Two weeks tomorrow and we are off again.
Lots of us are beginning to get the proverbial butterflies in the tummy.
Me: I don't like flying. Cramped up in seat for hours on end is not my thing.
For Richard this is his first time flying. He sure chose a biggie for a first timer. It's not so much the flying part I don't like it's the going up, you know the feeling when you are up there and your stomach is still down on the ground then there is that bit at the other end. You know you are coming down and then there is that thump as the aircraft lands.
I don't mind too much when I am up there other than the space. Who knows perhaps one day one of my Members may win the lottery and buy me a fist class ticket to Entebbe.
Dream on my son::::::::::
This trip has been a long time in the planning and in a two weeks time it will be happening. I must hold my hand up to a feeling of real mixed emotions about it.
There is the excitement of taking a group to visit and see what life is really like in Uganda for the poorest of the society.
I recall the first time we were visiting. My son said to me "You know dad this will be a real life changing experience for you". LORD: It's me and be honest--------- "I'm too old for a life changing experience" but it really was and I must say not just for me. I see the work that trip has engendered and encouraged in Ross and I must be honest, I am really proud to see the effect it has had on him.
I hope the same thing can happen for Robyn and Richard, and also for all the rest of the folks who are accompanying us.
As I said to one of our Head Teachers the other day, "When you return from this trip and watch those programmes on TV about Poverty in Africa, as others sit and shake their head, You will be able to say------ "I know!"-------- "I have been there and I have seen it!"
IT DOES AFFECT YOU AND IT MAKES A DIFFERENCEI think one of the exciting things about this visit is that we will be accompanied by people who have powerful contacts and will return home and do a lot of good.
Speaking of powerful people I see we are being mentioned again in dispatches at the Scottish Parliament. Nigel Don MSP has laid down a motion commending Saint george's Church and the Good Folks of Tillydrone for their efforts in raising money for a Tractor at Bezallel School, Kamuli, Uganda.
This is the second time we have been commended by the Scottish Parliament and it is really good for Tillydrone to be acknowledged for the support that we as a Community are extending to peoples in Africa. They really have done well and I am so proud of them all.
EXCITED? :::::::: YOU BET I AM!It's one of those things that begin by being a really good idea at the time but as it gets' closer to the date for travelling to Uganda, it really is mixed emotions.
I am getting too old for all of this. I like to go home at night to Mary and Morag and my own comfortable surroundings, to go to sleep in my own bed. It's time for the old ones like me to step aside and let some of the younger ones do a bit more.
I am excited for the good that can be achieved by what we are doing in Uganda.
I am excited that the folks will come back and share their experience with others and hopefully encourage them to volunteer and travel out for a week or two.
I have already say to Two of them "They will go back again!" and I have no doubt they shall.
It was a good idea at the time and it's still a good idea.
If I keep telling myself that:::::::::: it just may get through to me and I will start to believe it.
Pop in past next week to read some of Richard and Robyns' thoughts as they make their final preps for an adventure of a lifetime.