Friday, July 16, 2010
MOVED!
NEW!
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
stay
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
...maybe i'm wrong
i’m sitting on the plane, about halfway to miami. i have the headache of the century and lower back pains that i’ve never experienced before. leaving has literally made me sick. i’ve cried a multitude of times today, typically in small intervals, but they come on strong.
saying our goodbyes at the orphanage, i got to say goodbye to Joshua, who was in St. Marc when i got there, left for almost two months, and has since returned for almost 2 months, although he has been in Port-au-Prince for a little over a week to help train Ethan to be in charge of the kitchen for mission adventures this summer. after we climbed into the back of the teecan, he came over and said he had a word for us. he wanted to encourage us; how everyone prays that the change would begin with this generation, and we are doing just that, impacting this generation for this nation. that the relationships we’ve established with the children, and even with the people on base, will change lives. how he has seen the change from the beginning, how the teachers that have been there since the beginning have made such progress in the lives of these children, and reassured me, that i, too, have impacted there lives so much. i started to get choked up as he was talking, soaking in the encouragement as it was offered to me. jay started up the teecan, i gave joshua a hug, and as we began backing up, i started to lose it.
as we turned out of the long drive from the orphanage onto the alley road, i put on my sunglasses and sobbed silently, literally leaving haiti behind in the dust. as i thought about the words that joshua spoke over us, i couldn’t help but feel like that in my lack of emotion (or inability to process it), God just wanted to encourage use others to encourage me. i was spent; and i’ve had a real hard time even trying to talk to God, let alone even talk to the people around me. ya’ll know that i will strike up a conversation with anyone, friend or stranger, but i just haven’t even had the energy. God knows this. and i think He’s said, thats okay. just be. let me take care of all of this. don’t rush your emotion.
in that moment, realizing my stress-induced stomach pain and mental fog, i realized this: i was constipated. not just the can’t-use-the-bathroom constipation, but the mental, spiritual block that i can’t manage to process anything. i can’t force any words or thoughts or prayers out, no matter how hard i try to squeeze. ya’ll, i’ve never been constipated before; either physically or emotionally. but let me tell you, as of today, i have discovered that they might be the most painfully frustrating things in the world to deal with, especially simultaneously.
arriving at the airport, i was already alone. alone is not a word that i’ve been able t to illustrate much, if at all, in the past 4 months. although at times i felt somewhat constrained by the thoughts of always being surrounded by no-less-than 100 of your yet-to-be closest friends, i almost felt somewhat imprisoned by my newfound loneliness.
saying goodbye to stacia and anne after receiving my boarding pass wasn’t easy, but it wasn’t nearly as hard as i had thought it would be. i will miss them dearly, especially my lovely roommate anne. at the tender age of 21, and the roots of a pennsylvania farm girl, her innocence and acceptance nature was so refreshing. growing up mennonite, her heart and faith have been radically changed by her experience in haiti; and i’ve been so blessed to have gotten to know her. i know home for her is going to be a hard transition, but i see the strength she has in the Lord, and i know He will give her the courage and boldness to step out in faith, even at the cock-eyed look of members of her community and church.
after making it up through security, i sat on the brink of tears quite a few times while waiting for my flight. but none as crippling as walking through that gate and waiting in limbo before boarding the aircraft. the second i made it past the attendant, i burst into tears, putting my glasses on in the dark hallway as a futile and obvious attempt at hiding my emotion. i still can’t tell you what i was thinking or feeling, as much of this day has been a total blur. but the reality of leaving haiti became real.
as we lifted off the tarmac, my eyes again filled with tears. wanting to stick my heels through the floor of the plane and literally have them take me out of the country with my feet dragging, i curled up under my blanket in my aisle seat and drifted in and out of a light consciousness-- God’s attempt at giving me peace in my restlessness.
i journaled a bit throughout the flight, browsed some pictures, and shared some stories with the two ladies seated in my row. i had a diet coke, with ice, and some crackers; an ironic, personal metaphor to my feet in both worlds. de-boarding, i held my composure long enough to make it out of the gate and up the escalator before having a near-anxiety attack that sent me seeking refuge in the restroom. i felt so lost and overwhelmed; i couldn’t believe i was on US soil again. the culture shock was the most real thing i have felt in days., in the midst of the surreal denial that my time in Haiti was ending and i was, indeed, homeward bound. the overstimulation of impersonal contact-- as thousands of people scrambled about around me, but with no true interaction-- was so hard on my heart as well as my eyes. i tried to comfort myself with a sandwich stuffed with fresh veggies as subway in the terminal, but even the thought of choices and variety overwhelmed me into oblivian, and it took a good 5 minutes before i could even order. even with spinach leaves, olives, wheat bread, and turkey, i’m missing haiti in the worst of ways.
***
as we lift off the tarmac, tents and tarps have been replaced with the cookie-cutter communities and corporate america. their roofs, intact; the streets, identifiable grid-systems linking baseball diamonds with football fields, shopping malls with high-rise plazas. spanish instructions have replaced the french and creole, and is as dissonant to my ears as my feelings on leaving hating/reentering the states are to my heart. with every inhale, the pain in my lower back increases. i realize the dust that once clouded my lungs as been replaced with clean, fresh, cold air; but it doesn’t refresh my soul as i once thought it would.
readjusting is going to take time.
maybe i'm leaving...
i’m currently sitting, sweating, on a mattress on the floor of the YWAM PaP base. the fan blowing on me just got unplugged for a lady to plug in her computer. outside, i hear the children of the orphanage already up and running around the playground with careless joy for the day. in the distance, another plane lands on the airstrip of Tuissant Louverture just a few miles away. the skies are clear, but in my head is the worst fog i’ve experienced in a long while.
it began yesterday morning, saying our goodbyes in st. marc. i woke up at 4:25, got out of bed a little later and went for a morning swim with the sunrise. the pool was surprisingly warmer than the now-cool 83-and-dark-ness of the dawn. i prayed and thanked God for my time in St. Marc, asking Him to continue the work He’s started in me here; among other things. i showered at the pool, and headed home to change and load my bags for our 5:30 departure.
walking down to base, the only thing thicker than the swarm of mozzis, was the swarm of people and their sincere love in their goodbyes, especially at 5:30 (which i’ve decided, isn’t really that early anymore, especially when it’s already bright as mid-day). but goodbyes, even in the thick of love and thankfulness, are never easy.
i will miss each one of these people for so many more reasons than i can manage to communicate, especially right now. i will miss Sarah, my one-on-one and fellow teacher, for our many moments of bonding over challenges and ridiculous norms of life. i don’t consider myself a funny person, but i could always make her laugh at my simple nuances. i will miss Bryan (hereon: B Rock) for his ever-joyful personality, his sarcastic, witty, borderline-naive sense about him, even for his eclectic taste in music (k.c. and jojo to miley cyrus to justin beiber to rascal flatts to ludacris). i will miss hearing Ben say “Come on!!!” and “Nike, just do it!” or “weeiirrrddd!”. I will miss his voice leading worship and his generous encouragement and positive outlook. i’ll miss the never-complaining, never-negative spirit of J Ruggs (Jesse needed a nickname) as he always greeted everyone with a smile and likely never knew a stranger.
i could, and would go on, and on, and on, save for the fact i would likely burst into tears at any given moment. each person here has touched my life in such a way that i will desperately miss their quirks and the way they each contributed to just my every normal day.
saying goodbye to philipson, i found out that he was actually going to come with us (me, jenna, anne, stacia, lisa and ronald) to Port-au-Prince to see us off. as i got on the bus after dishing out hugs like candy on halloween, i didn’t turn around to look back. it would be way too hard after my goodbyes. although i didn’t cry, my body (already exhausted from the lack of sleep) was emotionally spent and aching. i literally felt sick to my stomach.
the dissonance began on the bus ride. i found that i couldn’t think. i couldn’t pray. i barely managed to carry on a conversation with philipson. i was void of the cognitive process, a state i haven’t found myself in often, yet can not seem to shake.
we stopped at the airport to drop off jenna. more goodbyes. you’d think i’d be a pro at this by now. we waited as ronald and philipson looked for a person (whom they didn’t know what she looked like, or her name) for about an hour. anne and i got off the bus to find a bathroom and hopefully seek out some last-minute, early-morning plantains.
we found a gas station with a small coffeehouse next door, and managed to use their bathroom. after ronald and philipson got back, the 4 of us scouted out street food. after deeming 8 am an inappropriate time for fish stew or rice and beans, anne and i settled on bananas and cokes; hey, we were starving at this point!
we made it to New Life Orphanage, the property on which the YWAM PaP base rents a house for its center. they are running Mission Adventures through here this summer, so it is sort of abuzz and chaotic. my plans to spend the day reflecting and journaling (which i desperately need to catch up on and document this past week and a half), were thwarted when they decided to go out to a tent community in Cite Soliel, one of the poorest parts of Port-au-Prince. Anne and i went along, (sidenote: we stopped at a gas station, and ben (different ben, here in PaP until tomorrow) asked if anyone could speak creole to the attendant. i told him i knew a little french, and he asked me to explain to him how much gas and change he wanted/needed in american, etc. without any thought i found myself speaking a perfectly crafted sentence, and translating his answer back to ben. great, my last day in haiti and i’m finally learning the language.)
in Cite Soliel, you can imagine . . . it was sunny and tres chaud! looking back, i perhaps shouldn’t have gone. i was not in the mood for people, heck i could barely handle myself. i found myself cringing as some of the half-naked children vied for my attention and tried to hold my hands. i prayed for brokenness as i saw the depths of poverty, the pits of hopelessness within the tents of that city. in my hour there, i was so sweaty; but i couldn’t even imagine how hot and frustrated the people that live there must be, at all times. i was so discouraged by how seemingly unchanged my heart was at the time, but looking back i think it was and is my general lack of processing that has prevented me from taking on any additional attachment or compassion. which i am not trying to excuse, only explain. i know its still wrong, and trust me, i prayed against it as much as i could manage, but you can not fill if you are not first filled yourself.
we got back for lunch and i laid down for a nap, which i wavered in and out of consciousness for a couple hours before waking in an even greater cloud than i had first been in. in a stupor of self-pity and mourning, i moped around until dinner, not really able to process the fact that i am leaving. this has been such a surreal day of mental limbo, one i can only equate to the drive back from arkansas in january in which i had no foot in either city; great grief in leaving, as well as returning.
during dinner, we come to find that philipson had not even left PaP, so we get to spend a little more time with him. overwhelmed by the influx of MA-ers that arrive for that evenings worship service, he and i decided to take a walk around the base to get away from the hustle and bustle. as i enter the worship service, i feel void of all ability to sing praise, so instead, i worship from outside of the chapel, on the step of a building directly across from the churches doors. i find peace in the solace of my last Haitian night-sky-scape, even though i feel distant from the presence of the Lord. how was i going to be able to do this, to say goodbye to a place and people i have come to just absolutely adore?
well, it came and it went with my goodbyes to philipson and mike (whom i also met in St. Marc; he went back to the states for a month before returning to haiti to work with mission adventures). as i bid them farewell, i quickly choked back my tears and ran inside, visibly wrenched from the heartache that goodbye’s elicit. i sat in bitterness towards the coming’s and going’s that have been friendships of the past 4 months, and shortly retired to bed for another sleepless night. between the bites of the mozzis, and tickle of the crawling ants, and the tossing, turning, and snoring that results from sharing a room with 5 people, i didn’t get much sleep. at all. i got up several times to reapply bug spray, and once to get my earplugs. even though my alarm was set for 6:30, i decided to get out of bed already when i couldn’t sleep past the sun anyways.
Monday, June 28, 2010
i know someday i'll be back here
Sunday, June 20, 2010
to do
- order patés . . . 82 of them. take a haitian staff and 410 gourdes.
- finish testing. (one absentee to go, so its sort of a win).
- write up portfolio assessments.
- turn in my grades.
- finish Liberty Academy photo collage (if i can find it hiding on my computer), finish kindergarten class photo collage.
- take said photos, to a "photo place" here (if i can find one hiding in the city), and get a 16" x 20" print made of the school photos, and 11 8" x 10" of the class photos. (Well, i tried. my computer ate my photos and wouldn't let me edit them. and then shut down.)
- Go to Deli Mart for my last one-on-one with Sarah. (moved to Wednesday!)
- Bake 2 cakes, make homemade icing, and enough macaroni salad for 41 people.
- Pack up my classroom.
- field day with the kids.
- pick up patés, macaroni salad, cakes and pudding, get utensils and plates, and set up food for lunch by 11.
- bake homemade cookies after school. at least 3 dozen. pray i have enough (and the right) ingredients. (woo-hoo! got the cookie dough made already tonight!)
- finish packing up classroom. because let's be real: you saw my monday's list, the classroom will not be finished by then.
- wednesday morning: graduation rehearsal.
- wednesday night: graduation.
- thursday: likely more packing and cleaning.
- thursday night: women's small group - ice cream and a movie.
- friday night: birthday night, dress up. both are mandatory.
- saturday: farron's birthday, and kay foun's for dinner. i'm over kay foun's and i rarely enjoy the food more than the company.
- sunday: hopefully beach in montrouis. i would love to spend my last weekend on the shores of this nation. i'm not holding my breath.
- clean the house.
- sunday night: church. last service. lots of tears will be assumed.
- monday: tour around haiti. hopefully headed north to cap hatien. again, not holding my breath because we all know even managing to get to the market is a feat and a half.
- monday night: goodbyes and deli mart (it's usually a given). i don't think i can do this.
- tuesday morning. wow. tuesday morning. we leave saint marc, and head to port-au-prince. i'm even typing in disbelief right now.
- tuesday night: spend the night, in a tent, down by the-- rubble. bittersweet way to leave the country. on second thought, just plain miserable way to leave the country.
- wednesday morning: i'm leaving, on a jet plane.
- 6:55 wednesday night. arrive in Tampa (Lord willing!). cry with Christina. get an iphone 4. see my family. hickory hollow. i can't even contain my excitement!
RIP Kenzi
Saturday, June 19, 2010
just another day in paradise.
Friday, June 18, 2010
more times like these
Thursday, June 17, 2010
times like these
Saturday, June 12, 2010
Friday, June 11, 2010
banana et mango
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
i hope someday i'm back here.
i'm sweaty. dirty. and i smell bad. but our God is the God of the impossible and He reigns! The bittersweetness is starting to set in; three weeks left in Haiti and God is far from done working in my heart and with this kiddos.
blessed.
free refills
so let me just share a tid-bit of what God is still doing in my life:
after being pretty sick last week with stomach issues, i went to the clinic held by our wonderful US military and got a prescription filled for cipro and flagel, both to treat what they suspected to be a GI infection. fun! after taking the first dose on friday morning, i got really sick and wound up spending the latter half of the morning and early afternoon on the couch re-cooping. praise the Lord that the medicine did not continue to make me sick; rather, has finally put me back at optimal health, even though i misread the label, and have only been taking half of my recommended dose of the flagel (2 tablets, 3x daily!).
sunday, we spent a wonderful day at the beach, relaxing in the beauty of what God has created in Montrouis. at church that evening, i totally began to feel a fresh renewal of God’s presence in my heart. the message spoke so strongly to me, about having faith because God is God, and having hope because there is prayer. the speaker told an allegory of islands off the coast of Scotland, called the Hebrides. drunkeness and spiritual apathy ruled everyday life here. two elderly women prayed fervently for revival, to see young people in church, and for the people to turn their hearts to God. after many years of prayer, the island was radically transformed through revival (google this story, or find it on cbn.com). all because of the faith and prayer of two women.
i was immediately encouraged by this story, and also likened myself and Christina to these two women. i knew immediately that i had to share this with her, and commit to prayer for hope in her life, and ask her to partner with me for the same within mine. i am so blessed by her friendship, in addition to the others i am so blessed to call mes amis. but there is something so powerful, so edifying in friendships that are committed to the sole purpose of glorifying the Father.
at the end of the service, the speaker asked us to pray with the mothers and grandmothers surrounding us; it will be their prayers that will change this nation. separated by language, i prayed for the woman in front of me, laying my hands on her and lifting her life up to the Lord. not knowing her or her needs, i just allowed the spirit to lead my prayers and really could sense God's presence so near. after several minutes of prayer, the woman, noticeably crying, fell to her knees before the Lord. the speaker asked if anyone would like to accept Christ, and this woman raised her hand! my heart was SO overjoyed standing there, praying with her and knowing that God was working in her heart! she got up and went to sit on one of the bleachers with her children and i just watch her wipe the tears with a joyful expression as she prayed. after the service, she got up and came over to hug me. haitians never initiate this (unless they are the child). we exchanged God bless you's in creole, and each went on our way. i was so blessed by even playing an unseen, background part of this woman's story through my prayer in the moment. God is so good!
Monday was my morning to lead circle time with the kids, and going to bed on sunday, i still had no idea what i was going to do. fortunately, the Lord did. i woke up and knew what game i was going to play (the one where you stand in a close circle, grab each others' hands, and have to untangle the mess that you've made!) and what scripture i was going to talk about (romans 12, rejoicing with those that rejoice; weeping with those that weep). for not having been prepared, the Holy Spirit sure filled me with joy and enthusiasm as i led off with the tooty-ta and the game, and even gave me the words to share when talking about working together with our brother or sisters to work for the better good of the body (as illustrated in the game). i didn't feel like the two tied together as neatly as i would've liked, but sarah gave me encouraging feedback at our one-on-one that let me believe that God accomplished what He wanted to through my words.
but the real treat was yesterday. lacking personal space, privacy, and even really the opportunity to speak prayers out loud in no one's presence but the Lord, i slipped away to the prayer room in the afternoon. armed with my Bible, a prayer list and my journal, i sat before God and poured out my petitions to Him. even just in allowing the Spirit to lead my prayers, I felt like transformation and redemption was being spoken over a friend. i jotted this down as i kept praying. still more, it was being revealed that this time in her life is about remembering the Lord is provisional and faithful.
bathing another friend in prayer, i asked God to show me His heart for them. the Spirit led me to two separate verses: one exact one i had already given them nearly a year ago, and another that was meant to encourage. although it was for them, i am so blessed by the encouragement that it imparted to me, reminding me to remain hopeful and confident in the Lord.
after praying for the things and people on my list, and finishing with prayer over my transition back to the states and a job opportunity, i left at exactly 3 ... only to come home and find an email written at 2:50 (which would have been practically to the minute of when i was praying for a job) from a principal i had emailed my resume to! after applying to 45+ positions and having had no feedback as of yet, this brought so much encouragement to my life, and reminded me just how important and powerful prayer is!! i found out later that christina had been praying for me in those moments too! God is too good, and look at the glory it brings Him!
i had so many life-breathing conversations yesterday, especially with Christina. the encouragement, hope, and even the challenge that we offer each other is paramount only to Christ's truth and love.
last night, i spent another hour and a half in the prayer room just soaking in the presence of the Lord through worship. learning that i'm able to worship through writing has been so instrumental here. the last 20-or-so minutes i just copied verse after verse from Romans 15 and soaking up the rich goodness in those words. coming home and speaking to Christina just after reading them, i was able to offer scripture as an immediate remedy to her achy heart. the scripture that God gave me, Romans 15:13, is a reminder of our hope and confidence in Him. further, 15:1-5 talk about how the scriptures are written to bring us hope and encouragement as we wait patiently for God's promises to be fulfilled! even the scriptures say that that is what they are for!!! I love the Lord and His word seriously fills me-- better than mountain dew slurpees. and with free refills.