Friday, October 29, 2010

Prayer Letter


It’s a shock to realize that what you once dreamed is no longer the dream of your heart.  That where your heart once was is no longer your home.
It hits me hard when I look out on the beauty of small-town New England in the autumn and realize that, gorgeous as it is, there is so much more to life.  My past goals of living here, raising a family, saving lives at a local hospital – it’s a transient reality, lived for a moment and then ready to go on the back burner to simmer again. 
I thought that when I came home from Togo I could go back to normal, that the heartache would heal in time.  Instead I find myself still there, in the stark, bare reality of a life without resources and a soul joyfully reflecting the glory of God, regardless of the cost.  My skin may be white, but my heart still beats with the rhythm of the djembe.  My naiveté has been lost and instead I sing with Brooke Fraser, “Now that I have seen, I am responsible; faith without deeds is dead.  Now that I have held you in my own arms, I will not let go…”

I found myself debating the point with a doctor from work at 4 am this week.  Night shift can sometimes be good for substantial debate.  Dr. Duke is wrong…a life of service cannot and should not be separated from faith.  In reality, a life of service can only be lived by faith, a reflection of Christ at work in a soul…a heart surrendered in worship.    Otherwise it becomes dry and meaningless.
And so, friends, I am headed back to West Africa.  To be a part of the miracle of a child living only by the grace of a good God and the fervent prayers of a mama.  To love the outcast and touch the hurting.  I will be a pediatric nurse again with Mercy Ships, this time in Sierra Leone – a country already torn apart from years of war.  My commitment is from January - May, 2011, and I am very excited!
I plan to meet the Africa Mercy in South Africa for the sail to Freetown, Sierra Leone. Along with my responsibilities as a pediatric nurse I expect to participate again in surgical screenings, respond to the need for Pediatric ICU (PICU) and ICU nurses, and most likely joining the emergency team again as well. 

I covet your prayers and welcome your support.  Because all of our surgeries on Mercy Ships are provided free of charge, I will need to raise just over $5000 for my 4 months of crew fees and the plane tickets.  Regardless of whether or not God leads you to contribute financially or join me overseas, please pray for my co-workers, patients, and myself.  Please pray for volunteer medical staff to be raised up, for God to prepare our way in the hearts and lives of the West Africans, for safety and for opportunities to witness.  I have continued keeping up with my blog here at this address, and plan to continue to do so throughout my trip.
To learn more about Mercy Ships or make a donation, you can visit my page at https://connect.mercyships.org/page/outreach/view/crewmates/colesl.  Donations can also be mailed directly to Mercy Ships, P.O. Box 2020, Garden Valley, TX 75771, with a note attached that they are for Acct # 2699.

Aiming to reflect His love,
Laura

Monday, October 25, 2010

Reflection of Glory

Autumn in New England is a glorious thing; autumn in the Berkshires is no less beautiful.  Stretches on vast stretches of rolling green-and-gold hills.  A mountain view on the walk into work that makes me just stop, and stare, and sigh.  My heart sings with the brooks and creeks as they wander along the path God guides them in.

I stop for a moment and stare, lost in the reflection of fall colors so perfect it's hard to know which is reality and which is only the reflection in the smooth water.  A few hundred feet down the current swirls, speeds around rocks, and the perfect image is broken.

We were created to reflect the glory of God.  It's hard to remember that sometimes, living in a world that frowns on vulnerability, encourages us to trust in our own strength.  In a job where I need to present confidence and competence in the first few minutes of meeting a patient, twenty, fifty or a hundred times a day.  Where co-workers tell me that service overseas is a farce of proselytizing and coercion rather than a God-given calling and ministry.  Where genuine joy is the oddity and not the typical.

I love the Emergency Department.  It's not the adrenaline rush, not anymore.  It's reality.  Where facades are stripped away and people show who they truly are.  I miss the innocence of before, but now that I know the reality I can't stay away.  It's not just in Africa where there are the poor, the forgotten, the outcast and the needy.  They are here too, our neighbors and friends, the town drunk, the lady camped out under the bridge, the girl who intentionally overdosed, the young father with a new diagnosis of cancer.  It's just that here in America we try to hide our brokenness.  It may not be physical, not always.  We have to look a little harder to see beyond the mask.

Lord, to these the hurting let me be a reflection of Your glory, albeit still a little broken sometimes.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

The limitations of Wong-Baker

I was getting patient report during an early orientation shift at an ED nursing travel job in New England. The nurse reporting off added as an afterthought..."oh, and you may have trouble communicating with "John". If a family member's not there you may need to call the translator."
I went and assessed my patients, had a nice conversation with "John", and came back out to touch base with my preceptor for the day. "Oh, and "John" is doing well, no nausea, vitals are great, and he needs a little more pain medicine."
"So, family was still there?" she asked.
"No, he stepped out, but he'll be back in a few minutes." And no, I don't know "John''s language. Within a few minutes I found myself explaining to a new staff how I came to be semi-fluent in medical pantomime.

It was difficult for them to wrap their American medical minds around a place where ATT translators are not readily available. Where we hire aides for their language skills rather than medical knowledge and background. Where conversations may go through multiple nurses, translators, and other patients or family members. Where a little girl and her uncle could spend a month on a ward with no one who spoke their language, and our one translator for them came
down a few times a day; where complex sterile dressing changes, NG feeds and assessments could take place with little or no verbal communication if necessary.
And so in an effort to convey the challenge and the reward of care in this environment, I found myself telling them about Sayeed.

Sayeed was born nine years ago into a society and culture where any physical disability could be fatal. Babies with any deformity could be thrown out on the belief that they were cursed; even if the family kept a child he became a liability because the family had to care for his needs. Until May, Sayeed lived life on his hands and knees.

I first took care of Sayeed just as he was coming out of the recovery room. His beautiful innocent grin lit up his face, a response to my welcoming smile as he rolled in the doors of B ward. One of the translators was next to me for this first crucial moment - an initial set of vitals and assessment, explanation of postop procedures, circulation checks and pain medicine. Reassurance that he would have his own legs back and they were indeed still there under the strange hard whiteness of the casts. He wiggled his toes, giggled and gave me a thumbs up when I pinched them, and pointed to the smiley face (0) on the Wong-Baker pediatric pain scale, then settled in happily coloring.
I opened his chart to look over the postop orders and stopped, half-stunned, at the medical history: cerebral palsy. Only the strong love of a mother and the grace of God could have brought him this far in the villages of West Africa. I glanced over at his bed and he gave me a brilliant smile and thumbs up, then went back to coloring.

He breezed through the first few hours after surgery with no complaints, no problems, no need for pain meds. Around dinnertime I went to check on him again, a routine becoming familiar to him by now. He turned on the pulse ox and put it on his finger, put the thermometer under his armpit and held it there until the beep. Vitals...WNL. I pinched his toes and wiggled my fingers. He grinned and wiggled his toes, gave me a thumbs up. CMS checks...good.
Finally I pulled the laminated Wong-Baker faces scale off the wall and ran my finger along it. Are you having pain, Sayeed? He pointed to 4, a slightly sad face, and gave me a happy smile. I pointed to the 4, shrugged and looked confused, and ran my finger along the scale again. Are you sure you are having 4/10 pain? Again the nod, beautiful smile, finger on the 4. Then he went back to coloring with his mother.

Confused, I called over one of the translators. "Yaovi, can you ask Sayeed if he is having pain?" I asked. He came back with the same answer, "A 4, Afua."
"But Yaovi, he looks very cheerful. Can you ask him again if his legs are paining him and if he would like some paracetamol?" He did. "Afua, he says his legs do not hurt, and he does not need medicine."

Now I was really confused. "Then why did he tell me it was a 4? Can you ask him what he thinks the faces mean? Yaovi did, and came back laughing uproariously. "I think he does not understand the faces, Afua. I have taught him again what it means."

I found out later that the faces meant something a little different to Sayeed than what Wong and Baker initially had in mind. The zero- I am having a lot of fun; a two - I am having fun. A four...I'm a little bit bored.  I love the pure, uncomplicated mind of this little boy who was completely unconcerned that he would be the object of horrified pity in my country, a symbol of family shame in his.  He didn't know that he had just had surgery and by any stroke of logic he should be thinking about his legs, crying, fighting the nurses....instead, in total innocent oblivion he trusted that we would fix his legs.  And in the meantime, he just wanted to play!

Sayeed hanging out with a few of his friends at the Hospitality Center, including Bo, Komla and Abe. Photos by the ever-talented Liz Cantu.