So, I expected the leaves to just keep on growing. I was horrified then, when every piece of mint in my planter turned brown and dry the day after I moved it here. I had failed again! At that moment, I was ready to give up on ever getting a plant to grow. Little did I know that it's not the leaves, but the roots that need to survive. In some crazy state of mind, I watered the brown leaves and carefully opened the window for the sun to shine in each morning. I talked to my little plant, hoping beyond hope that brown didn't mean dead. For six days there were no signs of growth. Then, one morning, as I greeted my dead little mint plant, I noticed what seemed to be a speck of green among all that ugly brown. Oh how I rejoiced!! I brought Aaron down to see it, and he begrudgingly agreed that it was actually maybe growing.
Now the green stalks are about 8 inches high, and my sweet little mint plant reminds me of a deeper truth going on in my life. I am putting down roots. From Oaxaca to Wheaton to Des Moines I've traveled. Each place I've put down my own little roots just like the mint plant. Every time I get uprooted it takes time to move past the dryness of a new place, but each time, little by little, new growth occurs. Friendships are made, memories happen, and roots grow deep. Today we joined our church here in Waco, and I am reminded once again of the roots I've left behind, and the new roots I'm growing here in the heart of Texas. I love that our little lives are growing and flourishing along with my plant, and I hope these roots can grow as long as this is the place God has for us! So, today, in the season of thanksgiving, I am thankful for new roots.