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soul mates.

March 4, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

Let me just start by saying that this post isn’t about Stephen, whom I love. The idea of a “soul mate” was never in my vocabulary as we dated & married.

It was actually a few months after we were married, when I started working at The Spero Project.  I was working with Brad & Kim Bandy, who had just recently started a non-profit in Oklahoma City. They were working with resettled refugees, as well as other amazing social justice ventures, and I interviewed with them for a administrative role. I was told it would be ten hours a week.

We were pretty poor at the time, and this wasn’t ideal. However, it seemed like a great fit & a great opportunity, so I took it. I worked daily with Kim, who just told me what to do as she thought of it.

with-brad-kimAbout two weeks in, she said this was turning out to be bigger than she imagined; could I work twenty hours a week?

…Fastforward two weeks after that, and I was full-time. I was sort of in administration, and I was sort of just Kim’s sidekick to do whatever she needed.

And just a few weeks after that, Brad declared us soul mates.

We got along great. We brainstormed beautifully; we could finish sentences and read each others ideas. I can honestly say it has never been so easy to communicate with anyone else I’ve met.

I can also say that we are oddly similar. We started to discover all the ways we just think the same, and to be honest, it made our work even easier. You can be really efficient with your time if you don’t have to finish sentences.

It was a good year.

And then we moved to the Thai-Burma border, and I discovered what it’s like to work with people who aren’t your soul mates.

dsc_0255We still come back to visit their little family of four when we can, and we’re here this week participating in Marked, one of Spero’s most amazing events. Due to the snow and ice that has repeatedly hit us throughout our time in the States, we were able to participate in the Collective before Marked, but the actual event was postponed.

That left us bundled up in the living room last night with half of the Spero staff playing Loaded Questions over soup.

Stephen’s pulled question was: What is your biggest phobia or fear? 

I wrote down belly buttons first, but marked that off, because of course he would know it was me. He knows me well enough to know this fear, and its not exactly a commonplace phobia. I decided on unfinished books, which also can haunt me for years.

The person next to him was reading the answers out loud, and amidst the dogs, heights, and even unfinished books–he read out belly buttons. 

What?!

Of course Stephen gave me that one, thinking no one else in the world has that fear, let alone this room of seven people.

And this, after working with my soul mate for a year and knowing probably way too much about our similarities, was the first time we learned we have the same phobia. And that neither of us have ever met someone with the same phobia. {But it does exist, mind you: omphalophobia.}

Because I’m telling you, we are weirdly similar.

And I’m just going to leave it at that, while I sit here with my mind blown.

She was the best person to work for, and there are so many days I wish that Spero would go international or we would go local.  For now, we’re still friends, we’ll call ourselves soul mates, and Stephen & I are both really hoping we can work with Brad & Kim in some capacity again someday!

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this is america, baby: four.

March 2, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

And last, a few snapshots that needn’t be left behind.

img_0003A date night out to a delicious local restaurant!

img_0282Enjoying a used bookstore & coffee.

img_0284We had dinner out with {most} of our home church group in Little Rock! We love all the people and personalities represented here.

img_0002We have spent our fair amount of time in Target, which we love. And I discovered America’s newest genius item: Olives to Go!

this is america, baby: three.

March 2, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

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We took a trip out to Tennessee to visit the mountains with Stephen’s parents and visit friends! We were snowed in a few days, and it made for an all around cozy week of fires, hot drinks and conversation.

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img_0004And this is one of my favorite pictures of Stephen to date 🙂

this is america, baby: two.

March 2, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

Now that {most} of Stephen’s family is in Fayetteville and with kiddos, we traveled up there to spend some time with them!

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img_7824We all showed up to cheer Gabe on for his Upward basketball game!

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img_7756There are a lot of great things about this photo, so please note all faces, passionate finger pointing, and nose picking.

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img_0011Our nephew asked if he could ride with us after church one Sunday, and before we had left the parking lot, he asked, “What if y’all had kids?” He then recommended we have twins: a boy named JoJo Allen and a girl named Reagan Compton. He said they would be fun for us to play with when we get bored.
I feel like this was really thought through; or perhaps he was a send-in?!  🙂

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As part of our Christmas gift from Stephen’s siblings, they sent us to Razorback basketball game! It was SO much fun to call the Hogs! And they are having a good season and did amazing.img_0262

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this is america, baby: one.

March 2, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

Keeping up while Stateside is laughable. The sheer pace of this country is a force to be reckoned with, in addition to our lives here as we try to seize every moment with every person we see in every city we visit.

I’ll just go ahead and say that we fail at this: we miss milestones, even while we are here. Some days we are tired, and I know we miss out on actually being present. Other days we are just overwhelmed, and I know I don’t communicate well or I don’t cherish the person in front of me that I haven’t seen in ages.

We’re trying. Every time we’re trying to sort this out more and more: how to live there and live here, to just live well and to be thankful for the opportunity to do so.

This has been my mantra while we are here: this is America, baby! Be thankful.

So without further adieu, here is part 1, where we spent quite a bit of time with my family after my dad’s epic 60th birthday party.

First, we had Green Day. This is exactly what it sounds like: a day for all of us to wear green wherever we went.

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img_7121This included a trip to my brother-in-law & niece’s school to visit. Ignore the fact that we are blurry since we’re just happy to be holding nieces and nephews!

img_3029You can also ignore the fact that two of us have our eyes closed here.

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img_0182We always play some games, and unfortunately the Spurlocks & Helmicks always ended up at the losers table for Euchre.

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img_0230We went to All Aboard, which is one of my favorite restaurants in Little Rock. There is something very magical about having your food delivered to your table by train.

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img_0200We took a climb up Pinnacle with nine adults taking turns carrying five children.

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img_0246We did a triple date night, with the two littlest babes joining us. 

img_7166We sang Roar! and obviously these two are the best roarers!

While a large percentage of us were on the same continent, we attempted some family photos.

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img_2705This is dad’s favorite pose.

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to see the kingdom come.

March 2, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos Leave a Comment

img_0016Nearly five years ago, we fell in love with a Karen family in Oklahoma City. We met them through my first job, when I took five of them to the hospital for shots and ended up losing my car in the parking deck. All six of us trekked all the way to the top and then all the way back down, where we had come out of the building just one curve away from my car. I’m super-organized like that. And then we spent more time with them in my next job, where we started a little crafting co-op and spent time sewing and embroidering a few times a week. Stephen & I learned some Karen from them, and we went on adventures together.  We taught them games and new words and little pieces of American culture.img_1006Now, we come back to visit them when we can. We still play games and laugh. They have assimilated into American culture incredibly. Their English is absolutely unbelievable; they can drive and balance six jobs between four working adults. Now they teach us new things in American culture. The oldest, Thay, is in her first year of university and Htoo will graduate high school in just a few months.  Aye is amazing at taekwondo and is as tall as his dad; both he & Htoo are amazing at photography and love their local youth group. Moo is an honor-roll third grader with more spunk that I know how to describe.dsc_0120

dsc_0046 Just this week we celebrated Thay getting her citizenship just a few weeks ago. Her citizenship!  This is incredible to me, as we live day-in and day-out with so many struggling to officially exist: papers are more valuable than I could describe. And she is now a citizen of the United States!dsc_0112

dsc_0043It’s amazing to see what they have accomplished and how well they are doing here. They are truly thriving, and it’s really, really beautiful. While we are here in Oklahoma, we’ve been visiting them when we can. We have spent a few afternoons over games of Jenga and Life; we laughed at old photos of us together and painted pictures. And Stephen taught them slow-motion video on their iPhone 6, of course.

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img_0015And now, I can at least brokenly communicate with the mother, War Gay, in Karen–which makes our time there just so much more fun. I’m still working on understanding the father, Law Del Moo–the fast, low voices are really difficult for me. Really, we just thoroughly enjoyed our time with them this trip. We loved laughing with them and hearing them saying that things were “so not cool.” Because they are so cool now, and it’s just so fun to see! As we left one afternoon, War Gay put some money in my hand and insisted it was for the Karen shirts we had brought them.  They had said they wanted to pay us back for them, so I took the money and thanked her, thinking it was a few twenties. I saw in the car that it was more than a few twenties. It was way more than we had purchased for shirts, so the next time we were there I went back to War Gay and insisted we hadn’t purchased the shirts for that much. She insisted we keep the money. She said they had all put their money together: all the kids and their father and the family budget. They wanted to help us: the kids around us, to feed them and play with them. They wanted to help our community. I thanked War Gay, and then turned to Htoo, who was standing next to us. She asked if I understand what her mom had said, and I said yes as I summarized it. And Htoo continued…”We want to give it. That was us.” Even now as I write it, tears come to my eyes, because this is the clearest picture of the Kingdom that I can fathom. I am so proud of this eighteen-year-old, who understands that that was them, and now they are here, and God is good!  These parents have raised their kids to know what they have come out of, and these kids now want to see the Kingdom come where they were and where they are.dsc_0327And they are willing to live in a two bedroom apartment in the not-so-picturesque side of Oklahoma City, working four jobs and learning to live life here, while they give money away to a little community on the Thai-Burma border. Because God is good. He blessed us with this friendship four years ago when we were in the same country, and they bless us every time we visit. They bless us as they learn and teach us; as they discover life here in the States and show us a fresh perspective. They bless us as they love well and love fully, and give us grace as we float in and out of their lives for just a short visit here and there.dsc_0323

celebrating life.

February 22, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

To state the obvious, there are so many differences between our worlds.

While we’re stateside, we spend day after day observing the differences: we sleep on oh-so-soft beds and freeze in oh-so-cold houses. We browse Target for hours and, well, just marvel at new candle scents and intriguing new technologies and odd styles and olives in a to-go cup.

We notice that our feet don’t fit in closed-toed shoes anymore and how fast everyone drives here.

We are late, again. Except now people care.

The differences are endless: big and small, significant and insignificant. Sometimes we discover a difference that makes us feel like we have found a new home; like we’re suddenly foreigners here. Other times it feels like we re-discovered that amazing old sweatshirt that is just the essence of your childhood: they fit deeply.

What really strikes me is how slowly some things come on you. I didn’t adjust to the heat overnight, and if you asked me during hot season in Mae Sot, I would strongly argue that I have not adjusted and it still feels like fire. But then I return here and find myself shivering and layering and looking at a thermostat that reads 72. I suddenly realize that we there is a difference; and we are different.  The change just came slowly.

On Sunday, I went to a baby shower for a sweet friend of mine. She sent the invitation and a little note that said she knew I wouldn’t be able to make it, but she wanted me to know I was invited. I was able to share the good news that we were in fact stateside and I would be more than happy to celebrate her little girl!

It was here that I noticed a difference that had crept on slowly. I watched a room full of girls, so many of them pregnant! I watched her open package after package of beautiful little clothes, hangers, diapers, bottles, and baby lotions. I talked with my friend beside me, also pregnant, as she anticipates two showers this month for her little boy.

Being who I am–regretfully cheap–I first thought about the money that goes into a baby, and specifically the money we had collectively spent on showering this little girl with love.

I’m going to be honest about this, I questioned if we needed it. Do we need all the clothes and bows?

But I realized that this was money spent on celebrating the life of a new little girl–the marriage of a beautiful couple, the birth of their new family, and the hope that this little baby brings.

I thought of all the girls in this room that would have their own baby showers, in addition to all the wedding showers we each had. I thought of all the gifts my mom sends, and her stash of wrapping paper and cards ready to shower blessings on her friends and my friends and her friends’ children. These were all celebrations of life: parties and gifts and traditions to celebrate the life God has given us.

Then I thought of an email I received from my Dad a few days ago, telling me that a friends’ father had passed away, and I might want to send a sympathy card.

Honestly, this is a cultural practice I haven’t really practiced much, partially for my age and partially in being out of the country. But this, too, is a way to celebrate life.

All of these things pointed me to the same celebration and valuation of life. I think it’s actually an integral part of American culture.

I suppose many will disagree, and I know there are arguments. I do think of the aborted babies, and the protection of abortion by law. I do think of the growing trafficking issue around the world, even the growing existence of porn, and the devaluing of life that involves.

However, while I do hope to recognize how we could value life more, I also want to note the value that life has already been given in our culture. There is a difference; I might not even be able to pinpoint it or describe it. But I see it; I see how my perspective has changed.

I stood in a room surrounded by so many women and saw a really beautiful culture of celebrating life. It felt foreign, but it felt God-honoring. It felt like we were remembering and worshipping Him who gives life.

Then the Lord God formed the man of dust from the ground
and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life,
and the man became a living creature.
Genesis 2:7

loco{slow}motion.

February 17, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, stephen Leave a Comment

It started while we waited at the airport for my brother-in-law, and Stephen decided to show my dad the potential of his iPhone 6.

Before long we had a collection of slow-mo: at the park, around the house, at the trampoline park.

So here is our compilation, for your entertainment!

{Make sure you enjoy Stephen’s faces and grunts as he does a flip
with the camera faced toward him!}

tapestries and tuning forks.

February 17, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli Leave a Comment

Sometimes when we visit the US, I just want to stay.

And honestly, not because of the delicious food or all the English speaking, or even the soft beds.

It’s usually because I don’t like being the one who disrupts the peace.

All of Stephen’s sisters and their families have recently moved to the same area of Arkansas. His parents are eyeing houses and will probably be there soon, which just sets the scene for family birthdays and holidays and Sunday dinners. A few are looking at sharing land and building houses together.

And then there’s us: living halfway around the world, not buying into the land, missing family birthdays, and Skyping into Christmas.

In my family, we are much more scattered, but I still want to be the one who stays close. I don’t want to be the aunt who always gets on the plane; I don’t want to make my parents love & hate the airport. I don’t want to miss everything.

Sometimes I don’t want to be the kids who make our parents cry.

The more we feel like we should stay longer in Mae Sot or Burma or who knows where, the more aware I am of the burden to our families. I become more aware of the weight it is to us–how it changes our lives and futures–as well as the weight it is to them–it changes our role as daughter & son, aunt & uncle, sister & brother.

I was praying about this yesterday: praying for our parents and our families and our futures in another country. I found myself praying for God to show Himself to them in even this: that in our absence or in the sadness we cause, that God would be present.

As simple as it seems, this is the first time I thought of it from this perspective. What if God is showing himself to us in being away, but also is showing himself to our whole families in this?

And of course He is, because He is God. He is good and he is sovereign; of course this is true.

It was just a reminder that this isn’t simply a tapestry of our lives. This isn’t a tapestry He is weaving of just our lives, but of everything around us. Seven degrees of separation, if you will: all woven together into a tapestry of the Kingdom.

It reminds me of a quote I read by Tozer the other day:

Has it ever occurred to you that one hundred pianos all tuned to the same fork are automatically tuned to each other? They are of one accord by being tuned, not to each other, but to another standard to which each one must individually bow. So one hundred worshipers met together, each one looking away to Christ, are in heart nearer to each other than they could possibly be, were the to become ‘unity’ conscious and turn their eyes away from God to strive for closer fellowship.

In each of us knowing the Lord more and moving toward what He has for us, what He is teaching us, how He is shaping us–we are actually moving closer to each other than we every could by living within driving distance or celebrating birthdays together. We are tuning, weaving, whatever symbol you want to give it–we are unified in purpose, not in location or life stage or shared cups of coffee.

And this is true in family, as well as with our friends and the many people who support us. While we are Stateside, we just don’t always get to see everyone we want to. It’s hard to know there are so many faces we won’t see and new little babies we won’t meet and new seasons we won’t get to celebrate. It’s hard to know there are people we won’t get to thank for the blessing they are to us month after month.

But there is a unity being formed, as we are of one purpose. As they hold us up financially, as we pray for one another, as we celebrate new babies and new marriages and new jobs, as we swap Instagram photos: we can be unified, if we are being woven into the tapestry of the Kingdom, if we are being tuned to Christ.

the epic party.

January 20, 2015 by Stephen & Kelli Spurlock Filed Under: kelli, photos 7 Comments

This past Saturday, we threw an epic party for my dad. It was the work of an entire year to get all five siblings on the same continent and over 150 people into one room to celebrate him!  But he turns sixty this year, he’s one of the greatest guys we all know, and he is the BEST person to throw a surprise party for, so it was completely worth it!

We started with snacks, of course.

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img_2190And then we waited for the big arrival…

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img_2217…which did not disappoint. He was shocked.

img_2220Then he found my sister, Janel, the only one he didn’t know was already in town. We were missing a son-in-law and four grandkids, but it’s been awhile since all the sisters were in one room. 

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img_2137So many friends and family drove so far, and we are so thankful!  It was fun to have a room full of people there to celebrate Dad.

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img_2335Then we did a little quiz on Dad and got a few laughs! Here’s to Steven, the best emcee I know.

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img_2464And then friends shared their favorite memories & stories of Dad and told him just how great he is!

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img_2476Of course we had to light 60 candles, despite the smoke alarm risk…

img_2533We love you, Dad! Hope you enjoyed your epic party!

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