I still have another year next year doing Honours. It's gonna be an interesting year, it'll be a lesson in actually doing my readings and making an effort to get stuff done early. Assignments this semester have been less horrific than in the last one, it may be because I only have three papers or because I am trusting in the Lord to get me through it more easily. The last one is probably it. Its so easily to get overwhelmed by all the work but you just have to get it done. No point giving up, that's what I've found is important to remember.
Not doing any English papers has also helped this semester, I really love English but it required a lot of work.
I will probably stay a semester after next year and finish my English degree, if I don't then all my English work counts for nothing because you can't have a Minor with an Honours degree.

I don't like the fact I'm on the other end of my University life, it's actually going to be winding up one of these days, then its on to the next thing.

I don't like it when stuff changes. After highschool I felt like I had an emotional breakdown, I must have been sitting at home and playing World of Warcraft a lot because that's all I could talk about when I got to Uni.
Oh dear.
I seriously can't remember what I did the summer before my first year of University back in 2008/09, but it wasn't anything productive because I do remember feeling lost and not knowing what was going to happen. I feel like that's how its going to be when I finally finish Uni and move on to other things.

I won't stay in Dunedin I don't think.

But hey, one good thing that did come out of Mothras is the fact that a script I wrote for one of the V20 Conference videos got BEST SCRIPT!
I'm stoked about that because I think I would really like to get into script writing, its kind of the perfect balance of Film and English, both of which I am studying here at Uni. Maybe its too perfect...
Nah but I really love writing, as this blog would suggest.
But maybe I don't love it enough seeing as I haven't written in over three months...

Haha.. my bad..

I think I have compensated though, this blog is massive. And full of rambling and hopefully some profoundness but I can't really count on that.

Not sure if anyone will read this but me, but if someone else happens to, THANKS! Hope you've gotten something out of it, even if its just knowing a bit more of what I am currently thinking.


I'll write again in three months, hahaha.
Ciao :-)

19 June 2011

Deciding Not To : A Short Story by Martinette Williams




                                                                         KAITAIA


Dry air circled around me as I dangled my arm outside the dusty window of my dad’s car. Yellowed fields stretched out in front of us and the sun hung low in the sky. I tried to focus on the weathered signposts that stood completely alone against the grassy bank. I was finally leaving Kaitaia, a rough little town situated at the very top of New Zealand. I would miss the constant warmth that seemed to saturate everything here, but I knew that the cold, dark flat I was returning to would eventually replace these memories. I would begin to question whether Kaitaia was ever really as hot as I had imagined it to be.  My mind drifted.
.               .               .

DUNEDIN
Tears filled my eyes as I watched clumps of people say goodbye to each other. It was a surprisingly warm day, I thought. I didn’t usually let people see me cry, but the thought of leaving made me forget. Summer was not going to be fun for me, it was never fun for me. I wouldn’t even consider going back there if my parents didn’t make me feel guilty about it. It was, in a way, sacrificial of me. I had tried to stop caring about what happened. It was only three months. By the time we all returned to Dunedin from our own unique adventures, we could have all changed significantly. I didn’t want to think about it. My friends hugged me as I tried to quell the soaring anguish that was stirring up inside me.
“Why are you getting so upset?” my friend Robert asked me as I turned to face him with bloodshot eyes. I wiped away the rebellious tears that lingered on my face.
“I don’t expect you to understand” I replied coldly. Maybe I was being overdramatic about all this, maybe it wasn’t going to be as bad as I’d made it out to be.
“It’s only three months” I heard him say. He obviously didn’t know what it was like. Three months spent in isolation and smouldering heat, no-one to talk to but a bunch of animals. He would laugh if I told him, so I decided not to.
.               .               .
KAITAIA
I didn’t notice as we lurched over the airport speed bumps and pulled in beside the tiny building.
“The plane isn’t even here yet” I sneered, it didn’t actually surprise me.
The people of Kaitaia live by a different perception of time. I wasn’t in any position to try and change it, but I had personally tried and failed to adopt this way of behaving. My dad helped me carry my bags inside and I retrieved my boarding pass from a very tan blonde woman who stood behind a counter.
“You’re headed back to Uni, eh!” the woman laughed as she wrestled my luggage onto the raised platform beside her, I gave her a tight smile before moving towards where my dad was waiting for me,
“You’ll come back and see me in a few months, right?” he asked hopefully.
I replied with a quiet “yes.”
He hugged me before he headed back to the car. I trudged outside after watching him drive away and I slumped on a wooden bench that overlooked the fields and rolling hills. The plane still hadn’t arrived, and I didn’t know how long it would keep me waiting.
.               .               .

FLIGHT TO KAITAIA
The air conditioner was screaming at me. I wanted to tell it how rude it was being, but realised this would be pointless and a bit strange. Thick clouds were lingering all around the airplane windows, being a nuisance and getting in the way like unshorn sheep on a busy country road. I squinted at the harsh lights that blared down on me, they were making my head hurt. I could feel the recycled oxygen clogging up my nose and throat, and sucking all the moisture out of my skin. I was sick of travelling. I felt like I was being continuously handed back and forth from my two respective homes, like a child whose parents had been divorced. They would tell you it wasn’t your fault, but you still wouldn’t be allowed to stay with one of them forever. That wouldn’t be fair. I slouched in the sticky blue seat and tried to focus on the clouds. They were being sliced through by the bladed wings, dismembered and left behind. Discarded like used tissues.

The people that sat around me were nothing like me. I watched a man who was balding considerably shift uneasily in his seat, the plane was too small and he clearly didn’t enjoy being confined to such a tight space. I was sure that I could see sweat glistening on the bald patch on his head. I wondered why he was flying to Kaitaia. In a different circumstance I may have had the courage to ask him. I would have liked to ask every single person on that plane why they were going there. When I first moved away to study at University, I felt an instant bond with the people that I flew back to Kaitaia with during my first few trips back. John Steinbeck once said that “one of our most treasured feelings concerns roots, growing up rooted in some soil or some community.” For me, Kaitaia was the place I had felt rooted in, it was my community, my hometown. The people in this plane were inevitably connected to me by the place I had grown up in, the place that I had called my home for so much of my life. Now I looked at these people with contempt. I contemplated their motivations for going to Kaitaia.  It must have been mildly important, after all they were enduring an hour long flight in a rundown, off-white Beech 1900, the doors of which could have fallen off at any moment and I wouldn’t have been the least bit surprised.  I guessed I would never know why these people were going to Kaitaia, the only thing I was sure of was the reasons I was back here. It was mostly guilt, administered to me by my lovely parents, and just a hint of longing to return to the place where life used to be a lot simpler.
.               .               .

KAITAIA
 “If you hate it here so much then why do you even bother coming back?” My dad was yelling and his voice was strained with frustration.
I looked at him carefully. He had deep furrows on his forehead, from a lifetime of worrying. I didn’t know what I was supposed to say.
“No, really” he continued in a loud voice, “I don’t want you to come back if you’re going to be like this.”
They were both staring at me, my mother and him. They were tired of my negative attitude and endless whinging, something was going to have to change. I pulled myself out of the wicker chair I was sitting in and skulked off to my bedroom. It was overflowing with cardboard boxes that spilled their contents out onto the carpet. I snatched up the crinkled clothes littering the bed and threw them on the boxes in a heap. Packing up all my things had proven to be a long and tiring process, but my mother had insisted that I get it done before I left. I sprawled out across the bed and stared at the glossy wooden ceiling. I could still hear my dad complaining to my mother about me.
.               .               .

FLIGHT TO KAITAIA
During the slow decent back to land, I struggled against my feelings of hopelessness. I could see now that the ground below me was growing larger with every second that passed. The fields spread out further than the cramped aircraft window allowed me to see, there was nothing but fields. Eventually I began to see tiny farmhouses nestled beside specially planted walls of trees, this brought some comfort to me. The patchwork paddocks were dotted with livestock: cattle, sheep and sometimes even horses. There was life in this town, I thought sarcastically, it was just mainly made up of the bovine variety. Kaitaia was ridiculous, it was the definition of a dead-end town. I had read earlier that year that it was ‘economically stagnant’,
“I hope you weren’t planning on getting a summer job!” my friend Alex had laughed hysterically, I narrowed my eyes at him which only made him laugh harder. “Economically stagnant!” he’d cried, “That’s hilarious!”
I hadn’t thought it was. I slid further down in my seat and cast my eyes on the balding man a few rows in front. He was actually more interesting to watch, I had seen enough of the endless countryside to last me at least another year.
.               .               .

DUNEDIN
I ambled through the emptying aisles of the plane, gripping my black laptop bag to my chest and trying not to make eye contact with those around me. The smartly dressed cabin crew beamed at me as I edged past them, dark rings were forming underneath their eyes but they still seemed quite chipper. I was pretty certain it was part of their job description to always look so happy, it seemed fake to me.
“Thank you” I told them,
“Thank you!!!!” they exclaimed, I cringed from their cheerfulness and made my way out of the plane. It was an unusual exchange, to thank and to be thanked in return. It made it feel like it wasn’t genuine. Once I was out onto the smooth grey tiles of the airport, the desperation I had felt for the last three months began to fall away. Pico Iyer once wrote that the airport is the “spiritual centre of the double life: you get on as one person and get off as another.” When I returned to this airport, a part of me was subsequently returned. The part that was blissful and uncontrolled, that knew the meaning of breaking free from oppression. As I hurried down the sluggish escalator and found my brother waiting by the main entrance, I thought about what it meant to have my happiness determined by whether I was in Kaitaia or Dunedin. I hugged my brother and only then realised how drenched he was.
“So I guess it’s raining then?” I grinned, brushing water drops off his jacket, “It hasn’t rained in Kaitaia for over four weeks”
“Oh, that’s no good” he uttered, “Hopefully it will one of these days”
“There doesn’t seem to be any shortage of it down here” I smiled, I could hear the rain before I could see it as we made our way out through the airport doors. Cold air rushed at me as soon as we were outside. I took a deep breath and let light mist tumble out of my mouth.
.               .               .  
               
KAITAIA
This wasn’t helping. I realised that I was never going to get through the summer with this attitude. It was like acid, eating away at me, sending me into a dark place that manipulated my thinking. Convincing me that it wasn’t going to get any better. I had to fight against this, I decided. I told myself that going back to Kaitaia was going to be a good thing, it was going to be incredible. A huge part of me didn’t believe this, but I had to be hopeful. I sat up in the sticky blue seat as the airplane lurched and collided with the ground, causing everything to jolt and rumble.
“It’s going to be ok” I said aloud, the roaring of the wheels on tarmac drowned out my words.
“I’m going to make the most of this.” I spoke it into being. I began to think about the father I had not seen in eight months, and my spirit lifted. A forgotten love for this hick-town returned to me. I peered out the window and saw the tiny airport slowly come into view. It looked like a regular office building, a very quaint one. The white paint was dull and faded, and nothing but countryside unfolded behind it. I smiled at the thought of getting off the plane and being greeted by my family. They had told me the night before how excited they were for my return, I owed it to them to at least try to enjoy my time here. The plane careened to a slow stop just in front of the wooden fence that surrounded the airport, tiny faces were lined up all along it. I searched for my dad but couldn’t find him, remembering that my eyesight wasn’t so great and finding him at this distance was unlikely.
.               .               .


DUNEDIN
This is what it was meant to feel like. My brother guided the car through the slick, wet streets that reflected bursts of colourful lights that lined the sidewalk. I could barely see the road markings that divided the lanes up and showed where to stop for traffic lights, but even this wasn’t going to cause me to panic. Rain drummed on the windscreen and formed huge shallow pools that stretched out across the road. When we drove through them, the car slid uneasily before the tyres were able to regain traction. I strained to make out the buildings that crept past us, it was hard to see anything through all the rain, but I was determined to make sure everything was the same as I had left it. I could make out the figure of the old Leviathan hotel that towered above the intersecting streets, and soon I could see brightly decorated stores that stood in the same place they always had. It looked treacherous outside, but the warmth of familiarity filled me up as we journeyed back to my flat.
.               .               .

                KAITAIA
I watched the balding man struggle to get out of his seat and lumber through the narrow aisle. I pressed my hands up against the window and tried to find my dad in the scattering line of people. I still couldn’t see him. I dragged my laptop back from under the seat in front of me and slung the strap over my shoulder. The plane was almost completely empty, I followed the remaining passengers out through the door and down rickety stairs onto the tarmac. I stumbled through the partition in the fence, scanning the faces of the crowd for my dad. The people in front of me embraced those that waited for them, I began to feel nervous and awkward, I convinced myself that everyone must have known no-one was here to get me. The luggage trailer slowly rolled up to the gate and people collected their bags from it. I trudged over to it and hauled my suitcase off the side, pulling it to a wooden bench just outside the airport doors. The sun was hot and blazed down on me, I dropped onto the wooden bench and fought to keep my composure. Anxiety was filling my body, and every hope I had was beginning to evaporate. I searched and searched for my dad in the dwindling number of people, but he was nowhere. There was nobody here that I recognised.

I sat silently and watched the people around me. I absently noted that the luggage trailer was being rolled around to the other side of the airport now, by a big burly man in a fluorescent orange vest. I felt completely alone and abandoned. Forgotten. My heart hammered against my chest, propelling tears that began spilling from my eyes. Only minutes had passed since I departed the plane, but all the optimism I had tried so hard to summon was now completely gone. I sat there and cried. I cried for the hopefulness I had been robbed of, for the way I had assured myself things might be different. Mostly I cried because I missed Dunedin. I felt homesick.
.               .               .

DUNEDIN
There was always glass everywhere. It lay scattered on the sidewalk and caught the sunlight like thousands of tiny jewels, casting off shimmering gleams of green and silver. The air was sharp, it clung to my face and hands and made me pull my coat tighter around me. I didn’t mind the cold, it was refreshing. It helped to wake me up, and when I breathed I could see it. I crunched the glass beneath my feet, the sound of it made me smile. I was walking back to my flat, the sun was shining but it wasn’t warm. It wasn’t like Kaitaia. I looked up at the wiry trees, which had branches that crisscrossed around each other into a big tangled mess. The sky was a very clear blue, it was an honest blue. I surveyed the sky for any approaching rainclouds, I always welcomed them and felt grateful for the deluge of water that was unleashed on the city. It was the only way that the vomit on the street was ever going to get washed away, I thought with a grin.
.               .               .

KAITAIA
Women I hadn’t noticed before began approaching me, putting their hands on my shoulders.
“Is someone here to pick you up, dear?” A voice asked kindly as I cried bitterly,
“My dad was meant to be here” I sobbed.
“Where do you live?” another woman asked, I discovered through my glazed vision that there were a number of figures hovering around me, I told them all in a loud voice where my parents’ house was. As soon as I had done so, I was bombarded with offers to take me there.
“I live out that way” I heard someone say, “I can drive you, it’s going to be alright, hun.”
I heard the sound of wheels on gravel and turned to see my dad’s dusty Toyota pulling up beside the airport building.
I took a deep breath and wiped my face with the back of my hand. Peering up at the women who encircled me, I noted that they all seemed very concerned for me, with frowns pasted on each of their faces. I told them that my dad had arrived, which seemed to satisfy them and prompted them to continue with what they were doing before they found me.
“Thank you” I sniffed.

My dad strolled over to me as fresh tears were escaping my squinted eyes, I glared at him and he stared back at me with a vacant expression,
“Why are you crying? I’m only twenty minutes late!”
He pulled me to my feet and put his arms around me before he carried my bags to the car. I slouched in the backseat and stared blankly at the weathered fence-posts that rushed by. Tears continued to fall, they seemed like an endless rain. I wondered if it still rained much in Kaitaia. I thought about asking my dad, but then decided not to.

15 April 2011

Nightlife Episode 1 - The Persecution

Ok so I'm meant to be asleep because its 1:49am and I have a class at 10am, but I had to write this down while its still fresh.
So I've just calmed myself, the crying has stopped for now, I hope.
Alright so earlier tonight I was doing Nightlife, its one of the Outreaches we run as part of Student Life.
It basically involves chilling outside The Cook with a Singstar and just sharing the love with people by allowing them to play and have a good time. If we get the chance to talk to them about what they believe, thats a bonus, but I have personally never gotten to that point.
Usually people bring up what they think about Christians in the first few moments of encountering us, as they ask us why we're doing this. Quite a few of the people I talked to wanted to know why we were doing this.
So I tell them.
Anyway, I was having a pretty good night. Hadn't had any decent conversations with people but that's standard.
By the end of the night we were about to head home and I saw my little brother Philip talking to this guy, and I could tell it wasn't going well. The guy looked really angry and I knew that I should probably get in there and try to smooth over whatever Philip may have said. He's not the most socially capable guy around, he is way too honest and will be blunt with people when sensitivity is required.
So I went over, and a few people followed me.
This guy was attacking my brother. Saying that science was real and that God was make-believe. I could see Philip was trying to reason with him (not very well, hence social inept-ness) but he was trying his best. I jumped in and tried to get him to understand why we believed in God, but he didn't want to hear it. I tried telling him how I have seen God heal people, but he thought it was a joke.
He started calling us idiots and mocking what we said.
He also swore at us. He said that we were stupid and annoying for playing Singstar and trying to convince people to believe what we wanted. Nothing I said was getting through to him.
He kept calling us idiots.
He insulted Philip and I told him not to talk to my brother that way, that he was being really disrespectful and mean and that he was allowed to believe what he believed just like we were.
But he was still angry, Philip told him "You believe what you want to believe, amen?"
And he got even angrier. "What the f*** does amen men? Don't come here with that amen ****"
We explained to him that 'amen' means 'I agree', but he didn't want to hear it.
Nice use of words Philip...
By the end of this altercation, I was feeling really upset and heartbroken. I know this guy through mutual friends and the fact that he hated God and Christians so much was really shocking to me. I have never had someone show so much hatred to me before. I had happily re-introduced myself to him earlier that night, but now he had turned on me. He called me a f***ing idiot as well.
My group and I finally decided to leave him because we weren't getting anywhere, and as we walked away I started to cry.
Nothing I could say was ever going to convince him that God exists.
How do you get through to someone with so much anger and hatred in their heart?
It was really heartbreaking, he not only insulted my earthly brother, which is a huge deal to me. People are not allowed to insult my family, ever. I am fiercely protective of them. But he had the nerve to insult my heavenly Father. To call what we believe, a God that created us and loves us, a joke.
All the things I've seen God do, and the miracles and healings and everything, the way that He has been changing my life for the better, none of it matters to this guy.
So all I could do was cry, and pray that somehow God was going to make a way.
How do you make people believe when they are so set against it?
Its a flippin hard thing.
I wanted to write all this down now so I don't forget it.
And when I think about this, all my little problems seem so insignificant when I think about all the people out there who want to know God but just never even considered it.
This guy needs God, so all I can do is love him and pray for him.
I hope this blog entry has been helpful in some way.
I realise now that sharing God's love is so crucial, and that sometimes you are going to get hated for it.
Sometimes people are going to make you cry.
They will break your heart.
But all I can do is pray that God will reveal Himself to them and bless them.
And with that, I am going to go to sleep, at 2:12am.

01 April 2011

My Testimony


When I was four I moved from South Africa to New Zealand with my family. I had a pretty sweet upbringing in the far north with my Christian parents, and I can’t ever recall a time when we didn’t attend church on Sunday. I even remember walking to church when we still lived in South Africa. Being a Christian was a part of my identity, I knew that God was real and that is something I’ve never been able to lose sight of. I feel like my life was generally smooth sailing up until I hit my teen years. 


At thirteen I had begun to acquire a taste for alcohol, and would drink it whenever I got the chance, even if it meant sneaking into the cupboard late at night. The first time I ever got drunk was when I was fifteen and a guy I liked was at a party that I wasn’t invited to. I was really upset and finished almost an entire bottle of home-brew wine by myself. Needless to say, it didn’t end well. I threw up everywhere and experienced my very first hangover the next day... at church.
Around this time I had begun to drift away from God. I was finding comfort in drinking alcohol, having lots of friends and getting attention from boys. This later turned to finding satisfaction in being unimpressed with everything, all of the time. This general apathetic attitude towards life would stay with me until much later.

My teen angst got worse as I got older, by the time I was sixteen I was painting hearts with black tar oozing out of them, eyes that were cut open, trees that drooped and sagged, and blood was a common theme. I could tell that something was obviously wrong with me emotionally but I didn’t even consider trying to resolve it. People would ask me what was wrong and I never told them. I wrote songs talking about how unhappy I was, how no-one understood me and some days I even longed for death. I refused to wear anything other than black and swore a lot. I painted my nails black even though my Christian school didn’t allow it. I would find myself in detention for refusing to follow the rules. My mum threatened to take away my bass guitar if I dyed my hair so I sneakily put black streaks all through it and no-one could really tell. I was obsessed with pushing the boundaries, whether it was breaking the rules at school, underage drinking or disobeying my parents. A phrase that was used an awful lot during this time by my mother was: “Why are you so defiant?”


At sixteen I was the bass player in the school praise and worship team, but in the same year I was also beginning to drink more heavily. I went to parties every other weekend and drank too much, I was one of the only people from my Christian school at these parties so I actually had a lot of people who wanted to argue the existence of God and things of that nature. I tried my best to defend the faith I wasn’t doing a very good job of representing, but I don’t think it ever really worked. I continued to drink up until a point when I realised that it wasn’t doing me any good, I think it was sometime towards the end of my 6th form year.


When I reached 7th form, I had decided that I wasn’t going to drink anymore because it was setting a bad example for all the younger kids at school. I think that this was also a time when I was starting to get my relationship with God back on track. It seemed to be the pattern that once I stopped drinking, I could focus more on God and reading His word. Unfortunately when I didn’t get Head Girl of my school, partly because of my drinking behaviour the previous year, I totally lost it. My angst reached an all-time high. I was furious. It took me a really long time to accept what had happened, to accept failure on my part. I never considered that the way I had acted in my younger years would affect me now.


Nevertheless, I finally got over my anger at losing the Head Girl position and took more of an interest in God. I was reading the Bible every day, and was actually about halfway through it. I had never been so disciplined in reading the Bible before and it felt good. I also got baptized with my family on 18 October 2008.


Eventually I took to drinking again.


By the end of 7th form, I felt like God and I were back on track and my teen angst was finally behind me, but I was still drinking. Before my final school prize giving I got really drunk on rum I had gotten for my 18th birthday. It was the funniest prize-giving I had ever been to. Shortly after this, I decided to stop drinking again.


Then I moved to Dunedin for University.


My Bible reading soon fell to the wayside as other things took priority in my life. My first three awkward and stone-cold-sober weeks in Dunedin were some of the worst I had ever experienced. I felt almost completely alone and out of place. I was struggling to connect with the people at my hall and my disgust at the drinking habits of everyone around me wasn’t helping. Sometime during my fourth week at University something clicked in my mind. Drinking was the answer. I took to the bottle like it was an old and faithful friend. I soon found that making friends was really easy and I really began to enjoy myself. As you can imagine, at this point God was taking a back seat in my life again.


It was during the mid-semester break in April that I discovered the Captain Cook Tavern and the subsidised drinking and points system entitled: “Power Hour” that was run every Wednesday and Saturday night from 9-10pm. During this time I was actually playing electric guitar at a student-focused service held by C3 church on Wednesday nights. As you can probably guess, Power Hour took precedence over my Wednesday nights and I stopped attending the C3 church. This is a perfect example of how drinking literally replaced time with God in my life.


During my time at Power Hour, I met a bunch of guys who I found out lived in a flat right next door to the Carrington building I lived in. I also began to hang out with people from Carrington who enjoyed drinking as much as I did. I stopped going to church regularly and when I did I was usually hung over from the night before. I also started going out with a guy who was part of my regular drinking crowd. He wasn’t a Christian but I was naive enough to think that it would work out and maybe I could even make him believe in God... eventually.


Almost all the time we spent together was while we were drunk. It became hard for me to spend time with him when we weren’t drinking because I got too accustomed to it. About two months into the relationship I was convicted of my behaviour and I decided to break it off with this guy before I did anything I would regret. The break-up didn’t go well. He seemed fine about it, but I felt like it destroyed me. I constantly prayed for God to make it better for me. 


I had retreated into a pathetic version of my former self. I didn’t want to be alone anywhere and would beg my friends not to leave me. I must have been a real pain. I had to stop drinking because I would cry about what had happened and make a fool of myself. I was no longer happy, crazy and fun when I drank, I was just a mess. I also found out that my dog Brutus, who I had grown up with and loved dearly with all my heart, had cancer. I started to do really badly in my studies and got really sick, probably due to the heavy drinking and emotional turmoil I was in. I remained sick for a long time.


It was around this time that I started hanging out with the guys who lived next door to me who I had met at Power Hour earlier that year, in an attempt to get away from Carrington and its dramas. Plus they had a TV. There were six of them but I never really saw the sixth member of the flat. He was never there. I was told this was because he was a Christian and part of a group called Student Life, which I’d never really heard much about. When I finally met him, I could tell straight away that his relationship with God was much different to mine. Throughout my whole life I always claimed to be a Christian, but he made me see that we were living for completely different things and that I was only kidding myself if I thought my relationship with God was all that it could be.
I really felt that hanging out at this flat helped me to heal from all the stuff that had been going on. They did tend to pick on me but I didn’t mind because they let me come over and watch their TV, and they never asked about Carrington. They were usually, on the whole, pretty nice guys.


Once I had recovered from my sickness and stopped being upset by the mention of my ex-boyfriend, I started drinking again. Usually it was with the flat guys, which I found was more enjoyable because they were way more relaxed about things. By the end of my 1st year at University, I was attending church again, though I’m not sure how regularly, and I was still drinking and swearing worse than I had been in high school. I came to the conclusion one afternoon at the guys’ flat that I would join Student Life the next year. I could see that whatever Student Life was had made some kind of difference in Slippers’ life (the guy who was never there, I found out later his real name was Cameron). 
I had a few chats with Slippers about Christianity and came to the conclusion that I wasn’t actually living a life pleasing to God. I was still carrying on with alcohol and making stupid decisions, and this would continue until halfway through my 2nd year at Uni.


During O-Week of my 2nd year, I went on a hunt to find Student Life and join up. That summer I had seen the massive transformation that my family had gone through. It was pretty crazy. My dad was a lot calmer than he used to be, and read his Bible every day and watched Shine TV a lot. He would try to get me to watch it with him but I wasn’t really interested. My little brother was similar in the way that he was passionate about God. I felt like I was the only one in my family who didn’t feel this way, and I was hoping that joining Student Life might change that. My dog Brutus had also passed away that summer and left me thinking a lot about death. I was plagued by the thought of death for weeks, and it scared me to think that when I died I might spend an eternity separate from God.


I promptly joined Student Life, and it was kind of cool, but I never felt truly accepted by them.
I kept to myself most of the time because the only person I really knew was Slippers, and everyone in Student Life called him Cam, so that was weird.
I attended the Student Life events and was part of the Creative Media team; all the while I was still binge-drinking almost every weekend. During our filming of the third part of ‘The Relationship’ series, as well as my scenes as Treebeard for our ‘Lord of the Gings’ movies, I was seriously hung over. But this didn’t seem to concern me, and no one said anything to me.


It wasn’t until I went to the Student Life conference at Living Springs that I realised something had to change. I was living a double life. Attending Student Life and trying my best not to let my foul language come out, and getting wasted on the weekends and swearing like a sailor. I wasn’t fully letting God into my life because I didn’t want to give up my partying lifestyle. I felt like it defined me, people liked me more when I drank.


In the end though, I decided to just stop. Stop drinking altogether, and for good this time.


When I got back from Conference, I told my flatmates and all my friends that I was done with alcohol. I can’t really remember the way they reacted but I know some of them weren’t happy. I felt isolated from these friends because they stopped hanging out with me as much. My flatmates were pretty supportive but it was still hard, they would go out and drink and I’d stay home and watch movies alone in my room. It was at this point in my life that I really got involved with the people in Student Life.


With a rebuilt relationship with God I felt like I fitted in better with the people who truly loved Him and followed His ways. I stopped being at my flat as much during that second semester.
I had become what Slippers (Cam) was during my 1st year.
If a random person had started hanging out at my flat they wouldn’t really have known me either, because I was never there.
I started to grow heaps in my faith and my walk with God was going pretty sweet. All my friends began to find out how serious I was about God through my commitment to Student Life. I was going out on campus and sharing my faith and talking more openly about God with my non-Christian friends. I would walk to church every Sunday by myself while my flatmates slept off their hangovers. 


By the end of my 2nd year, I had a flat lined up with four Christian girls I had met with Student Life and things with God were looking awesome. I attended my first mission project that summer and really saw God continue to work in my life.

06 February 2011

A Night Out On The Town

This is my first blog entry since moving back to Dunedin for the year.
Very exciting.
So last night I went to my first ever hen's night. It was a lot of fun.
There were many laughs to be had, especially because I am so immature when it comes to the sorts of things you would do at a hen's night. I'm sure you could think up some scandalous things on your own, they actually weren't that bad at all, I am just waaaay more immature than I ever realised.
But its all in good fun.
The part that got me about last night was when we went to town so the Bride-to-be could complete these crazy missions that all of the party guests thought up.
Now, I hadn't been to town since I gave up alcohol for good back in July 2010, so this was quite strange going back to these places I'd only ever been to while intoxicated. I was also wearing a nice dress and heels, like the majority of other girls in the group.
We got a few random yells and what not, which you would expect from people, but what bothered me more than the sleazy drunk guys were the insecure-looking girls wearing tiny little dresses that barely covered anything.
I could see that these girls were out on a Saturday night trying to find some sort of acceptance, whether that was by "having fun" (i've done it and it wasn't fun for me) drinking and dancing with their friends or if it was by finding a guy who would give them the attention that they craved. It could easily have been both.
I saw a lot of people in different clubs just sitting there on a couch. Looking pretty uninspired.
Why?! Why can't they see that they don't have to go out to the clubs to have a good time. It doesn't look like they are having a good time.
I did the clubbing thing, it isn't that great.
It's pretty tiring and gets tedious after a while.
If people want to have a dance, that's fine. But why do so many people go out with the intention to get wasted off their face? Is it to forget about their problems? Is it so they are confident enough to go out dressed in barely anything and find a guy who doesn't actually have their best interests in mind at all but only really cares about scoring a chick for the night?
It is so sad.
I didn't cry about it last night like I have done in the past, but my heart goes out to these people.
I want to tell these girls that Jesus loves them SOOOO MUCH! That He has an amazing plan for their life, that they are treasured princesses of the most High God who only wants the best for them.
They don't have to be out here looking for self-worth in all the wrong places.
I only find my worth in God. Nothing else that I do is going to make me feel as special as I do when I think about how much God loves me and created me for a purpose, as He has for everyone else.
I realise now that I have a real heart for telling the people who are out on the town about God and how much of a change Him being in your life can make.
So that is my plan for this year... and the following years.
God bless everyone who bothers to read this, you are awesome haha :-)

02 February 2011

My Summer In Kaitaia

Yep it is over at last.
When I first left Dunedin I was really upset. I didn't tell many people but when I first got home my dad forgot me at the airport. The minute I touched down in Kaitaia I started crying and didn't stop for about twenty minutes.
As most people know, I am quite an emotional person and cry easily if I'm upset.
By the time my dad finally arrived at the airport I was still crying. Random people at the airport were trying to console me, offering me rides home while I just cried.
Cried and cried and cried.
My dad didn't understand why I was crying. He was only twenty minutes late, big deal! Whats the problem?
But it wasn't about him being late. I knew that being back in Kaitaia meant I was going to be alone most of the time, and it was going to be a struggle just to get by everyday with nothing to do but work on the farm and watch movies all day. It doesn't sound that bad, but I'm used to being in an environment with people around me all the time. I like being able to visit people, and have people want to visit me.
Kaitaia is the opposite.
I do have a small number of friends left in the town, but there are only so many conversations you can have with them. Once the standard: 'What have you been doing with your year?' is over, there isn't too much else.
So the first month of my stay in Kaitaia was really hard.
It helped that I started helping out my church's youth band every friday, it gave me something to do and people to talk to (13 and 14 year olds mainly, but I wasn't going to complain)
My birthday was pretty average. Much less depressing than the previous year, but I was still sad that the majority of my friends were not sharing the day with me. A few of them weren't even in the country and I had no way of talking to them.
A lot of my old friends didn't say a word to me on my birthday. Friends I used to have in Kaitaia. That sucked.
I haven't even seen a whole bunch of people I used to be friends with in Kaitaia the whole time I've been back.
Stuff like that really gets to me and upsets me, but I realise that its just a part of life and I have to stop being caught up on it. Its not my job to try and maintain every friendship I ever had when life takes us in complete different directions and they end up being strangers to me.
I have to learn to let it go.
It wasn't until I went on the Nelson Beach Project that I started to feel happy again. I was around some of my friends from Dunedin, and made heaps of new friends with people that seemed to understand me and enjoy my company. I started playing my music in front of large crowds which really helped to boost my confidence.
It seemed that my summer was starting to turn around.
The night I came home from Nelson, I met a group of young people from the YWAM school in Matamata who were running a Kid's programme at church, which I helped with. It was super fun, and once again gave me something to do with my time.
After the YWAMers left, I started to fall back into my apathetic mood that I had for my first month in Kaitaia, but thankfully I was able to keep myself busy with packing up my childhood room and working on the seven songs I managed to write over the past two months.
Today is my last day in Kaitaia.
It is fair to say that while it started out pretty rough, I have managed to have a great time, but I still miss Dunedin and everything it stands for and am very excited to return.
I am glad that I was able to form a connection with my local church here, and I am looking forward to coming back and visiting my friends in the Youth Band. I am leaving Kaitaia in a much better mood than last time, and this makes me happy.
I feel that God has really worked in my life this summer, and for that I am grateful.
Seeing Him heal my grandma was awesome, and also just seeing what an impact He has on other people's lives has been eye-opening and inspiring.
So God bless Kaitaia, you aren't as bad as I sometimes say you are.
And I will see you again soon.

01 February 2011

Just an example of how awesome God is

I haven't really told this to many people but a little over a week ago my Grandma got appendicitus (she's 83, its uncommon but obviously can happen). She got taken to Whangarei hospital where they did nothing for 40 hours. My dad was very upset by this so phoned them and told them how this whole thing was gonna work, if-ya-know-what-I-mean. After they got a talking to by him they went to operate on her to take out the appendix. By this point, the appendix had perforated (started to tear open, allowing all the puss and gross stuff to enter into the rest of the body). The operation went well and my Grandma got sent back to Kaitaia hospital where she stayed for a while. All this time my Grandma looked TERRIBLE! Really pale and disorientated = not a good sight. When she finally came home she was still in a lot of pain and not looking very good.
She was covered in a rash because it turns out she is allergic to morphine, which she was on to help ease some of the pain. During this time my little brother was praying for God to heal her, but it didn't seem to be working. I also prayed for her to be healed before I went to bed, just because I thought I may as well do it. Two days ago my dad finally decided that we had to take her back to the hospital because she was still in heaps of pain and looking terrible with that rash all over her. When they did blood tests at Kaitaia hospital they found out that she had started to get sepsis because of all the appendix gunk that was released into her body after it was perforated. Soooo.. bad sign. A woman of her age can die from sepsis so this was quite worrying.
My parents drove my grandma to Whangarei hospital.
That night around 12:00am, according to my Grandma, she felt a hot burning sensation enter her body on the side where the appendix is, swish around, and then leave again.
The next morning they did scans and stuff, and there was absolutely nothing wrong with her.
All the infection was gone.
Just like that.
How exactly do you explain that other than to acknowledge the fact that the Lord healed my Grandma? It is so amazing!!! It just goes to show that if you pray, He really will help you out if that is His will.
All glory be to God!

28 January 2011

Son of a bee sting

Hi there!
Ok so the other day I went road tripping around the Far North. I went over the Rawene ferry, saw the memorial Opo the Dolphon sculpture in Opononi, and ate lunch at a hotel in Omapare.
Ah, it was a very good day.
Unfortunately during all this I was trying to nurse my poor swollen finger back to health as I got stung by a bee before travelling over on the ferry.
How did I get stung by a bee? You may be asking.
Well I was walking under a tree and felt something drop into my hair.
I reached up and took it off, thinking it must have been leaves or something. When I looked down, I registered that it was a bee, but before I could take the necessary action to stop myself from getting stung, BAYAM! I got stung.
It hurt more than that the 6 times I got my ears pierced. And I think thats saying something.
I haven't had a bee sting for a long time. I can't remember the last time it happened. I must have been 14 or 15.
I don't know why but I had it in my head that because I'm 20, I won't, I CAN'T get stung by a bee.
I'm an adult after all.
But when it happened, there was no crying and running around. All the drama of bee stings that I had experienced as a child weren't there. Yes, I had a bee sting. Yes, it hurt a lot. But all I could do was make a few frustrated comments: "Son of a bee sting!" and hold my finger in a container of ice for an hour.
This whole scenario has shown me that I must be maturing, because I managed the bee sting situation without any screaming and whinging, which is pretty amazing considering the way I used to react.
I am very much hoping I don't get another bee sting for a few years because they aren't fun.
MY FINGER IS STILL ITCHY! But I am dealing with it.
See Mum, I AM growing up? (Meanwhile, I am currently watching Hannah Montana)
No one ever said it was gonna happen all at once.
Ciao!

18 January 2011

Kids Aren't So Bad

So this week (well its only been two days so far) I have been volunteering at a Kid's Holiday Programme at church.
I was put on leading a team, which I have never done before, but I figured I have led the youth band and other things before so I should be fine.
Wow.
Its really had an impact on me, even though it has only been two days.
Being this positive influence to these kids has really shown me the need that there is for children to have those kinds of people in their lives. A lot of my kids, who are aged 9 - 10 years old, were quite aggressive when we started, and I am still telling them to be nice to each other all the time, but I can definitely see a change happening.
When I started this, I wasn't too excited, but now after two days with my team, I am really starting to enjoy myself and getting to know everyone.
I always tell people, and myself, that I don't really like kids. I'm not a childreny person. You know how there are always those girls who have been childreny people ever since you can remember? They always have little kids hanging off them, and when little kids spot them they yell their names and run to them?
Well I've never been that person.
Kids have usually been scared of me. But now I'm realising that its ok to be around kids and to act a little crazy sometimes. My scariness seems to be going away... slightly... :-P
That's all I've really got to say.
I'm super excited for the rest of my week with my kids.
See what I mean, I even call them my kids.
Oh and the YWAM team up here are doing a great job running everything, and its awesome having friends my own age again. Even if its just for a week.

15 January 2011

The Best Breakfast I've Ever Had

Like a wise person once told me (it was Dylan Jones) a good story is like wine and cheese, you gotta let them age a little first!
Well, this isn't so much a story as a memory.
When I was ten years old I went back to South Africa for the first time since I left in 1995.
I don't remember too much from this trip, but something I've always remembered is this breakfast that my Grandma cooked me. I don't know if I had this breakfast once, or a few times, but it was the best breakfast I had ever had.
I remember it so distinctly.
Toasted bread, with butter, fried eggs, bacon and deliciously savoury fried tomato.
IT WAS SO GOOD!
This may sound like your average breakfast, but it was SO DELICIOUS!
When I think about it my mouth waters.
When I ate this breakfast I was watching "The Puzzle Place" with my brother Cecil.
He got one of the cooked breakfasts as well.
I remember loving "The Puzzle Place" and watching it every day on this thing called Chubb. Or Tube. Or something like that.
Its so weird because I can still remember the theme song to "The Puzzle Place".
I am twenty now, so this was ten years ago and I still remember it all.
MAN THAT BREAKFAST WAS GOOD!

My whole life I've been trying to recreate that breakfast. I think thats why I love cooking eggs so much. Having eggs for breakfast is like my favourite thing in the world.
Although I don't eat bacon anymore (I'm vegetarian, going on three years), I have vegie bacon and it does the trick. The key is to cook the tomato just right, but to also fry the eggs a certain way. I don't know if I've ever gotten my breakfast as good as the one in South Africa, but I still try.
When I think about it though, maybe it wasn't the breakfast that was so awesome, maybe it was the sense of peace and happiness I felt in my grandparents house in Simon's Town, Cape Town. It was so warm and sunny and just fun! I didn't have a care in the world back then.
I think thats what I miss more than the breakfast.
My grandparents sold that house a long time ago and now live in Kaitaia, same as my own parents. So I don't think I'll see that house again.
And who knows if I'll ever be able to replicate that delicious breakfast made with love by my Grandma, but I definitely won't stop trying!

12 January 2011

Small Towns Kinda Suck

As you know I am back in Kaitaia.
Its soooo boring.
And more frustrating now that I'm back from Nelson where awesomeness flows.
*Sigh*
I'm also finding it really hard not to slap Hayden in the face.
Is it wrong that I don't want him to live at my parents' house anymore?
After all, its been two years now and he isn't showing any signs of leaving anytime soon.
I wrote on the fridge today: h go away
I wonder if anyone will get the reference.
They probably won't.
My parents don't really listen to me. I think thats why I'm so loud and crazy most of the time, its a result of being ignored for most of my life.
I JUST WANT PEOPLE TO NOTICE ME!!!!
GIIIIVE MEEEE ATTENTIIIOOOOOOONNNN!!!
See?!
I could be wrong about this but I don't think I am.
Three weeks left here.
I have to pack up my room and start cleaning out the horse truck for my parents tomorrow.
I'm sure the last 21 days are going to fly by.
How do I stop myself from physically assaulting Hayden though? Any thoughts?
I've included one of my most favourite pictures of all times below.
Alright, see you later!

Me at Nelson doing an impromptu Taylor Swift show for all my new friends :-)

10 January 2011

NELSON!

Hello blog,
Long time no see.
Today is my first official day back home after my whirlwind visit to Nelson.
My goodness! That place is much bigger than I ever realised!!!!
I had such an amazing time though. God was really moving in that place.
I got to share the gospel with this girl I met called Daisy. She seemed really interested in knowing more about God and Christianity, I just hope she doesn't forget about it because its all too easy to do that these days.
I made heaps of new friends, which was so nice after my month of hermitting in Kaitaia.


Its only three weeks before I go back to Dunedin, my true home, so I'm looking forward to spending my last few days with the parents and dogs.
Spartacus got really massive while I was away! He also stopped peeing in the house, so thats pretty amazing in itself!!
Anyway back to Nelson, hehe. I spent New Years with a select few of the Nelson team as we waited to be picked up by the Student Life van and taken into town to do our Nightlife outreach.
Unfortunately we were still waiting when the clock struck twelve, but we did a bit of yelling and gave eachother hugs so I was pretty happy with it.
When we got into town everyone was really really drunk, and some people were on ecstacy, like this one girl we met who was in really bad shape. It was at that moment that my heart just totally broke for these people and I started crying. I don't think people in my team fully understood why, but I just felt really bad about what I was seeing.
I know that in my life I'm going to see things that are going to upset me, but I can't help but have a cry about it. I want everyone to feel the peace and hope that God has given me. That might sound crazy to some people, but He has really turned my life around.
I think what really got me was the fact that I used to be one of those people. I thought my life was fine and that drinking and partying was just what you did.
Its really hard for me to accept that some people don't want to know God. They refuse to acknowledge that He exists. Even people who have known Him before and experienced what it is to have Him in your life and then turning away from it.
I don't mean to go on about it, but thats really what going to Nelson showed me.
I am so grateful and appreciative of all the people who encouraged and supported me in my Nelson endevours, God bless all of you.
I just pray I can apply all the things I learnt in Nelson to my life in the coming weeks, months and years. Thanks for reading this blog, I shall write again soon :-)