Tuesday, August 21, 2012

The Adventures of Laura and Sarah


Dinner of champions!
(Don't worry mom- its
grilled cheese not
toast!)
First we painted the living room! Laura is an amazing painter and mainly due to her, it only took us about six hours. So we spent the other part of our day running errands and my dad was wonderful and attempted to set up cable which failed (our outside line had come down-oops!) so we had to set up a maintenance call. But overall we felt very productive.







Friday we spent about four hours dealing with cable, then went to Jimmy John's for a delicious lunch.






Can I have it?

Ran a bunch of errands, and then decided to reward all our grown up effort with some puppy love!


As soon as we walked in the door, our friend called to say she had just arrived and that we should come by. So we went and helped her unpacked a little bit then went to another friends place, and by the time we got home we had been up and busy for 15 hours! Needless to say we slept well that night.

The next morning Laura and I got to eat breakfast on our beautiful porch while we waited for my mommy to come! We cleaned up the kitchen and bathroom. When my mom arrived she brought some tools that we needed to do some fix-ups. So being proud home renters we trimmed some branches, and by trimmed I mean hacked! We also made some cute curtains for the main windows in our house for a little more privacy.

Moving into a house has been overwhelming and exciting. But I absolutely love it!

*Joy of the day: Watching "What Not to Wear" with my housemate!

Friday, August 3, 2012

Little Dresses For Africa

While I was in Haiti one of my favorite parts was the little girl's orphanage. I loved painting their nails, playing with bubbles, running around and most of all being able to give them a little something to let them know that they are loved. One special thing that we were able to leave with them was handmade dresses from a group of women at our church! It was really neat to see the way that they were showing these little girls God's love even though they were thousands of miles away! These women never even touched Haitian soil and yet they made a difference!

Now it's my turn! My big hearted friend Brittany is leaving for Africa in a little over a month. She'll be serving the Lord their for several months, and I must admit that I am jealous! I would much rather be serving the Lord and his beloved people in one of his beautiful countries than in a stuffy classroom. So I am going to serve in the same way that the women of my church served along side of us in Haiti!


I found this adorable website called "Little Dresses for Africa." It has the directions on how to make the cute and simple pillow case dresses (and then if you follow their directions you ship them to a woman who will get them to little girls in Africa who need them). But I'm sending mine a different way! Miss Brittany will take the cute little dresses and give them to the little girls she meets while she's over there.

While I believe that everyone is called to serve, service looks different at different times. Making dresses is just as important as taking them across the world. No matter what you are doing, it's big and it will make an impact on someone's life. If it's a bottle of nail polish or painting a little girls nails for the first time,  or making a little dress or giving a little girl a brand new dress that she can be proud of, all of this to show that she is a beautiful daughter of God and that she is fiercely loved!

*Joy of the day: Praying over each of these dresses and for the little girls that will wear them!

Monday, July 30, 2012

Lamp Make Over

I am getting ready to move down to my new house at school and of course I need to have things to decorate my room with. So I found an old lamp in the basement and decided to recover it and give it a new look! Here's how I attempted this:

    1) I took the boring lamp shade and measure it, to cut the fabric the proper size (also iron your fabric first, wrinkles really show through the light)







    2) I began at the bottom folding the fabric under so no rough edges were sticking out




    3) I left about two inches of over lap at the end so once I was finished I could create a seam up the side







    4) On the top I did the same fold over technique but there were gathers at times because the top is smaller than the bottom








    5) Then I cut several one inch wide strips, and gathered them to add as ruffles around the top and bottom of the shade









    6) I also wrapped a little ruffle around the chain



    As simple as that! A little fabric goes a long way

    *Joy of the day: Watching the Olympics! 

















    Sunday, July 29, 2012

    God's Work Through CCH

    He lost everything
    in the earthquake
    She's a widow with six children
    Community Coalition for Haiti has done a lot in the few years that it's been established there. While it's built and helped with several housing projects, they believe in more than that. CCH doesn't just hand over keys to a house but makes sure the family has a source of income, that they are providing for their family, and giving back to the community and economy.


     
    She is raising a son and works in the Isaiah House

    CCH has also worked on several other projects through out the region. They are currently building a school in a rural area. They have started a "pepper project" which allow farmers to grow and sell these peppers which grow quickly in this climate. They've started a few other garden projects.

    He's raising 2 nephews and is the security
    guard for the Isaiah House
    They have also started some deaf ministries. Employing four deaf men to work on the construction when groups are not down there, and a group of deaf women who make beautiful jewelry.

    Community Coalition for Haiti is committed not only to helping the people of Haiti get back on their feet but equipping them to provide for their families and give back to the community!

    *Joy of the day: Getting to meet several families who CCH has served.

    Saturday, July 28, 2012

    My Day as a Nurse

    My "ah ha" moment of the trip was certainly in the clinic. Since the team knew that I'm studying to be a nurse they kindly arranged for me to follow a doctor at the clinic one morning, and it was amazing. It was so different that a doctor's office in the United States because of illnesses that were seen and the availability of medicine to the patients.
    The CCH Clinic



    One of the operating rooms
    I followed Dr. Calix around, he had his medical training in Cuba and spoke wonderful English (what he didn't know in English he'd explain to me in Spanish!). The way it worked was a patient would come in a sit down at the evaluation table, Dr. Calix would ask what the "story" was and find out all the details. Then moved to the exam table where he would do an evaluation of the systems that were complained of by the patient. From there he could make a diagnosis and would give them a prescription for the free pharmacy downstairs in the clinic.

    Here's where things were strikingly different than at home, these prescriptions were for things that we would find every day in a store. The patients would receive prescriptions for Tylenol, Advil, vitamins, and cough medicine. While some would also get prescriptions for antibiotics, these other medicines were often prescribed. And the patients were able to get them all for free because they had all been donated by groups like us!

    All the medical supplies (it was really hot)
    We saw a variety of patients that morning: a man with malaria and typhoid, a little girl with kwashiorkor (malnutrition), diabetes, hypertension, high fever (105), sore throat, and a pregnant woman. She was eight months pregnant and this was the first time she had been to the doctor, Dr. Calix made sure the baby had moved into a position for delivery and then found it's back and we were able to listen to it's heartbeat. It was amazing!

    This was one of those moments when everything just felt right, when it shouldn't have. I was completely out of my element, in a strange country where I am not respected by the people, I don't speak the language or understand their customs and yet I felt at ease. I could see myself being a nurse in a third world country one day. I could see myself serving the Lord and his beloved people in that way!

    The Haitian Nursing school!
    *Joy of the day: Witnessing the way that Dr. Calix is serving his people with his time and talents.

    Friday, July 27, 2012

    Beauty of Haiti

    We had two "fun days" to enjoy some of the sites of Haiti and the natural beauty that the island has to offer. We got to hang out on a beach and go to Bassin Bleu. Both were gorgeous!
    Stunning Beach


    The first Sunday we were there we went to church then enjoy our Sabbath at the beach! We traveled about thirty minutes to a beach where a lot of missionaries hang out. It was lovely, a real piece of paradise among all the brokenness and poverty in this country. The water was bright blue and so salty that you could float with out really trying. It was refreshingly cool too! There were beautiful shells all along the shore, huge conch shells and lots of sea glass. There were also the iconic island huts lining the coast, with the palm branch roofs. It was picture perfect!

    Look at that water!
    Our last day in Haiti we went on an adventure to Bassin Bleu. It became more of an adventure because it rained the night before making the river we had to cross a little deeper! (We cheered when we made it across.) Then we traveled an hour up the mountain to the other side of the bay to the base where we would then hike half an hour to the waterfall. It was fun to hike through the tropical forrest. We crossed a river and the water was aqua blue. I've never seen water like this except in the ocean! We we got to the Bassin you could get in to it in the first part or climb up a ledge, repel down to the other side then swim to a rock in the middle or all the way to the water fall to jump off the rocks there.

    Jumping from the waterfall!
    The place was breathtaking; the color of the water, the rocks, the waterfall. As one of the women on our trip said it was such a promise to the Haitians from God. That among all the destruction and devastation, that he was still there and his promise of restoration!


    *Joy of the day: God's beauty, his promise and his covenant was so evident!