
We were not used to hot meals. We were not accustomed to baskets of fruit available to us 24 hours a day filled with the sweetest fruit we had ever tasted. I had exchanged about 50 American dollars for Pesos at the airport, but ended up hardly spending any money the entire week. The only time I spent money was to purchase a few tiny inexpensive souvenirs at the market and two trips to restaurants for group outings. Besides these, the entire week was free aside from money spent on the flight. "What a way to live", I thought. Exchanging our labor, talents, strengths, and compassion for our basic needs being completely fulfilled. Living a life style in close relationship with God, and being taken care of completely while doing so. I wondered what it would be like when I got back to the states and I didnt have this lifestyle.


He ate free food at events on campus, mooched off friends and their leftovers, and went anywhere where anything was free. I did this as well, but Brenden had this expertise about it, he had honed the skill. NOT paying for food, to afford more missions. Brilliant. I decided after struggling to afford the flight, and after eating so well all week, I just couldnt go back to my old lifestyle. I wouldnt work my life away to pay for horrible, cheap, non-nutritious food all the time. I was already one of the cheapest people I know, but food seemed like one of those things you just HAVE to pay for. So I made the conscious decision to strategize better and quit paying for food.
When we got back to Charlotte we constantly texted eachother and let eachother know about any activities or events happening on campus that supplied free food and we traded and mooched off eachother. We incorporated and encouraged our mission-mates and friends to join in on the shenanigans. We quickly and easily developed a network of innovative, cheap, hungry and poor friends. Soccer games with free tshirts, specials at chikfila, events with free snacks, handouts on campus, care packages, friends dinner parties, Brenden even came to a feminist union film about water births for some free cake and fruit. It was great. It had a positive impact on my budget, and honestly? I loved the adventure. I was scavenging. It was a blast. Just a few steps closer in my quest for total food freedom. <3