Friday, December 29, 2017

Thankful Thursday!

"Thankful Thursday" is running a day late this week because I feel like I've been in an alternate universe all week long.  I've been teaching thirteen and fourteen year-olds how to be swim instructors for ISD 196.  As long as I've been there, we've always taught this class Monday through Thursday so in my mind today is Thursday.  Never mind that we celebrated Christmas on Monday and today really is Friday . . . 

What I am thankful for this week actually happened at work today.  We had eleven students in our class, one of them painfully awkward.  Seriously - a fourteen year old with absolutely NO social skills, NO ability to interact with others, and DEFINITELY NOT the swimming teacher you want for your child.  Imagine the "deer-in-the-headlights-look"  every time you said that student's name.  It's been hard . . .

For today's potluck dinner, this student brought macaroni and cheese in a crock pot.  Our biggest fear?  That when the other students' found out who had brought what, they would skip the mac 'n cheese because not only was this student PAINFULLY awkward, this student was also overweight with a different speech pattern and just plain WEIRD.  

I am thankful for all the students who tried the mac 'n cheese, for all the students who went back for seconds, and for the young man who said, "This is really good.  Who made it?"  I am thankful, that while they may not have shown maturity in the pool, this one time when it was most needed to encourage another, they showed it!     

Monday, December 25, 2017

Thank You!

Merry Christmas!

We had a most lovely Christmas today!  Our next door neighbor stopped by earlier in the morning.  Then Sam's cousin and his family came over for dinner - Uncle George and Aunt Lenore, David and Jeanette and Bre and Loren.  We loved, we laughed, we ate.  It was excellent. 

Sunday, December 24, 2017

Christmas with Grandpa . . .

We drove to Iowa yesterday to celebrate Christmas with my Dad  After lunch we decided to play a game.  Micah's wanted to play "Scrabble", Sam wanted to play "Rummikub:; and Dad chose "Harvest Fun".  He found it tucked away in a drawer somewhere and said he didn't think he'd ever played it.  Invented in 1959, it was a promotional game for International Harvester.  

I can't say it was exactly "exciting", but Dad enjoyed it.  And we enjoyed the stories he shared.  He began working for Jaycox Implement, an International Harvester Dealership, as a mechanic in 1956.  He stayed there until his retirement in 1997, working as a mechanic, shop foreman, parts manager and back to shop foreman during his tenure.  He also won the game!

We opened gifts after playing "Harvest Fun".  Our crabby camper who was thrilled to leave for Grandpa's at 7:30 a.m. became a happy camper when he opened his gift - a hat rack made by Grandpa!

We so enjoyed our time together!  

My New Favoirte Christmas Carol!

We sang this at church this morning and I fell in love!  Enjoy!
 

Friday, December 22, 2017

What do I want for Christmas?

This lovely poem was sent to me by dear friends from my days at Eagle Lake Camp:
 

What do I want for Christmas?
To see in that stable
  the whole world kneeling in thanks
for a promise kept:
new life.
For in His nativity
we find ours.
 
Ann Weems

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Thankful Thursday!

Today I am thankful for underwear.  Specifically, underwear that is packed in my pool bag the night before so that I can put it on when I finish swimming.  I must have been really tired when I packed my bag last night.

The front desk did offer me a pair from Lost and Found - children's size 4, Dora the Explorer!  Can you believe I said, "No thanks!"?  I was hoping for Super Hero!

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Conquering Fanta's Fear





I've reblogged this must-read story from "Ainsworths in Africa".  Enjoy!

Plastics patient Fanta before photo on the dockIt must be a hard day at work if you’re a teacher afraid of children, a jockey afraid of horses, or even a nurse afraid of surgery. But that’s what 44 year old Fanta had become. Despite working in the medical field for over 17 years, she told me she was too frightened to have surgery to remove her 10 pound Lipoma tumor, which had grown to the size of a watermelon under her right arm. For nearly 10 years, she learned to strategically hide the tumor under draped shawls while she worked, refusing to have surgery to remove it: “How can I expect people to respect me as a nurse and not be scared themselves when I am too afraid to do anything about my own problem?”
Since she was a young girl, Fanta would see nurses at her local hospital in their blue uniforms taking care of people and she knew she wanted to be a nurse too. But after a long journey of hard work to get there, the past few years have seen her struggling to fit into the scrubs she’d longed to wear. As the benign tumor began to grow painfully large, she knew something had to be done.
 
However, working in a hospital only heightened her fears: “My colleagues told me I would die if I tried to have it removed, and that I had left it too long”. Her understanding and knowledge of surgery made things worse: “I see the surgeries, I see the blood and I hate the thought of not being in control of my own body”.

When she heard about Mercy Ships through her hospital, she was finally filled with hope instead of worry when consulted about her condition. “The nurses at the ship are so compassionate and loving. They kept reassuring me that everything was going to be more than okay- and something in me trusted them!”
CMA171108_FANTA_PAT13160_BEFORE_WELLS_WARD_SL006_LO
It only took 3 hours of surgery aboard the Africa Mercy for Fanta to realize just how much her fear had held her back for the past decade. Her lighter arm and brighter face made her question why she had waited so long: “I can now lift my arms with ease! I will be able to dress like the other ladies at my hospital. My husband has already bought me some new fabric so I can made more dresses that show off my arms!”
CMA171113_FANTA_PAT13160_MID_WARD_SL005_LO.jpg
Plastics patient Fanta after
For patients like Fanta, Mercy Ships removes more than just tumors. Her fear and anxiety were dispelled as quickly as her hope was restored.

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Snow Globe Surgerons!


My friend Heidi and I volunteered in Sam's classroom today, helping his students make snowmen out of rose bowls.  We had a great time - and we became classroom reknown snowmen surgeons!  Ah, the things you can do with a damp sponge and a bit of patience . . .

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Thankful Thursday!

Actually happened on Wednesday this week and it took me until Saturday to record it!  I've had, for lack of better words, a stiff neck for the past couple of weeks.  By Wednesday it was so bad, I couldn't even turn my head.  Time to go to the chiro!  Dr. Tim could get me in at 2 p.m. and I was there.  He asked me what I did.  "Nothing. Seriously."  Obviously, he knows I usually do do something!

He took his magic fingers and went to work and worked and worked and worked.  At one point, I almost knocked him out - a little reflex reaction with the left foot - but he was ready.  He knows I don't like getting my neck adjusted!  At the end of thirty minutes, I could move my head.  Unfortunately, I was nauseous for the next two days while my muscles returned to "normal".

I'd like to say I was feeling great today, but I think I'll schedule another appointment for Monday and put the ice packs back on . . . 

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

New Moms!

For the past seven Tuesdays, I've been teaching a parent/child class at the Y.  Two of my moms were former co-workers from the Y and yesterday we went out for lunch together.  Meet my friends . . . 

The last day I worked with C. was the day after she miscarried her first baby.  I prayed for her, that God would bless her with another baby which He did.  This baby is one year old and he has scoliosis.  I'm praying for him, that my God who makes the blind see and the lame walk will heal this little boy.  His mom is scared for him and the new life growing in her.  She is not a believer, but she is grateful that I am praying for her and her son and the little one she carries.   

T. had a difficult first pregnancy and I prayed her through that.  I prayed for her little girl as she was having breathing difficulties at birth, giving T. the opportunity to do CPR on her at least once.  Now T. is pregnant again and I am praying for them. 

I am grateful for these co-workers who are friends who want me to pray for them.

"Meet My Friends In PACU"

Today's post is reblogged from "Morgans on Mercy".  I loved the stories and pictures and hope you do, too!

I am truly loving my position here in the PACU more and more each day I work. I am so blessed to be able to pour out my love on each individual I care for. I am able to see more clearly the gift of compassion the Lord has given me, as each patient truly consumes my heart and I just love them to the best of my ability. I am reminded of Colossians 3:17 and try to keep it at the forefront of my brain whenever I am working. It says " whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it in the name of the LORD Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him."
                                        Image result for colossians 3:17
I try to align my actions, words, and even touch to that of Christ, and pray that every patient I have see Him who has gifted me to care for them.

I want to introduce you to a few of my friends that have left a special mark on my heart. I will go away from here, Cameroon, and remember these precious children of God FOREVER.


MAEVA


This young lady is Maeva. She is 6 years old and came to use for surgery of a burn she received as an infant. During our time in recovery her grandmother (the woman holding her) told me that she was burned at the age of one month. Her mother abandoned her "because she was ugly". I listed to this story in the PACU with tears in my eyes. This grandmother's love for her little girl oozed out of her in such a way that was so special. Maeva was uncomfortable in the beginning, and required a little pain medicine. Once it was administered she began to call me her aunt.



I have visited miss Maeva multiple times and each time she yells "ta ta Lindsay" and jumps in my arms. Her smile and laugh are so contagious, I can't help but just want to be near her. 
 
She enjoyed some play time on the dock for a barbecue that we had, but after dancing she very much wanted to go in. I was given permission to escort her back to her ward, and then she didn't want me to leave. She chased me down the hallway "ta ta Lindsay" crying. Talk about heart breaker. I scooped her up and carried her back to her bed and hugged her tight, promising to see her soon. 
 
She was released two days later while our family was at a local orphanage. I wasn't there to say "goodbye".  I was devastated. I mean I literally had to go lay in my bed for a good cry. 
 
Thankfully my friend on the Comms team messaged me two days later "she is on the dock. GO GO GO" and I quite literally ran down the gangway to her. 
                                     

Now she was angry with me at first, for not being there when she left, but quickly changed her tune and kept saying " I want to go up with you". She meant she wanted to go back on the ship as she is now at the HOPE center for a couple more weeks. I have to prepare myself for the day she goes to her actual home, and thank God for the opportunity to meet such a special young lady and her sweet grandmother.

AXEL

Below is my friend Axel. Axel has a hemangioma. A hemangioma is most commonly made up of small capillaries, normal in size but there are quite numerous. They can be "superficial" or close to the surface and typically will be brighter red in color, or they can cover an entire extremity and be quite "spongy" to the touch and are called "diffuse". Axel has more of what would be referred to as a "cavernous" hemangioma, where larger blood vessels are dilated and the space between the vessels is filled with blood. These vessels caused necrotic areas on his lip and a rather large deformity in his cheek and neck area. 
                                     
Actual surgery to treat his condition was not an option, as he would bleed and bleed. So much so the doctors eventually opted to put in a Tracheostomy, in fear of a medical emergency and no one wanted to do this bedside.

Dr. Parker would go on to later say, that Axel has been added to his list of miracles as no "official surgery" has been done, yet his hemangioma has gotten smaller. Now Axel has had 8 surgeries to date, to repair his lip and other diseased areas because of his condition.
 
Now let me tell you about Axel as a person! He has a personality the literally lights up the room. He is always smiling. I mean ALWAYS, he will wake up from surgery and be in pain and still smile and give a thumbs up sign. He has made such a HUGE impression on my heart! Once again I thought I came here to give, and I end up on the receiving end of the blessings. He has made this kind of impression on so many people. He also really enjoys Jocelyn's company when she visits the wards every Monday. I can't wait to update you with pictures of him before he goes home!




YVAN

I am also pleased to introduce you to another friend of mine whom every time I think of him I can't help but giggle. This is Yavan, who was an eight year orthopedic patient. I will always remember him awaking from his surgery and was an angry little guy. He kept telling his father " you are not my friend any more" and "you didn't tell me they were going to do this to me" "look they made my legs white".

I thought to myself, there it is he was already so afraid and wakes up to these two heavy white casts, and had received a block to both legs so his legs also felt "funny" as he could barely move them and he thought we made his legs white. We spent time explaining the casts and showing him his toes, and trying not to let him see our giggle, as even the dad found this to be a difficult task. By the end of his hour with me we were friends, and as I left him, he had to give me one last High five and a "Merci".




So I am reminded as I look into each patent's eyes, why I am a nurse. Nursing here is unlike anything I have ever done as a professional nurse. It is what I would call "NURSING". It is a holding of a hand, encouraging words, prayers with the patient and family member, prayers with your coworkers, celebration of miracles big or small and so much more. Of course there is still charting, and medication to administer, but the majority of our time is spent truly caring for our patients. I am so incredibly honored to be here, serving with this organization that is changing one life at a time, mine included.

Saturday, December 9, 2017

Sisters in the Hood!

The message finally came on Wednesday, "So far . . .no fever today.  We will see you on Saturday!"  Matt and Micah's birth mom and her two daughters finally came down today for our first ever Christmas cookie baking party

.  Since a picture paints a thousand words, enjoy our time!  We sure did!

Check out the sibling smile!

Taste and frost was Kingley's plan.


Dishwasher extrodinaire!



The road home . . .
 Baked and frosted:
  • Grandma's Sugar Cookies
  • Chocolate Cover Pretzel Rods
  • Pretzel Ring Cookies
  • Chocolate Crackle Cookie
  • Mint Melt-a-ways

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Thankful Thursday!

Today I am thankful for the locker room ladies!  On my way into the shower, I stopped to talk to Sone, one of our water ex instructors, asking her how that new baby boy of hers was doing.  In the course of our conversation, I mentioned to her that Katie, one of our aquatics instructors, was expecting a baby boy and she was scared to death!  Katie is the mom of three girls and she has no idea what she's going to do with a baby boy!  As we are saying how much easier boys are than girls, the lady drying her hair next to Sone started to laugh.  She said, "I'm the mother of ten, five girls and five boys.  Boys are SO much easier than girls!"  Once she said she was the mother of ten - no twins! - all the ladies in the locker room started to talk!  We had quite the conversation going for quite a long time.  It was a hoot and a half!  An absolute fun group of locker room ladies! 

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Free To Dream Again!

This post is reblogged from Will and Briana Morrison's blog, "Morrisons on Mercy Ships".  My one regret with Mercy Ships is I have yet to attend a dress ceremony.  Read this bog and understand why . . .

The freedom to dream about a better tomorrow is a luxury many don’t realize they possess until it is taken away. This post is a collection of stories about a group of women that come to the ship for surgery and leave with a new freedom to dream. They are women who have suffered from an obstetric fistula, a condition caused by prolonged obstructed labor that makes the woman incontinent of urine or feces or both. In addition to usually losing the baby she was carrying, a woman with fistula is often rejected by her husband and pushed out of the daily life of her community due to the foul smell beyond their control as they are not able to control their bodies when nature calls.

Ashitou
“Head and knees, shoulvas, toos, shoulvas, toos!” (Sung to: Head & Shoulders, knees & toes)

When I first met Ashitou, she was singing her own version of the popular children’s song, pointing to her shoulders as she proudly sang “knees” and to her knees as she sang “shoulvas!” But unlike the song she was singing, Ashitou is not a child. Although she has not yet reached her 20th birthday, she’s already experience the pain of obstructed labor, already had a fistula that made her unable to hold her own urine or bear children, and already being ostracized by her own community in the Norther part of Cameroon.

Thankfully, she’s also already experienced Mercy Ships and a life-altering surgery. She’s also experienced the love of Christ through the crew she met.
Yesterday, I saw Ashitou coming for an outpatient check-up. She smiled and waived as I joined her under the waiting tent. Although neither of us can speak the other’s language (she speaks the northern tribal language, Fulfulde), there was no mistaking the joy in her eyes.

Ernestine
At least once a week, I go down to the hospital wards to visit with the patients. Although my French is improving, it’s challenging to have deep conversations with many of the patients who only speak French or another local language. So, I was happy to meet Ernestine, who comes from one of the primarily English speaking portions of Cameroon.

Ernestine is one of the lucky ones. Her handsome young son survived the obstructed labor and her husband stayed by her side, despite the challenges and unlikelihood that she would ever bear another child.

Over the few weeks that Ernestine stayed in the hospital on the ship (her husband often sleeping underneath her hospital bed), I got to know her and her family. After her surgery, we talked about her new life, now that she can re-enter her community. We danced and sang “God is so good!” together. Shame was replaced with hope.

I was honored when Ernestine invited me to her “Dress Ceremony,” a ceremony Mercy Ships host for the women to celebrate their healing. As part of the celebration, each woman is given a bright new dress, a symbol of their new life. They get dressed up to go out, something some of them haven’t done in decades. Ernestine stood to give her testimony, clearly overcome with the emotions of the moment but also radiant in her new dress. Clementine, one of our hospital chaplain’s also had Ernestine’s husband stand, to honor him for being a good husband. Afterward, we danced and celebrated together. Shame was replaced with hope and joy.

Marie
When I first saw Marie, I knew she was going be a character. With a hair weave of bright red and nails to match, she joked with me through her limited English and my limited French.

In my attempt to make conversation, I asked her what she did for work back at home. Her look suddenly turned sad. “I can’t work,” she told me. As she explained further, her incontinence made it impossible to get work. She had been confined to her home for many years. Trying to recover from my blunder, I asked her what she hoped to do when she got back home. Her smile returned immediately and she glowed as she started to think about her new life. “Maybe, I’ll be a beautician!” she told me through one of the ward translators.
———–
These are just a few of the women whose lives will be changed through an obstetric fistula surgery during our time in Cameroon. As you may have noted, this blog post doesn’t include pictures of the women it highlights. Often these women are living in the shadows–embarrassed and hiding. They’re ashamed and don’t want photos for the same reason.

Mercy Ships sometimes have difficulties encouraging these women to come out from the shadows. Such has been the case in Cameroon. Although it is known that there are a large number of women who need this surgery in Cameroon, we have had to postpone obstetric fistula surgeons coming to the ship because not enough women have come forward for surgery.

Please pray that these women would have the courage to step out of the shadows, to come to the ship for surgery and to dare to dream again.

Perfect Timing!

Tuesday is trash day and during our noon walk, Annie and I usually pull up our dear friend and neighbor Jana's trash bin.  Jana is fighting a brain tumor and is generally tired by the time she gets home each night.  My thought has always been, "Wouldn't it be nice to have one less thing to do when you get home?"  So we "secretly" pull up her trash bins.  She suspects.  If she reads this, she'll know.  But here's the cool story . . . 

While we were walking up the hill to her house today, her trash can was empty in the road and her recycle bin was tipped over in the driveway - and the recycle truck was one house away!  Annie and I rushed up there - at least as fast as you can rush uphill! - and the recycle driver waited for us to right the bin and pick up the flowing recycles before he emptied it.  Perfect timing!

Monday, December 4, 2017

The End.

Without flags or fanfare, without confetti or trumpets, today marks the end.  For over twenty years I have been sending updates, pictures and letters to Matt and Micah's birth father through New Life Family Services.  

It was never in any of our agreements, we had never talked about, but God tugged my heart.  So I faithfully sent a Christmas card to him every single year, the last maybe ten years with the knowledge that they were being stored in a lock box because New Life didn't have a forwarding address for him.

Micah turned eighteen last month.  By law, she's now an adult.  She can make her own choices.  I'm done.  I'm not sure how I feel emotionally, but twenty-some years ago, eighteen was the stopping point.  Today is the end.  

Saturday, December 2, 2017

It's a sad Saturday . . .

. . . At the F.O.O.'s (Family of Origin)!  Way back in October we picked a random date in December (today!) for the girls to get together to bake Christmas cookies.  Everyone was so excited!  Allison said that's all her girls had talked about for the past two weeks!

Yesterday came our first warning.  Kingsley had stayed home from Kindergarten with a fever of 103, but she had taken Tylenol and was "running around like a maniac"!  Allison was sure they could still come - she'd be fine tomorrow . . .

This morning, we got the 5 a.m. text shortly after 8 a.m. (yup, we slept in!). Kingsley's temp was now a whooping 105.9 and they were going to Urgent Care.

It's a virus.  We're rescheduled for next Saturday.  Stay tuned.  They're staying in bed!