Another week has come and gone, and with it American thanksgiving. I guess you can never be too thankful! =) I was going to say I'm about all dinnered out, but tomorrow I get the privilege of being invited to a missionary couple's place to celebrate Thanksgiving with a few of their Filipino friends. It's pretty neat to be a Canadian celebrating American thanksgiving in the Philippines! :)And yes, there's so much to be thankful for!!
Tuesday our current assignment is due, along with the exam. I always dread those deadlines, but look forward to finishing another assignment! :)
I'm sorry there's not much news this week.
I decorated my desk for Christmas- makes it feel a little more like Christmas is around the corner! The weather doesn't really help much! :D
Please continue to pray that God will give me the strength to give my best in the work He's provided for me here! And not that I would just get the work accomplished, but that Jesus would shine through every action and word!
Sunday, November 29, 2009
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Sooo... It's back to life in Davao city! It was sad leaving Tabuk, and all the wonderful/beautiful people we had the privilege of meeting, but it was good to come back to my midwife sisters here in Davao! I was able to deliver one baby while being there, and thoroughly enjoyed being a part of such an amazing little clinic for a few weeks! They have one amazing team there, as you can see from the pictures! :)
Well, unlike the last post, this one will be nice and short! I had day shift today, and again tomorrow. This week I'm on cooking, and it's American thanksgiving! I think this time we will stick with Chickens! haha...
Dec 1st the assignment we're working on is due. It's huge, but very interesting! Please pray it will get done on time! :)
Thank you all for your love, encouragement and prayer support! I thank God always for the amazing support team I have back home!!
Till next time...
Well, unlike the last post, this one will be nice and short! I had day shift today, and again tomorrow. This week I'm on cooking, and it's American thanksgiving! I think this time we will stick with Chickens! haha...
Dec 1st the assignment we're working on is due. It's huge, but very interesting! Please pray it will get done on time! :)
Thank you all for your love, encouragement and prayer support! I thank God always for the amazing support team I have back home!!
Till next time...
Saturday, November 14, 2009
A life changing Trip
I woke up at 11:30pm with a start, and peeked out the bus window to find myself traveling through the beautiful Northern Philippine mountains! The darkness of the night made them appear as black shadows canopying the sky. I wished for daylight, so as to enjoy their beauty, but instead closed my eyes in a feeble attempt to get some sleep during the remainder of our eleven hour bus ride.
It was the 4th of November, and Bethany (another student) and I were on our way to Tabuk to a small maternity clinic run by a Canadian midwife, Georgia. We first flew to Manila, where we were able to spend one luxurious day together at the mall of Asia. We went ice skating (something I never dreamt could be done in the Philippines!), watched “Under the Sea” in 3D at an IMAX theater, and ate at a French bakery. We felt spoiled! After a night at a Baptist guesthouse, we headed to the airport only to discover- after we checked in- that our next flight was canceled due to a typhoon at our destination! The airlines work a little differently here than back home- no accommodations were made, no flights were available for two days, and we’d be lucky to get reimbursed. So we picked up our luggage and made our way through the crazy traffic in Manila to catch a night bus…
At 5:30am we arrived at the clinic, which is also Georgia’s house. It was such a relief to be finally out of the city, breathing in fresh country air!! And the place definitely had country flair, with pigs, chickens, dogs, and water buffalos roaming around. The lifestyle is different as well. The outhouse and shower are just outside, and a pump serves as a water supply for the bathroom, and hand-washing clothes. When you hear “Mangan” you know it’s time to eat. =) They have fish or chicken for breakfast, lunch, and supper, always served with rice- as a meal without rice is no meal at all for a Filipino!! =)
I immediately fell in love with the clinic here, which is much smaller than Mercy Clinic in Davao- a big reason why we came. Our director wanted us to have the opportunity to witness this type of clinic, as Mercy itself is far too large for our minds to possibly image duplicating. It takes around thirty midwives to run Mercy, as apposed to four here! Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to deliver any babies here yet; however, I did have to transport two patients to the local hospital due to complications.
On the 13th, Bethany, Anita (a Filipino midwife) and I headed on a six hour trip up into the mountains to the small village of Bugnay, situated on the side of a mountain! We rode on the roof of a jeepney, completely spellbound by the breath-taking scenery of the beautiful rice terraces that have been carefully carved into the natural contour of the mountains. As we rode (more liked bounced) along, we were often faced with the predicament of passing oncoming traffic on a narrow one-lane path. Somehow, they always made it work! =) The path was rough, as it had just rained that weekend, and at one point, where a landslide had occurred, I wondered how we would pass through the muck! The jeepney slowly made its way through the mess, but it was too much! Our jeepney completely slid onto its side!! Thankfully, except for bruises and cuts, nobody got hurt! They managed to get the jeepney back upright with a loader that happened to be there fixing the path. I must admit, after getting back on, the next hour ride to our destination was one of the most terrifying of my life! I was on the top again, and for most part we were riding on a path that dropped at least 800 ft within a few meters from the side of the jeepney! Talk about praying hard- we sure were!
By the time we arrived it was dark, and we had to hike about 625 steps (Bethany counted =P) down the mountain, across a bridge, and up another mountain to reach the village. We were so relieved to make it to Emma’s house, Georgia’s friend who was our wonderful hostess! The few days we spent there will probably be some of the most memorable ones of my life! We thoroughly enjoyed our stay with the friendly villagers, scrubbing our clothes at the community water pipe, pounding rice, and dining on snails in their little huts! On the Sunday we went to the church where they asked Bethany, Emma, Anita and I to sing, and then give our testimony, with Emma translating. Such a sweet time of fellowship with people we couldn’t even understand!
We also went to the high school that was an about an hour hike up the mountain. The little elderly villagers put us to shame as they left us in the dust to huff and puff up the many steps leading up to, and through the village. The one day we went through the village to invite expecting mothers for a prenatal examination and we were excited to have 13 showed up. Some were a little timid to have these “strange white girls” do a prenatal exam on them! =)
On Tuesday morning, we had to say goodbye to Emma, the villagers and the beautiful rice terraces to bounce back on an overcrowded bus back to Tabuk! I will never forget Bugnay, that beautiful place where I learned so much about life!!
So that brings me back here in Tabuk, where I’ll be until the 20th. I am currently sitting on the clinic balcony watching self-made motors stacked with rice sacks zipping by, along with jeepneys overcrowded with people. Life is more simplistic here, and in many ways it’s more appealing then our sophisticated, chaotic life back home. But it is also harder- especially when you know a woman is dying in the hospital because her family has no way to pay for the medication. You see a little sweaty six year old boy carrying a heavy bundle up the mountain to his house, and a pregnant woman with a sleeping baby on her back, bent over scrubbing her family’s clothes. And then you realize that both worlds are not the answer. There’s only one solution to life- Jesus!
It was the 4th of November, and Bethany (another student) and I were on our way to Tabuk to a small maternity clinic run by a Canadian midwife, Georgia. We first flew to Manila, where we were able to spend one luxurious day together at the mall of Asia. We went ice skating (something I never dreamt could be done in the Philippines!), watched “Under the Sea” in 3D at an IMAX theater, and ate at a French bakery. We felt spoiled! After a night at a Baptist guesthouse, we headed to the airport only to discover- after we checked in- that our next flight was canceled due to a typhoon at our destination! The airlines work a little differently here than back home- no accommodations were made, no flights were available for two days, and we’d be lucky to get reimbursed. So we picked up our luggage and made our way through the crazy traffic in Manila to catch a night bus…
At 5:30am we arrived at the clinic, which is also Georgia’s house. It was such a relief to be finally out of the city, breathing in fresh country air!! And the place definitely had country flair, with pigs, chickens, dogs, and water buffalos roaming around. The lifestyle is different as well. The outhouse and shower are just outside, and a pump serves as a water supply for the bathroom, and hand-washing clothes. When you hear “Mangan” you know it’s time to eat. =) They have fish or chicken for breakfast, lunch, and supper, always served with rice- as a meal without rice is no meal at all for a Filipino!! =)
I immediately fell in love with the clinic here, which is much smaller than Mercy Clinic in Davao- a big reason why we came. Our director wanted us to have the opportunity to witness this type of clinic, as Mercy itself is far too large for our minds to possibly image duplicating. It takes around thirty midwives to run Mercy, as apposed to four here! Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to deliver any babies here yet; however, I did have to transport two patients to the local hospital due to complications.
On the 13th, Bethany, Anita (a Filipino midwife) and I headed on a six hour trip up into the mountains to the small village of Bugnay, situated on the side of a mountain! We rode on the roof of a jeepney, completely spellbound by the breath-taking scenery of the beautiful rice terraces that have been carefully carved into the natural contour of the mountains. As we rode (more liked bounced) along, we were often faced with the predicament of passing oncoming traffic on a narrow one-lane path. Somehow, they always made it work! =) The path was rough, as it had just rained that weekend, and at one point, where a landslide had occurred, I wondered how we would pass through the muck! The jeepney slowly made its way through the mess, but it was too much! Our jeepney completely slid onto its side!! Thankfully, except for bruises and cuts, nobody got hurt! They managed to get the jeepney back upright with a loader that happened to be there fixing the path. I must admit, after getting back on, the next hour ride to our destination was one of the most terrifying of my life! I was on the top again, and for most part we were riding on a path that dropped at least 800 ft within a few meters from the side of the jeepney! Talk about praying hard- we sure were!
By the time we arrived it was dark, and we had to hike about 625 steps (Bethany counted =P) down the mountain, across a bridge, and up another mountain to reach the village. We were so relieved to make it to Emma’s house, Georgia’s friend who was our wonderful hostess! The few days we spent there will probably be some of the most memorable ones of my life! We thoroughly enjoyed our stay with the friendly villagers, scrubbing our clothes at the community water pipe, pounding rice, and dining on snails in their little huts! On the Sunday we went to the church where they asked Bethany, Emma, Anita and I to sing, and then give our testimony, with Emma translating. Such a sweet time of fellowship with people we couldn’t even understand!
We also went to the high school that was an about an hour hike up the mountain. The little elderly villagers put us to shame as they left us in the dust to huff and puff up the many steps leading up to, and through the village. The one day we went through the village to invite expecting mothers for a prenatal examination and we were excited to have 13 showed up. Some were a little timid to have these “strange white girls” do a prenatal exam on them! =)
On Tuesday morning, we had to say goodbye to Emma, the villagers and the beautiful rice terraces to bounce back on an overcrowded bus back to Tabuk! I will never forget Bugnay, that beautiful place where I learned so much about life!!
So that brings me back here in Tabuk, where I’ll be until the 20th. I am currently sitting on the clinic balcony watching self-made motors stacked with rice sacks zipping by, along with jeepneys overcrowded with people. Life is more simplistic here, and in many ways it’s more appealing then our sophisticated, chaotic life back home. But it is also harder- especially when you know a woman is dying in the hospital because her family has no way to pay for the medication. You see a little sweaty six year old boy carrying a heavy bundle up the mountain to his house, and a pregnant woman with a sleeping baby on her back, bent over scrubbing her family’s clothes. And then you realize that both worlds are not the answer. There’s only one solution to life- Jesus!
Tabuk/Bugnay Trip
- Please click HERE to see album -
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Isaiah 41:10
Fear you not; for I am with you: be not dismayed; for I am your God: I will strengthen you; yes, I will help you; yes, I will uphold you with the right hand of my righteousness.