About 2 or 3 weeks after that I made that fateful decision, I received the most unexpected surprise! My manager approached me and asked if I would be willing to go to Nashville for about 3 months to help with a plant shutdown. I’m pretty sure there wasn’t even a breath between her question and my “YES!” Completely out of character, that impulsive answer was certainly not my head talking. My spirit knew well what my brain could not yet articulate. I needed a change, and Nashville looked a whole lot like change.
I arrived in Nashville on April 29, 2006, walked into the beautifully furnished apartment the company had procured for me and finally…I exhaled. Standing in the middle of the living room, two huge windows to my right, fireplace in front of me, I literally closed my eyes and exhaled. I was home. Nothing there was familiar, nothing belonged to me, yet I was home.
That summer was beyond. I found 2 amazing churches, reconnected with a few folks I knew from high school and distant relatives, made new friends, and couldn’t keep the guys away. Life was good. But my 3 months were quickly coming to a close, and so was my apartment lease back in Michigan.
I knew that the plant in Nashville was closing and that the expectation was for me to return to my job in Michigan. But I wasn’t ready to go back. I wasn’t prepared to forego this newness that I had found. Being so, with the help of the Plant Controller, whom I had developed a really good relationship with, we managed to get my assignment extended through the end of the year.But the lease on my apartment in Michigan was ending, so on July 28 I flew to Detroit, packed up all of my belongings, stored them in mother’s garage, and flew back to Nashville.
I didn’t know what I was going to do or where I was going to work after the end of the year, but I knew I wasn’t going back to Michigan. I couldn’t. There was nothing there for me but loneliness and painful memories.
With the Nashville plant closing at the end of the year, I knew that if I were to remain in the city, I needed to find another job. I’m sure there were others, but the only interview I can recall was for a Finance role at a popular healthcare company. On the day of the interview, I was sicker than I have ever been in my life. Certainly, I had no business showing my face in public and spreading my germs, but there was no way I was going to cancel or reschedule. So I pulled myself together, medicated, and less a few sniffles and slightly losing my voice, pulled off a pretty convincing interview. I ended up in the ER the next day.
I returned home from the ER and was sitting at my dining room table preparing to take my prescriptions when the phone rang. It was the healthcare company that I had interviewed with the day before. They offered me the job and a 21% salary increase. I was completely baffled. Holding the phone and fumbling for words, I was rendered completely speechless. Wait…I’m sorry…WHAT?! The person on the other end chuckled at my stupor. I was baffled for a couple of reasons…First, they made an offer so quickly…less than 24 hours after I interviewed. And second, they offered me a significant salary increase. I don’t know how long you’ve been around, but it’s in most business’s nature to low-ball…to get as much as they can for as little as possible. So the fact that they offered me 21% over my current salary made zero sense to me. Little did they know, I was so sure of my purpose in Nashville, I would have taken a decrease! Still completely dumbfounded, I quickly accepted.
I called my manager in Michigan to give her the news. She was not at all surprised. She said she felt that Nashville was where I was supposed to be. Two weeks later, I flew back to Michigan to say my final goodbyes to my old team and spend the Thanksgiving holiday with my family. The funny thing is, no one on my team was surprised. In fact, before I left for Nashville the first time, they all told me that I wouldn’t be back. I just thought they were being nice. I had no idea that they were speaking prophetically into my life. Neither did they. On Saturday, November 25, I packed up my black SUV to start my new beginning in Nashville.
With Fred Hammond’s newly released Free to Worship CD (a gift from my outgoing manager) bumping through my speakers, I drove down Interstate-75 South at a dark and wintery 5AM into a bright and sunny new day in Nashville, Tennessee. Foregoing everything safe and familiar, I reached forward to the destiny that await me.
Friends, I leave you with a question: What are you willing to dispossess in order to possess the WILD that God has called you to?
Leave your responses in the comments section below. Also, if you have questions for me, ask!



