I have a deep passion and commitment to the ongoing development of spiritually strong and emotionally healthy individuals, marriages, families, leaders and cultures, helping you achieve your God-designed and appointed destiny.
I have a deep passion and commitment to the ongoing development of spiritually strong and emotionally healthy individuals, marriages, families, leaders and cultures, helping you achieve your God-designed and appointed destiny.
The coming and leaving of those we love, the experiences of love and betrayal, the witnessing of birth and death, care and indifference, generosity and stinginess can actually be our pathway to true freedom. All of these tensions can result in a deep, deep yearning for full freedom that is beyond the structures of our world.
Drinking the cup of Salvation involves emptying the cup of sorrow and the cup of joy, so that God can fill it with pure life.
Weeks ago, while mustering as much vulnerability as possible, I admitted to my husband that every time I attempt to slow down, this loud, accusing voice rises up within me. “You’re lazy!” it shouts. Shame and second-guessing immediately ensue, preventing me from making changes or stepping into slow and restoration.
“Cammie, that voice is your dad.”
This idea of slowing…ruthlessly eliminating hurry from our lives…is nothing short of extraordinarily counter-cultural. Society deems faster is better, waiting is wasteful, and slow is lazy with every message it can muster.
With this in mind, over these next weeks, in true Coach and Spiritual Director fashion, I hope to share with you ideas, concepts, questions, and possibilities that could help you on your own journey, as you seek to become closer to the One who loves you most, the One who delights in you, the One who has so much to show you, as you chose to wake up to the beauty of slow.
It all began when I realized I’d had it all wrong. Way wrong. Although difficult to admit, I was tired of what I call “white-knuckling” my relationship with Jesus – trying to be who I thought He wanted me to be and what others told me I should be. Always falling short. Always filled with shame.
Listen to this short 3 minute video to discover my top 5 Book Recommendations for growth, health and wholeness!
How did a challenge I received from George W. Bush change my life and how can it change yours? Listen to this quick video to discover how to fill your 2021 with much goodness!
And finally, do I believe God is who He says He is? I mean, REALLY? Even when life is horrific and it seems my relationships are all splintered and messy, and money is tight, and people I love are sick, and so many are suffering, and it seems like no one cares, and our world is messed up – do I believe God is who He says He is then?
Growing and changing into the person we want to become doesn't "just happen." If you fail to plan, you can plan to fail. Set yourself up for success in 2021! Listen to this quick 2 1/2 minute video and discover how to make a plan that works for 2021!
What are you going to do if your candidate loses? What about if he wins? Listen to this 2 1/2 minute video that will help you navigate any outcome with strength and courage! And thank you for visiting www.cammiewilson.com to discover more about coaching and spirtual direction!
Almost without exception, we all want to know our purpose. It’s one of those universal questions we ask ourselves again and again over the course of our lifetime, gnawing in our gut. “What am I here for?” We want to know we have value and meaning. We want to know we’ve made a difference, that we aren’t just taking up space and sucking up air. We want to know that we matter.
I’m good with feelings…the convenient ones, that is, such as joy, passion and anger. These emotions I can respect. They are straight up, clean and uncomplicated. These I can fit into my agendas. But more complicated feelings, that’s another story.
With all that is going on in our culture - Covid, politics, endless opinions and never-ending conflict, our energy levels are struggling! Listen to this quick video to discover one change you can make to get some of your power back!
How long has it been since I felt like I honest-to-goodness heard from the Lord?
I can’t even remember.
It had been such a long time since I’d found that golden-Holy-Spirit-nugget-of-truth, jumping off the pages, bringing clarity, solace, understanding, even a surge of energy. For more days than I could count, it seemed as if I have been merely going through the motions, doing the next “right” thing, hoping that eventually there would be some type of break thru - that familiar, yet unfamiliar, spark that would once again ignite the passion within me to not merely “get through” another day, but rather seize it with a force of gusto originating from deep within my belly, knowing that I was on target to do what He’d called me to do.
This morning, as I sleepily (and a bit grouchily) drank my first cup of coffee and read my Instagram feed, I came across this quote by Lysa Terkeurst, “A woman who is careful with her words is a gift to all who know her.” Goodness! That’ll make me think before I spout off at the mouth today. As long as I can remember, I’ve been plagued with the need to speak my mind. This has both helped and greatly hindered me as I’ve navigated through my life. Countless times have I literally cringed at the words I’ve spoken, wishing I could take them back and do them over, or better yet, not say anything at all. Over the years, I’ve constantly invited God, by the power of His Holy Spirit, to control this part of me, which as we see in the Book of James, is described as “a small part of the body that makes great boasts.” It’s been quite a journey and I still struggle at times. With all my heart, I try my best to remember, as James advises, to be “quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry.” James, like Lysa Terkeurst, is a very wise individual.
As I continued to sip my coffee, I began to also ponder the tone in which I speak. Sometimes tone is everything. Years ago, Stan and I were leading a team of short-term missionary students, as we did each summer, to the inner-city community of Islington in London, England. I now look upon these summers as some of my fondest times, in which we would inundate this community with love as we served, encouraged, taught, mentored and tried to be Jesus to children, teenagers and their parents. Our goal was always to communicate how much Jesus loved them and the life He had for them, all while making authentic relationships. Over a period of 10 years, we spent quite a lot of time in Islington, creating a deep love for this area and the amazing people who called it home.
During one of these trips, as we were hanging out with some teenagers, I was approached by a cute girl, who said, “You don’t sound like the other people that came over from America with you.” I explained that most of our team was from California, whereas I was originally from North Carolina, in the Southern part of the United States. She then replied, “Oh! That’s why you sound so different! It’s like when you speak your words dance!” I have to say, she made me feel much more confident about my Southern drawl that day.
As I, once again, ponder this comment, I am reminded that as Christian Believers, those who claim that their life and hope is in Jesus Christ, our words – the content, meaning and, yes, even the tone - shouldn’t be the same as those who do not follow Him. In other words, shouldn’t we communicate differently? In fact, shouldn’t all of our words “dance”? This makes me ask some hard questions… Do my words lift up those around me, or do they drag them down? Do they speak hope and promise, or do they discourage? The Bible tells us that the “power of life and death are in the tongue.” This means that each of us has the ability for our words to “dance” and bring life to those around us, as well as literally saturate others with death.
But it can be difficult at times, can’t it? We want to be full of life, but we often communicate death. I used to have a friend who, when she failed, would say, “I want to be Miss Melanie, but I keep being Scarlet!” (Apologies to everyone out there under the age of 45). But there is a way that we can be a Miss Melanie, so to speak, and lift up everyone around us with our words. And hands down, the most powerful way to do this is to equip ourselves (and our mouths!) to speak these words by saturating ourselves in God’s Word. God’s Word is where true life is. It changes us from the inside out. It’s is the only thing that can authentically enable our words to dance. Luke 6:45 (NLT) tells us “What you say flows from what is in your heart.” In other words, the first step in making our words dance, is a heart transformation, which only God can do. It’s not a mouth issue…it’s a heart issue.
Our words have incredible power. More, I believe, than we are even humanly capable of comprehending. So as we go about our days, beginning today, I invite you in joining me in giving extra thought to our words, especially with those whom God has entrusted us with. I know that there will be challenging times when our words may not want to “dance.” But I am confident that if we daily look into God’s Word, if we humble ourselves, and if we ask God for His touch upon our speech, our words will definitely be dancing!