Thursday, March 31, 2016

Thankful Thursday!

On this particular Thursday, I am thankful for all of those who donate blood, and particularly those who gave today - including me! - and those who tried - including Micah and her friend, Shayla! 

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Sophie and Brennan!?!

I was swimming laps at the Y this morning when two middle school/high school age students joined me.  I did a double take - it was my former neighbors Sophie and Brennan.  We did a couple of laps together when it hit me - they should have been in school!  Sophie and Micah are the same age and do both go to North!  So, being the good parent I am, I called them on their truancy.  It turns out their mom (who also teaches with Sam) is on spring break this week and declared it "Family Day".  And that's all I'm going to say because North does not have school on Friday . . .

Sunday, March 27, 2016

3FT or March Madness!

We had a delightful Easter dinner at the cousins' house - that would be with Dr. David Durey and his wife Jeanette, along with their two children, Loren and Bre, as well as a friend, Jake.  Micah had asked on Saturday if we could do that "saran wrap ball" on Sunday, so we spent Saturday afternoon at the Dollar Store, Cub and Target - finding just the right things to add to the ball which Sam and Micah then shaped like an Easter egg!

It was a hoot!  Loren could not roll doubles if his life depended on it - and me, sitting next to him, could roll them faster than a speeding bullet!  Jeanette got so into watching the action, she forgot to roll - and Matt sitting next to her got a lot of prizes!  If only we could have filmed the whole event - you would be laughing with me!  The memory of looks I saw on faces still brings a smile - it was good forced family fun time or truly March Madness!  

Until next month . . . Happy Easter!   

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Credible Hope

We have the privilege of personally knowing Dr. Gary Parker and in him and his ministry, we truly see the light and love of Jesus!


Friday, March 25, 2016

On Holiday . . .

Dr. Sherif Emil is a pediatric surgeon and Director of the Division of Pediatric General and Thoracic Surgery at the Montreal Children's Hospital. For 2 weeks, he was part of the volunteer crew of the Africa Mercy, currently docked in Tamatave, Madagascar. The Africa Mercy is the world's largest civilian hospital ship dedicated to bringing hope and healing to tens of thousands of the world's impoverished populations.  These are his brief stories that are definitely worth the read - if you don't have time, start with #5. 
Read more: 
Dispatches from the Africa Mercy # 1: The End of the Earth
Dispatches from the Africa Mercy # 2: Can it get any better?
Dispatches from the Africa Mercy #3: The Heroes of Africa
Dispatches from the Africa Mercy #4: The Power of Camaraderie
Dispatches from the Africa Mercy #5: It Takes a Mercy Ship

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Thankful Thursday!

Today I am most thankful for the son who scooped out the elderly neighbor's driveway four times as he was in the hospital, allowing his wife the opportunity to only worry about her husband.  And I am most thankful for the daughter who vacuumed the house, walked the dog, did the laundry and baked chocolate chip cookies all while I was at work today.  Wouldn't you be thankful, too? 

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

One less . . .

We were one student short this morning and I drew the short straw.  I got to call the house and find out why.  

The phone was answered by a woman who asked me if M.S. (missing student) had called me to tell me he was going to drop the class.  I said no because there was truly no way to call me; however, he could have called the Aquatics Department and I just hadn't received the message yet.  I thought that was the end of the phone call, but it wasn't! 

I found out that MS was living with his grandmother, whom I was talking to, and and not his grandfather because he had died two years ago.  He was an only child and used to being alone.  He was living with his grandmother because he had been abused by his birth mother (grandma's daughter-in-law) since birth.  Grandma's son, MS's dad, had died when MS was three.  Because of his abuse and the tragedies he'd endured, he has a sensory issue and all the touching we did in the pool yesterday had sent him over the edge.  He wasn't coming back.  

And that's all I wanted to know in the beginning.  Then I began to wonder - could we have done something more or different?  But the honest answer is "No".  Without any background information until after the fact, no we couldn't have.  It's hard, but sometimes life is just hard.

Monday, March 21, 2016

Eleven. Fourteen. Sixteen! Fifteen.

I'm back at Black Hawk this week teaching fourteen and fifteen year olds how to teach swimming.  Last Thursday, there were only eleven in the class.  At 8:30 this morning, we were up to fourteen.  By 8:45 a.m., it looked like sixteen students.  We started at 9:00 a.m. with fifteen - so we added a third teacher in the afternoons.  We definitely have the largest class going over there this week!  There are a few glitches and challenges - we determined Ashley's cold was worse than mine because her Kleenex box was bigger - but it should be a good week!

Sunday, March 20, 2016

The Burden of Proof

I just finished reading a book about the Congo, "Congo Dawn", and I was amazed at the overwhelming corruption.  Then I read the blog "Through My Porthole" and realized my fiction book was real life today for these women. As a part of Mercy Ministries, Mercy Ships crew have the opportunity to visit the prisons on a weekly basis. 
 
The grim conditions I saw 42 women enduring in the local prison today touched me deeply, but I was really rocked by the stories the inmates told us.
 
prison 1

The common thread for many prisoners here is being accused of a crime (like a theft), only to be incarcerated for months and months waiting for a trial. One woman had been waiting 8 months for a verdict, another has seen a year pass – a baby born – with no trial date in sight. The release date for yet another woman is in just a few days but she is terribly worried that she simply will not be allowed to leave. The husband of another was accused of kidnapping so his wife was imprisoned although she knew nothing. This but a glimpse of the injustices many are suffering.

The female section within the prison compound includes 4 ‘cells’, 10 women to a room. The look reminded me of something from an old western movie; walls formed from concrete blocks, a roof of rusty tin. Windows spaces  are secured with old-fashioned iron bars, and the interiors are dim and hot.

Several women were squatting in the cooking area; tending their meager, unvaried meal of cassava over naked flames.  Others pumped water from the sole spigot to wash themselves later – without privacy, or to scrub by hand the few items of clothing they own.

Their open space is small rocky, dirt courtyard with a washing line stretched across it. Someone had tended hardy plants along one side.  A scattering of Livingston Daisies in brilliant magenta brought a poignant splash of colour to their dismal world.

The stories these women told make their physical conditions fade into insignificance. Like all the prisoners in this nation’s system, the burden of proof lies with the defendant. These woman were imprisoned because they were accused of a crime, and it is up to them to prove themselves innocent. I don’t really know how they hope do that with no money or resources.

My friend Patti and other Mercy Ships women spend time encouraging these precious women every second Saturday (a male group also goes to the 1000-strong men’s section). We told stories, we sang together, we got them moving around with actions songs, we did crafts. And we shared that God knows each of us by name – and explained to the ladies how they could know Him too.

Hanging out with the women prisoners today was an earth-shattering experience for me. In the midst of my prayers for prisoners in so many nations suffering under the same conditions, I am truly thanking God for the impartial legal system in my own nation.

Justice is so easily taken for granted until you glimpse life without it!




Thursday, March 17, 2016

Thankful Thursday!

On this very particular Thursday, I am thankful for Ana and Ashley who are taking my classes at the Y next Tuesday and Thursday respectively so I can go make almost twice as much money teaching eleven students in the Water Safety Aid Course at ISD 196 next week.  And next Thursday, I guarantee I will be thankful that I'm DONE teaching at ISD 196 until May.  Just saying . . .

Monday, March 14, 2016

Amerista

Today's post is somewhat similar to Saturday's, but with a different, equally blessing perspective.  It's been reblogged from "A Beautiful Wander" and I hope you'll read it.

Today our hearts are broken over the loss of a young patient.
The beautiful 5-year-old girl from Northern Madagascar passed away on board the Africa Mercy on Thursday 10 March, at 5.45pm. She died two days after a very unusual, rare and severe reaction to the surgical procedure in combination with general anaesthetic, during treatment to remove a complex tumour of her lower face and neck. Her mother had been at her bedside since their arrival to the Mercy Ship on 20 January and her senior uncle joined them Thursday evening.
Official formalities with the local authorities were completed Friday morning and the family and the body are flown back to their village in the afternoon to prepare for her funeral.
Our prayers and our love leave with them.
-Mercy Ships Press Release
There are times where God doesn’t make sense, where our life and beliefs collide and it just seems altogether unfair.

And that’s OK.

A five year old patient died this week from complications during her surgery. Its tragic, understandably difficult and terribly sad. Personally I didn’t have a connection to her other than she was one deck below me, but as a community we have a connection. She was a precious life that was fought for even before the complication, she was a patient our nurses looked after and gave stickers, smiles and hugs to. She was a beautiful person whom God loved dearly. And now she is no more. And that is always hard to understand. Especially when as a community we prayed and interceded and begged for her life. But God did not answer how we hoped.

And that is OK too.

I’ve given up trying to figure out how God could allow tragedies and evil. I will never understand or make sense of it, I will always see it as an injustice and unfair. I could go round in circles trying to make sense of it and justify God’s decision. But that is not my job, my job is to love God and love others. And if I really love him, and really believe he works all things together for good, than the logical manifestation is that I trust He knows what he is doing even when bad things happen… trust that in his infinite wisdom and knowledge He makes the perfect call.

But it doesn’t make it easy and I don’t think we should cover that up.

I have friends whose hearts are aching right now, friends who have come across the world to help people and have just lost one instead. How do we connect those dots?? Maybe we don’t.

And that, too, is OK.

Instead of demanding answers to the why questions, “why didn’t you heal her?” “why did you allow this?” “why didn’t you perform a miracle?”, perhaps we need to quietly ask the where question, “where were you God?”

We’re reading through Esther as a community, the one book in the Bible that never mentions the name of God yet God is everywhere in the story, He is active behind the scenes and works to bring about his will. In my own life there have been seasons where God seems absent but in reality he is active and working to bring about his will. Just because he’s quiet doesn’t mean he’s any less good. I have learned to ask where instead of why.

A friend shared that this little girl had fought already to live after a few complicated surgeries, that this wasn’t the first time she’s had a complication while in surgery. And while this knowledge doesn’t make it easier, it does paint a bigger picture as I ask God where he was in all of this.

I see that He loved this child enough to bring her to a place where she would pass into his arms with dignity. Had she passed away in a local hospital I can only imagine the lack of care and reverence her life and body would have been shown, perhaps no one would have comforted the grieving family, and with little fanfare or intention she would have become just a number on a piece of paper somewhere, another empty statistic.

But here she was more. She was Amerista and she was loved well.

Medical staff fought valiantly for her life in the OR, hospital leadership discussed and reviewed her case with hearts and eyes that desire the best and value life, nurses provided world class care and kept her alive until the last moment, and chaplains came alongside the family and entered into their grief and pain with love and compassion, and an entire crew of housekeepers, cooks, deck hands, and more set aside whatever we were doing to pray for her precious life as it hung in the balance and then to pray for her family.

Moreover, after her passing, a carpenter crafted a coffin with compassion, and not just a haphazard box but a proper and beautiful coffin with smooth corners and sanded sides. Women quietly covered cushioning to line the inside of the coffin and sent down a beautiful dress so this little girl could rest in peace as a honored life. When the time came for the family to leave the ship, the hallways were cleared and path blocked from general crew, the family was escorted by people who entered into their pain as they walked.

As I said, I will never understand or be able to explain the why, but I will accept the where… God didn’t show up how we hoped but he showed up nonetheless, he showed up in how this family experienced respect, dignity and love in what is probably one of the hardest things they will ever endure.

And its still OK to be upset, to be disappointed, or confused, or frustrated,or angry, sad, doubtful, numb… its all OK because that is the reality of living in a broken world. Its not easy and its not fair and its certainly not comfortable… but its OK to be uncomfortable, God will meet us there and sit in that space with us. And that is beautifully OK.
Faith includes noticing the mess, the emptiness and discomfort, and letting it be there until some light returns. 
-Anne Lamott
 

Saturday, March 12, 2016

On a ship far away . . .

This just happens to be my blog post 1001.  It's also reblogged from "Krissy on Mercy".  I like it because Krissy is a down-home girl.  She's from Duluth.  And she shares the reality of what happens on a medical hospital ship far away.

It’s remarkable how you can forget.

You live in this place that is filled with hope, healing, before-and-after pictures that bring a smile to your face and a tear to your eye.  You share meals and share stories and make coffee and answer emails and fill out forms and teach your students and wash the plates and the pots and the pans… and in all that you can know you are doing a wonderful thing but not realize the gravity of it until the moment.

The moment when you hear “I don’t have any details, but they are resuscitating a 5 year old girl in the OR.”

And you gasp as you remember.

We don’t just change lives.  We save them, too. And sometimes we don’t.  And it’s really not up to us. 

And the managing director makes an overhead page and begins to pray and every single person stops what they are doing – they stop the emails and the teaching and the serving and the cleaning of plates and pots and pans, so we can unite together, this beautiful place of hope and healing, of tongues and accents and faiths; we unite together in speaking life and hope and healing over this little girl, and wisdom and strength and peace over the operating room staff; we unite together to fight to keep that little girl with us for just a little bit longer, and a little longer after that.  We fight together for her to experience the joy of healing, the joy of returning home without the tumor that defined her for so many years, for her family to know what it’s like to live free of shame. 

And slowly you return to your routine of emails or forms or students or dishes or patients but it’s still there, in the back of your mind.  Then a bit later you come together and as a family you hear that the little one has gone to be with Jesus.  And you also hear there are over 5100 patients who we could not help this year.  And your gut twists and turns with the injustice of it all; with the pain, sadness, and with the acknowledgement that somehow, regardless of these things... God is.

And we cry together and we pray together and then we sing together… how great is our God, He is mighty to save, blessed be your name.

This place.  My heart.

Thursday, March 10, 2016

Thankful Thursday!

This particular Thursday,
with so much to be thankful for -
I am just choosing one man -
The man with whom I will celebrate
twenty-seven years of marriage on Saturday!
I am so thankful for my
Sam I Am!

My Little Shadow

"My Little Shadow" was reblogged from Nurse Jenny's blog, "Shine Bright". 
 

At 3 years of age, she fell into a fire severely burning her right hand and wrist. Without money to go to the local hospital, her family turned to a Catholic nun nearby for help. Over time, her skin did heal but not without contracting so tightly that her wrist was forced into a bent position and her fingers fused together making them essentially unusable.

Then, they heard about Mercy Ships providing free surgeries and there was hope. This 4 year old little girl and her older brother left their family and traveled for 4 days across Madagascar to the ship for her surgery. They trusted that these white people who didn’t speak their language could possibly heal her arm.

When I first took care of Sasimeny, it was a few hours after her surgery. She lay in her bed, in and out of sleep from anesthesia. Even though she never complained of pain, her grimaced face and the giant tears rolling down her cheek showed evidence of the major surgery she’d just gone through. But she obediently sat up and swallowed every bad tasting medication and tolerated our constant poking and prodding that interrupted her rest. All the while, her brother sat next to her bed patiently stroking her hand and speaking words of comfort that would mean more than anything my English ones ever would.

The first few days are always the worst. That’s what we tell our patients before their operations. Then things get better.

For a while, we all believed Sasimeny was shy and quiet. She kept to herself, coloring in bed or watching the movies that came on TV twice a day. Across the room, there was another 4 year old girl who had surgery around the same time, but she was not shy at all. Variela loved to play and be held by the nurses (and argue with her dad about taking medicine!). Sasimeny would watch from a distance as we played balloon toss or built Lego towers on the floor. Then one day, as I sat holding Variela, Sasimeny reached out to be picked up too. I guess the vazhas (white people) aren’t so bad, now are they? From that moment on, Sasimeny and I have been inseparable.

Sasimeny (right) and her buddy Variela

Now, I call her my ‘little shadow’ because about 95% of my working hours she spends in my arms or very close by. She is a completely different little girl – playful, vibrant and full of life with a bit of a stubborn streak we assume comes from being the baby in a family of 6 older brothers! Some have given her the nickname ‘Sassy’ and it fits well. We taught her to play Jenga, blow bubbles and cover her face in stickers. But her favorite thing is being carried up and down the hallway snuggled in someone’s arms. Occasionally, I force her to walk which usually turns into us racing down the hall holding hands. Secretly, I don’t really mind. She’s been in our hospital now over 50 days and rarely spends a moment in her bed unless she’s sleeping.

Sassy and her balloon with another nurse, Kayla.

One day soon, Sasimeny will leave our ship and move to the Hope Center to wait for several weeks of outpatient appointments and rehab before she can go home. While the surgery we did here will make it possible for her hand to move again, it’s the months of rehab and exercises after the skin heals that will allow her to use it to its full potential. And that really is the goal. Her right arm will never look completely like the left one again. But hopefully, with lots of practice she will be able to pick up a ball, hold a pencil and carry a bowl. Someday, she will be able to go to school and learn like the other kids. And years from now, she will be able to get a job or care for her children. All things that would have been more difficult or impossible without this surgery.



I can’t deny that I won’t be a tiny bit sad when my little shadow walks (or, let’s be honest, gets carried) up the stairs and down the gangway off the ship. She is only 4 years old and will probably not remember much about her time here. But I hope I will never forget her beautiful face or big, inquisitive brown eyes. As much as I hope she will have memories of nestling into my shoulder after running around Deck 7, it’s a tough reminder that this is not about me. My job is to love each patient and take care of them while they recover from surgery – their job is to use the life we’ve restored to its fullest potential! And I have no doubt that Sasimeny will do just that.

Sunday, March 6, 2016

No Fairy Tale Ending

Today's post is reblogged from "Through my Porthole"  and is dedicated to my friend Marilyn who has been asking if I'd heard any more about Olivienne. 

It has been a tough couple of weeks.

One of the reasons is that Olivienne returned to her village.
Olivienne. Pic by Katie Keegan
 
She came to us four months ago; malnourished and close to asphyxiation by the large benign tumour growing into her mouth. A special love for Olivienne crept into our  hearts over the weeks as she gradually gained strength, then received complex surgery to remove the tumour that had also destroyed part of her jaw. It was an uphill battle as bone and skin grafts seemed to take a long time to heal. Finally our beloved Olivienne was strong enough to return home to visit before her last operation. But this fragile young woman was badly beaten before she reached her village. She found her way back to the Mercy Ship with new damage to her face. Something seemed to break within her. Olivienne began to loose weight again and one skin graft would not heal. Sadly, tests showed that the tumour was regrowing. Her body couldn’t sustain her healing, and our dear Olivienne finally went home to her two small children in her remote northern village. Would you stop and pray for her just for a second? For her children, her pain, her remaining weeks – and her eternal days.

In the deck below me, Lanto is in her hospital bed. She is a sparkling 14-year-old who was born with gigantitism in her right leg. She came with her friend, who had six toes on each foot. Her dearest wish was to be able to wear a pair of shoes just like the other girls at school.
Lanto had gigantism since birth. Pic Ka Keegan

We were able to reduce Lanto’s foot so it is now the length and width of the other, but the disease made significantly reducing the depth of the foot impossible. Those cute shoes will be forever out of reach.  Lanto’s deep disappointment is perhaps underscored by the fabulous result her friend received; her feet will look pretty normal as the surgery site heals. Would you take a moment to lift Lanto’s self image, her hopes and dreams to her Maker?

20 year-old Tsima has suffered with an obstetric fistula for 7 years (!) She received a free surgery late last year, but her body refused to heal. She is scheduled for a second surgery in April to repair this permanent incontinence resulting from a birth injury. The tiny teenager lost her child, was abandoned by the baby’s father, and is only tolerated by her family. Please pray Tsima finds the courage to return for the second surgery, and that her body will be healthy enough to heal.
Tiny Tsima. Pic Justine Forrest
Each day people are leaving this ship healed and whole. But occasionally a patient does not receive the results we expected. A lot of screening, radiology and testing goes into deciding if a patient’s condition can be treated on board; we are not into offering false hope. The complex, tough cases keep us on our knees, and we keep our patients close to our hearts.


Saturday, March 5, 2016

Maraie Helene

Today's post was reblogged from "Into the Deep".  Read it all the way to the end . . .

The reality is sometimes we meet people that we cannot help or we have to ask them to live with their condition a little longer. We don’t always like it, we wish we could help every single person that came our way on the spot, but the hard truth is there are only so many surgery spots in a day or a surgery may require a surgeon with a particular expertise that may not be available for a few months. It’s difficult to explain to someone who has lived with a debilitating tumor for many years that they have to wait a little longer or that we can’t help – they often don’t understand, they feel like they’re going to die so why wouldn’t we operate right now; why would we wait? Why would we say no?

© 2015 Mercy Ships, Photo Credit Mercy Ships;
The task of assessing patients, hearing their stories and coordinating schedules thankfully falls on people gifted with a grace and ability to juggle moving parts in a way that I am often in awe of. Our screening team this field service has evaluated thousands of potential patients in 11 cities throughout Madagascar. But sometimes we don’t have to go very far to find a patient, some patients come right to our “door step” showing up at our HOPE Center, our land-based facility where patients heal after their surgeries, on the hope that we can help. That’s how I met my friend Marie Helene and her sister-in-law Biviane.

MGC151201_MARIE_HELENE_PAT05118_SCREENING_KK0001_LO 

About 12 years ago Marie Helene noticed a bump on the right side of her face. She lives in a remote village but was able to have a local healer look at it. She was given some medicinal oils that did nothing but the bump was so small Marie Helene decided she wouldn’t worry too much about it. However, slowly the tumor grew and over the last three years the tumor began growing exponentially. It grew so large that it rested on Marie Helene’s shoulder and she often had to support it with her hand. I’m told it’s not uncommon for these types of tumors to grow very slowly at first and all of a sudden start growing exponentially.

Marie Helene and her family didn’t know what to do. Unable to work and help her children out in the fields, Marie Helene was looked after quite often by her sister-in-law Biviane. The two ladies, both in their 70’s, vowed to care for one another after they both became widows just a few months apart. They were more than sisters-in-law; they were the best of friends.

Credit Photo: Mercy Ships;
Biviane was concerned that if Marie Helene did not receive help soon she would soon die. For months the two ladies had listened to travelers on their way home to the northern parts of Madagascar come through their village. They told a strange tale of returning from a hospital ship where they had experienced tremendous healing. People spoke of the foreigners on the ship and how well they were cared for and how everything provided was free. And then one day Biviane was visiting a friend in a larger city and she saw a news story of a man named Sambany, whose tumor was larger than Marie Helene’s and was removed. Biviane convinced Marie Helene to make the journey as the last hope to save her life. Marie Helene agreed and the two set off on a Saturday down the river from their village. After a half day canoe ride, the women rode public transportation for another half day before resting for the night. The journey continued with more public transportation, a cramped bus with people sitting shoulder to shoulder and no leg room through the winding Malagasy roads.

By the time they arrived, the ladies were exhausted, but glad to have arrived and eager to discover if we could help. A battery of tests and evaluation confirmed that Marie Helene was actually in excellent health except for the massive tumor on her face on a low iron count. She weighed in at about 95 pounds and it was estimated that about eight of those pounds was her tumor. I enjoyed getting to know the two ladies as the screening nurse worked on her tests and finding a surgery slot for her. They shared about life in their village. I showed them pictures of my family on my iPod. They giggled at the pictures of my two month old niece and said she had very chubby cheeks. We passed the time and became friends.

Although she was older than our typical surgery age of 60, Marie Helene was scheduled for admissions on Friday, March 4, which was three months away. For most patients that we meet, receiving an appointment date for surgery is an exciting moment, but for Marie Helene and Biviane, who just made a difficult journey, especially for two elderly women, they were crushed.  Marie Helene pleaded,  “I’m dead already. Please do the surgery now.”

Hearing her words I was reminded of Sambany, whose story inspired the ladies to place their hope in us in the first place; he said the very same words 10 months earlier when he also just appeared at our HOPE Center.  However, a surgery cannot be done simply because a patient wants it. In Marie Helene’s case, her iron deficiency needed to be treated ahead of her surgery and she needed to put weight on her very small frame to have the best chance for healing and survival during and after the surgery. The whole situation was complicated by the fact that we were beyond maximum capacity at the HOPE Center with more patients arriving that week; we couldn’t even house them for a night and sent them back home straight away. And this is the razor’s edge where logistics and compassion collide. Sometimes, like in Sambany’s case, everything lines up perfectly and we can bring the patient onto the ship immediately while we get them ready for surgery and sometimes like in Marie Helene’s case, not everything lines up perfectly and we do the best we can demonstrating love and compassion as we work through the logistics.

The screening team supplied Marie Helene with everything she would need for the next three months including protein packets to add weight. The screening nurse, translator and I stood on the dock as the two ladies boarded a bus, encouraging them that we would be standing on this very dock waiting for them on the morning of Friday, March and we expected them to be here.

Although today is March 4, I’ve known for some time that there would be no reunion on the dock this morning. I woke with Marie Helene on my mind and honestly, I couldn’t even bring myself to looking at the space until late in the day. As I finally made my way out there this evening and stared at the empty dock space, I thought about Marie Helene for a long time. I thought about the courage she showed in making the journey to the ship. I thought about her sweet spirit and determination. Most of all I thought about how she was no longer in pain, having succumbed to her tumor just a few weeks after visiting us.

When I do share these stories with friends back home, some inevitably ask me why I am still here. They ask why I sacrifice so much to be a part of what appears to be an uphill battle in a region of the world that isn’t getting better. There are two answers to that questions. One is, I believe we are winning this battle. I believe that healthcare can, and will be accessible to everyone one day.

And the second answer is that Marie Helene’s story deserves to be told outside her village. And sure this blog space has a small following and only a very small fraction of the world might read this but maybe these words will inspire one more volunteer or one more donor to support our cause. And that donor or volunteer may just be the tipping point needed to win this fight.

The need is great. Will you join us?

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Elvie

Thankful Thursday!

Who would think that on this particular Thursday, I would be thankful for work - especially when I'm teaching the dreaded "Sea Turtle" class, also know as "Parent/Child".  But what a hoot!  I kicked out my two year old, Leah.  She was far too advanced to be in with the babies so that left me with five babies, half with a grandparent and half with a parent.  I followed that class up with an "Eel" class who last session were in my 10:00 a.m. and 11:10 a.m. "Pike" classes.  Now they're absolutely delightful eels - all four of them!  Then came the "Sunfish" - just two of them!  And they've already gotten their heads wet without tears!  Could the day get any better?  Swim on!