I try to smile every time I pass the patients
and tell them “thanks for your patience in waiting- you are important to me-
and we will be with you soon”. I continue to run in and out of my tent
throughout the day, taking this patient inside the hospital ship to X-ray or
taking that patient’s blood that I have just drawn to the lab. Another patient
needs medication from the pharmacy, so I run their prescription up the gang-way
and wait at the pharmacy until their meds are ready. A different patient needs
to see the surgeon so I loiter in the hall-way outside of the OR with the
patient to confirm with the surgeon in between OR cases if my nursing
assessment was correct and we can actually schedule a surgery for the patient.
The other patients still wait patiently
for their turn to see their nurse or doctor. I see small children sitting
patiently next to their parents, but starting to get a little antsy. The
parents smile, but I can tell they are getting tired of waiting as well. No one
enjoys a long wait at a doctor’s office.
I know the patients will be fine and for a fleeting second “I think-
they can wait- they are getting free surgery and treatment from Mercy Ships
after all…” I extinguish the thought as quickly as it enters my head- and
think- it doesn’t matter; I can do more for them & more for HIM the one serve… I run into my tent once more,
look for the bubbles and decide the list of patients I need to call can wait.
When back outside, I open the bottle of
bubbles and tentatively start blowing bubbles near one of the toddler patients
with crooked legs. They stare in
amazement as the bubbles form from the stick I am blowing on and then take
flight in the air. The toddler looks frightened at first- then sheepishly smiles
as the cool, wet, bubble bursts on their dark skin. Their gaze comes back to my
direction and they step closer to me waiting for more bubbles to come. I keep
blowing bubbles until I am light-headed. I cannot bring myself to stop blowing
the bubbles as a previously sleeping, cleft lip baby, jumps up and down, trying
to catch the bubbles so she can eat them with her giant- hole- ridden smile.
She melts my heart.
Thoroughly out of breath I start to
head back into my tent to put the bubbles down, but not without blowing a multitude
of the bubbles at the little, old, grandpa sitting in the corner with a frown
on his face. He looks at me in utter shock and pure disbelief; I hold my breath
for a moment thinking I may have just made the biggest culture faux pas of my
life, but then his lips form a toothless smile and his eyes light up with joy. I breathe a sigh of relief. All the other patients
burst into laughter, tension is washed away, and I duck back into my humble,
inflatable tent on a dock in Africa.
2 comments:
Dear Laura, what a wonderful mission you are on. I know that God is and will be blessing you and those you care for and work with for your kind and loving service. After all, this is his work and our whole purpose in life on this earth. You serve him well. Thank you. Love, Judy Maxfield
I'm sitting here eating peanut butter m & m's remembering all the fun things we have done together. And I'm thankful you bring fun into the lives of the African children!! Love you tons...
Mom K.
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