Henderson is a Wofford College graduate and 2010 graduate of Charleston Law. After graduating from Wofford with a Bachelor of Arts degree, Henderson took a sharp left turn and spent two years teaching in a remote village in Kenya before attending law school.
“I thought if I’m ever gonna do anything kind of altruistic it needs to be now,” he said. “You’re sort of on the front end of adulthood and you have the time to be able to devote to these things. I wanted to do something just a little bit outside of the box.”
The remote community, eight hours from Nairobi, Kenya, was a cultural wakeup call. Henderson quickly learned, unlike the U.S., how to survive without access to clean running water or electricity.
“You throw away your watch,” he said. “You eat what the locals eat. I remember waiting for a bus with no AC and beside me was a woman nursing a child while holding a chicken at the same time. I’m like, this is wild.”
Henderson was given a reality check on his two-year trek to a third-world country. He returned to the States with a deeper sense of appreciation and gratitude. “We saw mob violence and people killing villagers … it was super bizarre.”
Henderson talks more about his experience as a missionary, best practices for law students and the future of technology and the impact is having on his firm culture on the Charleston Law podcast.
Charleston School of Law hosts Mindful Mondays, a workshop-style session designed to de-mystify mindfulness and give students practical tools to manage thoughts, emotions and overwhelm.
Charleston School of Law will be in attendance at the University of Tennessee Law School Fair on Tuesday, September 30 from 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Charleston Law is committed to nurturing the well-being and success of our students. Lawyers Helping Lawyers clinician Briana Suhr will be on campus each Tuesday from 10am–4pm.