Tuesday, April 30, 2013

There are lows in trying to 'help.'


So why do I want to cry?

I can’t blame fatigue today.

I used to cry too much. I take an antidepressant that stops me from crying almost completely, unfortunately. But, today, I am starting to sob.

I feel as though I have been trying to step very carefully for 2 ½ months. What comes naturally for me and brings joy to me, isn’t necessarily right here. There is nothing like holding the kids. I LOVE opening doors to new worlds for young people - like game drives and new discoveries. The kids have documented their lives for me with my cell phone. Today I realize that each of these things may have hurt more than it helped. 

I know just enough about anthropology to know that my way is not the right way (as a western thinker).

I know just enough about people to know that kids need the kind of attention these kids don’t normally get, for some very good reasons. I have chosen to give it to them and hope they don’t pay an unforeseeable price. I think I am paying the price today for the bonds we’ve creative.

I have given the best I had to give but something has been amiss in me and today I just sit here, needing to cry.

I have a great job that pays me very well. Andy earned and saved for 30 years for a very nice pension. We want to use those blessings to glorify God. I just feel that the more I try to do that, the more I misstep. By giving, I inadvertently hurt people.

The rules are completely different in a developing country and I am tired of trying to understand through language and culture differences and personal boundaries that stop deep conversation.

Volunteer work has lows. This is one of mine. I can’t call it doing mission work because I know very clearly now that I am not a missionary. I am a short term volunteer.

When my kids were really getting independent and I needed to let that happen without interference, I would sing the song, “I surrender all.” I hear those words in my ears today. I think I am fully realizing that I need to give the kids back to God, as if they have been 'mine' for a couple months. They are not mine, and never were. They belong to their families, to Social Services in Namibia, to CHI, to the Ark, but not to me. I can’t protect them, I can’t provide for them, I can’t hold onto them. I need to surrender them and today…

that is through tears. 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Open Boxes and God Loves Uncle Joe


One of the most unsettling parts of this time in Germany and Africa is my seemingly uncontrollable desire to put things in little boxes. I want to understand. I want to see what is going on so I can plan and communicate with others about what I know. I have learned over and over again, I'd better keep those little boxes open because my understanding is changing constantly and I don't want to miss the often surprising and wonderful adjustments. 

I understand this to be Greek thinking. I want things to make sense and be logical. “Since I observe this…this must be true.” A+B=C

Over and over again this mode of thinking has been shattered and leaves me feeling humbled. People who are very very sure of things fascinate me. I’ve felt wishy-washy in the past (like politics and personal opinions) because I always think there is another side to every story. But, when I have a set amount of time, like these 4+ months, in which to figure out new worlds and worldviews, I keep falling into the trap of categorizing quickly, only to have to completely relearn and readjust later. 

For example, some people seem to be intelligent because they are verbal and expressive, while some seem to be more limited. Then, one will open up in prayer or in conversation and prove all assumptions wrong. 

People seem to not care because they aren’t all huggy like I am. Then I see different kinds of acts of love and soften my thoughts considerably, apologizing in my head and hoping I didn't show what I was thinking.

I asked a question of a person yesterday and he seemed very defensive. I found myself angry and wanting to write him off. I felt devalued and untrusted. I knew I was very tired and just needed to get home and rest. Today, I am ready to try to move forward with the person and the organization he works with. 

The kids (especially the teenagers) don’t thank us for things like meals out and lodge stays. It can be unnerving, especially when you know you are overspending and will pay the price. I am so direct and believe in open communication and the good in “teaching” young people so that they are better equipped for the future. It seems like my direct approach can put people off here so I am more hesitant to speak up or to initiate dialogue about deeper issues. Then, I go to prayer, remembering that I only have an ‘audience of one’ to please. We will see if I feel led to sit down with the couple of teens we still have with us and talk about how it makes Andy and I feel when we do something special and appears unappreciated. My hope is that I would learn something about how they see things too. 

I could go on and on. It seems almost trivial as I list these things. But it is not. My own insecurities cause most of my 'observations' which are mostly snap judgements. Again, I need to go back to the only One who matters. My insecurities lessen with Him so I can keep on trying with people, regardless of what I think they think of me or what I think of them with my limited understanding. 

When we volunteers come to a children’s home, we fall in love with individuals. We have the unique experience of falling in love with what we see during a glimpse in time. A precious glimpse. There is a multidimensional person and life situation and world view behind each person we meet, that takes time and trust to come to understand. Do the children like going to see family on holiday or it is traumatic? Is it good for kids to be exposed to the outer world when the world is so corrupt, or is sheltering them from pain best for them (the way I CRAVE to do!)

How should a young country like Namibia, with many challenges like the tidal wave of unwed mothers raising children they can’t really care for, and HIV/AIDS looming, educate about sex and God’s plan for 1 woman/1 man for life? I also find myself wondering why the heck aren’t condoms given out by the busload instead of held behind the counter for sale at the store? 

Over time, I realize I MUST adopt a more Hebrew way of thinking. Hebrew thinking can allow things to exist that appear to be opposites or conflicts, simultaneously.

It can be difficult and even traumatizing to the children to go to family they didn’t grow up with. They may even be in circumstances of poverty, harsh relationships,  and where Jesus is not honored. Still, I hear stories about kids choosing this over the advantages of the children’s home. Both are true, the good and the bad of this whole, seemingly impossible, situation. By the way, I find the same difficulties with the foster youth at home. So hard to grasp. 

Body language can be totally wrong, or at least the way I understand it. People can be quiet and not respond to questions as if they don’t understand, and be very intelligent and insightful when the time and communication is right. 

The hugs and kisses of volunteers can be wonderful and can hurt too. Others who don’t seem to show love the same way can care deeply and hurt just as much as "we" do when they see the children hurting. I suspect many of the people here have had to toughen up over time. I have trouble gaining insight into any of this without feeling like I am prying.

Kids who have been brought up in a children’s home where food comes from the kitchen or the Ark’s budget, not from the result of particular people working for it, may not appreciate ‘us’ for buying it. They might also think we have unlimited resources. Hopefully, they appreciate God for providing it.

Besides Greek vs. Hebrew thinking, this all makes me think of the concept of “Multiple Intelligences" and "Emotional Intelligence or EQ.” I teach these concepts in my classes, mostly as a way to help people see that they have much to offer, but may be very different that those around them. 

I need to ‘pearl dive’ for those valuable differences in others and that takes time and overcoming language barriers and...it takes holding back my judgements and opinions from forming much longer than I usually can. Keeping the boxes open to adjustment seems to be my only hope to gaining any understanding at all. 

Sometimes it is really exhausting and I just want to run home to where it is more familiar and easy. On the other hand, I want to wallow in the differences and savor the morsels of understanding I get into the people I am with. For example, all the Aunties and Christina, Heidi, Kim, and 2 of the teenage boys were here this morning for devotion time. I shared the story of Uncle Joe and Ephesians 3:14 - 21. I have shared that as a Lenten Devotion at MOO. I'll paste it at the end of today's entry because I want to have it as part of this record. Afterward, I simply opened the prayer time with, "Holy Spirit, please lead us in prayer." I couldn’t understand much of the other's  prayers in Afrikaans but I could hear their hearts open up while they prayed. It was one of those experiences I want to hold onto. I also took some video another day of the aunties praising God spontaneously that I never want to forget. I'll try to insert it here. They gave me permission to tape it.


This morning while the aunties were praying so powerfully, I was also reminded of something Jos had mentioned to us about Liberia and the story of the women of the little African nation “Praying the Devil Back to Hell.” I’m going to try to download the documentary to show everyone here when we have time, before we start the Vacation Bible School week. I’ve pasted some details I looked up below.

I wish I could write a book about all the people here. They are fascinating. We over simplify problems and people and I want so badly to break through that and understand.  It is so easy to think the aunties are "just" employees. The kids are "orphans." The whites are "blinded and heartless" for not getting involved with the orphan crisis here. The blacks are "too ill equipped." The cities are where the "movers and shakers" are. Whatever. It is all of this and none of this at the same time, or so I think I at least have that right.

Pray the Devil Back to Hell is the astonishing story of the Liberian women who took on the warlords and regime of dictator Charles Taylor in the midst of a brutal civil war, and won a once unimaginable peace for their shattered country in 2003. As the rebel noose tightened around the capital city of Monrovia, thousands of women – ordinary mothers, grandmothers, aunts and daughters, both Christian and Muslim – formed a thin but unshakable line between the opposing forces. Armed only with white T-shirts and the courage of their convictions, they literally faced down the killers who had turned Liberia into hell on earth. In one memorable scene, the women barricaded the site of stalled peace talks in Ghana and refused to move until a deal was done. Their demonstrations culminated in Taylor’s exile and the rise of Africa’s first female head of state, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Inspiring and uplifting, Pray the Devil Back to Hell is a compelling example of how grassroots activism can alter the history of nations.


Because God loves Uncle Joe...

I wondered all the way up there. The 50 minute drive had me looking at my Bible I had come to cherish…and believe. But they don’t want some zealot rushing in.  Would they think we are disrespectful of their beliefs? Of them?

We pulled up to the hospital. Uncle Joe has always been so grumpy, opinionated, and gruff. Somehow he had shown his softer side to the two of us, though. I always figured it was because he didn’t really hurt us when he growled but his ways did hurt his own kids and their spouses. We were able to dismiss his hurtful comments but his own kids just couldn’t, of course.

I decided not to take my big study Bible in with me. I had no idea what to expect but I had heard he wasn’t doing very well. He had been in the hospital for weeks. Chamie, our associate pastor’s young, beautiful, and somewhat controversial wife had shared with me that a group of women had prayed Ephesians 3: 16 – 19 for her when she needed faith. They had inserted her name where it said “you” and “her” in for “your”. I had begun praying this for Uncle Joe, inserting his name. I wanted to share this with him but my heart pounded whenever I thought about sharing scripture with these people who believe in such things as praying to people other than Jesus and feared Purgatory.

The elevator door opened and we were surprised to see Andy’s cousin right there to meet us. We hugged and he quickly told us, shaking his head slowly, that Uncle Joe had been out of it for days. He was hallucinating and it was often troubling with fear, like he was in a nightmare (I can’t remember his exact words here).

Andy paused to talk to sweet, hunched over but beautiful, Aunt Dolores. They had been married so very long…and raised so many kids!
I saw Uncle Joe in his bed and walked up. He looked straight at me and said, “Hi.” He was there. 100% there with me, and then us, as Andy came to the other side of the bed. My love for both of these men deepened as my big handsome husband stroked the hair of his dying uncle. I could not have imagined that I’d ever see Uncle Joe accept such tenderness, but he did.

His eyes met ours. We sort of stumbled over small talk and then Andy asked him, “Do you know the Lord Jesus, Uncle Joe? Will we see you in heaven?” The answer was so cute and short and sure. “You betcha.” I will never forget the love and relief and peace I felt. We asked a few more questions like if he knew we loved him. He answered the same way each time. We stayed just a few more minutes and went home. Amazed. I thought all the way home about Ephesians 3:16 – 19. God had given him a glimpse of his love for Uncle Joe and this man who had acted so stubborn and hard headed, responded. I just knew it.

Uncle Joe died soon after. We arrived at his funeral service. The large church they had gone to for decades was bustling and full. Andy and I were stunned when one of the cousins (Joe’s children) asked if we’d share at the funeral. I knew instantly what I wanted to share: Ephesians 3:16 – 19.

When I got to the front of this huge church and turned around, I felt the air leave me and I felt as if I could fall backwards. To look at a huge sea of mourning faces, I hadn’t really prepared for that. The family was right there in front of me. I felt embarrassed to be up there. But I began.

Being who I am, I felt compelled to share the background story of how I prayed for Uncle Joe. Somewhere in that, I somehow blurted out words about him being such a “grumpy old fart.” I couldn’t believe what I had said but I saw shocked faces soften, smile, and laugh, especially those of the elderly men in the audience.

I looked over to the priest. He looked visibly perturbed.

16 I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen Uncle Joe with power through his Spirit in his inner being, 17 so that Christ may dwell in his heart through faith. And I pray that Uncle Joe, being rooted and established in love, 18 may have power, together with all the Lord’s holy people, to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, 19 and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that Uncle Joe may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.

Uncle Joe’s son, Mike, a pastor, spoke after us. He shared how his father had been in the hospital, dying, for 40 days and 40 nights. He pointed out the biblical significance of that. Uncle Joe needed all that time to come to Christ - to respond to the gift of soul piercing faith which must be freely accepted to be received. It was amazing.

After the service we went to Uncle Joe and Aunt Dolores’ very cool house in the San Gabriel foothills. It is the only family home I’ve ever been to that had an elevator. We were sitting outside with some more of the family.

Aunt Dolores approached the table. I couldn’t wait to apologize to her about the “Grumpy old fart” comment. She smiled and reassured me that it was fine. Then she said to Andy and me, “All I know is that, when you walked into the hospital that day, the Holy Spirit came with you.” 

Thank you God for the way you work.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Live like a poor man with lots of money.


“I would like to live like a poor man with lots of money.”

This experience has given us the opportunity to do this and it’s pretty nice.

We drive this old Nissan mini-truck called a bukkie while we are here. It is hysterical to see Andy get in and out and he says he is afraid his legs will cramp up and he’ll get stuck on the gas or something. All the vehicles are stick on the left and drive on the left. I get confused riding in the vehicles and wince often as we go on the ‘wrong side of the street’ and have huge semi trucks coming at us, so I have left the driving to Andy and Chrsitiaan. On the other hand, the Ark has a great combi van too. It has lots of miles on it but Christiaan takes such good care of it. Andy had to replace a headlight (oops) and it has been bruised many times but it is in great shape.




I got us wedding stainless steel wedding bands with an inscription from Song of Solomon inside them and I love them. I have seen a couple white people here wearing diamond wedding rings but I like our bands. I love the ring Andy got me for our 10th anniversary but I am thinking about selling it. We have 2 families now that have young ones needing college educations, and we will need the funds when we get home.

I love having a small amount of clothing. I have a closet packed at home, mainly because I don’t want to get rid of things I ‘might fit into again someday.’ I find freedom in a limited number of choices that really fit and work together. I have 3 pair of shoes with me and am doing just fine.

We live in a little flat with it’s own bathroom and kitchen. I moved into the house that Andy bought before we were married so we never really did the crappy apartment stage together. This has been kind of fun. And…I don’t spend time maintaining all my stuff. We clean it in ½ hour and go live.

So, we are living simply and loving it.

On the other hand, we have money. We have had the pleasure of buying special meals or making meals with expensive ingredients like cheese and tuna, treating the kids to a trip over Easter weekend and game drive, and throwing a big party (sponsored by my sister, Julie). This weekend we take Rita and Christian to the airport. We will drop off many kids on the way there, some to take little minivan busses to different areas of the country to be with family. We are taking the volunteer from Belgium and a 19 year old from the Ark to a wilderness camp for 2 nights. The 3rd night we will have Christian (office manager) and Heidi (college student from the Ark with us) too and go on a game drive Wednesday before we come back to Keetmans. We just found out we will have another 19 year old who grew up at the Ark joining us for Wed night too. We have been able to meet some personal pressing needs here and there, and that has been a thrill!

We brought $1675.00 from last minute donations people gave us and the garage sale proceeds. Here is what we spent that on in Namibia dollars which is about 9.25 to our 1.

Computer for Ark's college students and protective sleeve: 4945.85
Tools for Christaan at the Ark: 2100.00
Antivirus and MS Word software for computer: 1599.91
Electrical converter for paint sprayer  1200.00
Materials for wall of new OVC program in Keetmans: 6573.85
This comes to a total of about $1750 US. 




So I guess we’ve had the chance to ‘live like a poor person with lots of money.’ I have to tell you, though. I realize more and more that I have never really experienced any kind of physical poverty. 

For example, I find myself a bit shocked when I hear about people just doing without or waiting for what they NEED, because it simply isn’t there. I always have an ATM card with overdraft. We were with workers recently that couldn’t do their jobs because they had run out of prepaid Internet. So they don’t do it right then. It's a bit irritating as an American used to efficiency. It is also humbling. This can create much tighter knit communities because people need each other and share resources. A person told me her kids went to school hungry yesterday and people matter of fact-ly tell me they can’t feed their kids the last 10 days of the month.  Kids don’t always have jackets when it gets cold, so they wrap themselves in whatever they can find.

It is so different to do without because it simply isn’t there. We are on a ‘break’ from our lives so it is so easy to do without. Even fun. It's not fun when there is no other option. 

Here’s where the counterintuitive part comes in. The people wait and watch for God to provide. All of a sudden there is a couch being given away, for example, and a person has been sitting on the floor in their home. They are so grateful to God for providing a couch; they experience joy. When I work, get paid, and buy a couch, I don’t usually feel overwhelmed with joy to God for providing it, especially a discarded old couch. I am thankful for my job and for all God provides, but I don’t fall on my knees out of overwhelming gratitude over it. I suffer from the epidemic of Affluenza and I need a remedy, or I just want more and more and better and better. It is the natural state of humans.

CHI does not pay salaries except for a few employees at the Ark. Those who join this organization are signing up for just the kind of doing without and waiting on God for necessities that I've been talking about, relying on God and God’s people to support the ministries. Sometimes the money is just not there. Recently a 16 year old filled a ministry van with friends at another site in Namibia and went for a joyride. He crashed it. It is unusable and needed.

The fence they hit needed to fixed and we all prayed about it. It was causing friction with the owner of the house/fence. The money wasn’t there. Andy and I were able to help with that and it cost less than what we would pay going out for 1 dinner at home. It feels good to be used by God. It feels even better to see God provide. The ministry coordinator probably experienced more joy that we did, not because he was receiving help from us, but because he was aware that His Father is taking care of him and the ministry that serves the precious children!

It is all so counterintuitive. Living this way takes trust and sacrifice and a perspective that can only come from getting to know God on his terms. “The renewing of our minds” as scripture calls it. As soon as my eyes are diverted off of Christ Jesus, my human nature takes over and I am swept away again. I need God constantly. 

So, I want to live like a poor person. The part about having lots of money is a thrill but it can rob us of joy. Lord, can I experience the same joy as people here while in wealthy Orange County, California? Can I still learn to rely on You and You alone, even though I don't live in such a way as I need you moment by moment to survive?

I finally understand what God means about it being "easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven." We miss God's kingdom when we think our security comes from our wealth or from anything else except our relationship with Him. 

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Two Families.


So many of us get involved because we are concerned about orphans and those children in the world that don’t have the benefit of an intact family.

Today I am in pain because I now have two families. I have one in the U.S. that I cherish and that gives me a sense of great security. They make me feel like I can do anything.

Today, little Todop slipped his hand into mine in such a way that my heart just broke. I see the way the kids are blossoming with Andy’s attention. I fall in love with him over and over again, like I did when I watched him with our boys growing up. Leaving feels impossible. 

I know these aren’t our kids. It is much more complex here than I understood before I came. They all have some extended family except for one little spitfire who has been all but adopted by one of the aunties. For years, some of the kids who have grown up in the Ark never went anywhere to see family but family has been tracked down and now they go to visit a grandparent or a cousin of a parent or a distant relative. Sometimes the relative can take the child but, for those that are left, that doesn’t seem to be in the cards. The kids want to go but are torn; I’m sure it isn’t all roses and candy where they go, but it is family.

I asked smart and talented Arnold yesterday if he likes going to see his sisters and cousins where they live. He said yes but he likes it here better. Then, he shut down and ended up curled up in a ball on the floor of the combi (van). We got him to come in for ice cream but he didn’t eat it. I’ve seen this reaction from a few of the kids. They shut down like I’ve never seen a human being do before. They always work their way back eventually, back but I wonder about all the pain they deal with. It isn’t really easy to get deeper which is another complex issue since so many volunteers have come and go.

In the next 3 days we will say goodbye to the kids. This time, they are leaving the volunteers; usually it is the volunteers leaving them. I think this is a blessing. Andy is making homemade cookies for goodie bags to go. I am planning some surprises for them when they get back.

Today I made a special lunch (Ter Ter’s famous Tuna Casserole with potato chips on top.) Before we ate family style, I asked the kids to write good things about each other on little posters for each of the kids, house parents, aunties, and volunteers. I also spoke to them about how they are each other’s family and we feel like we have a family in Africa now. Like family does, we will be praying faithfully for them and be working for their futures and I hope they can support and ‘give courage’ or ‘encourage’ each other.

I have been describing my angst at having two distinct families I love but can't be there for both at once. Consider the longterm missionaries.

They leave their families. I knew that before now but the depth of that sacrifice is more real to me. They miss out on milestones that give meaning to life and comfortable times just being with the people they know best. Rita’s daughter is having a tough time with chemo and Rita and Christiaan are going home to Belgium Monday for 6 weeks. Rita told me she is scared about leaving because she will need to be prepared to leave her daughter again; she has a family who needs her here too. It is a very unnatural conflict to have. We are born into a 'tribe' and want to stay there. This is something humans do in response to love and it is counterintuitive. 

I am so humbled by the sacrifices some people make. Missionaries of the past actually packed their coffins on the ships with them, knowing they would never see their families again. I have facebook, email, facetime, skype, phone calls, the ability to fly back and forth … and I am dying inside. Wow. 
Arnold and Todop

Flicking contests with Uncle Andy.

Hugable Belvin!