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Saturday, 15 November 2008
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Currently
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel
By Lisa See
see relatedOne of those days...
Well, Kara and I had one of those crazy nights last night that will be forever burned into my memory; filled with those all too familiar moments thinking - "would I EVER get to experience this had I lived in America for an entire lifetime?" Answer: probably not.
So, what happened was this:
It all began a couple of months ago when I started having a desire to get involved with the plight of babies in Nepal. I kept running into incidents of babies being abandoned, or children being neglected, and realized that in Nepal there just isn't anything within the "system" set up to protect or care for these children. I mentioned this stuff in a recent post, so if you haven't read that one... look below for a more descriptive version of that story.
Shortly after that post was written Kara and I began volunteering at a government run orphanage here in Kathmandu. It is the only one that was started through the government so anytime babies are abandoned at local hospitals, or found by the police abandoned outside they are sent to this orphanage. We have been going every Friday and mainly work in the infant room holding babies, feeding them and changing diapers. Honestly, I have been LOVING spending time there. Although it's hard to once again be in an institution where you really have no say in the every day administration of the place - it is fun to simply sit and hold newborns for a few hours each week. They are beautiful. The other bizarre thing about the place is that it is located in an old king's palace; an ENORMOUS building with huge courtyards and hundreds of rooms. And yet when you get past the exterior and actually enter you discover children living in really bad conditions with an obvious lack of physical contact, love and individual attention. Major RAD (reactive attachment disorder) cases all over the place. But even with all of that going on the kids are still as gorgeous as can be.
So that brings me a little closer to last night's story. A few weeks after we started working there Kara and I ran into a Christian friend of ours in Thamel, "Sarah". A tiny lady that is very poor and sells small purses to tourists for a living. We've known her for quite a while, so it was pretty obvious when she walked up to us one night with her belly bulging out from underneath her shawl that she was pregnant (with her fourth child). She pulled us aside and starting weeping right there in the street. She told us that she wasn't planning to tell anyone this but that she had become pregnant unexpectedly and could not possibly handle having another mouth to feed. She had already made up her mind that she was going to simply give birth and then leave the baby at the hospital. (Meaning that it would end up in the exact same room that Kara and I had just started volunteering at weeks before.) We were shocked and told her not to worry and that we would find a way to support or help her... but begged her to reconsider keeping the baby. A week later I took Rekha - one of our wonderful WMF staff ladies - to meet her. Rekha counseled her for about an hour and by the end, Sarah had decided that this baby WAS in fact a gift from God and that her heart had changed. We were all really excited, feeling like even if it was just one life - we had kept someone away from having to grow up in that orphanage. Thank God.
Well then last night we got the call - Sarah had gone into labor. Kara got to the hospital around 3pm and when I arrived at 6 they had just taken her into the delivery room. I saw the husband outside and asked him how things were going. He replied with, "I don't know... why don't you go in and see?" I was a bit surprised by that because although I had been with many women in that hospital before - even up to the point where they were ready to push - I had never actually been allowed to go into the delivery room. I didn't think they let anyone in there! But when I asked him where Kara was he said she was inside as well. So I just put on the hospital slippers and walked right in. No one seemed to notice or even care. In fact I think they were kind of getting a kick out of seeing two white girls inside. The room has 6 beds all out in the open and there were about 3 nurses wondering around checking on the women.
Now - just to give a nice clear perspective for anyone who has NOT been in a hospital in the third-world and is picturing some sort of sterile environment with bright lights, lots of doctors in crisp white lab coats and monitors beeping intermittently... maybe even a tv mounted on the wall... this is not that kind of place. When I say delivery room I mean 6 beds. Plastic covered mattresses without sheets. A single pillow and a blanket folded on the end of each one. Blood and "junk" stained walls and floors with a faint smell of urine and dettol soap lingering in the air. (If you've ever volunteered at any of the missionaries of charity homes in India this description of the scent will be very familiar to you... if you haven't just believe me when I say that it's bad. Unforgetable really.) A trash can sitting at the end of each bed sitting up on a stool in order to catch whatever happens to come out of the women during the birthing process - aside from the baby of course :) Lovely, I know. But I'm trying to be descriptive here. A metal bed-pan on the floor under the bed. A bathroom attached to the room with no doors - and trails of blood strown around the room. The sound: lots of screaming. Voices that are saying (in Nepali of course) I'm dying... I'm already dead... I can't do this, and OOOOOOOOUCH that hurts. And variations of those things. No monitors. One IV stand that isn't being used. No instruments around really, just a bed and a floor. And a desk where the nurses are now sitting drinking tea. It is also very cold. Mid-November with no heat and cement floors sort of cold.
Sarah is screaming when I get inside, and Kara is standing beside her massaging her back with this look on her face that describes my thoughts exactly (no one cares that we're in HERE! amaaaazing!). We stand on either side of her bed for about an hour... lots of screaming, lots of rubbing her back. Then the lady in the bed directly across from us is suddenly pushing and next thing you know the nurse walks over and out pops a baby. We were like, ummm... did that just happen?? Baby is handed to someone who takes it out of the room and sits it off to the side for a while. The doctor finishes up with the mom, hands her the baby and walks away. Lady beside us starts screaming... and lady that just had the baby is wheeled out of the room. We're still massaging Sarah's back. Over the next 5 hours we watch as two more women come in - scream for a while - nurses hang out yelling back at them saying, "Hey didn't you know this was gonna hurt? What do you expect, this is the fate of women... deal with it, and while you're at it... be quiet." Sarah is getting REALLY uncomfortable at this point and Kara and I are getting tired. 5 hours earlier she was dialated at 5-6cm... finally the doctor comes to check her again and yep... to our surprise she is now at 5cm. Frustrating.
Eventually she starts telling us she wants to push so we're kind of looking at the nurses and they're like, "well if you feel like pushing then push... we'll just sit here at our desk drinking our tea." So Kara and I (still the only ones standing there with her) are like, "ummm... are we supposed to be watching for something or what? When it finally seems that an eternity has passed the lady in the bed next to us also starts to push. The nurses get up finally and are joking about which baby will appear first. Suddenly both babies are appearing at the same time... and still Kara and I haven't been asked to leave. Just standing there... holding Sarah's hand. Sarah's baby appears and is completely blue... suddenly the nurses are screaming at her saying, "stop moving... don't push or you'll hurt your baby!" We're a little freaked out, Sarah is writhing around in pain and we notice the cord is around the baby's neck. My heart is beating pretty quick at this point. Everyone is screaming (including the lady who is about at the same point in the bed next to us) and finally the baby is out... still blue but coughing - lots of blood everywhere. That's when the nurse starts yelling a LOT more, asks Kara and I to leave and tells another nurse to call a doctor quick.
We're a little nervous and sit oustide the room for a bit. Finally we're told she needs to have surgery and that we need to go to the blood bank and gets some AB+ blood. Well the blood bank is NOT located in the hospital... and it's about 2am. "Sake summa chito" is the phrase the doctor used I'm sure... which means... as fast as possible. So we run outside, jump in a taxi, and tell the driver to get us to the blood bank which is about 10 minutes away. We get there and all the lights are off except for one where a guy is sitting. He gets up, unlocks and opens the door and we hand him the paper that says what we need. He replies with, "sorry - we're out. No more AB+ blood available tonight... but we're having a blood drive tomorrow afternoon - should have some by around 2pm." 12 HOURS LATER! Problem. Again, heart is beating kinda fast.
Finally we ask the man what he suggests that we do and he's like, "go back to the hospital and ask them... I don't know." Ummm. Big Problem with a capital P. We convince him to call another hospital nearby to find out if they have some... no one will answer the phone because it's 2am. The blood bank guy there is probably asleep. Kara and I are discussing our blood types and I'm trying to remember that time in our health class at JBU when we had our blood typed. Was that an A or an O? Can't remember. Yikes. Kara and I sit down on chairs and decide it's time to pray. Eventually the man at the blood bank calls the maternity hospital and they come up with a solution. One pint that had been reserved for another patient could possibly be available. He finds another one that happens to be there. So we have 2 pints. We pay our 400 ruppees ($5) for the blood, he drops it in a black plastic bag and we're on our way back to the hospital. Hand the blood to the right guy and head up to the OR to wait. Meanwhile Sarah's husband is sitting in the hallway beaming, oblivious to the gravity of the situation. He just knows that he has a new son. I'm amazed that back home the husband would/should be the one who is the most informed about the birth of their child/status of their wife. Not here apparently.
An hour passes with us sitting on the cold cement stairs trying to stay awake and suddenly Sarah appears semi-concious and is pushed down the hallway on a bed. We follow her to the recovery room which is lined with about a dozen beds and people trying to sleep. Kara is asked to jump onto one of the beds and to help lift Sarah onto it. She is hoisted onto the bed, still caked in dried blood, and the doctor is gone - very little explanation. Just us, Sarah, her husband and an IV in either arm. One normal IV and the other with the blood we had just purchased across town being pumped into her body. The one thing the doctor did say is, "we're gonna need one more pint... and get that one into her fast!" Somehow another pint of blood is located and she's hooked up to that one too. Eventually she becomes hysterical waking up everyone in the room. And I'm left thinking, why is it that in ALL the times I've been in Nepali hospitals - about 3 dozen or so different times - I've never been with one of the quiet, normal patients? I ALWAYS end up with the one who is screaming and waking everyone up. Perhaps to keep me humble? If so, it does the trick. I'm trying to calm her down while one nurse is yelling,"If you don't shut-up I'm gonna tape your mouth shut."And a second one is asking me, "don't you care about your patient?! clean her up or do something!"
Sarah starts screaming, "don't leave me!" and is clinging to me for dear life. Then yells, "Where am I? Did I already have the baby? Where is the baby? Where is your friend (Kara)? Where are my other kids? Where am I? JESUS forgive me!! Oh, I am all alone... only me and Jesus! Oh LORD! Ah, I am in pain! Where am I? Did I have the baby? Can I have some water? JESUS will forgive me!! Where am I? Where is my baby?" I'm trying to answer her in Nepali over and over again while I'm sure everyone else in the room is being fully entertained. The baby meanwhile has yet to be seen since it was born.
After an hour Kara and I can barely keep our eyes open and are FREEZING cold. It's nearly 4:30 am when I finally ask Sarah's husband, do you think it would be alright if Kara and I went home and got some sleep? He's still just beaming and unaware and is like, "sure no problem." Haha. So we came home and were in bed by about 5:30am. Kara went back this afternoon to check on Sarah and low and behold, she is fine. Baby is gorgeous - about 6lbs. And Sarah remembers nothing about the whole night. :) The husband... still beaming I'm sure. Not a care in the world.
Wow. Another day.
And, for anyone who made it all the way to the end of this story, here are a few pictures from the orphanage where we have been volunteering. Cute kiddos:
Sunday, 09 November 2008
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Currently Reading
Sold
By Patricia McCormick
see relatedFinance Minister calls Nepalis home...
I'm not sure if it's just the person who wrote this article, or if it's actually the finance minister - but this article shows the depth of the idiocy of the people running this country... wow. There is a growing trend among young Nepalis to leave the country in search of work and opportunity. This was the finance minister's plea to bring them back home:
Come back home, Bhattarai to NRNs
Kantipur Report
KATHMANDU, Nov 9 - Finance Minister Dr. Baburam Bhattarai on Saturday urged Nepali people living abroad and considering settling there to extend a helping hand for the economic development of the country instead of roaming around in foreign lands in search of opportunity.Dr. Bhattarai also urged people still in the country to give up any idea of going abroad but instead join hands with the government and build a new and prosperous nation. He said the country could achieve a major breakthrough in economic progress, like in the developed countries, by utilising its huge natural resources.
"Let's return and do something good for the country," he said. "We are probably roaming around here and there without understanding and realising the potential of our resources. Our inner soul will haunt us if we do not return to the country." He conceded that the country is poor despite having huge resources.
Bhattarai, who had proposed an ambitious budget for this fiscal year, said the government has identified certain sectors, including tourism, to boost the economy. "We can gain much benefit from this sector," he said. "I have reached a conclusion --- after traveling in some foreign countries -- that there is no such a beautiful country anywhere else in the world. This is a true heaven on earth."
Constituent Asse-mbly member Arzu Rana Deuba, however, called on the government to create a favorable environment for those who would like to remain in the country, saying that nobody would think of going abroad when there was a good environment right here.
Bhattarai and Rana were speaking at a book release function in the capital. At the function, Bhattarai, Rana and others jointly released three books--The Annapurna Circuit from the Air, To Go or Not to Go to the USA and Everest from the Air -- written by instructor pilot and noted aerial photographer Bed Upreti.
Friday, 22 August 2008
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Currently Reading
Pedagogy of the Oppressed
By Paulo Freire
see relatedThe strangest things...
Sometimes I'm amazed at the bizarre things that I see and hear here in Kathmandu.
Right now I'm sitting in a coffee shop checking email and watching the USA men's volleyball team play against Russia. We've spent a lot of time outside in public places that have TVs lately in hopes of catching a bit of the Olympics since we don't have a TV at home. It's funny because I still think of China as half way across the world as I watch. But in reality, sitting here in Nepal, the border of China is only about a 5 or 6 hour drive away from here! Haha.
Also crazy... in front of me there are two guys having a conversation at the moment about their "climbing clients." I think guy #1 is a lawyer that is setting up expeditions for people climbing Mt. Everest and Mt Cho Oyu (the world's 6th highest mountain). Guy #2 is a Nepali Sherpa maybe? Can't really tell. He's definitely a professional mountain climber though. So fascinating. They're discussing getting oxygen tanks, climbing permits, and weather conditions for their climbers. Again, something I would probably never hear sitting back home in Kansas drinking coffee. :) It's pretty bizarre to know that I have walked down the street with so many famous climbers, but would never recognize a single one. Well, maybe Sir Edmund Hillary, but he passed away recently so I guess I'll have to familiarize myself with some more famous climbing faces. Great quote just now from guy #1: "We may be able to cut costs on Yak expenses..." classic.
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This last week our community had a week of prayer together... We got together three times a day for an hour, 6-7am, 2-3pm, and 6-7pm to pray for unity as a community and to seek God about where our community's focus needs to turn in the future. It was a really good time... kind of hard at times to push through the sheer number of hours. But I feel like it really broke through in some areas and allowed God to speak. It's a very strange feeling having community things together without the West family being with us. They have been gone for about 2 1/2 weeks now, and seem to be settling into their new life in Omaha well. It's strange to feel like we know them and their children so well... and to now be so far apart. We really miss you guys Kim and Silas!!
So as we prayed this week I really tried to focus in and listen for anything God would have had to speak to us regarding where our community's focus needs to move towards. As I didn't feel anything real specific I tried to look back over the week and think about what I encountered outside with people and there seems to be a relative theme within that at least.
1) I spent a morning at the police station trying to figure out how to speak into a situation regrading a little baby that used to be in our children's home. Over the course of the 1.5 hours I spent talking to the police I found out that Nepal actually has NO laws whatsoever that would protect a child in the case of an abusive family situation (nor does it have laws to protect women). I am so used to American life that it is shocking to think there could be no legal way to have a child removed from a bad home situation. So that was heavy on my heart.
2) I went to the maternity hospital twice this week with a young (15 year old) friend who is very close to giving birth to her first child. So sad to watch such a young girl becoming a mother far too early on in life, with a husband who has no interest in working to support a family. When I asked the girl if she had anything ready for the baby, or had chosen a name she simply responded, "Oh no, my husband and I haven't really even thought about this baby at all." Which I interpreted as, "my husband hasn't given any thought to this, and I'm terrified." After they were married last year they got pregnant right away, but aborted the baby. Fortunately they have at least chosen to keep this one.
3) On Thursday as I was crossing the bridge between Thamel and my house I saw a large crowd of police and people watching something. It looked at first like they were just staring at a wall so I asked a lady close by what was going on and she pointed to a pile of trash, and there lying on top was the tiny body of a dead infant. I was horrified to see something so terrible in a place I walk by 3 or 4 times every day. But I also know that this kind of thing is very common here in Kathmandu. A family can't raise a child; there are so few other options, so... they throw the baby away in the trash piles that line the rivers. I mentioned that I had seen this to another Nepali friend the next day and she told me just days before another woman had taken her twin 6 month old sons down to the river in the same area and had left them there. Fortunately someone else found the babies and took them in before anything too bad happened to them. Then yesterday I mentioned this story to Pawan and he told me that he was just in the same place near the river 3 days ago and also saw a dead baby's body. There was a crowd, and several police men that were trying to stop a pack of dogs that were destroying the baby's body. Horrible.
4) On a positive note, the wife of one of our Nepali staff members found out that she is pregnant with her 2nd child this week! Such an amazing contrast from the lives of those others around us who have to throw away their babies because they simply can't take on having another mouth to feed.
So, at the end of the week to say the least the children of Nepal were heavy on my heart. I know that God has such a great plan for this generation of children, and of course Satan is working overtime to keep their destinies from being fulfilled. So pray that God would show us if there would be any way for us to be involved in this situation.
Monday, 07 July 2008
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4th of July
Once again this past week another major US holiday passed without as much as a thought here in Nepal. The first year or two I didn't really think it was that big of a deal. But then I realize that because I generally don't celebrate many major Nepali holidays, due to the fact that they are predominantly Hindu, I kind of miss out on holidays all together. One thing that will help though is that the government of Nepal has now decided to add Christmas to the list of official national holidays here. So hopefully that means the Karuna Ghar girls won't have to be sitting in school taking exams on Christmas day like they have in previous years.
We did however have a bit of a celebration on July 5th to celebrate the 4th. The American Center here, which is the place that Kara and I have been playing football, has a celebration each year for American citizens to get together and eat some good food. They had swimming, a barbecue and pony/elephant rides for the kiddos. So that was fun. Here are some pictures from the day... unfortunately the swimming pictures didn't make the cut because Kara told me I wasn't allowed to post them publicly, haha. And well the pictures of Calvin... let's just say, I cut them myself for the sake of anyone who reads this blog.
Our three new staff members, Calvin, Andrew and Jesse:

Krishna the elephant giving rides:

The four Wests kiddos who will be leaving Nepal later this month:
Friday, 27 June 2008
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Currently Reading
The Shack
By William P. Young
see relatedRain, rain... stay a while...
I was trying to get a couple of videos uploaded recently to put up here. Nothing too exciting, just a little monsoon rain, but it looks like our internet connection isn't having that. Maybe next time.
So it's monsoon, raining pretty much every day - which if you don't know, is my absolute favorite kind of weather. I'm not really the sunny, mid to upper-70's type. I love to have a reason to bum around at home and get some work done. I also love the routine of being out in the street with people - but there's something about a period of just staying home and resting that is good for the soul.
We're getting ready for some major transitions to take place here in our community. Our field directors Silas and Kimberly West and their four kids are leaving the field and moving back to the States on July 31. So that's gonna mean some pretty big changes around here. I feel like we've already been in the "preparing for their departure" stage for quite some time. We're planning a big party for all of their friends from here in Nepal to celebrate together in a couple of weeks, and I'm really excited about that. I always see these huge wedding parties and celebrations going on but it's never been something we've actually planned. So this should be fun. I might even find time to go out and purchase a sari to wear, but we'll see about that.
I'm also currently looking around at flights to try and plan my trip home at Christmas time. I'm pretty excited because hopefully Pawan will be flying home with me!! It'll be his first time ever outside of Nepal - so start praying now for his visa to get approved!
The last couple of weeks Kara and I have ventured into some new territory. We have begun playing football.. aka soccer if you still live in America. We were both pretty intimidated at first because neither of us have ever really been footballers. But when we realized that it was really just a laid back group of women getting together for a "friendly" match - we actually enjoyed ourselves. AND the best part is that we got to go into the American Center here in Kathmandu for only 150 rupees to play. The American Center was built (I think) for ex-pats who are living in Kathmandu. Most of them being embassy, UN or other government employees. It's a place that would NOT seem like a huge luxury for anyone in America but for us it's a little piece of heaven. Inside there is a baseball field, soccer field, basketball court, tennis courts, fitness center, swimming pool and a restaurant where you can buy food imported from the US that you can't find anywhere else outside in the city :) ahhhh... Seriously, it actually felt like we were transported out of Nepal for a couple of hours just by being inside. So we're looking forward to another friendly match this Sunday.
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I also recently read the most amazing book mentioned above - and would HIGHLY recommend it to anyone who is looking for something good. There are so many incredible insights into the heart of God in this book, I can't even tell you. You just need to read it!
burklikeshercoffee
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- Name: Brook
- Country: Nepal
- Metro: Kathmandu
- Birthday: 11/26/1980
- Gender: Female
- Member Since: 8/17/2005

