• When I think back to the day I landed in the United States, I still remember the weight of that twenty‑dollar tucked in my purse. Just twenty dollars not twenty thousand. That was all I had.

    I came on faith alone. No scholarship, no savings. Only the belief that God Himself had whispered this journey into existence. His voice had been clear: Go. So I did.

    When I registered for classes, reality began to settle in. Tuition was high and everything around me screamed impossibility. Still, I decided to try.

    Every day, I went from office to office asking professors if there were any graduate assistantship positions available. One by one, the doors closed with polite refusals. After several days of hearing no, something in me began to shift. Instead of complaining, I whispered to myself, It is what it is with the Lord.

    That became my anchor.

    Morning and night, at 6 a.m., 12 noon, 6 p.m., and midnight, I prayed. I didn’t just pray I reminded God of His word, repeating it like poetry until my heart caught fire. “You said you will never leave me nor forsake me” (Deuteronomy 31:6). “You parted the Red Sea for the children of Israel; surely you can open one for me” (Exodus 14:21).

    Some nights, fear crept in quietly. I asked myself, what will happen if I don’t get a scholarship? But the Lord silenced that voice. He replaced what if with See, I am doing a new thing; do you not perceive it? (Isaiah 43:19).

    It wasn’t just comfort it was direction. Later, I felt Him speak again: “I will send an angel before you to guide you and bring you to the place I have prepared for you” (Exodus 23:20).

    And so, I waited not idly, but with expectation.

    A week before classes began, I walked across campus, knocking on doors again, introducing myself, asking if there were any openings. Monday and Tuesday passed with the same answers: No, sorry, not at the moment.

    Then came Wednesday. It was raining. I remember holding my umbrella, my heart heavy, whispering a prayer as I walked: Lord, You know where I come from. My family back in Botswana doesn’t even have forty dollars right now. If You don’t make a way, who will?

    In the middle of that prayer, I heard a voice gentle but certain “Search for the School of Health Promotion.” I pulled out my phone but only found the School of Health Sciences, fifteen minutes away. I was like I will go tomorrow because it raining.

    As I turned to go home, the same voice came again. “Sego, go.”

    I paused. Lord, it’s raining.

    But then, louder this time, “Sego, go.”

    So I obeyed.

    The rain soaked my shoes as I walked, but something in me knew this was holy ground the kind of obedience that only faith understands. When I arrived, I introduced myself to the administrative assistant and asked if there were any assistantship opportunities.

    Right in that moment, a man stepped out of an office and said, “Thank you for showing up. I’ve been looking for someone like you.”

    His words seemed to echo. I smiled through disbelief. He introduced himself, asked me to return the next day for an interview, and that was that.

    That afternoon, I thanked God as if the job were already mine.

    The next day during the interview, he asked about my home country and how I was adjusting to the U.S. Then he told me, calmly, “You’ll work twenty hours a week assisting faculty members with anything they might need help for. Congratulations, you’re hired.”

    I walked out of his office trembling a mixture of joy and awe. Outside, the air felt different. I whispered, “God, why now?”

    And His answer came softly: “Sego, you were applying for the wrong positions. The right one had your name on it. That’s why you got those twenty‑six rejections.”

    That moment changed me. It wasn’t just about getting the job — it was about realizing that faith is not wishful thinking. It’s trust in a God who orchestrates every detail when our resources, strength, and logic fail.

    That twenty‑dollars became a testimony a symbol of what happens when faith pays the bill that money cannot.

    Now, every time I face uncertainty, I remember that day in the rain, God’s voice cutting through the noise: “Sego, go.”

    I went and He met me there.

    You too can trust Him.

    Segolame Lebogang_

  • The weekend before last , I attended an XA retreat where I truly enjoyed the worship and fellowship with fellow Christ Ambassadors.
    One night, the pastor preached a powerful message called “Don’t Bail Out,” and on another, he encouraged us to immerse ourselves in the Scriptures. As I listened, I thought, “Wow, Sego, this is exactly what you’ve done.” I thanked God for His amazing presence in my life.

    Trusting God Despite Uncertainty

    Back in 2022, I applied to several master’s programs in counseling and was admitted to Southern Illinois University, but without funding. I told myself that I would not let this opportunity slip away. but will inquire of the Lord .Like David, who inquired of the Lord for direction:

    “And David inquired of the Lord, ‘Shall I pursue this raiding party? Will I overtake them?’ ‘Pursue them,’ he answered. ‘You will certainly overtake them and succeed in the rescue.’”
    — 1 Samuel 30:8

    I prayed, “God, I have been admitted but have no funding. What should I do? You are the Lord who knows best.”

    While waiting for God’s direction, I immersed myself in Scripture and came across Judges 18:6:

    “Go in peace. Your journey has the Lord’s approval.”

    This reassured me that God accompanies and protects us when He sends us on a path.

    Perseverance Through Rejections

    I started applying for graduate assistantships but faced many rejections ten at first. Though my own understanding told me otherwise, I chose not to lean on it but to trust God. Matthew 7:7 reminded me:

    “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.”

    Psalm 23:1 encouraged me:

    “The Lord is my shepherd; I lack nothing.”

    And Philippians 4:19 assured me:

    “And my God will meet all your needs according to the riches of His glory in Christ Jesus.”

    Faith Rewarded

    Today, as I write this, I have funding and am about to complete my master’s degree. I did not bail out. I trusted God even when it was hard. God never promised the journey would be easy but assured us:

    “When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and when you pass through the rivers, they will not sweep over you… When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned.”
    — Isaiah 43:2

    I encourage everyone to keep praying because we serve a God who answers. Remember, God will never leave you or forsake you (Hebrews 13:5). One thing I know for sure — we will never call on the name of the Lord and be put to shame. I have witnessed His miracles before my very eyes.

    Segolame Lebogang

  • There are moments in life that carve us into who we are meant to be. For me, that shaping began with loss the kind that changes how you see the world and how you talk to God. When my mother passed away, I was a child who barely understood what grief was, let alone how to survive it. Yet, through every tear, every prayer whispered in the dark, and every mile walked under the sun, I came to know that pain can be a holy teacher.

    This is not a story of pity, but of purpose. It is the story of how God turned sorrow into strength, how my mother’s last words became seeds of survival, and how faith carried me when nothing else could.

    I am not writing this so that people can feel sorry for me. I write because I have learned that even in breaking, there is building; even in shaking, there is shaping. I am grateful for the pain and the journey, because if it were not for what I went through, I would not be the person I am today. God knew I needed it.

    Before my mother fell ill, she spoke words that I would come to understand only years later. My brother and I were at the cattle post counting chicken eggs when she said, very calmly, “If it happens that I pass away, tell your grandmother to buy goats with the change left after the funeral expenses.” She listed what needed to be bought first her coffin, food, and chairs and then she said the rest of the money should be used for goats.

    At the time, I did not understand the weight of her words. I was young, and death was something that only happened to other people. Two weeks after her funeral, I finally told my grandmother what my mother had said. My grandmother did not ask questions; she simply nodded and did exactly as she was told. She bought the goats.

    Looking back, I see the divine pattern in those moments. God had already placed the future in my mother’s mouth. He knew what would come, even when we did not.

    My mother died when I was in Grade 6. In the rural village where we lived, there were no mental health services, no counselors, no one to help a grieving child make sense of loss. But we had faith and that became our comfort. God Himself was our counselor.

    After the funeral, my  brother and I moved to the lands to stay with my grandmother. Each morning, we walked five kilometers to school and another five back to the lands . The long walks were hard, but what hurt me most was watching my younger brother struggle beside me. Still, I thank God, because today he is a grown man.

    The year after my mother died, I wrote my Grade 7 exams (Primary School Leaving Examinations). I had always been an A student, but that year I got a B. It hurt deeply, not because of the grade itself, but because I knew I hadn’t been able to read or focus. My mind was heavy with grief. I remember asking God, Why did You take my mother? Why can’t something good happen to ease the pain?

    In 2006, I started junior school. I had no uniform, so on the first day of junior secondary school, I wore my old primary school clothes. Watching the other students in their new uniforms made me cry silently. A week later, my cousin gave me one of her old skirts, and for the first time, things began to feel a little lighter.

    Still, life was hard. The pain of losing my mother lingered. There were days when I thought of giving up completely. Once, in a moment of despair, I even thought about ending my life and my brother’s because life felt unbearable. But my grandmother’s love anchored me. She had no job, yet she gave us everything she could warmth, hope, and faith. Each day she reminded us, It’s going to be okay. God loves you.

    While other students wrote with pens, I used a pencil because we couldn’t afford pens. Our cousins refused to lend us theirs. But I kept going.

    One day, during Form Two, I sat down and asked myself a question that changed everything: If I don’t study hard and pass, what will become of me and my brother? That day, I made a promise to myself to study, to succeed, and to one day earn enough to make life better for us.

    I started paying attention in class, reading after school, and praying more. I would sit alone in one of the huts, open my Bible, and talk to God as if He were sitting beside me. I learned that He truly is close to the brokenhearted. I told Him everything my fears, my hunger, my pain.

    Later that year, I was chosen as Head Girl at Lerala Junior Secondary School. I didn’t understand why. Maybe they saw something in me that I couldn’t yet see in myself. Some said I was humble, others said I was kind or smart. They didn’t know the battles I was fighting inside. I had simply learned not to look like my pain.

    Many nights, I went to bed with an empty stomach, but I always thanked God for another day of life. When my brother started Form One, seeing him in torn clothes broke my heart. I often hid in the toilet to cry, whispering prayers to the God who had become my closest friend.

    Despite everything, I believed that God still had a plan for us just as my grandmother always said.I sat for my JCE exams  in 2008 and passed. By then, our goats had multiplied.

    When I was admitted to boarding school for Form Four and Form Five, my grandmother couldn’t afford all that was needed. We sold three of my goats to buy sheets, blankets, and toiletries. The money wasn’t enough, but my aunt helped with the school uniform.

    That’s when I finally understood what my mother had meant about the goats. They became our provision when we needed it most. God had arranged it all long before I knew I would need it.

    Now, when I look back, I see a clear thread running through every hardship, every tear, every prayer. God was there all along organizing, preparing, guiding.

    Indeed, my mother’s words were not just instructions. They were prophecy.
    And through them, I learned that God’s plans are never random. They are written in love, even when life hurts the most.

    Today, I write this story not just as a survivor, but as a counselor in training. My journey has taught me that healing is not about forgetting pain it is about transforming it into wisdom. Every struggle I faced has shaped the heart I now bring into the counseling room.

    I understand what it means to sit in silence, to ache for comfort, and to search for meaning in the middle of brokenness. That understanding allows me to meet others with empathy, patience, and grace. My story reminds me that no wound is wasted when placed in God’s hands.

    I once thought my mother’s words were simply part of a painful goodbye. Now I know they were the beginning of my calling to be a voice of hope for those who feel unseen, to walk beside the hurting, and to remind them that God is still present in their story.

    Her words still echo in my heart: “Buy goats.” What once seemed strange has become sacred. It was God’s way of showing me that provision and purpose often begin in places of loss.

    And so, I continue my journey guided by faith, strengthened by love, and committed to helping others discover that even through pain, there is always a plan.

    Segolame Lebogang-

  • .

    There was a time when my mother was very sick. They took her to the hospital where she spent a whole month. After that month, the doctors decided to discharge her because she was a bit better. My aunt and grandmother took her home, but after a few days, her condition became worse. No treatment seemed to work for her.

    At that time, I was in a rural area attending school. One day, my grandmother spoke to me on the phone, telling me that my mother wanted to see me. The next morning, I took an early bus to town where my mother was. I arrived in the afternoon. When I saw her, I cried because she had lost so much weight; she was really thin, and I was even scared to touch her. My grandmother asked me if I wanted to sleep with her on the bed since my mother had requested it, but I was too afraid and said no.

    The following morning, my mother told me something I will never forget. She said, “Sego, my daughter, I know you are in your teenage stage. Please take care of yourself and do not get pregnant, because there will be no one to take care of your child. I am going.” I did not understand what she was saying because I was still young. When I asked her to explain, she told me directly that she was dying and only had a few days left. I thought she was just joking since she often joked with us.

    When school opened, I had to go back to the rural area, but my heart was troubled. Every day I prayed and asked God to heal my mother. I was in Grade 6 at the time. I sometimes cried secretly, asking myself what would happen to my brother and me if she passed away.

    A month passed, and one day, while we were playing at our neighbor’s house, we saw people going to our home and sweeping. Deep down, I knew what was happening, but I didn’t want to say it out loud. To my surprise, my younger brother, who was in Grade 3, pointed to our house and said, “Sego, I know what is going on.” I wondered how he knew. I wanted to cry, but I held back my tears because I felt I needed to be strong for both of us.

    As we watched people sweeping the yard, some cars drove straight to our home. A few minutes later, a lady came and called us over. She took us to a house where my grandmother and some other women were sitting. My grandmother looked at us and told us the heartbreaking news. My brother’s cry hit me deeply, but I still did not cry. I told my grandmother, “It’s okay,” then I went to the back of the house and prayed, asking, “God, why us?”

    From then on, I cried every day, asking God questions: “Why did You do this? God, we are still so young. Who will take care of us? God, are we going to be safe? Look at my brother, he is so small.” I cried a lot, but I did not want people to see me crying.

    The night before the funeral, during the night of comfort, I sang a Tswana song called O Tshepehe Thapelo, which means “Trust in Prayer.” I sang that song while crying. The following day, we laid my mother to her final rest.

    From that time, I started going to church and paying close attention to the teachings. I often heard the pastor saying, “God heals, restores, and saves.” I became deeply interested in knowing this God. I prayed often, asking Him to heal my heart and my brother’s heart. Little did I know that this was the beginning of my faith journey.

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