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Sep 01
2009

Medical Blog Re-Post

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Tagged in: News

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Rejoice!!!!!!

A good wife is a great thing, a great wife is a blessing from God. My dear wife, Terri, reminded me that I began this blog assuming that the readers knew the history of Agape Project International and the reason we are here in Kenya. So, defering to her wisdom, I will briefly introduce API and our current medical mission trip.

API USA exists to support the pastors of API Kenya to fulfill the call of God on their lives. The vision of API Kenya is “The Christ centered holistic development of the people of Kenya”. The practical expression of this vision is to provide access to healthcare, clean water, and primary school education. Additionally, we partner with a boys orphanage, and are actively involved in small business loans, $200 on average, to increase the standard of living through capitalistic ventures. Finally, we believe in the church and provide pastoral development and evangelistic outreaches throughout Kenya.

The medical mission team is comprised of 10 people from the west coast who have come to Kenya to provide medical care for people of the Masai tribe. Additionally, we are supported by four Masai translators. We are here for two weeks and will see about 1250 people over 8 days of clinics. A Kenyan Clinical Officer, Dr. Charles is with us to guide us in the common diseases of Kenya. We have a physicians assistant, several nurses and medical administrators and people who have never been involved in the medical field. We are all here for one purpose, to bring hope and healing to the people of Kenya.

Rejoice! Today, Sunday, we slept in till 8 AM and went to church. In Kenya it is an event beginning at 10 AM and ending after 1 PM. The singing and dancing is captivating and today was no exception. After the service the youth wanted to continue with singing and dancing. The young girls grabbed Paige and Chelsea and taught them the Masai way and later Chelsea had them dancing the Macarena! Karen and Paulette were breaking out some moves and were given beautiful Masai necklaces. The festivities ended with lunch in the dirt floored but very colorful church in Kilgoris.

Afterwards Scott, Paige, Alpha and I went to one of our translators home to build a chimney for her in her cooking hut. Most Kenyan women living in rural areas cook over an open fire with little ventilation resulting in many lung and eye problems. Scott, a recent architectural graduate of WSU and API Associate, is working on a project to provide chimneys built of native materials, sticks, mud and banana bark ropes, for the rural cooking huts. This was his second work and the framework was built in about three hours and will be completed tomorrow.

We ended the day with a pill party. What else do you call 14 people sorting, counting and labeling medication packets for the nine containers used as our pharmacy. Katie was the boss and everyone else was busy bottling antacid, counting pills and restocking various creams and ointments. It was controlled chaos lasting till after 9 PM with comic relief provided by a small swarm of bees and one very large mouse sized bug bravely dispatched by Paige. Tomorrow is our fourth clinic day at a new location. We are all in good health and moral is high that is why I say Rejoice!

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Seasons…………………..

For everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose under heaven: a time to be born, and a time to die…. Ecclesiastes 3:1

Throughout life we move from one season of life to the next. Sometimes predictably moving from adolescence to adult to middle age in the regular rhythm of life. The carefree childhood days seem like they will never end, school is too long and summer to short. We think we will live forever. And yet, we all know that sooner or later we will die.

 

Today, the happiest season of life ended swiftly for a young boy brought in to the mud walled building that for the last three days was our medical clinic. Hit by a motorcycle, the nameless five year old was brought in limp and bloody. No pulse, no breath. The team jumped in to action, swiftly applying CPR and assessing his other injuries. Our oldest team member and leader of the trip rescue breathing, Katie providing compressions. Gary and Katie traveled 10,000 miles away from home to provide CPR on a dirt floor, in a church in Trans Mara, to a boy without a name. He still died. I do not know what else to say, of all of the wonderful success stories, the laughter and joy of providing healthcare to people with no access to healthcare. And yet what stays with us at the end of the day is that little boy. Even two games of “Extreme Spoons” with Paige diving full length across the table to grab a spoon could erase the memory.

 

Tomorrow, Sunday will be a day of rest for us. We will split in to teams to attend two different churches. In the afternoon several of us will build a chimney to further refine our plans to provide chimneys made of local materials, mud, sticks and banana leaves for the women who cook day after day in a cooking huts without ventilation. We will also try out a digital microscope on some blood and fecal samples. Seems that no one on the team is volunteering to provide samples. Keep praying for us for rest and wisdom as we start a new clinic location on Monday.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Accident of Birth…...................?


I finally slept for more than a few minutes, flying over the Mediterranean and in to Egypt somewhere. I was on my third airplane and had been traveling for 20+ hours since leaving my family. The window seat is the only place to be for me, even the clouds hold a fascination for me. Looking down at the brown and red hued barren desert it was easy to imagine why no one lived there, or so I thought. A river came in to view, just a bit darker than the surrounding landscape but with the unmistakable bends and curves of a river. Then a faint bit of green clung to the riverbank in a rectangular pattern. So there was life down there and it was a very big river, it must be “The Nile”, you know the one you’ve watched on PBS but have never seen in real life. I can’t take it off my bucket list yet because my toes have not dangled in it, perhaps some day. The plots of green irrigated fields now lined both sides of the river and here and there I began individual homes and then clusters of homes. People were somehow living in that arid expanse, getting married raising families and dieing. They were born there not of their choosing, but for a purpose. Just as I was born in Seattle, Washington for a purpose. It has taken me a few decades, a bit of pain, a lot of joy and an incredible wife to find a purpose in life worth living, and dieing for. Perhaps a bit melodramatic but do you have purpose in life? I don’t mean the standard American dream thing but something requiring the supernatural intervention of God to get it done? If you do not, then I say you are not fully living!

It is now over 48 hours since leaving the US and I am finally here, Kilgoris, Kenya. In addition to the 3 airplanes it took a private car, two Matatu’s and a lift from the team over the last 2 km but I have made it. The Medical Team just finished day 2 of the clinics, they are tired, excited and hungry all at once. Thank you for being a part of the adventure. Take some time to discover your purpose in life. Something that seems impossible, serves others and costs you something. God Bless and Good Night.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Getting There

Letting go and letting God..... ever hear that one before? I am practicing it right now. The API USA Medical Mission 2009 to the Masai Tribe in Kenya is going on right now and I am still waiting to leave and catch up with them. They left last Saturday from San Diego and Seattle and because of scheduling challenges I will not catch up with them for several days now. Everyone arrived safely, minus one case, and is in good health and spirits. The vehicles were rented and Boke was loaded with all the luggage. Boke is our resident Landrover Defender 110 driven by our dear friend and brother in the Lord Alpha. They should be in Kilgoris by now and unwinding from the 6+ hours of Kenyan roads.

The team will begin treating patients on Thursday the 27th of August and are prepared for 300 patients. Our team of nurses, and untrained staff will partner with Dr. Charles, an Kenyan Clinical Officer, to provide medical care in the rural areas around Kilgoris. We will share pictures and stories as the days go on. Pray for health and strength for the team.

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