Normal

I feel as if I should define a normal week as we approach September and what is normal will become the new normal.  I have been here ten days now and those days have been filled with daily life and praying and planning over what is to come.  Clinics have continued along with daily life and work on the new building.

Here is a snapshot of what normal looks like….

Friday we visited the widows, did a short devotional with them along with a time of sharing. We meet in Chiminisiguan which is a 40 minute car ride followed by a 30 minute walk to our clinic.  These women get together once a month to share with one another as well as bring their baskets or other goods that they have made since the last time we met.  The ministry supports these women by buying their goods and providing them with a small bag of food.  Many of their children were in the final stages of malnutrition when they were brought to our clinic for help.

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On Friday we also did our grocery shopping for the week.  Friday evening is market where the people come in from the surrounding villages to sell their fresh fruits and vegetables.  We stock up every Friday for the next week.

Saturday – Clinic in Canilla – Clinic days mean traveling to our clinic, seeing patients as well as children in our nutrition program that come in from the surrounding aldeas.  On these days I monitor the children in our nutrition program by weighing them and charting them and then assist Leslie in seeing people that have come for medical care.

Sunday – Clinic in San Andres

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Monday – Paperwork – typing up information on the widows, preparing information on the nursing school and the needs that abound with it.  We are also going to be switching to a new charting system with patients so I am trying to process what that needs to look like as well.

Tuesday – Clinic in Chiminisiguan

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Wednesday – This day is our Sabbath.  As you can see the other days are filled with ministry and preparation and we have come to learn that we can fill all of our time with busyness and continual work if we are not careful.  And so we have set aside Wednesday as our day of rest.  I spent my morning listening to the sermon from last week, doing some reading, cleaning and settling in more and took a walk up the canal to do some bug catching with the girls!

Tomorrow will be a prep day for a team of dentists that will be coming to this area to do extractions, fillings, and treat infections that many of these people have lived with for years.  We’ll have to clean the rooms, move in tables and chairs, set up the entrance and make sure everything is ready to see roughly 140 people this weekend.

Thus finishes the last normal week we will have for awhile.  As this fall approaches and we experience a lot of change to the way things were, we covet your prayers as we continue to move forward in all that God is doing here.  Just this week we added an engineering team to our list of visitors for October that will be helping with the design of the hospital.  The pieces to this puzzle continue to come together and I am excited to see the development continue.

What’s New?

IMG_0108When I come each visit we often play this game as I can pick out things that are new as opposed to those that live here constantly; they often feel as if everything is the same.  I can point out construction that has happened, new homes, the change in cars in town, new stores, prices of products, and advancement in people.

One of the greatest “new” factors around here that has caused much excitement is the development of the road.  They are not just widening the road and making it more passable, but they are actually planning on laying cement and paving the road to San Andres.  This project is something that we have heard in the works for years and didn’t actually think we would see happening until the construction vehicles moved into town.  It is not just a few construction vehicles, these are very expensive and extensive machines – many of which I cannot name.  I need to watch a little more Bob the Builder!

It is difficult to go anywhere without noticing the action.  There are eight dump trucks that begin at 5:30 in the morning that drive past our house to go to the river which is south of our house.  In the river there is an excavator which fills the dump trucks with materials for the road.  Last week the trucks were filled with very VERY large rocks that are being laid as a foundation for the road.  This week it is 8,000 loads of sand that will be laid on top of the rock to build a foundation for the road.  How long will this project last?  They are hoping to have it finished before the new president takes office – in two years!  It is amazing that a project like this might take that long, but they have many disadvantages as well working in this area.

There are so many positives to this project.  The government is hiring local workers to do much of the physical labor in collecting and laying out the materials.  First the road was widened and many curves were taken out.  In many places they had to blow away chunks of rock to make it passable.  This is investing money right into the local economy and giving work to many of the people that otherwise struggle to find employment.  The government is also playing landowners for materials that they removed from their land.  Those that own property by the river have hit a jackpot as they have received money for the rock and now the sand that is in front of their property.

On a personal level, this road reaches into the area of people which we feel most drawn to serving.  San Andres is an indigenous area where the people have less money and resources.  This road takes our 40 minute trip and cuts it down to 15.  With the smooth road, it will also me easier on the vehicles as well as us as we travel to San Andres each Sunday and often throughout the week.

As for other things that are new, there are many changes that are happening right now within the ministry.  There are definitely exciting times ahead.  As these changes occur, there are many decisions that have to be made as well as vision in order to see what needs to happen first.  Please pray for us through this experience as we know we are to prepare for the new.

Blessings!

Adrienne

Arrival

Here’s a shout out to let you know that I am on Guatemalan soil and nestled in.  I cut it a little close this time ….. I’ll share a few positive and negative firsts to pass on….

 I had a hiccup last night when I realized where I normally keep my passport there was no passport.  And my desk where I keep my passport was sold in my yard sale.  So after me mentally being at my breaking point and tearing apart my house, I “accidently” found it.  I actually hadn’t taken it out of my carry on bag from my June trip to Guatemala.  Whoops!  I guess I was preoccupied when I got home.  Traveling point – know where your passport is at all times.

I had another first today as well…. when I travel I always have three bags and a backpack – two bags on wheels and dragging a large bag I call my body bag.  As I made my way in the door a gentleman asked if he could assist me to the check in counter.  In the twenty+ times I have struggled through the airport, this was the first someone assisted me so joyfully.  I was glad for the encouragement this morning.

My last first will be for those who know me well…. as I was flying today the girl beside me must have dreamt in her sleep and hit me.  For a split second I did almost hit her back, but after so many hugs this week, I had control of my reflexes and kept my hands from hitting back.  What a pleasant first 🙂 

Clinic in Chiminisijuan tomorrow….. Blessings to you as you read this!  Thanks for your prayers…. they got me here, now to just sustain me!

IN BETWEEN

The last week has been filled with a wealth of good byes, a great deal of planning and packing, and sweet fellowship moments.  Although I often feel as if I’m in between two worlds, the last month has been lived in anticipation of what’s ahead and the balance of closing another chapter of my life.  I have been in between as I met with people I may not see for years.  I have felt in between as I tried to come up with a list of things that I should pack.  I have felt in between as all of the back to school stuff has been out and I am not going back to school this year.  My mind has not totally grasped the fact that life as it has been will be different.  This week as I said something about packing a friend commented, “Well if you forget something you can just get it there.”  And the truth is far from that.  Some things I can get there, but many things I will have to do without.  Living in a third world country is a change of lifestyle.  And so as I finish up my packing, planning, and preparation I know that the time has arrived where I will be landing on the other side of the cliff on Guatemala soil.  Although my heart will always be in between the two countries, my feet will be on Guatemala soil.  I will land in Guatemala Monday and fly to our little town of Canilla.  From there I will surely hit the ground running as there is much that lies ahead!Image

 

WHERE WILL YOU LIVE?

I find there is a pattern to the questions that I am asked…. with most people wanting to know what life is like there.  I wish I could transport you there so that you could see the area in which I live.  If you were to fly into our region, you would fly over many mountains and land on a dirt strip where there is a flat strip of land a few miles across. 

This area that you see is the town of Canilla and the surrounding mountains.Image

The “home” that I live in is approximately 1 mile out of town which would be the lower right hand corner.  It is just cut out of this picture, but here is a view that you can see the house as well as the dorm that is currently being built.  The tree in the middle of the photo divides the new building on the left and the current buildings on the right.  In the future, the hospital will be functioning on the right and the building on the left will be used for housing.   In the background is the town of Canilla.   Image

 

 

And this is the building in which I stay.  Infact, that is me on the front porch.  Also in this picture, you can see the water storage tank.  This is an apartment that is built onto the end of the clinic.Image 

This last photo was taken of the back field.  This is the view of the back fields.   Flat land is of an premium.  It is not the norm in our area.  Hopefully this helps to give you a greater visual of what my every day view holds.Image

 

 

 

Give me your Eyes

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I returned from Guatemala in 2001 with a completely different perspective – a global perspective.  During my time there I realized the difference of culture as well as the need that existed in everyone.  That need wasn’t just something present in Guatemala, or India, or Africa ­ it was present in everyone around me.  Americans had needs just as Guatemalans did; they were just different.  As I took on this new perspective, I wanted my eyes to be open more to the realities of life around me.  To my neighbors, my students, my coworkers, my community.  Years later Brandon Heath put these words that were in my head to a song titled Give me your Eyes.  The chorus proclaims:

Give me your eyes for just one second
Give me your eyes so I can see
Everything that I keep missing
Give me your love for humanity
Give me your arms for the broken hearted
Ones that are far beyond my reach.
Give me your heart for the ones forgotten
Give me your eyes so I can see

When I return from Guatemala it’s always easier to see the needs of those around me in the first few months than after the busyness of life in the states swallows me up.  I have looked forward to my time in Guatemala every summer as a time of refocus and perspective.  Last weekend someone asked me, “So you’ve spent so much time there that you’ve fallen in love with these people?”  And I would have to say that I have a love for the Guatemalans, but that same love that I have for them is translated to others as well – my students in my classroom, those around me, children in Brazil, and Canada, and the Netherlands.  To me it’s not the specific place as much as it is the people.  Brandon goes onto write….

Step out on a busy street
See a girl and our eyes meet
Does her best to smile at me
To hide what’s underneath
There’s a man just to her right
Black suit and a bright red tie
Too ashamed to tell his wife
He’s out of work
He’s buying time
All those people going somewhere
Why have I never cared?

I’ve Been there a million times
A couple of million eyes
Just moving past me by
I swear I never thought that I was wrong
Well I want a second glance
So give me a second chance
To see the way you see the people all along

And it’s true.  I’ve been there a million times, consumed with the busyness around me to see people for who they really are.  One thing my time in Guatemala has taught me over the years is to slow down and give those around me a second glance and a listening ear.  And so the answer to my friend’s question is yes, I have developed a love for the Guatemalan people over the years, but at the same time I have developed a love for all people.  For the needs that we all have.  We are all broken people in one way or another.  That brokenness can either me mended and healed or left to continue to cause pain.

As I prepare to leave, the words of Brandon’s song continue to play in my heart as my hope is to see the people around me each day through the eyes of compassion and understanding.  As you encounter people today, see deeper as well.  Blessings to you!