Friday, November 26, 2010

pavement & needles

 In October I went home, to my other home, Canada, for 1 month. Just 1 month, only 4 weeks, not very long at all (sure went fast from my end!!). But when I came back to Guayaquil, and ventured forth across the dreaded highway to Bastion, I almost had to pinch myself and
double check where I was. Because this didn't look like the Bastion that
I've known for so many years, not at all. That Bastion had mud streets, lumpy, bumpy and pot-holed. Dry and dusty for half the year, and flowing with mud and giant bottomless
puddles in the rainy season. Always a challenge to negotiate my way about, never able to raise my eyes and look around me for more than a few seconds at a time, lest I fall over or into something, or step on any number of undesirables. But all has changed, or is still changing. Now the streets are being paved, and not just paved, but with sidewalks too!! I can hardly believe it, it looks so different now, all neat and tidy, nice smooth streets, much cleaner. As I walk around I keep losing my bearings, that's how much it's changed. And there are new sewer pipes installed. All going to make living in that community so much better for everyone. Now we're all saying - Bring on the winter, the rainy season!!! Oh, it's going to be so nice.

the street with the school
We've been travelling these new lovely streets recently, the kindergarten class has been doing its annual home visits. The entire class, along with the teacher and helpers, all go out and visit the home of each child in the class. We trundle along with the kids holding onto a rope and the adults herding them along and trying to keep them on course. And one by one we visit their homes. In we all go, and the child has to introduce the family members who are on hand, then they all tour the home, see the kitchen, where the child's eating habits are questioned and everyone applauds if we find out they eat vegetables, then to where they sleep, where we find out if the child keeps their bed and (few) toys tidy. Then most moms serve a snack to us all. Last week we visited 6 or 7 houses one morning, and got back to the school full of assorted crackers and cookies, jello, yogurt, pop and one clever mom served us all big wedges of papaya, a nice nutritious snack (but NOT my favourite tropical fruit). I don't think much lunch was eaten that day.
The living conditions differ a lot between the various houses. Some of the homes clearly  represent a huge struggle for survival, while others are in better condition and the families evidently are doing reasonably well. 


Yesterday when I arrived at the school, a Ministry of Health team was there, vaccinating some classes. I was so happy to see them and find out that they're doing this - not waiting for parents to bring kids to them for immunizations, but coming to where the kids are. It was strange for us Canadians to see, no consent forms, no info for the parents. It just gets done! I joined the fray when they were about to do the grade 1 class, and it was in an absolute uproar. A nurse and doctor were sitting at the desk calmly drawing up all the syringes, and the kids were sitting watching, a number of them wailing and sobbing, and I found 5 of them hiding under desks at the back of the class. So we got them all out in the hallway, and brought them in one by one, and I held the kids in good big "hugs" while the job was done. I confess it was just a little funny to watch the poor little things come in, some of them crying piteously "I don't want to, I don't want to", and others just swaggered in, no big deal at all. I happened to have a camera with me that day, so we got a few pictures. We felt as though we'd been on the battlefield by the time we were done. But I'm very happy to have these kids immunized.

( I have never had so much trouble laying out a page of this blog before! I'm not happy with the way it is, but I've spent too many frustrating hours on it, and this is the best I could do. They've changed something!!!)



Wednesday, October 6, 2010

lives in Bastion

I'm just in from some visits around Bastion this morning. I've been doing quite a bit of visiting in the last few days, spending time with people before I head to Canada next week. And in these visits, sitting and talking, I've had it brought home to me all over again just how tough these peoples' lives are here. Home after home, friend after friend, story after story, each and every one pulling at my heart a little more. Life here in Bastion is not just not easy, it is so difficult, beyond difficult, for many it must feel completely impossible. And it didn't just get hard in the last week or month, a little problem that came along and pretty soon things will get better. These are lives that have been hard for years, and will stay that way, there is no corner to turn and find a marvellous easy life wating.

There are my friends in block 10. Invited me to lunch on Sunday, and pulled out all the stops and served me a wonderful meal, which I enjoyed, all the while feeling so guilty because I know there are days when they can't put 3 basic meals on the table for their family. He's been trying to earn a living collecting recyclables from the garbage that others put out. That involves pushing a big old heavy trike around the city picking through piles of garbage to find the stuff that he can sell for a pittance. Never a great way to try to feed your family. But now he's getting too, umm.....mature (I have to be careful here, he's younger than me and I'm not ready to call myself old!) to be out there doing that all day in the heat. He's been unwell for some months, and I finally got him to a good doctor who told him he just can't do that work anymore. Ok, fine. So now what? His wife is finishing her first year of university, studying to be a teacher, in the hopes of being able to get a job eventually. But that's going to take 4 more years. What happens in the meantime? They have kids in school, there are always costs involved. And how do they eat?

There's a family in block 6. There is no husband or father, hasn't been for many years. There isn't anyone earning any money in that house at all at the moment. 2 of the kids have have been through our Hope of Bastion school, now in high school, and one older daughter with a 2 year old. She sometimes gets work in a shrimp processing plant nearby, but gets laid off frequently. And when she is working she gets paid an absolutely ridiculous pittance for beheading and peeling a pound of shrimp. She could work all day doing that and earn $3 or $4.

Then there's my dear friend, her life has been a never-ending series of griefs. I stopped in there for a few minutes, but we began to talk and then the floodgates opened and she told me part, just part, of the last 10 years' worth. She is a single mother too, 5 kids at home. She has struggled away faithfully doing a fabulous job of rasing her kids alone, finding ways to make ends meet. She has a degenerative kidney disease that we are managing, her meds alone cost over $400 a month. Her latest disaster is that one corner of her bamboo house has rotted and is collapsing. Well, just fix it then. Even if there was lots of money, it's not that simple. There's more to the housing story, that's what came out today. She lives behind her sister's house, with her wall maybe 4 feet away from the back wall of the other house. And her sister has decided that she wants to enlarge her house, build onto the back of it. So, too bad about my friend, the only solution offered is to knock down the front of her place and live in the back part to make way for the addition. Which would reduce her living space by half for her family of 6, including 4 teenage boys. Oh, and the corner that is falling - you have to pass through it to get to the "bathroom". So the kids are skinny so they're doing that with great care. So I asked what my friend is doing about facilities. Oh she's going off up the road to someone's house. Oh, and.... you can hardly make your way along her street right now, it's all dug up, they're putting in sewers and finally fixing things up in Bastion, but at the moment that street is a disaster. As I left she hugged me and thanked me for listening, and apologized for serving me a delicious bowl of soup and rice.

And the red tape and paperwork and level of dificulty in every aspect of life here make for other problems. I was in another home this week (another meal served to me), seems like a nice stable little family. There is a father present, and he has a job. Sometimes. He works in construction which is quite different here to what it is in Canada. Here that usually means getting taken on for little jobs here and there. So he's often out of work. There's a 19 year old son, he's finished high school, but can't get a job because of some long involved delay with getting his papers from his school. And without those he can't work. 

I could go on. And on. I'm absolutely reeling today with it all. Why is it bothering me so much now all of a sudden? I think I must have got used to things to some degree and been floating above it, relatively unaffected. I don't want to think of myself as hardened. I guess so much time in the last few days spent listening and observing has re-opened my eyes. And now I'm getting ready to go home to Canada for a month. To a rather different world. The homes I've been in here are furnished with the most basic of items, sometimes not even those, and what they do have are things that by the standards of the world I'm going to are fit only for the dump. How can I ever reconcile what I will find there with the realities I know here?

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Back in July (yes I've fallen a little behind on this blog), I was invited to go to a track and field event that a bunch of the kids in our Hope of Bastion school were a part of. I was asked to go just in case there were any accidents or injuries, being as how I'm the school nurse! So I packed a bag of first aid things that I really hoped would be unnecessary, and climbed on the bus with about 25 kids and some of their parents, and we spent 2 long mornings at the stadium here in Guayaquil, perched on cement bleachers, watching to see how our kids would do. And we saw! And were proud!
They were competing in various track and field events, long jump, a version of shot put, but mostly running. And can our kids run! They were up against other schools in the city, including some expensive private schools and our Hope of Bastion children held their own, and came home with their fair share of medals. It was interesting for me to sit and observe the differences in the kids of these schools, those from the obvious "poor" schools, and those from the wealthy ones. There is a definite and obvious class system here still, it was easy to distinguish between the rich and poor. The parents from the weathier schools were sitting around using Blackberries, and were dressed rather differently to our parents. The kids had spiffy uniforms and, this to me was the biggest deal - good running shoes. Our kids had their little school t-shirts the first day, and the second day wore Tim Horton's shirts that had come from someone in Canada. And shorts that had also been a donation from Canada. But didn't necessarily fit all that well! And their shoes - I felt badly when I saw what all but one were wearing for shoes. You can buy very cheap shoes here, we used to call them $3 shoes, they may have gone up to $4 by now. Canvas and a very thin slice of rubber for the soles, absolutely no support, or cushioning, or built in bounce. I saw huge holes in one little guy's, all kinds of toes poking out! But they took themselves, with their inadequate shoes, out onto the track and showed us all that they knew how to run! And they did so well, we came home with 7 medals in all, a pretty good showing for kids from a little school in a squatter area. I wonder what they could do with proper sports shoes!
And the other good news - my bag of supplies wasn't needed - there were no injuries.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

The last month seem to have passed in a blur of activity. It has been a very full few weeks.
An update on my cataract patient. We did go back to the hospital in Milagro on the Monday, and there was power, and she had her surgery. And it seems to have been successful, she has some lingering cloudiness which will be dealt with by laser next week. It means yet another jaunt to Milagro, but the outlook seems good for greatly improved vision for her.
And an update on another patient who I was also feeling a bit discouraged over. My old friend Julian. I first met him soon after I arrived here 2 1/2 years ago. He had a big leg ulcer that he'd had for a very long time. With daily visits for 3 months, it finally closed. Then when I got back from Canada last year, there he was with another smaller one, which proved to be remarkably stubborn, just didn't want to heal, but we won in the end, and got it closed. Then, wouldn't you know it, a couple of months ago, I discovered he had 2 more new ones!! So, there we were back to the same old routine, but they've been very nasty ones, and after caring for them every day for 3 or 4 weeks, we just didn't seem to be making any progress. I had to put in an SOS request to Janna's mom, who is a wound care nurse in Canada, to send me more supplies that I can't get here. But I'm so pleased to report that this week, all of a sudden, he's beginnning to heal. I can see it progressing each visit.
I've had a small army of people praying for these 2 patients of mine, and I feel so encouraged to see the results.

The big excitement of the last month was the visit of my brother Don and his friend Caleb. They were here for just one week, but what a week it was! We packed a lot of activity into that week, I look back at the time now, and wonder if it was all a dream! We saw the required sights of most of downtown Guayaquil - the Malecon, Las Penas, the artisan market, the iguana park, the Central market, had a great $2 Ecuadorian "almuerzo" or lunch. And all that was on the first day! We spent time in Bastion, toured the school, visited my patients' homes, were fed by my faithful friends whose mission it is to fatten me up. I lost the 2 men one morning, they decided to go exploring Bastion on their own while I was doing a dressing, and got so far away that I began to worry. It's not the best idea for 2 prosperous looking gringos to go wandering these areas alone! But we found them, and all was well.
One day we visited camp, out in Playas, so they could see the new house that was built last year and has been named "Casa Heather Berry", in memory of Don's wife. When she passed away last year memorial funds in her name went into that house, which houses the infirmary, the cooks' quarters and the tuck shop, all downstairs, and a guest house upstairs.

We did all that in just 3 days, and then.....we set out on an adventure - to the Amazonian rainforest. What a trip that was. We flew to Quito, then to the town of Coca, where we were met and taken down the Napo River by motorized canoe. Then a 1/2 hour walk through the forest, to another landing, where we were paddled in little canoes across a beautiful peaceful little lake to our final stop, Sacha Lodge, where we spent the next couple of days soaking up the sights,sounds and smells of the rainforest. It was a wonderful place, and a fabulous time. We were assigned a couple of guides, and taken out on trails through the forest and on canoe rides up silent little creeks, where we saw all kinds of fascinating things - monkeys, frogs, spiders, a boa (!) and many exotic birds. And such plant life! On the property is a "canopy walk", 3 towers that rise up above the forest, joined by suspension walkways. You climb up many stairs, and when you arrive at the top, you're above the canopy and can see way across the jungle, the sea of green just stretches out in every direction as far as you can see. What a place and what an experience. It was the one big area of Ecuador that I had never visited and always hoped I'd be able to some day. Never thought I'd get to do it in such style!

We came back to Guayaquil via Quito and were able to spend a few hours there, we went to the Old Town, the historic part of the city, and once again managed to fit rather a lot into a short time. But it was fun and they got to see a city that is quite different to Guayaquil.

And then they were gone, and life returned to normal, or what passes as normal! This house has been strangely quiet since they left.....

Friday, June 18, 2010

You know how some days just don't seem to work? The days where it seems it might have been better to have just stayed in bed? Today felt like one of those days.

I had to make a return trip to Milagro, where I've gone a few times with some patients who need eye care. I had a hugely successful day there back in October, and blogged about it. But 3 weeks ago I took a lady who needed cataract surgery, and it was done, but at the time it looked iffy as to whether or not it would be successful. It turned out to have been a traumatic cataract, as a result of a blow to the eye years ago, from an abusive husband. The damage from that blow has been lurking all these years, and has meant that the eye wouldn't support the new lens implant, and it has moved out of position. So we had to go back for a second surgery today, using a different technique. So all the arrangements were made.

It was bad from the outset, my alarm clock somehow got moved ahead by an hour, which meant I got up at 4:30, instead of 5:30. 4:30!! I thought it seemed rather dark, and the cat wasn't waiting outside my door like he usually is, but by the time it all came clear it was too late to go back to bed. Oh well, extra time, doesn't hurt.

Then off out to meet my patient and her daughter in Bastion, and make the trek - get a taxi to the bus terminal, get tickets for the bus, find the bus, get to the city of Milagro, get a taxi to the hospital, and....we got there early. So, find seats, and wait. And wait. And watch staff arriving and trying to punch in on the time clock. Not working. Little by little it began to dawn on us that a number of things weren't lookng right. Ah I see the problem - no power. Oh great! But nobody seems concerned, and we do lose power here fairly often. But finally at 9:15 someone thought to call the electricity company, and guess what - it was a transformer - no power for the foreseeable future. Oh really excellent!! Sorry folks, no light, no doctor, no operations, come back on Monday. NNOOO!!!!!!! I don't want to come back on Monday, I came all the way here, and I'm here now. Please don't make me go home. But what are you going to do, I'm a middle aged senora, and a foreigner, and I just can't throw myself to the floor in a tantrum, even though it's what I most wanted to do.
So, out we went, and reversed the whole process, and came home. And Monday we get to do it all over again!!

Life in Ecuador. Always some adventure lurking around the corner.

I have to add, along with the inconvenience that we all had to deal with, was the disappointment of my patient. She's very nervous about this surgery (can't say as I blame her) and had herself worked up to it, and now she has to live through a weekend before we do it. Please pray that this will be a success this time.

There was a positive to the day, however - we got a clinic scheduled for July, when a team from the hospital there will come with their equipment to Bastion and see anyone with eye problems. The hospital is an MMI (Medical Ministries International) project, and this is part of what they do to serve the poor of Ecuador. So it wasn't all for nought!

Thursday, May 27, 2010

another trip up the river

I'm just back from 11 days away (only 11 days? felt like much longer). This was a trip back to the communities up the Onzole river, this time with a "team" and the purpose was to hold medical clinics. A group came from Canada and together with some of us from Guayaquil and Playas, we were 16 or so - 4 nurses, 1 doctor, some translators, and assorted helpers and administrators. Most of us met up in Quito on Tuesday, and at 11:30 that night all climbed into a van, with every nook and cranny filled with suitcases and bags full of medical supplies, and headed off into the night. 6 bumpy, uncomfortable, carsick (not me - I took 2 gravol and never felt a thing!) hours later, arrived at the edge of the river to wait for the canoes that would take us into the interior to the riverside community of Santo Domingo. That part of the trip was relatively quick this time, the water was high thanks to lots of rain, so we made it in about 3 hours. Last time I was there in December the river was so low it took us 5 hours!

We had a couple of days to put in before the clinics could get underway, we arrived just as the entire community went into party mode, it was a huge fiesta to celebrate the founding of the town. It is a very big deal. Parades, pageants, soccer games, fireworks, and.....music. Or should I say MUSIC. Oh my. 2 years ago when I visited for the first time there was no electricity. And it was peaceful, when night fell, we lit candles and listened to the quiet. Just the many jungle insects to be heard. And you could hang out the window and see thousands of stars and almost as many fireflies. But then electricity came in, and changed everything. Now there are speakers as big as your car, and they were blasting at top volume, all day, and all night. ALL night. We could hear that music everywhere we went. Even way downriver, we went in the canoe one afternoon to visit the "finca" (kind of a farm) of a man from the village, and climbed up the hill where we got a wonderful view, and heard....yes, there it was - the music from Santo Domingo!! Ah yes, Latin America. It carried on pretty much ceaselessly until Monday morning. The North Americans got just a little tetchy!
But it was sort of fun to hang out with the people and be a part of the celebrations, even if our hearts weren't in it quite like theirs were.
We finally got our clinics underway on Saturday morning, packed ourselves and some supplies into the canoe and went to spend the day in the village of Colón, 20 minutes upriver. In a rather small cement building we set up a registration area, a preliminary assessment room, another assessment room, and a pharmacy. And that day were able to see about 60 or 70 people, in a clinic which by the end of the afternoon felt very much like a sauna. But by the time we left, it was raining, a torrential tropical downpour, a specialty in that part of Ecuador. We had to drag all our stuff down the 144 stairs on that hill, load the canoe, and put our wet miserable selves into the canoe and head for home in the dark. But, we did cool off.
The next day we went to church in Santo Domingo, then straight off to Zancudo, 20 minutes downriver, and set up in the school, where we had more space, and more air, and it all went much more smoothly.
I have a sight stashed in my memory from the trip home that evening. Once again we set off after dark, but this time it wasn't raining so I didn't have my head down and could see something special. And all the way along, in the trees beside the river, the whole way home, there were fireflies. Dozens of them, flashing high in the trees and low near us. Such a magical sight,I'll always carry the memory of those little twinkling lights along the river.

The following 3 days were spent in Santo Domingo, holding clinics in the school there. We were able to see more than 100 people, men, women, children, babies, elderly folks who had no idea eactly how old they were (not something they ever felt the need to keep track of!). Part of what we did was annual assessments on all the Compassion sponsored kids in the schools, they were very time consuming, but we were happy to see that these kids are basically quite healhy. We saw many assorted skin infections, most kids and adults had parasitic infections, there were pregnant 15 year olds, people with problems stemming from old serious injuries that were never treated properly or sometimes not at all. Cataracts, sore backs, headaches, the list goes on. I saw so many people with health problems related to issues that we almost never saw in North Burlington Medical Centre! Machete wounds - never. Sore backs from carrying water up a steep riverbank to your home, from bending over doing your laundry in the river, wielding a machete on your finca every day. And the skin and parasite infections. It's a very different world there, even to the world I live in here in Guayaquil, a world apart from southern Ontario. We were able to help many, some we had to say, Sorry, I'm afraid there's nothing we can do to help. We worked from 8am until dark on our last day there, we didn't want to have to turn anyone away who needed attention. And everyone was seen, and treated as best we could with limited facilities.
I had what for me was a bit of a disaster, on my second day there my good camera broke, for no good reason. Thankfully I had put in my little pocket one, so I had that, but had to use it very sparingly, as it charges on the computer. None of those in those villages. But I was able to get a reasonable number of photos. I've posted them, link below:

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Well, the "crazy season" is over, and did it ever go fast! Can't believe Feb and March have come and gone already, with all that those months bring to us here. 2 weeks of camp for youth in February, and 2 more in March, for children ages 8 to 11, or so. Those weeks were wonderful too. The time with the children is so special, they are so much fun to spend a week with - so affectionate, love getting hugs (so do I!), and they have so much fun - singing their hearts out, playing, digging on the beach, jumping in the waves. And so good too to see the counsellors, our youth, talking to them about Jesus, and doing all they can to give those kids a good experience at camp. The first of those weeks was for the kids in the neighbourhood of our camp, and as happened last year, up until just before camp started there were only a handful of kids registered to come. But The Lord was faithful again and brought us 80 kids, some had been last year, but it was the first time for many. And on the last night we invited the parents to come for a snack (the empanadas) and a program, including a simple presentation of the gospel. Such an important outreach to that community.
Mid-week the first week I made the trip back into Guayaquil, to the airport again, this time to meet my sister, who came for a month. We headed straight back out to camp the next morning, after a rather short night, and Alison got to know our camp. She had planned on being in the kitchen helping with the making of meals, but for the second week our cook had sort of forgotten who she had invited to come and help, and kept on asking ladies, and by the time they all arrived on the Sunday nght before the second week of camp, there was quite a crowd of them! That didn't leave much room for 2 gringas, so we helped by keeping out of the way, although we did get pressed into service a couple of times to help with making many empanadas. Alison impressed the socks off all the ladies with her quick learning of the technique, and then doing it better than anyone else!
Most of my patients in those weeks were counsellors and visiting Canadians, with assorted ailments. But I did have a girl with a gash in the chin from encountering something big in the ocean, which in an ideal world would have been stitched. But I had remembered to take some wound glue with me, and this was the perfect time to use it. And if I say so myself, the end result is rather good - a nice neat little scar.
Then there was the little girl with a nasty "nacido" - an old fashioned boil, over her eyebrow. It opened and drained, and healed up, but in the meantime there was another huge one brewing on her collarbone. Again, in an ideal world, a doctor would have incised and drained it, but camp isn't the ideal world, and I'm no doctor and wasn't about to get into that! So I had to talk her into hot compresses, which didn't make me popular at all, and sure enough, in due course, it looked after itself. Very nasty, and I have yet to figure out why there are so many of these here, in small children. They're not at all uncommon.
And my favourite patient of that week, a little fellow with a cut on his toe, which I fixed up for him, and while I was doing it, he watched intently and then said quietly to a bystander in an approving voice - "She's a very good nurse". And he was my new best friend after that. I love those moments. On the last evening of camp he came to find me, all spiffed up, and took my hand and pressed a shell into it and folded my fingers over it, as though he was slipping me a $20. And that shell is worth way more to me that any number of $20's.
After camp was all done we had a week in Guayaquil to rest abit and catch up on things at home, and then we headed off to the mountains for a week. To Quito first to get a bus to Mindo, a cloudforest area 2 hours out of Quito. And there we spent 4 wonderful days, relaxing, resting, hiking, birdwatching, and - wait for it - ziplining!! Yes, we did, twice, and had a ball! It rained much of those days, but we learned that we had to just get out there and do things anyway, and don't worry about getting wet. And get wet we did, to the skin, but we did and saw lots, and had a great time. Our hotel was 5 km out of town, which made it harder for getting anywhere, but was also good in that it forced us into just taking it easy, and I sat and read, and had naps, and loved the absolute peace and quiet - nothing to hear but a rushing river and birds.
yes that's me cruising through the cloud forest!
Then to Quito for 2 days to get to know that city a bit, and it was beautiful weather there, sunny, 25 degrees, dry - absolute heaven after these months in the city I call home!

Now Alison has gone home, and the kids start back to school on Monday, and that school has been a flurry of activity all week, as the everyone prepares for the new school year. And I'm back to "normal" life, whatever that means here!! I've been back to hospital and doctor visits, some old problems, some new problems. Always problems. More on those next time.

So as I look back over the last 2 months, I give thanks for many blessings, so many gifts from God. 4 weeks of camp, supported by churches from North America, kids protected from serious illness or injury, times of spiritual growth for campers and counsellors. And family members here to spend time with me, and the chance to see another part of this beautiful little country, safety in all of our travels, and a good time spent together. So many blessings.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Camp 2010

So, a month ago we were gearing up for camp season, and now here we are already halfway through it. In February there were 2 weeks of back to back camps, both for youth, and on Monday we start 2 more weeks for children.
In spite of heading into those first 2 weeks with everyone feeling less than ready, we all must have been more ready than we thought, because it all went very well, they were 2 good sessions, both different from each other, both good.

The first week was for senior youth, mostly from Bastion, and numbers were down this year, due to a few factors. But that made for a more manageable group in many ways, and it was a good time. All the usual activities - groups, soccer games, crazy fun games, beach time, devotions with the counsellors. There were teaching times in the morning and evening, with a speaker who was so good, talked about who Jesus really was and is, as opposed to the image many have grown up with. The kids listened to him, he speaks from his heart.
We had a walk along the beach one morning, teams were to gather up any unusual finds and when we got back the collections would be judged, see who managed to find the weirdest thing on the beach. We came back with quite a assortment of oddities! Then later that day on the beach, there were 2 more contests (it's all about competition here!), one to get as many team members buried in the sand as possible in a given time, and then the other for each team to build an amazing sand castle. It just does my heart so much good to see these kids, ALL of them, even the big ones who consider themselves the tough guys off the streets of Bastion, down on their hands and knees earnestly working on their part of the sand castle, getting it just right, adding a flower here, a shell there. And then they're so proud of the finished product they need me to take a picture of them in the middle of it.

The second week was livelier, we had 120 or so younger kids, junior youth, and the beginning of the week coincided with the national holiday called Carnival. Which, aside from being a 4 day weekend, means that you are completely free to throw water at anybody at all, anywhere, anytime. You can be walking down the street in Guayaquil, and have a hose turned on you, or a bucket of water thrown at you, or be shot at by a water gun. And consider yourself fortunate that's all it is, because it's also ok to throw other stuff - dirty water, paint, flour followed by water, and it gets worse. So being away at camp seems like a good plan for those days, safer somehow! Not this year. All was calm until Tuesday, still Carnaval, and then it started during dishwashing after lunch. A little water was splashed, then more, then dishpans full, then the hose, then paint was applied to hands to be rubbed into unsuspecting faces. It had rained, leaving a lovely mud puddle, an excellent place to roll someone in. It even extended to the games, the teams had to get as much paint rubbed into each other's faces as possible, they were merciless. Nobody was immune. Except - ME! My advanced years bought me some respect, and also any time anyone looked like they were heading my way with paint, I reminded them that IF they got sick during the week, it was me they'd be needing! Worked every time. I did get hosed once, but water I could deal with, especially in this heat!

Each week there was a campfire time, when kids are invited to share what's been happening through the week, and at each one it was evident that God had been working in hearts. There were testimonies as to what God had done, and commitments made to follow Jesus, and tears were shed. As always, it seems so easy when they're away from the world, in the special world that camp is - these kids face huge challenges when they return to the real world of Bastion, and it is our challenge to be able to offer the support and discipling that they need, and also to offer a warm, accepting, loving church community for them to be part of.

The weeks were without major medical issues, thankfully. We had a couple of viruses do the rounds, but everyone survived those, lots of tylenol was doled out. There were 2 stingray stings in one day, but now I'm an expert in dealing with those. The kids look at me as if I'm crazy when I tell them they have to put the foot into a bucket of very hot water, and I know they have serious doubts about this gringa nurse's methods. But in 1/2 an hour, they've changed their minds, and off they go, happy and painfree.

I was delighted to go back into Guayaquil in the middle of the first week to pick up my niece from the airport, and she spent the rest of that week and all of the next week with me at camp. It was her first time here, and she jumped right in, learning Spanish, and getting into the spirit of things, and adjusting to Ecuadorian ways. It was great to have her here, and be able to show her a little of my life here, and see her make friends with my friends. And now I'm looking forward to my sister arriving in just a few days. She'll be here for 4 weeks, she'll be at camp for the first week and a half, and then we'll spend time here in Guayaquil, and we're hoping to get away for a few days somewhere, too. To the mountains, to find some coolness - the heat and humidity here on the coast have been unrelenting the last few weeks.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Well, it's been awhile since I updated. I guess it's been a challenging time for me, for a number of reasons. I don't plan to inflict all the details on anybody who is still reading this blog. Suffice it to say that homesickness featured around Christmas time, plus the seemingly endless frustrations in trying to do what I do here, and in trying to do almost anything sometimes. Lineups, delays, patients not following directions, the many trips it has taken me to simply renew my passport and then transfer the visa to the new passport. So far that little project has meant 10 trips, 4 to the Canadian consulate, and 6 to the Ecuadorian gov't. department to do the visa. And it's not done yet. And all is not happiness and joy in the 2 churches that I'm involved with and that is hard to see. And then on top of it all. it's been SO HOT!!!!

So after a particularly bad week, at the beginning of January I seized the chance of an empty house to go to the beach to stay for a couple of days, to have a break from all that frustrates and regroup a bit. It was a wonderful few days, a time to listen to the quiet - nothing to hear but birds and breaking waves, a time to breathe clean air, and do nothing but sit and gaze at the Pacific ocean or walk along beside it. It was also a time to be able to pray in that quietness, and do some listening to God. So it was a very body- and soul-restoring time, and I came back to the city with a few ideas as to how to do things a little differently to reduce the demands a little. It has been dawning on me slowly that I am only one person, and can't sustain the way I've been working, with the patients that I now have.

So it's now the beginning of February, and I have stuck to my new resolutions fairly well, which has reduced the burden a bit. The frustrations of trying to accomplish things are still alive and well. I have just come home having experienced 2 huge ones. And these are things that are almost incomprehensible to the average Canadian. Again, I'll spare you the details but if any of this happened in Canada the uproar and complaints would be heard for miles around. Here, you just have to fight the urge to burst into tears and throw yourself to the floor in a tantrum, and smile as sweetly as you can and say, "Thanks, I'll come back." All the while knowing that coming back the next time involves yet another long, noisy and desperately hot trip by public transit!!

But, of course, it's not all negatives. Last week, I was able to be at the high school graduation ceremony of 6 of our Bastion kids who have made it all the way though the education system to graduate and go on to university. These kids are from the very first class ever in our little Hope of Bastion school, and have overcome many difficulties to get to where they have. The odds are against so many of these Bastion kids: lack of money for uniforms and books, lack of parental support, lack of structure and discipline in the home, the wish to go and get a job to have some pocket money. Pregnancy is another huge issue, many of these kids go off to live with each other, with parental consent, at age 15, 16, 17, and of course, inevitably get pregnant. And that's the end of their education!
So I felt very proud of our kids as I watched them get their diplomas last week. It was an enormous accomplishment.

And now school is out and camp season is upon us. The first of 4 weeks starts on Monday. As always, it seems to have arrived much faster than we somehow expected, and we wonder if we're ready. Last weekend we took about 30 of those who will be leaders and counsellors in the coming weeks to camp for a part work weekend, and part training time. Everybody worked very hard on Saturday morning, getting the place ready - cleaning cabins, windows, mattresses, shifting piles of construction leftovers, painting.... Lots got done. And then there were sessions by a great guy from Quito, teaching some leadership skills. It seemed a very young group, but some of the older ones who were not able to be there for the weekend will be at camp.
So ready or not, it all gets underway on Monday. The first 2 weeks will be youth camps, then there's a 2 week break, followed by 2 weeks for children. We have groups of North Americans coming to be a part 3 of those weeks. And at the same time other groups will be arriving via Quito to go to Onzole to work on projects there. And we look forward to seeing how God will overcome the problems, and work wonders in both places.

And.....I am looking forward to having a couple of my own family members arrive to visit, my niece comes next week for 10 days, and then in March my sister is coming back for a second visit, and she'll be here for a month. And I'm SO looking forward to these visits.

So, please pray for us in these weeks ahead. And I will write about them.