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(photo layout & photos compiled by my friend Josh Callow
& other Mercy Ships' photographers)
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a current description of God's work in and through the life of my husband and me while serving HIM wherever HE leads...
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Highlights from Guinea 2012-2013 Outreach in Pictures- Screening Day Part 2
Highlights from Guinea 2012-2013 Outreach in Pictures- Screening Day Part 1
...testing God's nudges...pink fans...and Fan Milk...
I stepped off the plane and thanked God for safe
travels and finally opening the doors for me to depart Guinea- as it had been
ridiculous struggle against corruption and bribes (which I refused to pay) with
the airline officials for 4.5 days,…yes days… prior to that moment. I acquired
a visa without difficulty. My luggage arrived in one piece. There was no
appearance of tampering with its contents (as happens more often than not in my
foreign travel). And I cleared customs without one question being asked about
the thousands of dollars worth of chemotherapy drugs I was carrying for the
mission hospital. I smiled and squealed
with delight as I stepped out of the Lomé airport and was greeted by my former
translator who worked with Mercy Ships in 2010 and 2012 while the ship was
docked in Lomé, Togo.
Right
outside the airport, I found a Fan Milk man with his little bike- cooler
selling my favorite packaged, iced treats. Fan Milk is one of the best
inventions in Africa- it is only sold in Togo, Ghana, and Benin- it is the
closest thing to an ice cream man this side of the world! I have been craving
the cold, little Fan Milk treats for a year now (since I last left Togo)! In
this land where it is so hot, that even gum melts, cold treats are a necessity! For a mere 30 cents I purchased one of my favorite
treats and first used it as an ice pack to cool my sweaty skin and then tore a
small hole in the package with my teeth and savored the cold chocolate milk
flavored slush that seeped through the hole, cooling my tongue in a heavenly
way.
My
former translator and friend helped me secure another essential in Africa; a
fan. I smiled and definitely took it as God’s special gift to me that pink fans
were cheaper than all the others and pink is my favorite color. We stopped to acquire a few more Fan Milk
treats for my ride, I thanked my friend for welcoming me, and then the taxi
driver and I set off for my home for the next few months… Hôpital Baptiste Biblique,
an amazing mission hospital, in the African bush, located at the base of a
glorious, lush, green, mountain, a few hours northwest of Togo’s capital city
of Lomé.
I nodded off and on in the taxi, not really fatigued from the
short plane flight, but all the drama leading up to my departure- and the early
hour in which I had to leave the ship to head to the airport. I startled awake
to a refreshing breeze, the outdoor temperature had dropped by at least 10
degrees as we ascended toward the mountains. The shift in temperature assured
me we were almost to our destination. I
was giddy as we neared the hospital. I could not stop grinning from ear to ear.
As the taxi came to a stop, I jumped out of the taxi, un-loaded my luggage, and
breathed in the fresh air and said, “God- here goes nothing…lead me, strengthen
me, guide me, and uphold me as I go deeper for you, testing if I have what it
takes to be a missionary nurse on land, show me your will as I test the nudges
you have put on my heart….and thanks for Fan Milk and pink fans!”
Sunday, April 28, 2013
awkard moments
You know those awkward moments when
someone sees you, they wave emphatically, smile, and grin at you like you are
their long lost best friend. And if they
aren’t driving past you in traffic, or across the way at the check-out
themselves, they rush to greet you, shake your hand vigorously, and pull you
into an embrace….And the entire time, you cannot remember for the life of you,
who they are…so you muster a smile of your own, while in your head you are
rapidly flipping through “old files” attempting to find “the file” with their
information on it- so you too can be as excited as they are.
I have been experiencing a number of
those awkward moments lately. Just the other day a precious patient found me in
the hospital hallway. She smiled at me from ear to ear, pulled my hand from my
pocket, grasped it tightly in hers, and ran her little chocolate tinted fingers
over my vanilla forearm, all while looking intently into my eyes as if I was
her closest friend. I quickly glanced at
her, trying to see where her bandage was to cue me into what operation she had
had, but there were no bandages in sight. Every so slightly embarrassed at the
awkwardness of the situation, I just kept holding the little one’s hand. However,
she kept looking at me so enthusiastically, I knew I had to know her for some
reason, so I humbled myself and asked her in French, “what did we do for you?” She
looked at me with a blank stare on her face for a few seconds, then pointed to
her elbow.
There upon the back of her elbow was a 6
inch incision that was open to air and healing well, I could barely tell that
she had had any surgery….And then I remembered…I regained all recollection of
her situation … I couldn’t believe it! I did a double take! She was the little
girl I had spent hours with during her triage phase. She had come and gone,
seeing many doctors, for assessment upon assessment. I had her return for
appointments, in hopes that our CT scanner would be fixed, just to learn it
hadn’t yet been fixed and we had to push back her appointments again… and
again.
Where there had once been a large, firm, grapefruit
sized tumor protruding off the back of her skinny, little, elbow and a
cantaloupe sized mass on her little hip, there were only healing incision lines. The timid little girl who months ago would
barely look at me, the nurse, with vanilla tinted skin, had disappeared. She had transformed into the confident,
bright-eyed beauty, who held my hand. She
grasped my hand tightly for a few more minutes, and then skipped off down the
hall-way and back into the plastic surgery ward. I walked away to triage more patients
and as walked, I thanked God for the transformed little girl and for the “awkward moment.”
Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Jaka-a story from the professionals
Did you know that the amazing home I live in is just like a real city in many ways? We have a hospital, bank, post-office, ship shop, Laundromat, crew clinic, a thrift store, dental clinic, pharmacy, lab, Starbucks, mechanics, carpenters, welders, IT Techs, plumbers, receptionists, hospitality crew, janitors, electricians, bankers, accountants, engineers, you name it- we’ve got it- the difference between our city and other cities in the world? Our city is inside a ship, we work for free & pay to work, and we are from over 36 different countries! In our small city we also have an amazing team of journalists, writers, videographers, and photographers that pour their hearts and talents into sharing the stories of what we as Mercy Ships do… so- today I am going to cheat… here is a story from the professionals- it was written by written by Catherine Clarke Murphy one of our amazing writers & editors aboard the Africa Mercy- it was edited by Nancy Predaina & the photographs included were taken by two of our amazing photographers, Michelle Murrey and Bright Effowe! The little girl in the story is one of them I got to say “yes” to!
“There is a universal principle of childhood physics that we all remember well: the joy of spinning in circles. Perhaps it was spinning while locking hands with a playmate, in a teacup at Disney World, dancing in pirouettes, or simply turning in place – it was a thrill to send our surroundings into a kaleidoscopic blur. This was followed by a dizzy fit of giggles – at least until our internal compasses caught up, and the world came back into focus. Do you remember?
Four years ago, a little girl named Jaka was spinning around in circles with some other children while her mother was at the market. Around and around, arms out, chin up, her face full of smiles. Tragically, when Jaka lost her balance, she plummeted into her aunt’s cooking fire. Jaka landed in the burning coals on her left side with her arm up. The pot of boiling water her aunt had prepared for rice spilled over the little girl’s shoulders, arms and back.
Fanta, Jaka’s mother, ran home from the market and took her daughter to a local hospital in Conakry. In order to be seen by doctors, the hospital required a payment of 1.5 million Guinea Francs at the gate – just over $200. The family could not afford admission. Fanta returned home with Jaka, unable to ease her daughter’s agony. For the next eight months, Jaka laid on her little stomach, tethered to the ground by unimaginable pain. Each day, her mother fanned her, trying to offer Jaka whatever relief she could from the inescapable African heat.
As Jaka’s burns healed without medical care or rehabilitation, her left shoulder and arm contracted. Jaka’s skin began to grow back in such a way that her arm became stuck to her side from her armpit to elbow. Fanta feared that Jaka would lose the ability to move her arm. Still unable to afford any medical treatment, Fanta tried to treat the problem herself.
Fanta forced Jaka’s arm away from her side three times, trying to prevent the contracture. Fanta described each attempt, saying that she and Jaka both cried themselves to exhaustion. On the fourth try, Jaka begged her mother to stop because the pain was so unbearable. “If you try to pull it open again, I will die. The pain will kill me,” Jaka said to her mother. With that, Fanta resigned herself to allowing Jaka’s arm to heal on its own, stuck to her side.
Today, 9-year-old Jaka is a patient on the Africa Mercy hospital ship, recovering from a free plastic surgery that released her arm and grafted skin. Deep burn marks cover her entire upper body – her head, neck, shoulders, back and arms – but no one notices because they are entranced by the little girl’s adorable gap-toothed smile.
Sweeping, washing and fighting – these are the activities Jaka says she will get to do with her restored arm. Laundry might not be appealing to many, but participating in household chores is a normalcy Jaka has never known. “I am so happy,” Jaka says. “When I go home, I will work all the time because I can.” (Fanta admits she is glad for this enthusiasm.) Free of her deformity, Jaka will also now be able to go to school for the first time.
As for fighting, Jaka is one of ten children, and she happens to be very ticklish. With her new arm, she will be able to hold her own the next time she is picked on by one of her older brothers or sisters. She was ashamed to go among her siblings and friends when her arm was stuck to her side because they would tease her. “Now they will see me and say, ‘Jaka has become well!’” she declares. Then they will invite her to sit with them and watch the cars go by their house.
From her hospital bed, Jaka is all giggles – she can hardly contain her excitement for her now-bright future of playing, going to school and watching cars. But Jaka’s favorite part about her restorative surgery and rehabilitation is even simpler than that: “Clapping!” she exclaims. With her arm free, Jaka can finally clap with both hands.
Now there’s a happy ending worthy of applause.”
Friday, April 12, 2013
un-expected surgeries, peanut butter needs & raspberry, diet coke blessings
God is good all the time & all the time God is good...in no particular order of importance...check out what God has been up to lately in my life...
I visited the Mercy Ships’ operating room a
few weeks back & I am not talking about the standard visits I make there
daily to converse with the surgeons about potential patients. This time I was
the patient. I can better empathize with
hernia patients than I ever desired to! How the heck I got an umbilical hernia
is unknown- maybe picking up & loving on too many kids- but more likely my
abdominal wall was weakened already from the scar from my appendectomy
(appendix removal in 2005) & my stomach muscles said- enough of that- lets
jump out! Don’t feel bad for me that I
couldn’t be home with my family during the stressful process of being away from
the USA during a health challenge. Although- it would have been splendid to
have some hugs from many of you during this time- I am so thankful I was in
Africa for this operation. I am thankful my ailment arose when it did- should I
have had this pain when I was home visiting that would have spoiled my vacation
and given me some extreme financial challenges to say the least! I am thankful
that my ailment arose when it did because had it occurred one week later- we
wouldn’t have had a general surgeon aboard! God is good & I have
experienced the hope & healing of our ship firsthand & God bless Doctor
Larry Barr!
I participated in an aqua-gym class conducted
in French and Spanish- with the Spanish Ambassador’s wife in her pool that has
a lovely ocean view! The randomness of
my life brings me pure excitement!
The ship snack-bar ran out of diet coke-this
was very tragic for many of us! Yes- we are spoiled on the Mercy Ship- we have
a snack-bar with special treats from home. The containers that travel to us on
ships across the ocean delivering medical supplies for our hospital also deliver
special treats that we can buy aboard if we have extra money. But, the containers
delivering the diet coke were delayed! Although many cannot believe it- I have
never had a cup of coffee in my life- so the Starbuck’s we have aboard the ship
does nothing for me- but I do love a cold diet coke over ice every now and
then! Some comforts from home- I really do like- I am human- lest you were
going to put me in another category…Well- God smiled on me when I stumbled
across a little store constructed with of sheets of metal nailed together
inside a shipping container. Inside this
humble store- diet coke is sold! I managed to buy some with my improving French
language skills and obtained a marriage proposal from the store owner at the
same time. I politely declined the offer- but if I run out of spending money I
may have to take the man up on the offer to keep me supplied with diet coke! Thanks God for your sense of humor & blessings!
My good friend and fellow nurse- passed a foot
long worm- she dug it out of the toilet- placed it inside two plastic bags
& delivered it to me in the hallway. I preceded to magnet the little- not
so- little dead worm in its bag to my wall until I had time to examine the
sucker under a microscope in the lab. My
diploma in tropical nursing comes in handy! I love using the knowledge God has given me!
We got frozen raspberries & blueberries in
the ship-shop! They were sold out within minutes of being placed in the
freezer. After making my purchase from the ship-shop- I took my treasure to my
room...On the way back to my room- I passed someone in the hall-way and they
asked how I was…I responded with pure excitement- “There are raspberries &
blueberries in the ship shop!!!” With no excitement, whatsoever, they said- “oh.”
This person obviously hasn’t been on the ship long enough- or they would have
appreciated my excitement & danced wildly with me as a few of my other
long-term friends and I did…all in honor of the raspberries! The small things
in life!
I got one of the best packages of my life- on the
ship’s container last week! The package was mailed from the USA December 31st
– it travelled to Texas- was loaded into a shipping container that made its way
across the ocean to me & arrived April 5th! The package
contained a “birthday in a box” & was complete with a birthday banner- cake
mix, frosting, little wrapped gifts…and
oh- bless peanut butter m&m’s, Cabot Cheddar Cheese flavoring for
popcorn, real crumbled bacon bites, gummy bears, you name it! Awesome! The
package arrived just in time- not for my birthday- that was March 12th-
but just in time nonetheless. I really needed some cheer & love from home
on the exact day the package arrived! God is good! I pray my 31st
year is better than all my previous years- I pray God teaches me much &
allows me to bless many!
As a part of my nursing work
here- I wrote the following email a few weeks ago- can’t say I ever wrote an
email like that during one of my nursing shifts at home! Never a dull moment
here… “Hello! I have another very random question for you. Do you or anyone at
the US Embassy have any extra smooth peanut butter that you would be willing to
donate to Mercy Ships or let us buy from you? Or do you know of local
supermarkets that sell it? Our containers have been delayed that bring our
pediasure & ensure for NG feeds. We have run out before- we are used to
making due- & in that case we have our own recipe for NG feeds with smooth peanut
butter & other nutrients- so our patients get the calories then need, but
because of the delay of our containers- we are out of smooth peanut butter too!
AHAHAh! We cannot use the crunchy peanut butter in NG feeds- because it could
clog the tubes. So- if you know of any available peanut butter. Mercy Ships
would love to know about it! Thanks.”
From un-expected surgeries to
peanut butter needs- God is good- he's got adventures for us each and every
single day- trust him in the adventure- he won't let you down... He doesn't disappoint-
in fact he loves to give blessings- you just may have never known they can come
in the form of raspberries & diet coke!
Sunday, April 7, 2013
pray that they will see more of HIM & less of me
As
the man struggled to speak to me in English, tears rolled down his cheek,
describing what had happened to his brother.
His brother had been traveling from the interior of Guinea to Conakry when
he had been attacked by bandits, was robbed, beat, and he had his right eye
slashed with a machete. As soon as the
man started talking to me, I knew that Mercy Ships couldn’t physically do
anything for his brother- because all Mercy Ships surgery slots for eye & maxilla-facial
patients were/are full…I dreaded saying no to the man… I hate saying no to people,
but it is part of my job…when Mercy Ships surgery spaces are full or we don’t
have a doctor that can treat the patient’s aliment, I have to say no… My heart
hurt for this man and his brother, as it does for every patient I come across….But,
for this one….I couldn’t bring myself to just say no… My schedule for the next
few days was lighter than normal so I agreed to see the patient, even though I
couldn’t really help him. I gently, but firmly
told the man - that Mercy Ships would not be able to operate on his brother,
but that we would see him nonetheless & offer any advice we could… I didn’t want to offer false hope…
The
patient was a middle-aged man, a taxi driver, and his injury not only
threatened his vision, but his livelihood- if he lost the vision in one of his
eyes- he would not be able to work as a taxi driver & his 5 young ones at
home were going to face serious challenges.
The patient was hopeful…I was doubtful…what was I really thinking- when
I agreed to see him? I knew we couldn’t offer him physical help… I prayed
quietly under my breath- asking God to somehow touch this patient… I saw him 4 days after his initial injury-
the swelling in his eye had subsided significantly, but still he had no vision.
He couldn’t even see light… I arranged for him to see our eye surgeon. The
surgeon confirmed that the patient would not regain his sight & he needed
an operation. The eye surgeon and I
contacted a local clinic & they confirmed they could perform the operation
the man needed.
Upon
telling the patient that Mercy Ships couldn’t help him & that he was going
to be blind in his right eye, we offered to pray with him if he desired- he
accepted….We offered a simple prayer and I again apologized that I could not do
anything for him. I felt horrible- the
patient was going to be blind forever in that eye- he would very likely lose
his job, and the livelihood of his family was in jeopardy. Oh, man… I expected the patient to be angry or beg me
for help- as they often do- if I have had to deliver less than ideal news…but
as this patient spoke in his local dialect, I noted he didn’t look angry…instead
he looked entirely at peace and was smiling… my translator told me that he was
thanking me profusely for my time and for seeing him. He also reported he didn’t
know how he was going to repay me… Through a translator, I told the patient I
helped him because God loves him & cares about him & if he told others
what God had done for him, that would be enough thanks… I then handed the
patient an offering we had quickly gathered to cover the cost of his operation
at the local clinic (a clinic I had made contact with while I was on the
Advance team in Guinea- back in May-August 2012) and sent him on his way.
Nothing but thankful phrases rolled off his lips as I escorted him off the
ship.
Days
have passed since I saw the patient that had been attacked with the
machete. But, a few days ago a fellow
crew member pulled me aside to say…”Good job! I don’t know what you did- but the
man I was sitting next to kept pointing at you- saying… ‘she is the one, that
girl, she is the one that helped us so much…’ so great job!” I said- I didn’t do anything special…I was
simply doing my job…
I
saw the original man again- a few days ago… he stuttered as he tried to communicate
to me in English…but this time he stuttered words of thankfulness with a huge
smile on his face… He requested a picture of me for his brother. He said his brother cannot stop talking about
me & Mercy Ships. Through his broken
English- I managed to understand his brother wants to remember the one who
showed such kindness to him…And he said his brother is telling all the people
in his village what I/we did for him… I don’t normally give pictures of myself
to patients, but for this one I may…and I pray that whenever he sees my photo
or when he thinks of me…that he will see Jesus…
Pray that what they all see is more of HIM & less of me...
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
...don't worry or fear for me...cause I fear not...
For those of you who are up on your geography & world news and may have heard about the trouble happening in Mali, the neighboring country
north-west of Guinea, where French troops have come in over the last
few months, please pray…The minor protests and riots we are having in Guinea are nothing like the current unrest in Mali. nor are they related. The trouble in Mali is about 911 kms away from where
I live- even though Guinea & Mali do share a border. Also- don’t trust Googlemaps it says it take 12 hours & 28 mins to
get to Malia…A recent road-trip of mine in Guinea was estimated by Googlemaps to take 3 hours & 9 mins to travel
233 km…It took my friends and me a good 8 hours and that was in a vehicle in
excellent condition (that's another story for another time)…so real trouble is more than 24 hours of travel away…but
nonetheless please pray for God's presence to be in both the situation in Guinea & the situation in Mali...Don't worry or fear for me.. for "I fear not for he is with me"...Isaiah 41:10
Sunday, February 24, 2013
if you missed it...it isn't too late
In May of 2012- the CBS news- 60 Minutes team- visited my floating home in Lome, Togo. 60 Minutes aired their documentary one week ago today- but if you missed it- don't fear- click the link above & you can catch some of what you missed- plus a few "60 Minutes- Overtime" segments that didn't make the original showing- but are worth watching! Don't strain your eyes too much searching for me in the spot-light- the television team showed up one day after I had already left to go to Guinea to prepare for Mercy Ships' current outreach here...but some of the Ziulkowski's caught some of the action as my mom & dad were aboard volunteering during the time the television crew was aboard...Enjoy & be blessed!
praying for peace in Guinea & answered prayers
As my
translator was reporting to me that he had just finished calling the list of
patients I had asked him to call, our conversation was interrupted by the sound
of the intercom overhead. I held my
breath- knowing that among the few reasons the ship’s intercom system is used-
is for emergency medical team calls. And
even though I have lived in the ship’s environment for over four years now
& we have miraculously few emergencies in our hospital- I still hold my
breath and instinctively start praying as soon as I hear the intercom’s static
erupt through the routine of my daily life aboard the ship.
I
breathed a sigh of relief as I heard “Attention crew- attention crew- this is
the captain speaking.” Thankful there wasn’t a medical emergency in our midst,
my heart calmed and I listened to the captain.
The captain announced that once again because of the growing political
unrest and tension here in Guinea- that he had received word that within the
next day or two there were threats of protests and riots in town. Therefore, there would be “restricted shore
leave, no coming or going, and only mission critical travel-
as approved by the captain alone.” The captain reported he would keep us aware
of changes in the situation and that crew should frequently check The Captain’s
Notice Board- where critical information is communicated.
After
an announcement of that type- some would expect me to feel fear or frustration
over the danger just around the corner or cancellation of planned adventures-
but neither fear or sadness over cancelled adventures to the market or beach
were on my radar- instead- I found myself angry & with a bunch of repeat
phone calls to make….
I
was angry as I reflected on the fact that it does no good to have Mercy Ships in
country- or to be one of the blessed patients that makes it onto our surgery
schedule before it fills up, if patients cannot get to us. My patients don’t need any more resistance in
their fight to get to us…the patients here battle fears we wouldn’t even think
of-they have been told stories of what will happen to them if they go to the
ship- their elders & chiefs remind them of folks the same skin color as me
who not long ago- sailed away with their loved ones on ships- chaining and imprisoning
them, religious fears, threats of being disowned if they come to us, unimaginably
difficult roads to traverse, fear of water, walking for miles and miles,
selling everything one has to get here, these people do not need more challenge
in their lives….now riots, protests, taxi strikes…When is enough…enough???
Battling
my frustration at injustice & the enemy (because I truly believe many of
the struggles we face in this life are not against flesh & blood- Ephesians
6- & the enemy is the one trying to steal, destroy, and disappoint the
people of Guinea) I took a deep breath and looked at my translator and told him
all the patients we had just called to come into the ship had to be called once
again because I wasn’t going to be able to drive with them to the local hospital
(related to the ships’ lockdown) to obtain the CT Scans they have been so
patiently waiting for while Mercy Ships’ CT Scanner has been on the fritz. Bless my humble patients- some of them had
been waiting for more than 4 months for their CT Scans, since Mercy Ship’s CT
Scanner first started having trouble months ago. Some of these precious patients had already
had their appointments for CT Scans with me changed more than 4 times back in
the fall, when we thought our CT Scanner was on the mend. I would schedule
their appointment after receiving the shipment of a few vital bio-medical
components from the USA& Europe only to find we needed more parts and had
to cancel their appointments. Then we would receive more parts for the scanner
and I would call my patients to come in again-trying to give them travel time
considering some of them have to travel more than 2 days to reach me, just to
find out we needed more parts for the machine to be fixed. I asked my translator to call each of the
patients again and to explain that each of them is very important to me and to
Mercy Ships, that we were so sorry for the inconvenience and would call them
again soon to reschedule their appointment and that I would not forget them.
I listened
as my translator spoke to one of my patients on the phone. I interrupted him
and gently asked him to please say exactly what I had asked (my French is
improving rapidly). Although translating
exactly what I say- should be a given in translation, it isn’t…and sometimes
that is good as I have learned that culturally things need to be said
differently- and I have asked my translator to tell me that- not just change
what I say- but other times- what I am asking to be said is just so foreign- my
translator has deemed it not necessary to translate. More frustration mounts in my heart- I truly want
to communicate to my patients how important they are to me- that I am not like
others who have promised them something and never give it, but this is hard to
express when I cannot communicate directly with my patients & up until now-
I haven’t been able to provide tangible evidence that I do care for them and
their needs.
I
pray that somehow my patients will understand they are cared for and loved by
me, Mercy Ships, and far more important than either my love or Mercy Ships’
love, they are loved by God! I ask again
that my translator verbally acknowledges and tells my patients that they are
important to me and I value them. My translator
looks at me with a blank face…At first I feel myself becoming more frustrated,
but then it hits me that maybe my translator has never been told that he is
important or valued…Sobering thought…There are many in this world that have
never been told they are important or valued… if you fall into that category; let
me be the first to tell you…YOU ARE IMPORTANT & VALUED… I try to explain to
my translator the value in being told that you are important and that not only
the physical needs of my patients are important to me- their emotional and
mental frustration mounting with the waves of hope and despair they have felt
over the past few months- waiting for their call to come to the ship, then
being told not to come…matters to me..I know they are seeing the days and
months tick by- with no tangible hope yet received, their tumors are growing
bigger, their pain is increasing, their rejection mounts….I hurt for them and sincerely
want to communicate that I care…Oh- the adventure & challenge to
communicate with language & cultural barriers. To grow up in a world where
you don’t have the basics in life… love, shelter, clothing, clean water, where
no one cares if you are dying, or bleeding to death, of course emotional and
mental health are low on the radar…all learning and teaching moments…
With
the CT Scan patients called- and a whispered prayed for peace in this country-I
set to my next task…With creativity I can hopefully help prevent losing
operating room time- I will not allow the enemy to steal one more bit of hope
from another patient in this country- if I can help it…I pull up the OR
schedule for the next few days and after approving with the ward supervisor
that there were enough bed spaces on the ward
with boarding pre-op patients under the beds if necessary, my translator
and I set to calling in the patients for surgery for the next few days to come
in early to stay on the ward- so that they wouldn’t be prevented from traveling
to the ship if they were caught in riots or protests. A few riots or threats from the enemy won’t
scare me- I am on a mission here- to know, be, & bring the Peace- (brilliant
sermon series by Pastor Warren R) - with all I am; in His strength- I wage
Peace…
What
a day….never a boring moment…tired & exhausted… I went to bed- but not
before praying for peace in Guinea…
The next
morning I awoke and glanced at the Captain’s Notice Board and was pleasantly
surprised that my prayers were answered! The riots and protests were cancelled
for that day because the president of FIFA (the governing body for football/soccer
for the World Cup) decided to visit Guinea that day! And since he was in town,
Joseph “Sepp” Blatter, the FIFA president, decided to stop over for a surprise
visit to my home here. No big deal- and in case it interests you the other day the
ambassador from Saudi Arabia popped in for a visit. And I probably failed to mention it, but in
my time while living on the ship, Princess Anne from England, a few other
African presidents, Miss Belgium, an Australia television crew, a Norwegian
television crew, some German actresses, Nick Vujicic (an evangelist &
motivational speaker who was born without all four limbs), and 60 minutes correspondents,
among many other dignitaries, have just popped in for a visit to my home here
and there-sometimes announced and sometimes un-announced!
After
a mere day, the excitement of the FIFA president’s visit to Guinea disappeared
into the past and the riots & protests were scheduled once again. More changes in patient appointments and
plans... This place I live is ever amazing and never boring. Who would have
thought a nurse must work so hard to just get her patients to the hospital so
she can care for them… After another long day…tired & exhausted… I went to
bed- but not before praying for peace in Guinea… Prayers for peace in Guinea
appreciated!
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