rotating header

Sunday, April 14, 2013

A day in the park . . .


 When being deluged daily with over a foot of rain in the last couple weeks, and only rare glimpses of sunshine, it's time to head for the gates of hell.  Yes, Hell's Gate National Park.  This is the kids' school vacation so I was glad to get a day to take them with a few friends to our nearest national park where we rented bikes for an unusual way to view animals.

And we're off.  

Soon this was my view.  At this moment I realized the importance of choosing a park without predators when biking with five teenage varsity athletes.  Because predators pick of the stragglers.  

When we ran out of road we climbed.





And picnicked.

And enjoyed the view.

As well as the animals:  zebra, impala, gazelle, warthogs, buffalo, and a couple giraffe.  None of which I captured very well on a phone while riding a bike and huffing to keep up.  Even I can't really see the zebra that were originally in this picture.  

Mid-day we switched from the park to a nearby "heated" pool where we got a good deal to swim for the afternoon.  And miraculously, we all got sunburned through the overcast clouds, and the rain held off until the very end of our swim.




 And perhaps the greatest adventure of all was in trying to get back home as the torrents of rain beat down once again.  I was too busy driving in low-4WD to snap mud photos until we were almost up to the town.  


Yes, that's the view out my window, of the ROAD.





Monday, April 08, 2013

Don't Do Jet Lag

It's a famous Luke Myhre line:  "I don't do jet lag."

On the Africa to America leg, we simply jumped into life and it worked. It's a long day (extra 7 to 8 hours) going that way, and for me that is easier.

On the America to Africa leg of the journey, the jet lag issue is usually a little more intense.  We left the US Saturday afternoon, travled 20 hours snatching a little nod of sleep on the airplanes, and landed in Nairobi Sunday night, home to Kijabe about midnight.  Slept 1 am to 7 am and then it was back to reality.

Today 8 new Medical Officer interns started DAY ONE of their internship, so Scott and I had to be at their orientation at 8 am.  And I also had a new visiting doctor to help orient, rounds to do, clinic, patients. We lost my phone's SIM card in the move, so Scott was scrambling to replace it, and at one bizarre moment today I was wheeling an infant I had just intubated for respiratory failure through the halls on the way to the ICU breathing for her with a bag, and trailing an oxygen cylinder and two nurses, as he passed me to pick up the nonfunctional phone, and he said "I guess you hit the ground running".  Amen.

Hospital 8 to 5:15, Junior Class sponsor party 5:30 to 7, Kijabe Hospital greet-new-people dessert night 7-8 . . .

I know that busy-ness can be a strategy to numb grief.  And that's supposed to be a bad thing.  But for the moment I can just say it worked, I walked through this day without bursting into tears, and while being numb is not a great way to live, for now it's all we can do.


Epic Fail

Once upon a time, we took a full year sabbatical from Africa.  We enrolled in the MPH degree program at Hopkins, and rented a house in Baltimore.  And collected stuff.  Discards from relatives and friends, free stuff, hand-me-downs, a few antiques, an ikea table, chairs.  Books.  More books. Stuffed animals and toys, dishes and towels, tupperware and framed prints.  All the clutter of a life with four kids and two grandparents and community soccer and grad school. And at the end of that year only the most perishable photos made it into my parents' basement where they joined a lifetime collection of records and letters and school papers.  The rest of it was crammed in to free storage in a container at my dad's equipment yard.  Apparently we didn't have ANY time to organize and cull.  Or more likely, we were suffering from recent war and displacement and somehow believed that we were wisely preparing for the possibility of another disaster.

Instead, we provided excellent substrate for a dozen years of dust and mold.

And a mammoth task of sorting and disposal as we're losing the free storage, and now have to rent a small space for the few boxes of dishes from our wedding, photos, a table and chairs my mom doesn't want to move, less than ten percent of our books, some shelves.

What to do then with pretty much an entire household of hand-me-down stuff that we no longer have the margin to keep as an emergency stash?  And wouldn't particularly want to at this point.
                                     
Friends recommended a yard sale.  Put it on Craigs List, they said, and you'll see it all disappear. Hundreds of people scan these sales and snatch up the leftovers. Saturdays are best, so we got up very early on the day we flew out, and unloaded that container, and set our rock-botton one-dollar prices.  I was thinking of how we could put the money to good use.  We put up posters, and waited for the customers to roll in.

And waited.

And waited.

We had precisely three customers.

One lady bought two measuring cups.  One guy bought a weed wacker.  And the third looked and considered and then left.

It was an epic fail of a yard sale.  Our plane was coming in a couple hours, so we had to load it all back in and leave.

It felt like an epic fail of greater proportions.  A failure to understand the American yard sale scene, the mechanics of Craigs List (you have to repost every 24 hours), a failure to complete our task, to deal with our things, a failure to finish well.  A failure to keep this burden from falling to others. A failure to have things that anyone else values.

So tonight we remember our Good Friday sermon:  the disciples needed to understand that failure was the necessary beginning of redemption.  I don't know how this miserable yard sale failure will be redeemed, but I do know it will be, somehow, in the all-things-new of undone disappointments.



Friday, April 05, 2013

Words and Pictures: 2 weeks in review

Two weeks.  Two sons arrive, and leave.  Two trips, each two nights, one to West Virginia at the beginning to my roots, one south at the end to look at 4 colleges.  Two holidays, Easter and my mom's 77th birthday.  Too many decisions, because every hour between all that was spent sorting through boxes of every letter ever received, text books, trophies, clothes, scrapbooks.  Making decisions about furniture and mirrors and dishes and towels and tupperware.  Too much to describe, so here are a few words and phone-photos to illustrate.

COLD



EXPLORE


JUNK


HOLY


PURGE


COLLEGES


FAMILY


RECONNECTING


GOODBYES

'

April Madness: CSB to Regional Football (soccer) Tournament!

This is from our acting Team Leader in Bundibugyo.  Please consider helping.  This was a huge part of our life, and our kids'.  Go CSB!!

Dear Friends of CSB,

We are now one month away from wrapping up our first term of the 2013 school year at Christ School Bundibugyo.  The students have picked up where they left off from last year's studies and been hard at work both in the classroom and on the soccer field.  Since soccer is a first term sport, much anticipation has been building for our boys and girls soccer teams to see if they can improve on last year's performances.  

In 2012, our boys team won the district and qualified at regionals for the national tournament.  At the national tournament they finished the best out of their region!  It was a wonderful way to end their season.  

The road to nationals was a bit different for our girls last year.  All girls teams in Uganda were invited to come to nationals.  While they didn't have the excitement of a district nor regional tournament, they had a great experience of competing at the national level and came away with one win!  This year, the girls are required to follow the same course as the boys by first qualifying at the district and regional levels in order to play at nationals.

I'm proud to say that BOTH of our teams finished top in the district this season!  I can't say that the season didn't have it's fair share of "bumps along the road," but I can say that CSB was resilient and ran two very honorable programs.  

Funding the regional and national tournaments are a challenge for us since we are never guaranteed a spot for competing at these levels, which makes them difficult to plan for.  The regional tournaments for both teams will be held in Fort Portal from April 11-13.  We believe that these tournaments are a great opportunity for our students to represent Christ to the rest of the country and expose them to places and experiences outside of their daily routines.  This is truly an exciting opportunity for each of our players.

Would you help send our teams to the regional tournaments this year?  If so, please make a donation here:  http://www.whm.org/project/details?ID=11024
If you would like to, you can mention "Soccer Tournaments" in the comments section.  

God bless you all for your generous hearts towards the people of Bundibugyo.

Michael