Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Bowling, face painting, and yovos.











Here are just a few pictures from this weekend. We work 12 hour shifts on the weekend, and since there are no surgeries or new admissions there is often a bit of down time. A few weekends ago I did a little line dancing lesson for the VVF ladies. This weekend it was bowling in the hallways. We have a bunch of little balls of yarn and one of the nurses had the great idea of turning A ward into one big bowling tournament. All the patients lined up in the hallway and bottles of water were filled up just a little bit and place on the floor. It was good fun to watch! Most of the patients were either on crutches or had at least one or two casts on their leg(s) so some had to sit in chairs.
One of the translators did some amazing face painting as well. There were some twin 2 year old boys whose faces he painted and it was SO cute. The boys however are quite afraid of white people...yovos as they call us in the local dialect of Fon. When I would walk near them they would start crying..sometimes even if one of us white nurses would look at them. It was kind of a fun, sick game....take one step near and they cry, one step back and look away they stop. They got much better over the weekend, but it was kinda funny:) Here are some pictures for your viewing enjoyment:)

Thursday, April 9, 2009

"For our stuggle is not against flesh and blood" (sorry, this is a long one)

I have been working with the VVF women now for the last 3 days. This was the first night of 3 night shifts in the same ward. Little did I know at 930pm what I would be walking into. First, here is a little history.
Bed 17 (Ramatou) and bed 11 (Kolani) are from the same village up north, Muslim, and met on the bus coming down here. Realizing they were going to the same place for the same thing and from the same village, they had an instant bond. Ramatou is the only one who spoke Kolani’s language, although Ramatou could also speak French. Ramatou was going to be discharged but we kept her for Kolani since she was the only one who could speak her language. Kolani was really upset when we told her Ramatou was maybe going to go home, so relieved when we let her stay. I had also been told in report that Ramatou had become a Christian and since then Kolani and her had not gotten along as well. Clemintine (our awesome ward discipler came down to pray with them and talk in the morning yesterday and they went for a walk and things seemed to be fine the rest of the day.
So I walk onto my shift and there was a lot of noise on that side of the room. Bed 11 and 17 seemed to be arguing with the other ladies chiming in. I asked the translators what was going on. He kind of gave me the same story as I had been told. There was only one translator (who wasn’t stationed in my ward) who kind of spoke 11's language. He came over as well. I was told bed 11 acted up a bit the night before as well and that tonight she was paranoid and not going to sleep , saying she thought the white men were going to kill her. I’m not sure if this is because she was Muslim and her friend was converted, or what. But later she tried to warn the others that she had seen me pouring poison. We finally calmed everyone down and I gathered the translators and some other nurses to pray. One of the translators said that this was a spiritual battle and the woman would not find rest until she finds the Lord. I agreed that this seemed to be spiritually rooted. Another patient later was saying that Kolani had a "bad spirit" and it could not find a place to go while on the ship so she (Kolani) wanted to leave.
Well, we finally got everyone calmed down and Kolani was just sitting on her bed. I was sitting at the computer and had a curtain up to block the lights from the patients at night. I heard a yell from behind the curtain. I pull the curtain back and Kolani was crouched by bed 14. Now bed 14 is all upset cause she was sleeping and woke up to Kolani just crouched by her looking at her. Well, this got the whole side of the room in an uproar again. All the ladies woke up and starting talking loudly back and forth. Bed 14 refused to go back to sleep and wanted a light on because she was freaked out by Kolani and said she had a bad spirit and was practicing witchcraft. I told her I would take the curtain down and leave the light up front on so I could watch Kolani so the others could sleep.
Everyone went back to sleep for about another 30 minutes. It’s about midnight now and I look behind me and Kolani is standing by bed 17 now. I go over there and this commotion wakes bed 17 up. Kolani refuses to leave "her friend’s" side and says she wants to sleep with her. This gets everyone riled up again and the translator and I decide we need to move either bed 17 or Kolani. Bed 17 was fed up with 11 always bugging her. We figured we wouldn’t be able to get Kolani out on her own will so we decide to move 17 into another ward. Bed 14 wanted to leave too, but we can’t move everyone. Well, moving her friend made bed 11 more upset, but there was no compromising with her.
Again, things calmed down for about an hour…Kolani went back to sit on her bed. However, anytime anyone would come into the ward or the phone would ring she would get startled and stand up and go over to bed 19 and shake her legs, wake her up and cause more commotion. This happened almost every hour or two. The translator and I finally had to take turns sitting in a chair at the end of her bed so she could not get out. At times when she had gone to bed 19, the translator and I had to forcefully pull her back to her bed and sit her down.
At one point at like 3am during another escapade, 14 came over and started yelling at Kolani again. The translator interpreted that she said, "I have Jesus in my stomach (they use that instead of heart here) and if you come near me He will kill you!" Thank goodness no one else spoke Kolani’s language or I feel like that would have been another whole ordeal.
I spent most of the night reading scripture and praying for Kolani and for protection for the other women against whatever Satan had in His mind to do. It was a long night needless to say. At 6am I went to empty her foley catheter and it was not by her. I was so confused cause I had been watching her and she had it with her all night. I finally found it under her bed. The translator had fallen asleep watching her at one point and I’m guessing this is when it happened. At this point I am beyond frustrated. She had just had surgery 3 days ago and was now dry from leaking urine...if she pulled a catheter out, that would cause some serious damage. However, when I saw the catheter, she had managed to tear the rubber part so the bulb of the catheter was still in her. She would not let me touch her to get it out. I paged the VVF coordinator on call and we discussed what to do. We decided to leave her alone and wait until bed 17 comes back and see if we can get it out without having to hold her down. This is where I left it at shift change in the morning.
I went to bed and slept until about 4pm. I ran into one of my roommates who was in B ward in the morning and asked her how it turned out. It took them until 10am to convince her to let them take out the catheter. Then she still refused to stay here. We are not going to hold them against their will, so she got discharged. I guess midmorning she calmed down until the Jesus film came on at which point she just sat in her bed and screamed for 30 mintues. They had her then sent to the hospitality center. On the way out she sat in the middle of the hallway and screamed again. When they finally got her to the hospitality center she caused more chaos and either left on her own or was kicked out. So now she is wondering somewhere in Cotonou, even though she is from up north.
I continue to pray for her that she finds the Lord and that the devil will release His grip on her. I also continue to pray for Ramatou who will be going back to the same village that her faith will remain unshaken and used to convert many in that village and even in Kolani’s life. I praise God for His grace and protection last night as it got a bit scary at times. This was the first time in Benin that I really was involved in something like that. I know there is a big spiritual battle going on and it is even more prevalent here with all the voodoo and witchcraft we are surrounded with. I truly believe everything that happened last night was spiritual. I also continue to pray for the other ladies on the ward that God will protect them and not be affected by Kolani. I know Kolani is a precious child of God and I pray so hard that she will find Him and His freedom and love! The spiritual warfare going on is very real! I am so thankful that Ramatou became a Christian!. Our God is a God of healing and reconciliation emotionally, spiritually, and physically. What an awesome God we serve! He is breaking bonds, revealing His love, giving freedom and healing right in front of my own eyes. The resistance from the enemy is very real, but our God is bigger!!!
Ephesians 6:12
"For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms."

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Dirty Jobs

We think we have a new idea for the show Dirty Jobs. Four brave divers had the chore today of going down to clean off the air conditioning vents on the ship. This has to be done on a regular basis because they get clogged quickly and then the air conditioning doesn't function so well.

Tracy was one of the lucky divers. She got to the ship this past week. She did gateway with me and is so fun to be around. The last 6 months before gateway she spent hiking the Appalachian trail. Well, I had to giggle because when she got here she was all excited that she was a certified diver and she wanted to go down and help look for all the honey and other paraphanalia that fell to the ocean floor when a couple crates broke when unloading a container. Others heard about this and next thing she new she was designated to go on the honey expedition as well as clean off the vents with some others.

I saw her coming out of the water after I finished my run. Needless to say, Im pretty sure she will not be quite as quick to volunteer for the next dive...the look on her face said it all. I think the pictures do all the explaining. It sure takes a lot of soap and scrubbing to feel clean after comin up out of that water:) But thanks to Tracy and the other ship divers for doing that so we can have air conditioning!!!:)
On a cleaner note...I am doing night shift right now and at about 1030pm one of the translators who plays guitar came in and we had a spontaneous (those are the best!) worhsip, dance, singing session. We had already shut the lights of but the ladies loved it, so we sang for about an hour. I wish I could videotape some of this stuff some times because words can't explain it. Several of the translators and a couple of us nurses just sang and danced. One of the translators can make a trumpet sound...different notes and everything..sounds exactly like it...he joined in as well. It was amazing starting the night out like that...praising God and asking for His presence here. I just wanted to share how cool that was. Praise the Lord!

Monday, April 6, 2009

Emma's Birthday



The other week I was invited to Emma's 17th birthday party. Her and her family have lived on the ship for quite a while now. I became close to her when I was here last year. She is such a fun girl! Her family is from England, but she is actually thinking about doing nursing school in Texas next year...:)
Well, when you have been living on a ship for years you kinda have to start getting creative with birthdays. This year Emma had a custome party/video scavanger hung. Emma gave each person an invitation and a person/job on the ship they had to dress up as and act like throughout the evening. It was quite fun...i had to come as an officer, there were some who had to dress up as a nurse, baker, academy (school on the ship) kid, housekeeping, hairdresser, engineer, surgeon, etc. We thensplit into teams and each team given a video camera. We had an hour to go around the ship and do the tasks that were on our sheet. Each one was worth different points. Then we had to have our team videotaped while doing it. The team with the most points at the end one. Some of the things we had to do included:

-forming a pyrimid in by the cafe and singing a song from Sound of Music
-having a team mate shower with their clothes on
-knock on the door of a family cabin and sing a Christmas carol
-have a team member run through the midships lounge (where everyone hangs out) singing and acting out I Believe I Can Fly
-drinking from the sludge bucket (where everyone dumps their unused liquids after meals)
-the group doing the Macarena
-borrowing money to get a coke then having someone drink it in one swig and burp the alphabet













It was great fun needless to say. I will try to add some pictures:)

Friday, April 3, 2009

Team Rockstar



The last week or so I have been working on D ward....the maxillo-facial surgery ward. It has been pretty busy in the evenings getting patients back late and having several little kiddos that have had some not so fun surgeries needing lots of care, meds, suctioning, etc. I have to say...I don't believe I would enjoy having those mouth surgeries, having my jaw wired shut and spitting up blood. It has been quite busy but I have been working I have been working with Linda...my favorite Dutch Canadian and we do AWESOME team work if I don't say so myself.


Linda and I have so much fun together and work so well as a team....well...except the time we were drawing blood and I got stuck with a needle. I am good at IVs and she is a pediatric nurse so we went to another ward to draw blood for a baby. Well, long story short, after getting the blood I was holding the needle and she was trying to push up the safety cap and somehow I got poked (always a bit scary in Africa). Luckily it was a small needle and not deep and I bled a bit after. And again... God is SOOOO good....the patient's blood was negative for HIV and Hepatitis. I will get rechecked in another 3 and 6 months...so it is still a prayer request, but God has been good! Now it's just a big joke. But we are a great team at drawing blood on kids I have to say! It is just quite humurous now when we do it and how far away from the needle we stay:)

Anyhoo...sorry about the rabbit trail. But Linda and I have had some busy days but manage to still laugh, have fun, and help each other out. After our run of evening shifts last week we went and had some cookies outside up on deck 8. It was quite entertaining. Around midnight we saw cars pull up to the ship next to us and people on the ship with flashlights so we made up this whole story of how they were dealing drugs and gonna throw a body overboard any moment. Well, it was entertaining to us anyway...I guess anything is at that time of night though:) It will be a sad day when she leaves in June:( I'm sure you will hear about her again;)
Oh, and random thought of the day: I have had about 6 people now (nurses and African day workers) ask me if Im Australian because of my accent. ..ya, I have no idea. But I thought that was kinda funny. Maybe that is what happens when you mix midwest accents with Texan ones;)