Showing posts with label Alice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alice. Show all posts

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Something small like plastic

What do you have to share?

Many, many nights here during rainy season are cold and rainy. The storms come on quickly, are very powerful, and then they taper off.

Because it rains at least once a day during this time of the year, it is hard for people who "dry" things for a living, to get anything done. The example I'm thinking of is "thatch." Most people here live in a thatched hut like this.











They need to re-grass their roof sometimes as often as once a year.

Alice, my houseworker, often walks to work in the rain, with Sarah on her back. She would tell me of the cold, wet night. She told me her roof was leaking in many places, but that there was no grass anywhere to fix it.

Can you imagine you and your family, including a new born, trying to sleep through rain storms night after night, while your bed, sheets, floors, etc. have water dripping on them?

I kept trying to think of solutions for her because that's what we do– we Americans problem solve and try to fix things. But she kept saying since no grass was available; it couldn't be fixed until dry season. She was very matter-of-fact about it, until…

Doug started constructing the crates into storage, and he ran across a large sheet of plastic that had been used to ship our mattress in. He took old pieces of cardboard and that plastic down to the trash pile.

Patrick (our watchman) and Alice (our house worker) went down to gather these treasures. Patrick wanted to use the cardboard for a fire-starter, and Alice took the plastic to "fix" her room for the time being.

Her face was priceless the next morning. She had had a dry night after her husband fit the plastic on the roof. I don't know how they did it (I should probably go see), but it gives me peace knowing during the rain tonight, she will be protected.

How many other families out there are getting wet night after night? How many babies are sitting under a drip, catching cold and getting sick? This is a reality I'm sure of, I just don't know who they are.

We didn't even know that the plastic would be such a blessing. What gifts and talents are you throwing away because you don't think they would be of use to anyone? God wouldn't have given them to you if He didn't intend for you to use them for His glory somehow.

What can you do with your own "plastic sheeting?"

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Laboring in Africa

This post is not about what you think.

It’s truly about laboring…as in woman in labor, having child.

My house worker called last Sunday to say she was having much pain and was in the hospital. Doug had biked 20 miles to church, and I didn’t expect him until 4pm, and I wasn’t sure I wanted to drag three kids into a maternity ward in Africa.

After waiting a few hours, I decided to go…kids and all.

For the first time ever, for me, I rode on a piki (motorcycle) with three children. So if you can picture this, Caleb in front, Karis behind him, then the driver (God bless that man), then Kylie straddled, then me, straddled in a dress because I couldn’t fit side-saddle.

We made it to the hospital, and I paid him well over the “going rate.”
Out in the yard of the hospital were many people, friends and families of patients. They come and stay at the hospital with their admitted loved ones. They bring them sheets, food, water, mosquito nets (only sometimes), and anything else the patient might need because the hospital provides nothing but the medical care, and THAT leaves something to be desired, as well.

So out in the yard, we found the husband who spoke English and the grandmother who didn’t. The husband told us the nurses were being quite forceful about people going in, so he said he would text when the baby came.

No problem.

We walked to a nearby “cafĂ©,” and had chips (French fries) and bottled drinks to wait for the text.

After much time, I texted the woman in labor, Alice, to tell her I spoke with her husband and that we would go home, wait for the call, and come back when the baby was born.

Alice called me in what I’m sure was the middle of a contraction and she told me to come see her.

When I returned, there was no one to leave the kids with in the hospital yard, so the husband led me and all three kids into the hospital.

The rooms to my right and left, as we walked in, were beds filled with women who had already given birth and were sitting around topless waiting for the next feeding. Lovely.

We weaved our way back into “labor and delivery.”

It was a big open room with green curtains along the right and left walls. Horrible noises were coming from both sides. In the middle of the room were mats with people sitting on them. Again, these were family members sitting, waiting, and watching all their belongs and food that they had brought.

The grandmother who spoke no Engish, motioned for me to sit on the mat beside her and wait.

So here we are sitting in a cold, cement room with a Lugbara-speaking grandmother, a smiling new father-to-be and several other people waiting on different loved ones. No one is saying a word, and all you can hear are screams and groans.

I can only imagine what was going on in my childrens’ heads.

Out from one of the curtains came Alice. Sweaty, not smiling, and looking rough – most of you know what I’m talking about.

She wanted me to pray for her because “I am paining much,” she said.

I prayed a very direct and short prayer because I didn’t know when another contraction might hit.

It must have been right around the corner because when I said, “Amen,” she turned and headed back for the curtain.

I hurried the children back out into the yard, and after wishing the husband well, I stopped under a tree to de-brief the children.

I wondered if they had questions, concerns, etc.

That was a pretty quick conversation, and then we got on a piki, all four of us again (different guy), and headed home.

Shortly before 4, Alice herself called to say that she had a baby girl. I told her I would come as soon as Doug got home.

Doug arrived soon, and as I was heading out, all the kids said they wanted to come, too. I didn’t mind. Doug looked like he could use some rest after his 20 mile ride, so we walked to a friend’s house, got another adult, and we headed back to the hospital. This time we split up the kids with two adults on two pikis.

I know this story is long, so instead of giving all the other particulars (which are good, mind you), I’ll just cut to the chase.

We got to see Alice in her “private room.” She had paid extra NOT to stay in the big open room with all the women (picture youth camp sleeping conditions, but more flesh showing). My friend asked about the room rates, and Alice said it was 5000 shillings! People of America, that is about $2.50 for a PRIVATE room!

I only wanted to make you jealous for a minute, but don’t be!

The room had a twin bed, a small window not letting in any air, room on the floor for a mat for her grandmother to sleep on, and that is IT! It was smaller than prison cells you see on TV. There was 2 feet on either end of the twin bed, which had one of its long sides up against one wall, and only 4 feet of space between the bed and the other wall. It was basically a hot box, but I don’t blame her for paying for it. I would have taken that over “camp” conditions any day.

The nursing story will have to wait for another day, but I promise not to forget.

We are headed to Murchison Falls on a safari for 2 days, but I will write when we return.