Tag Archives: Family

Ixtapa, Mexico

About a week ago, I went on my tenth vacation with my grandparents, brother and cousins. Shout out to my grandparents who have taken us all from the time I was six. I’m so thankful for the opportunity they gave me to travel. If it wasn’t for them, I wouldn’t have been very many places. But I’m thankful for something even more important: the opportunity they gave us grandkids to get to know each other. My cousins are like my siblings. And I’m so happy for the relationship I have with them.

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We ended the ten year streak with a bang: Mexico. We stayed at a Club Med resort in Ixtapa on the Pacific. Needless to say it was beautiful, and don’t even get me started on the food. Amazing. We met people from all around the US, France, Canada, and Mexico (wasn’t expecting that last one, were ya?). Plus I got to do one of my favorite things: the trapeze!

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But a resort really isn’t my scene. I knew this from previous vacations, but it really stood out on this one. The third day there I was actually rather upset. Not angry, but sad and confused. You see, I didn’t fit in with any of the people I met. Their lives, their goals, their way of talking was so far from what I valued. Yeah, some of them were fun, but I felt completely out of place. It wasn’t that their conversation made me feel uncomfortable, but I didn’t know how to contribute. I mean, what was I supposed to add to their stories of getting drunk and the parties or clubs they’ve snuck into? So on that third morning I took my journal and found a nice spot on the beach to think.

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I also was pondering a question that one guy had asked me the night before, “So what is your friend group? Like what category do your friends fit in and how do you play into that?” I wasn’t sure how to answer because I had never thought about it before. I think I said something to the effect of, “I think all my friends are clever in one way or another. I respect their opinions, and they make me change.” That is true, but I wasn’t sure how I fit into the picture. I wasn’t sure who I was in my friend group because some of my friends are polar opposites.

So I thought. After about an hour on the beach, I realized why I was feeling so awkward around these people at the resort, and who I was with my friends.

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I was used to being the “crazy” one. I’m the most wild. I dance the craziest. I’m not sure how to describe it exactly, and if you were to ask my friends, they could very well disagree, but to me that is the role I play. I didn’t even realize I played a role until then. I guess I like shocking people. I feel comfortable shocking people. I get a sort of high off of it. But I wondered why. I figured, when it comes down to it, I like being different. The reason I felt so uncomfortable at the resort was because I no longer was in the role I was used to playing. I was the conservative one for the first time in my life. I was the one who didn’t do things or wear things. I wrote in my journal that day, “Is it true that if I just wore a bikini people would take me seriously?” Because me and my tankini over here feel like we were being excluded. So in Ixtapa, Mexico, I was faced with a decision. Either I changed the role I played or I played up my role. I could decide not to wear a tank top underneath shirts that I thought needed one. I could say things, ask guys for alcohol, grind, and kiss more than anyone else there. That’s what it would take to stay in the role I was used to. I didn’t want that, though.

IMG_0203Different. That’s what I wanted to be. Drinking and flirting was not different. Okay, I thought to myself. So what do I do? I’m not going to be the shock factor here. Then I realized that being different and shocking people are not the same thing.

Different for something. That’s what I needed to be. Anyone can act differently. Anyone can pretend to be anyone they wanted to be or as interesting as they wanted to be. But that’s a fake identity. I needed to be different for a reason. I couldn’t change who I was depending on who I was with. I couldn’t stay in the state I was in. I was changing. The world was changing. What could I be that would always, no matter when or where, be different and interesting and slightly scandalous?

Then it hit me. A Christian. Duh. Well actually when it happened it was more of an “Aha!” than a “duh” moment for me. No matter who I talked to, an identity in Christ would always be different. What is more interesting than some one who goes against what the crowd is doing and fighting for something more? What is more scandalous than a relationship with God?

A Christian. That was what my identity needed to be. I said “duh” earlier because ever since I was little that’s what I was told by everyone in my circles: Christ should be my identity. But it was then in Mexico that I realized what that meant. First and foremost, I decided to be a Christian that week.

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The tank tops stayed on. My swear free language stayed the same. I said no to the shots. And I decide not to participate in the skinny dipping. And I had fun. Not because I was shocking people, though I did probably confuse several, but because I knew why I was acting differently from all these people. I had fun because I actually made friends instead of making out. I had fun because I gained the respect of people and learned new skills. I had fun because I listened to people tell me stories from around the world. (I do have to say that I was totally the best dancer there, though.) The small group of people that I actually had some form of respect for noticed that I wasn’t the same. One guy, Santiago, even told me, “You’re different from all the other girls.” It must have been a good different because he and I along with my cousin Ean hung out most of the week.

Life is easy when you know who you are. And life is amazing when Christ is who you are.

Of course, the next question is “how does one live in Christ” but that’s for another time. I’ll write a post on that when I have some kind of an answer. Or I’ll write one to get some sort of an answer.

Here’s a video of the trip I put together:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2d8z3XPGFDA

Fire-baked Pies

Looking for a fun, summer meal? Ta-da! Fire-baked pies.

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Make your preferred bread dough. Roll into individual rectangles.

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Make chicken pot pie filling or gravy.

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Roast away.

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Want dessert? Berries or fruit. Sprinkle with 3:1 ratio of sugar to flour mixture. Add less than a tablespoon of butter. Not a fruit person? Nutella and peanut butter. Honey and cinnamon. Get creative!

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Once again my dad and I packed up the van and headed to Lake Geneva for Escape to the Lake, an Under the Radar music getaway. Once again we listened to some great music, walked a lot and met lots of interesting people. Over the three days I decided to work my brain and try to remember everyone’s name that I met without asking; so once I met them, that was it. I actually did a pretty good job considering I met over 20 people. Here are a few of them:

Tom and Melody- both there last year. Tom takes Melody for her birthday present each year. Melody is a school teacher. They have a son named Nathaniel.

Mary- drove seven hours to get to the camp. She just graduated college with a degree in interior design.

Zak- came by himself. Has a legit mustache.

Sheryl and her son Craig – Sheryl’s husband is in a wheel chair.

Sarah- Came up on the third for the Burlap to Cashmere concert. She lives in Chicago.

Amy and Walt – I remembered their names with A&W. Walt started going bald when he was 17. As he puts it, “God gives some people perfect heads and the rest he covers up with hair.

Sherri and Tim – were there with Sherri’s sister Grace and their family. Their oldest daughter went to college and with no help from them graduated debt free and was able to study abroad in Spain. Previously they had homeschooled their children.

Erica- Singer for Mercy Child. Her main occupation is photography. She shoots lots of weddings. Lives in Nashville.

Madeline- Mercy Child. About to be married. Also is a photographer. Introduced the Jones to the Cryars making it possible for The Vespers to form.

Kyle- Mercy Child. Amazing at instruments. He learned one of my songs so I could sing for open mic. From Texas, moved to Nashville ten years ago.

Nate and Andrea- Have a record label for people who do music as a side. Host house concerts. Nate is worship leader at their church. Andrea teaches piano.

Lishia and Dave- Gray Havens. Debating wether to homeschool when they have a family.

To remember peoples’ names, I remembered something about them and said their names over in my head. I also reinforced them by saying their name’s whenever possible: “Hello Erica” or “Hey Andrea can you pass the salt?” Very educational.

Although it is getting harder to travel with just my dad, everyone thinks we’re married. which is awkward and funny.

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Mercy Child: Madeline, Erica and Kyle Taken on the porch where I got my selfie with The Vespers

Trekkies Unite!

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The 5 Hayworths were together for the first time in forever and for the last time ever. We celebrated the occasion by running errands, going out to eat and buying these fabulous Startrek sweaters — one of my only impulse buys. Normally I would have been a stickler over $17.50, but I was buying more than a sweater. I was buying something hard to get: a sense of unity. Unity is what family should be all about. An unspoken knowledge that no matter what happens and no matter what someone does, everyone will be right there, loving, caring, and possibly laughing.

My sister just replaced her last name. A beautiful bride she was. Absolutely stunning. Thankfully, she married a Trekkie, so we don’t have to banish her. Ally was always mellow. It was hard to get her visibly excited about anything. But she was excited to marry her man, Daniel. The looks on both their faces when she walked down the aisle brought tears to my eyes. You could tell, just from their visage, that they were 1oo%, no doubt about it, in love. In fact, I’ve never seen her so happy as she was that day. So although the Hayworths are now only a collective of 4, we have a trek club of 6. And who knows when a little number 7 might pop into the equation.

Me, Kate, Ally, and Rachel before the wedding.

Me, Kate, Ally, and Rachel before the wedding.