By Janan Talafer
All great dreams start with a tiny seed of inspiration, which if tended carefully can blossom at just the right time and make a huge difference in the world.
Many of us have felt that inner prompting encouraging us to take the first step toward achieving our soul’s desire. But often we let doubt, fear and the busyness of life stop us.
One Tampa Bay woman has not let those concerns stop her. In July, Lore Raymond will lead her first VisionQuest: Travel that Opens Hearts and Inspired Action, bringing more than 20 enthusiastic women on a spiritual journey to the Indonesian island of Bali. With them, they’ll take 1,000 pounds of clothing and other basic necessities to a Bali orphanage and medical clinic.
This is a dream that Lore has kept alive since childhood, when the nuns at her California Catholic grade school encouraged the students to donate pennies each week to support the poor children around the world, a program that they called the “Pagan Babies.” (Remember this was in the 1960s!) Lore “adopted” more than seven babies and still remembers how wonderful it felt to contribute to them.
But there is another part of this dream that she didn’t even realize until recently. Lore’s great-grandmother was a healer and nurse in Scotland in the 1890s at a time when few women had a profession outside the home. And now, through a series of “spiritual coincidences” she is partnering with Nurses with a Mission, a local nonprofit organization that supports medical mission trips and collects supplies for clinics in third world countries.
Mauri Barnes, one of the co-founders of Nurses with a Mission, will fly 30 hours to Bali on a scouting trip in preparation for bringing nurses there on a medical mission in 2010. Lore, in turn, has pledged seven percent of the net proceeds from all VisionQuest journeys to support the Nurses with a Mission international humanitarian work.
“VisionQuest is about collaboration, service and inspiring people to make positive changes in their lives through spiritual travel,” says Lore. “My heart connection with Nurses with a Mission is a sweet synchronicity. Together we’ll reinforce one another’s vision to serve the women and children of the world."
Lore has been following her heart for over 15 years now. But that wasn’t always the case. A former corporate coach, fundraiser and motivational speaker, she was a self-described type A personality for many years. But in 1998, during a very difficult time in her life – a dark night of the soul – she went to visit friends living in Roatan, a small island off the coast of Honduras. She stayed five years.