Tuesday, 31 January 2012

For the sake of blogging...

This is the longest period I have gone without blogging... 2 weeks!  I'm  not even sure what to say...
I'm blogging for the sake of blogging. This does not mean that things are not happening here... quite the contrary.

God is challenging my thinking... and my fears...  I might post about this at a later date.

I am still learning Creole... ever so slowly!
I am still teaching 3rd Grade.
I have now driven four times in Haiti and feeling a little more confident on the road.. though it is still very stressful.
I am forming new friendships and missing friends from home.

That's all for now!




Tuesday, 17 January 2012

Please Pray...

Last night there was a serious road accident not too far from where I live.  At around 10pm a truck whose brakes failed, killed 29 people and injured 67 others (news article attached).  I was unaware that the accident had even occurred, until I received a message at noon today.  The message was a prayer request for Jacky who was involved in the accident and is now in a coma.  Jacky is Wilson's best friend.

I've since been told that Jacky has improved a little (though he is still in a coma) and that the doctors are preparing to operate on him.  I'm not sure of the details of his injuries; but there is damage from his waist down, as well as a bandage around his head and eye.

I know that it's by the grace of God that Jacky is even alive!  And I became aware of my mortality today... and how I take life for granted... and those I love.  It's by the grace of God that each of us has life!  (click here for previous blog entry on the grace of God)  Thank you God for your grace over my life; for the countless blessings I do not deserve.  Thank you God for your grace over Jacky's life; for sustaining him thus far and for getting him into a good hospital. 

But there's more...
I'm praying for more of God's grace and mercy to be poured out on Jacky.  I'm praying for a miracle in his body, as well as wisdom from above to be given to Jacky's doctors.  I'm praying for peace and comfort for Jacky's family and friends; that they would know that God is present with them as they wait...  

Please join me in prayer if you have the faith to believe that the God who loves Jacky is able to bring about these things and more!!

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Two Years Today

I have copied the following article verbatim from Irene's blog, a friend and colleague of mine in Haiti.  I was also at the church service she describes and I cannot put the experience into better words.  I attempted to pray for the Haitians today, it was hard to know what to pray... not knowing how great their loss was or what they might be feeling; I walked away blessed from experiencing the joy in their singing and dancing... quite different from what I expected!

Today we’re remembering the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti on January 12, 2010. We’re praying for the country, for those who lost loved ones, and for those who are still suffering physically, emotionally, and spiritually as a result.  We’re taking a look around forsigns of progress, healing, and reconstruction.  We’re hoping in God to bring complete restoration to every crack, to every broken place.

This morning, I went to a memorial service at a large Haitian church where a couple friends of ours worship.  Yesterday, as I was thinking about attending the service, I felt like I might if I were to go to a funeral of someone I didn’t know.  Moments of silence, tears, and stories that I could empathize with, but could not truly understand.  After all, I wasn’t there.  I didn’t hear the roaring noise that people later called “goudougoudougoudgou.”  I didn’t feel the earth shake.  I wasn’t trapped for days under rubble.  I didn’t lose a husband or friend to a collapsed building. 

But today, sitting in the upper balcony of the huge sanctuary, spilling over with people, I was surprised to see that the mood was nothing like that of a funeral, though I was still a little mystified by it all.  Thousands of people packed in, filling the main level and the two balconies up above.  (Little did I know that every church in the city was packed, many for all-day services starting at 6 or 7am.)  People sat on benches, plastic chairs, sheets laid out on the floor, and cinder blocks turned on their side.  Many others stood.  As you might expect, they prayed, read scriptures, and sang.  But the tone of the place was anything but somber. People seemed fully alive.  They danced and clapped and waved their hands in the air.  They screamed out their unison call-and-response of “Thank you, Lord!”  They thanked God for everything they could think of—for their lives, for their families, for God’s grace for those who died two years ago.  The whole place shimmered with enthusiastic thanksgiving and worship. 

As a counselor and as an American, there's a little part of me that wonders if this kind of response is too easy.  Or fake.  Or denial.  I mean, this is the anniversary of the most devastating day that Haiti ever experienced.  Shouldn’t people be crying?  Or at least feel sad?  Or want to process it again?  But, the more I talk to people, the more I realize that maybe my American perspective on mental wellness is limited.  Not totally worthless, but limited by culture, personality, circumstance.  Though I always remind people I work with that it’s okay to cry and feel hard feelings and share, maybe it’s not the only way to cope.


I’m reminded of a conversation I had about a year ago with an American psychologist who had spent many years in Haiti and was also married to a Haitian man.  We were talking about mental health and culture, and she said something like, “After all the years I’ve spent in Haiti, I still don’t think I understand mental wellness in Haiti.  People go through something that’s horrible—they lose a child or a spouse—and they just move on.  They deal with it.  It’s like, if they sat down to talk and feel and cry, a huge dam would burst and they would drown.  It would be too much.  They don’t have that luxury.  Survival comes first.” 

At the memorial service this morning, I’m sure that this cultural reality played a role.  But it wasn’t the only thing.  The thanksgiving, the worship, the dancing—they weren’t at all a clamped-down tight upper lip repression of feelings.  They were genuine.  And alive.  And as I looked around, I wondered if maybe they expressed a reality that was somehow even more real than our feelings.  More real than our grief.  More real than our loss.  Just maybe.

It reminded me of a story I read in “After Shock: Searching for Honest Faith When Your World is Shaken,” by Kent Annan.  He shares a conversation with his friend, Enel, about the night of the earthquake, after Enel survived the collapse of a university building just up the street from where we live now:

“In the dark there were aftershocks and fear.  What was it like spending the night lying in that square with hundreds of people, unable to move?  What sounds mingled with the dust in the air? Cries of agony?  Silence in the face of such disaster? Moans of those in pain?  Hushed conversations as people who were able tried to comfort each other?

‘No,’ Enel says.  ‘All night long we were singing and praying to God.’

They sang church hymns together.  Other times people improvised their own hymns in response to what they’d just survived.  And they prayed.

Angry prayers? Questioning prayers?

No, mostly prayers of gratitude because we were spared, Enel tells me, and prayers for those who weren’t.  All night long” (p. 23).

Today, those prayers continue.  Prayers of gratitude to a God who saves.  Prayers of praise for a God who extends grace to the undeserving.  Prayers of worship to a God who will wipe away every tear and restore all things.  

May it be so.

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Favorite songs...

Here are some of my favorite songs at the moment... Tonight I began learning how to play them on the guitar.

Never Once by Matt Redman


One thing remains by Jesus Culture


Lord I need you by Chris Tomlin


May they encourage you as much as they've encouraged me!