Monday, September 29, 2014

Remember . . .


This photo?  It was taken on Happy Matt Day this summer at Sand Creek Adventures over in Jordan where I am now the NEWEST EMPLOYEE!  When I stopped at the end of that zip, I met Duane, the owner, and asked him if he ever hired little old ladies - like me!  And he did and today I was trained in on the zip line.  Of course, training did include zipping - lovely fall colors!  Tomorrow, I'll learn the low ropes course and maybe even the high ropes!

"Low ropes and high ropes and fourteen foot walls;
Running and dipping a thrill for us all;
Crossing the zip line accomplishment rings
These are a few of my favorite things!"

Yup, I'll be singing that just like Julie Andrews in "Sound of Music"!

A Quote from Twain . . .

Mark Twain, that is!

Going to sea is like going to jail -
with a chance of drowning. 
 
After having sailed from Togo to Tenerife with muster drills, lifeboat drills and pirate watches, I had to watch the movie, "Captain Phillips".  Now I'm reading his book, A Captain's Duty.  It's a bit salty, but I like it.  It brings back good Mercy Ships memories . . .

Friday, September 26, 2014

Only a two year old . . .

. . . Could look at me with big brown eyes and say, "You're doing a good job, Miss Margo" while I'm teaching him to swim!  Thanks, Oren!

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Free Tours!

 Wouldn't that be great to go?
After all, they would love to host us!





Saturday, September 20, 2014

Maybe . . .

Just maybe . . . you saw the picture today in the StarTribune of the empty streets in Freetown, Sierra Leone.  Sam, who was a ship driver and who drove on more roads in Sierra Leone than most people will in a lifetime, said, "That hill looks so familiar but it's so empty . . ."  Look at our pictures and see the city full of people we love and pray for a Mighty God to heal that land . . . 

 

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

New Signs in Monrovia . . .

When we were in Monrovia in '07, the signs graphically displayed how rape was wrong;
I'm not sure this is any better.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

More Eloquent than I . . .

Dr. Michelle is a anaesthetist consultant aboard the good ship Mercy.  She hails from the UK and what she had to share on her blog, "Dr. Michelle Onboard", regarding going to Madagascar was far more eloquent than I . . . Enjoy her heart!

These are not easy times, but they are incredible times.
We delayed our departure to Benin so we could monitor the Ebola situation especially in nearby Nigeria. The Ebola cases in Lagos were less than 120 km from where our team was preparing for the ships arrival in nearby Porto Novo, (the capital of Benin) and Cotonou (the large port city). However, the Ebola situation in Nigeria was far from contained – as those who have being following the news will know. Therefore we took the decision to cancel the ships deployment to Benin for this year. This was a very difficult decision. But crew safety was important, and also a desire not to worsen the Ebola situation was at the forefront of our minds.
How could we worsen the Ebola situation? Our ship, offering free healthcare, acts like a large magnet. Many people travel great distances in search of help. Countries in West Africa are like Europe, where the national borders are easily crossed and are no barrier to people movement. We frequently care for people outside the host nation who come to the ship, desperately seeking help. So being in Cotonou Benin, where literally hundreds of people cross the border back and forth to Lagos, Nigeria each day, was considered not a wise idea. The best thing to control Ebola is to restrict the movement of people, not encourage it. 
Our Advance team have been in Benin since April preparing for the ships arrival. They have hired approximately 200 local people to help us and had begun training them. Literally hundreds of posters have been distributed, radio and TV announcements were advertising our main patient selection on September 9th. Applications forms for our healthcare education programs have been collected and two large ship containers were in Benin full of equipment and supplies – ready and waiting for us. Suddenly it is all change.
For the last few weeks this same team have been packing up, and pulling out. The radio and TV announcements now tell people that the patient selection is cancelled. However, some people had already started turning up – so sad. The 200 people hired for the year are being told they will no longer have a job. Thankfully the newly renovated buildings that we would have used for our dental clinic and Hospital Out Patient Extension (HOPE) Centre will still be able to be used. So at least we have left something behind. But then again, I believe it really is more than just buildings that we have left behind.
On one level it seems like we went to Benin and gave the people hope, and then that hope was snuffed out. But that is only part of the picture. We will be back – just not sure when. Benin will remain in our hearts and prayers because Mercy Ships is committed to West Africa and we are committed to serving the poorest of the poor. And now after Ebola, this region will be poorer than ever, especially countries like Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. At times like these I take my hope from the words of Jesus,  ‘whatever you have done for the least of these you have done for me’. So every encounter, every smile, every hand shaken by our Advance Team was a Jesus encounter. A chance when love was shown, hope was sown, and an opportunity for more was born. It isn’t just about Mercy Ships bringing a hospital ship to a city. It is about people having hope for the future. The ship might not have come to Benin, but love did. Love in the form of a small team made up of 8 friends of mine, who poured heart and soul into Cotonou and the surrounding areas. Why? Ultimately because they believe in something bigger than Mercy Ships. They believe in a God who can bring hope and healing in ways the ship can't. Ways bigger than simply healthcare. They believe in a God who can make all things new. They believe love has a face and so do I. And that is one of the reasons I am here and why I do what I do.
And the great things about belief and faith like this is, that despite these very sad, very real, and very devasting consequences of Ebola – love still has a face. Every encounter is a Jesus encounter. My heart goes out to the people of Benin, I have been there twice before and I was looking forward to going there again. And I pray for the opportunity to return. But meanwhile, God is expanding our territory. No longer is Mercy Ships limited to West and Central Africa – we are now headed to East Africa. We will be serving the people of Madagascar instead. They are excited about the opportunity to host us and we are excited to be going. Sadness on one hand for Benin, but on the other hand - so thankful for the opportunity to spread our surgery and capacity building efforts to another part of Africa, Madagascar……here we come.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Madagascar!


The Africa Mercy's anticipated arrival into Madagascar is by the end of October, and the vessel with have a shortened seven-month field service. 

Madagascar is located off the coast of East Africa. More than 43% of its population of 22.6 million is under the age of 20, and the nation is positioned at 151 out of 187 countries and territories in the Human Development Index.  A protracted political crisis in recent years has endangered the nation’s ability to meet a number of millennium development goals and has taken a heavy toll on Madagascar’s economy and people, especially the most vulnerable. More than 92 percent of Madagascar’s population lives on less than $2.50 a day. 

This island nation was last served by the Anastasis in 1996, and has since experienced great civil unrest, leaving an already challenged popoluation in immense need.

Going on a rock hunt!

Gonna find a rock!

Yesterday, my next door neighbor (clue number one) came over after the game and said, "Do you want to go find rocks with me to put around the fire pit (clue number two)?"  I, of course, always being up for adventure, hopped in to the Rav (clue number three) and went over to the construction zone on Highway 50 and helped her find all kinds of rocks! 

Sunday, September 7, 2014

The F.O.O.'s

We had a great day with the kids' maternal family of origin (hence, the F.O.O.'s).
Check it out! 

Senior Picture Practice

The Siblings

On the road again . . .

All of us together

One more of the sibs

Allison with the kids
 

Saturday, September 6, 2014

From Texas with Love . . .

After spending an entire month in Texas and NOT seeing a single armadillo, 
our boss dropped us off at the airport with the following gift . . .



My very own armadillo refrigerator magnet!
Then this came in the mail yesterday from my friend, Sarah,
of my 600th blog post fame!



Now, if you're in Texas and reading this -
I do have room for a few more armadillos!

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Grout Cleaning!

Here's the lap pool at the Y - only it didn't look like that yesterday!  The water was drained Monday night and staff started cleaning it on Tuesday.  I showed up bright and early Wednesday morning and spent the next three hours cleaning grout!  It took four of us two hours to do the leisure pool, but only one hour to do the lap pool which is bigger.  Why you ask?  Well, two hours in, one of our staff remembered that if we got the tiles well and then sprayed on "Foamy C & A" it cleaned better - and it did! 

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Oh, Poop!

Or a better title may be "just a random happy thought!".  You see, our dog likes to poop and that means whoever is walking her, has pooper scooper duty and mostly it's me.  But my random happy thought is with a Monday holiday this week, some people didn't get the memo and put their trash out a day early.  Full trash cans are fair game!  And Tuesdays trash pick up will now be on Wednesday and Wednesday's will now be on Thursday . . . and I'm going to have a full week of fair game!  Poop on - and I don't mean the mustard!
 

Did you know . . .

. . . that from 1926 until 1962, the American Public Health Association mandated nude swimming classes and that included the YMCA?  But when I forgot my swimsuit this morning, I was not allowed to swim nude at the Prior Lake Y!

It's been SEVEN years . . .

Since Matt and Micah went to the same school at the same time in the same vehicle!  Obviously, someone was not happy that I wanted to capture this momentous occasion!



Monday, September 1, 2014

A Different Reality . . .

Africa is tough.  If you go there, and you're with the people, it's even tougher because they become a part of your heart and then you realize how much you have and how much they don't and your reality becomes different.  I've attached two pictures that are not for the faint of heart, but Ebola is a reality and right now it's in my corner of Africa . . .  

A burial team from the Liberian health department sprays disinfectant over the body of a woman suspected of dying of the Ebola virus on Aug. 14, 2014 in Monrovia.

An Ebola clinic in Liberia, with the living and the dead.