Dream Catchers Therapy Center
About ten years ago I was very interested in learning more about therapeutic horseback riding. I lived in Tucson, but was back in Colorado for a summer when I discovered Dream Catcher Therapy Center. I started volunteering there and learned a lot. I enjoyed leading the horse, or walking beside it (as a side-walker) during the therapy sessions. I was amazed to watch as the movement of the horse helped to strengthen muscles that were otherwise unused, trigger speech, create smiles, and positively motivate their mentally and developmentally disabled riders.

Dream Catcher Therapy Center
Later, I moved back to Colorado and I brought my horse Amadeus with me. For a while he stayed out at my parents place, and his only four-legged company was a couple of cows. Then I moved him to Dream Catchers where there was an arena to work him in and horse buddies for him to talk to. I cleaned stalls in exchange for his board and I continued to volunteer. It was a lot of work, but I loved being around the horses. I’ve always been amazed that these large animals that are ten times my size will let me tell them what to do. They don’t have to let me sit on their back, or listen to me when I tell them to scoot over, but they do. It’s fascinating!
Eventually my life took a different turn. I sold my horse, and I remained in contact with Kathy, the director of Dream Catchers. But I didn’t make it out there to volunteer anymore.
Recently, I went out to visit with Kathy and discovered that she needed some help in the office. I happen to have a little extra time right now as Hope's Journey Int'l is moving along slower that I anticipated. So, I’ve been helping out at Dream Catchers again. Now, they not only provide therapeutic riding to mentally and developmentally disabled individuals, but the horses are also assisting with mental health sessions, and soon will be working with veterans.
In addition Dream Catchers has started another project that is called End of the Trail Rescue Sanctuary. They have been able to rescue and rehab abused and neglected horses. They are also providing a sanctuary to horses who are retired and cannot be ridden, or whose owners can no longer keep them. As you can imagine, they have a lot of horses out there (around 30), but there are also others that are willing to foster or adopt horses. So, Dream Catchers goes through a lengthy process to match a horse in need of a home with a caring family.

The Mission:
The mission of Hope's Journey Int'l is to be a recuperation organization where burn-injured, traumatized, and disabled individuals will be accommodated as they continue with their therapy and recovery. It is to be a place of physical and emotional healing as they transition into their every day lives.
I understand that it will take a lot of people to accomplish that mission. In addition, I believe in working with other organizations that are accomplishing part of that mission. This is a better use of resources. I don’t need to reinvent the wheel and I have no desire to compete with other healthy organizations. One of the programs that Hope's Journey Int'l will offer to its guests is therapeutic riding. What I am learning here at Dream Catchers is invaluable to the future of Hope's Journey Int'l. Dream Catchers has over twelve years of relationships, experience, and success in this community. I hope that Dream Catchers Therapy Center will be an integral part of Hope's Journey Int'l’s future program.
If you would like to learn more about Dream Catchers Therapy Center and End of the Trail Rescue Sanctuary you can visit their website at www.dctc.org. If you want to keep updated with all the Dream Catchers is doing, send me an email and I’ll add you to their mailing list.
Thank you again and again for you prayers, care and interest in Hope's Journey Int'l.

As always, if you know others that may share an interest in this worthy cause, feel free to pass on our web address to them.
Fall 2010
This summer has been busier than ever and full of adventures.
Scandinavia
I started this summer with a five-week missions trip to Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. It truly is the land of the midnight sun. We had to learn to sleep while it was still light outside! More importantly, with a team of 40 youth and families, I had the pleasure of witnessing lives changing every day.

Some of our Ao1 team members in Borlange, Sweden

These “cows” were chasing me!
Family
After I arrived home I went to Sacramento to help my sister out. She had her 6th baby on August 2. He’s a perfect little boy that blends right in with his delightful brothers and sisters. I love being an aunt!

Mikey-5, Eliana-6, Danny-3, Selah-2, Elijah-newborn

Sammy-1….I couldn’t get them all in one picture
ESR
In September I was honored to be invited to the Phase 2 School at Eagle’s Summit Ranch in Westcliffe, Colorado. It was a privilege to learn from Dave Roever and his son Matt as they continue to help wounded soldiers heal. I had a great time, enjoyed trail riding in the fall colors, 4-wheeling, hiking, and making new friends.
Celebrate
I returned home from Westcliffe to a celebration! Fifty family members and friends arrived at my home to honor a committed and loving marriage of 50 years. There was a big party for my Granny and Grandpa (Jim & Lorena) Martin, where we enjoyed good food, beautiful weather, and most of all each other.

WBC-2010
My next adventure will be a trip to Galveston, Texas. This is where the annual World Burn Congress (WBC) will be held. It is also where my sister and I were treated almost 17 years ago for our injuries when we were burned in a car accident, so it’s like a convoluted “home away from home.” I look forward to reconnecting with old friends and making new connections. Every year I am amazed by the strength and character of those that attend the conference. There are the heroes, the firefighters, caretakers, and family members that sacrifice to help others. Then there are the stories. To hear what others have survived and to watch as they choose make the next step to live their life fuller is truly inspirational. I always feel that WBC holds hidden treasures just waiting to be discovered.
While in the South, I’ll take the opportunity to visit my sister in Louisiana and some dear family friends in East Texas.
Hope's Journey Int'l
In the time in between I’m continuing to develop resources and plans to assist those that are hurting. I am also working on our next goal: getting classified, licensed, and certified by the State of Colorado.
It’s official! As of August 4th, Hope's Journey Int'l is a 501(c)3 charitable organization. That means that all donations in the past and in the future are tax-deductible. Please consider where or not you are able to make monthly commitment or a one-time donation to Hope's Journey Int'l. We truly appreciate your encouragement and support.
Please note if you have subscribed to our website feed in the past (like before we got a new website), then you’ll need to re-subscribe by clicking on the envelope icon in the bottom left corner of the home page. Subscribing to our feed means that you’ll get our updates made on our website in your e-mail.
A plug for one of my favorite organizations….
Many of you know that I’ve worked for several years with a youth and family ministry called Solid Rock Foundation Ministries (SRFM). They have taught me, supported me, encouraged me, trained me, been my best friends and have released me to start my own organization. The lessons that I’ve learned and the growth that I’ve experienced during my years with SRFM have been invaluable.
One of SRFM’s ministries is called Audience of One (Ao1). It is a youth discipleship ministry. With Ao1 I’ve traveled to several countries including Australia, New Zealand, Italy, and Hong Kong. This is where I have not only overcome my fear of teenagers, but I have also learned to enjoy them as individuals.
I always imagined that the Christian teenagers that were able to go on missions trips were a) from wealthy families, b) from perfect families, c) somehow capable of never messing up or making bad choices, and d) nothing like me. What I’ve discovered is that I was wrong on every account.
The Ao1 kids that I get to work with are “normal.” Only about 10% of the team members that come on our missions trips have the money up front. A lot of our kids come from single-parent homes, either because of divorce or the death of a parent. Some kids come from unstable homes or have experienced unthinkable traumas. They have the same fears and insecurities that we do. Like the rest of us they are trying to make good choices for their lives and some days they do better at it then others.
I know that working with these youth, these “normal” kids, has prepared me to work with the kids that I’ll be serving in Hope’s Journey. The kids that come to Hope’s Journey Int’l will have experienced severe physical trauma, they will not feel “normal” and they will struggle with that feeling.
While they may not appear “normal,” I say that they are. They will respond to their trauma the same way that any other person would respond to an equivalent injury. They will experience loss, grief, confusion, questions, frustrations, sadness, and anger. They will struggle with fears and insecurities and they will make choices. In fact, they will have to make many of the same choices that the “normal” Ao1 kids have had to make.
They will choose whether or not their past will dictate their future. Will they be a victim or an over-comer? Will they live life in fear or in courageous attempts to face their fears? Will they let others tell them who they are or will they walk confidently in who they know they are?
There is something that sets the Ao1 kids apart from the masses of teenagers that surround them each day. They are taking their “normal” lives and living them for God and His purposes instead of for themselves and their comfort. They choose to believe what He says about them instead of what their peers say about them. They work for months in advance and raise their own money to go on these missions trip. Therefore they are not “normal” but, “beyond normal.” That is my hope for the future participants of Hope’s Journey Int’l, that they too can learn to live a life “beyond normal.”
I’m excited to travel this year with Ao1 to Scandinavia (Denmark, Norway, and Sweden). I recognize that my work for Hope’s Journey Int’l will take my future in another direction. I will no longer be available to work with Ao1 as I have in the past. I see this summer’s trip as a completion and a closure to that season. I look forward to my continuing education from the teenagers that have already taught me so much. I love seeing them grow and take steps to overcome their personal pains. It fuels my hope for the kids that I will serve in the future through Hope’s Journey Int’l.
So check out Solid Rock Foundation Ministries at: www.solidrockfoundationministries.com it is an amazing organization!

Spring has arrived in Colorado. It’s always so fun to see all the brown turn to green and to feel warm again.
Lucy and I attended a Writer’s Conference at Mount Hermon, near Santa Cruz, California at the end of last month. The setting was beautiful. About 330 people attended the conference including publishers, editors, agents, and authors.

One of the walking paths at Mount Hermon
It was a whole new world to me. My emotions were up and down and all around like a rollercoaster. One moment I was encouraged that I can write a book that people may actually want to read. The next moment I felt very small, wondering how could I ever compare to these “writers.” Of course I also made a lot of new friends, which is always the fun part of attending conferences.
I learned so much about the publishing process and writing techniques in a very short amount of time. I have been very thankful to have Lucy along on this project. I realized that she has been teaching me a lot in the last month as we’ve been working together on this book; her patience with me is astounding.
The biggest thing that I’ve learned is that a book doesn’t just happen. It takes so much work (kind of like a non-profit). I’m anxious to implement all that I’ve been learning and see my book through to completion. I know that it is a necessary part of Hope’s Journey Int’l.
Other news:
The burn camp that Dave Roever was planning to start this summer has been postponed a year while they continue to build their facility in Texas. So, my summer plans have changed. I’ll be joining the staff of Audience of One on their summer mission’s trip to Scandinavia. I’m very excited about this opportunity. I love working with youth.
There are also some other possible projects on the horizon. I’ll keep you posted as those are solidified.


I hope that your new year is going well. I wanted to give you a brief update as to what’s happening at Hope’s Journey Int’l.
Adam Woodden has been working hard on a new website for Hope’s Journey Int’l. It is making great progress and we look forward to having it up in the weeks ahead.
We are contacting the State of Colorado this week so that we can begin the process of determining our classification with the Department of Health and Human Services. We have contacted them in the past and came to a bit of a stand still. Now we will approach them again to discover what is necessary for us to do so that we can move forward.
We recognize that there is a lot to accomplish with the State and the County before we can even begin to locate a county approved property, fundraise for it, and build. This will take more time than I ever imagined when I dreamed of providing a ranch for burned, disabled, and traumatized children to come and adjust to their injuries while developing coping skills and gaining emotional healing. It has been obvious to us there are many other people involved at many levels that are not very concerned about our time tables, so as we wait through the process we are thinking of ways to offer hope and healing now.
My current primary goal is to write a book that will provide a resource for those that are in pain. I would also like to make our website an interactive resource for those that need hope. I’ll do this by writing articles, providing connections to other organizations and people that can help, and providing a place for positive discussion.
I am planning on attending a one-week Writer’s Conference in California at the end of next month, with a friend and author, Lucy Allen. There we will make connections with publishers and other writers. We will submit our plans for a book and get the instruction necessary to keep me on target. I will also learn how to write better articles for the website, and possibly magazines, and how to publicize my book, and concurrently Hope’s Journey Int’l. There are workshops that incorporate public speaking and marketing as well. I am taking Lucy along because her knowledge, experience, and connections will help me to gain the most out of this conference, and it’s nice to have a friend. The total cost of the conference with travel and accommodations is $3,000 for both of us.
As you know, we submitted our tax exempt (501(c)3) application last October. As of right now, the IRS has not yet gotten to our application. Hopefully, in the next month we’ll hear from them. Despite the delay, we are able to receive donations and issue tax-deductible receipts while our tax-exempt status is pending.
Will you consider giving a one-time or monthly donation to Hope’s Journey Int’l? Your donations go towards the operating costs of Hope’s Journey Int’l, to the upcoming Writer’s Conference, and ultimately to our goal of offering hope and healing to those that are in pain. Checks should be made payable to: Hope’s Journey Int’l. You can also make a donation by credit card through PayPal here on our website by clicking on the “donate” page.
We cannot thank you enough for your prayers, support, encouragement and interest in Hope’s Journey Int’l.
I want to take the time to thank each one of you for your responses to Hope’s Journey Int’l, it is so encouraging when we hear that you are following the progress of our organization. We love that you have a heart for the vision to help burned and disabled children rise above their circumstances to live healthy, full lives.
I’m looking forward to the New Year and all that it has in store for Hope’s Journey Int’l. It will be exciting to see where our journey will take us in 2010.
I pray that you will have a wonderful Christmas and that your New Year will be full of amazing and delightful surprises.
This time of the year I can’t help but look back and reflect on what the last year has held. This year has truly flown by. Although Hope’s Journey Int’l isn’t where we imagined it would be this time last year, it has made incredible progress. Every month that goes by I get a clearer picture of how big this project truly is and how many steps are required to accomplish our goal. I’ve determined that I’d rather it take a while so that we can build a proper foundation, then for it to go up quickly and fall with the first storm.
I am thankful for what has been accomplished this year. We have become our own non-profit incorporation, we are awaiting a response from the IRS granting us our tax-exempt status, we have a wonderful board that has a heart for Hope’s Journey Int’l, and we have an Executive Director, Chris Gray, who is faithfully working to keep us moving forward. I am also thankful for our prayer team, those that come to the prayer meetings and those that pray for us from afar. I am thankful for all of our friends, the ones that have been following our progress for the last two years and the new friends that have shown interest in Hope’s Journey Int’l and its vision. I’m thankful for those that have offered to volunteer in the future. You are such a gift to our organization. I’m thankful for the words of encouragement and the support that we receive. It keeps us going.
We are continuing to take steps to educate ourselves about the ins and outs of a charitable organization and to begin to educate others about the healing process. We have a fan page as well as a cause on Facebook and we are brainstorming improvements to be made on our website.
Thank you for showing interest in Hope’s Journey Int’l and sharing our vision with others. I pray that you will have much to be thankful for this holiday season.
P.S. Our monthly prayer is cancelled for November and December due to the holidays. We will make an announcement in the new year about when the prayer meetings will resume.
I attended a Phase 1 school at the beautiful Eagle’s Summit Ranch near Westcliffe, CO at the invitation of Dave Roever. His son Matt Roever runs the school and its curriculum.
The Phase 1 School is focused on teaching business principles, public speaking, and other techniques to people who have been through painful situations so that they, in turn, can help others. There were thirteen of us attending the school; two of us were non-military. We had morning sessions with Dave Roever, mid-morning sessions with his son, Matt and early afternoon sessions with other speakers. Mid-afternoon we would go on outings. The first day we went to Bishops Castle where we were challenged to climb to the top of the towers in teams. On the other days we went 4-wheeling, skeet shooting, bowling, walking, and were treated to amazing meals by the staff and some of the local businesses.
What most impacted me was the change that I saw take place among the soldiers during the week. The staff accepted them where they were at, loved them, and continually expressed their care for them and their thankfulness for the service that the soldiers provided for their country and our freedom. As the soldiers relaxed they let down their guards they reconnected with themselves, the core values that were trained into them, their dreams, and their aspirations. It’s like they remembered who they were. I felt like I watched several miracles take place.
It was a pleasure to stay at a beautiful ranch in a lovely part of Colorado, in a comfortable room with amazing people. I have been asked to help staff a new children’s burn camp that Dave Roever is starting in Texas next summer. Mr. Roever also wants me to help recruit campers, so I’ll get to be in on the start up. I’m pretty excited about it. I am also looking forward to a Phase 2 school some time this winter. While Phase 1 focuses on business and public speaking, Phase 2 digs into biblical teachings and principles in order to train for ministry.

Bishop's Castle
This is one of the towers that we climbed to the top of. Sorry that there are no more pics, I tend to forget to bring my camera.
Last month was a very busy and exciting month. It was fun to have family come and visit for the first half of the month right after Laura and I returned from NYC where the annual World Burn Congress was held.
After all the company left, Chris and I got busy with our tax-exempt, charitable organization (501(c)3) application. After two board meetings and many hours hashing out the details we are proud to say that the application is complete and going into the mail tomorrow!!
I’ve also been preparing to attend “Phase 1 School” at Eagle’s Summit Ranch in Westcliffe, Colorado October 5-10. That means I leave tomorrow. This is a school that I was invited to attend by Dave Roever. I am very excited about this opportunity and can’t wait to see where it will lead.
Dave Roever is a Vietnam Vet that was burned in an explosion during the war. He is an incredible overcomer and inspirational speaker. When I was 16 he came to the town we lived in (Houma, LA) and some friends took me to see him speak. This was the first time that I had ever seen a burn survivor. The message that he spoke was about life and hope and faith. This was an important message for me because a year after I heard Dave Roever speak, Roseanna and I were in our car accident. A few years ago I was reminded of Dave Roever and I realized that his story imprinted on my subconscious that burn injuries were something that you can live through, overcome, and still have a full life. I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Rover a year ago and share with him how he impacted my life.
If you would like to see more about the school I will be attending here is their website. www.woundedwarriorsalliance.com If you don’t know who Dave Roever is, here is his website: www.daveroever.org.
For those that have given to Hope’s Journey Int’l, I again want to thank you. Your donations have been a great assistance in getting us this far. They have covered the costs of starting our organization, our 501(c)3 application fee, our computer equipment and software necessary to communicate with you, our logo design, initial printings, county zoning fees, trips to a Burn Camp, World Burn Congress, a Non-Profit Conference, and they have helped us to make many contacts and connections that will prove invaluable.
Now that we are our own organization future checks should be written to: Hope’s Journey Int’l. Our new mailing address is: P.O. Box 854, Montrose, CO 81402.
Thank you again to everyone!! I look forward to sharing with you the outcome of my week ahead!
I had the privilege of attending my 7th World Burn Congress this year. This year I brought along my 14 year old sister Laura. My mother was pregnant with Laura when Roseanna and I were injured in our car accident, so Laura has grown up understanding burn injuries and the people underneath the scars. I asked her to share what she saw at the conference. Here it is:
“This was my first time at a burn conference. It was a great experience, but not quite what I expected. Since I have only known Charity after her accident I am able to see her in a different way than my family or others see her. I didn’t have to go through the trauma of losing her or part of her. To me she has always been the same, whole person I know and love. Seeing the people at the conference made me realize that there is a lot of pain and hurt out there that I could never even imagine, and a lot of people don’t know how to get out of that situation, so they just give up and stay there. During one of the teaching sessions a lady quoted, ‘Those who go through the fire are great, but the ones that get stuck are in trouble.’ That’s a great example of some of the people there. Some of them truly have overcome intense stuff and they are whole great people but the ones that got stuck in the emotional trauma are struggling. Seeing these people made me learn a lot about myself too. I don’t want to get caught in sticky situations no matter how hard. I want to be able to overcome and grow. They really helped me learn that and also to love the skin you are in and wear it in pride no matter if you are scarred or not because you are more than just your outside appearance. If you don’t love it and accept it, people won’t be able to see the inside as well. Over all, I am very glad I went and I’m looking forward to going to more if God allows.”


World Burn Congress 2009 – New York, NY


What’s it all about? I have had a few friends ask me what Hope’s Journey is all about. They know I am working with this new ministry but “what is it all about?”
It’s about the kids. It is about the children who are born perfectly normal and then one day find themselves in pain and “no longer normal”. They suddenly have to be under emergency, traumatic and constant medical care. Their parents and family are rushed into horrible circumstances. The children are then placed in a world in which they are in pain, horrible pain, constantly.
They endure horrible medical procedures for months on end. They are now faced with being “different” than their peers. They “look” different. They “feel” different. Frankly, they are different.
They have to wear hot pressure garments. They have to have surgeries to repair skin and bones. Often limbs that once functioned normally are no longer there or are no longer able to function normally.
After what is often months and months they have to return to normal, go to school, church, the Mall, and the doctors and surgeries….
What happens to those kids? Never do they just return their normal life. They return to a “no longer normal” life and that life is hard. Often, they are stared at, laughed at, discriminated against….you name it their life is “no longer normal.”
My heart is in this ministry but I still don’t get it. On Sunday August 23 I got to see a little of it for myself. Charity and I were guests and observers at Cheley’s Boys and Girls Camp in Estes Park. There the Denver Hospital held their annual burn camp. I saw them. I saw a lot of them. I saw beautiful bodies that were forever marred by scars. I saw faces that were once innocent and lovely scarred. I saw adult burn victims cheering for their charges. I saw a mass amount of volunteers serve and love on these kids. But mostly, I saw children who came here to just fit in to find their normal. They were able to be normal for a short time.
I left there just a little sadder and a little scared that the dream of bringing these kids to a place where they can heal completely from the inside will be difficult, but completely possible.
Hope’s Journey is a place that will bring these kids into a place in which they can look at their “no longer normal” lives and reconcile them to the Heart of God. Hope’s Journey wants to give those kids their voice and identity back. HJ wants to love on those children and show them that they are “no longer normal”. But neither am I and neither are you. They will have an opportunity to not only play and learn but they will be able to be “safe” as they work through the spiritual issues that will bring a healing not so much to their body but to their soul, emotions, and spirit.
If God does what we think he is going to do. Kids like that will be able to stand tall, look in the mirror at their “no longer normal” bodies and smile back at who they are in Jesus. And know that God loves them, God has every tool available to them to bring them into their “no longer normal” world and assist them in loving the face that looks back.
Is it possible that you yourself today can look in the mirror and think, “I am not normal” Know this….God knows and he loves you anyway…..A lot…..
Please keep the mission of Hope’s Journey in your prayers.
Charity Freeland was seventeen when she received 2nd and 3rd degree burns over 75% percent of her body in a fiery car accident. After the car accident, Charity spent two and a half months in the hospital. These initial medical interventions were only the beginning of the healing process. The next seven years were filled with over 25 reconstructive surgeries while learning to accept herself and the new physical limitations resulting from her accident. In her recovery season, she learned that the manner in which one adjusts to a new body directly affects that person’s overall success in future relationships and life. Charity realized that there is more to becoming whole than physically overcoming. She had to receive the gift of God’s grace and strength in order to make choices to live.
A year after the accident Charity joined her father on trip to Colorado, where he was going for a job interview. Through the diverse beauty of Colorado she began to envision a place that would be restful, fun, and therapeutic for those recovering from disabling injuries. This led to the dream of starting a recuperation facility that would help them overcome their circumstances, know their value, and be all that they were created to be.
Charity has worked with Solid Rock Foundation Ministries (SRFM) since October of 2002. SRFM is a non-profit 501(c)3 charitable organization that has a focus on family and youth ministries. As a staff member of SRFM, Charity has done administration and bookkeeping along with leading, teaching, and counseling in their youth programs locally and internationally. In 2001 and 2002, Charity worked with Dreamcatcher’s Riding School, a therapeutic riding school for mentally disabled children. Working with these organizations has given her the opportunity to input into people from different cultures, backgrounds, beliefs, and circumstances.




David and Kathleen Tabor have involved in full time missions since 1977. They began their mission’s adventure by joining Youth With A Mission in September 1977, going to Hawaii for two years of training and mission’s introduction at the University of the Nations.
In 1979 they moved to Australia and were on staff with YWAM Australia. They served in Goulburn for two years and Brisbane for two years. There they were involved in training, teaching, discipleship, youth ministry and evangelism locally, nationally and internationally.
In 1983 they moved to Lae, Papua New Guinea where they pioneered YWAM PNG. They were involved again in training, teaching discipleship, youth ministry and evangelism. Under their leadership, three YWAM bases were established and numerous local, national and international outreach events were held.
In 1997 David and Kathleen moved to Montrose, Colorado where they founded Solid Rock Foundation Ministries, a Youth and Family ministry. They continue to be involved internationally as well and nationally and locally. Teaching, training, discipleship and evangelism are still top priority.
David and Kathleen have four married children, with 18 grandchildren. All their children, Lisa, Jordan, Megan and John were raised in missions and now reside in the United States.

Rick and Kathy Weaver were raised in Southern California, met in college, and have now been married 33 years. For the last 21 years, they have lived in Montrose, CO where they raised and home-schooled their three daughters, now married with children of their own.
Rick and Kathy have served on several church and non-profit organization boards. Rick is a civil engineer and president of a 20-person consulting firm. Since their children left the home, Kathy has served on staff with Solid Rock Foundation Ministries locally, and on several outreaches internationally. Rick is also a pilot and flies mercy flights locally and to Mexico for two local ministries.
They became acquainted with Charity Freeland in the 1990’s and were impressed at the work the Lord has done in her life following her accident. Her overcoming spirit and freedom from bitterness is a powerful testimony of a real God. By serving on the Board for Hope’s Journey Intl., the Weavers desire to help facilitate Charity’s vision to bring God’s healing and restoration to those who have experienced similar life-altering events.

Chris Gray recently moved to from New York to Montrose with her husband Jon. She has not only spent time managing farms and working with animals, but many of her professional years were spent in the corporate world. She has a heart to see Hope’s Journey become a reality. Chris is currently offering her time and her personal and business experience to help build the foundations of Hope’s Journey.
These are PDF's to download and view
Board Meeting September 11, 2009
Board Meeting September 21, 2009