Sunday I was bombarded with these thoughts, these feelings. As I was going down to get water, I fell down the uneven, slippery stairs- the “Indian stair death trap”. I couldn’t breathe under the pain, and arose from the ground somewhat shocked. I didn’t know what to do, so I walked to the kitchen trying not to cry. The cook (bless her beautiful heart) stopped me on the way and tried to feed me with her hands whatever on earth she was eating. I kindly declined, fighting back the tears that so desperately wanted to leap out from my eyes. My back and my shoulder seemed to be groaning in pain themselves as I tried so hard to stop the signals to my brain that I had just fallen down the stairs. I walked slowly, shocked, back to my room. As I opened the door the flood gates opened and I began to cry. “I fell down the stairs…” I told my roommates, probably in somewhat of a pathetic whimper. When I said it, I cried even harder as my pride was almost as bruised as my back. Thoughts began to overwhelm my mind, thoughts of home, of giving up, of foolishness, and embarrassment, hopelessness and pain. We looked at the damage, I had two stair size marks the length of my back on my lower and upper back, both swollen, with patches of broken skin on the top bit. Everyone else went out to dinner that night, I stayed home.
Monday I was supposed to be in Admissions, but as walking was a difficult chore, I stayed back on the prayer team. I was somewhat refreshed, as I poured my heart out in prayer for this city, for the hospital, for this nation. In my prayers, I remembered why I was here. I was filled. I felt the grace of God wash over me.
Tuesday Michaela’s mom (visiting from B.C.
Wednesday I was on prayer team again, but had to accompany Darcy to a meeting, and ended up making 13 welcome cards for the
The next morning in our prayer and worship time we have every morning, I broke. I broke under the mix of brokenness, humility, healing, love, and faithfulness that had so bombarded me. I wept and I wept as I prayed out the faithfulness and worthiness of my beautiful Saviour. In the midst of the tears and the prayers I felt as if I had lost myself completely in the presence of this amazing God. However, in loosing myself, I found myself. This is who I am, broken, humble, desperately in love, and simply undone. This is who I want to be, forever. This is who I am so far from being much of the time, but who I want to be.
Thursday I delivered babies 19, and 20. Samson David, and Adam Aften. I have now delivered 20 babies. It was a day confused with joy and sadness. I assisted with two IUDs, (Intrauterine deaths), delivering babies words could not describe even if I wanted to attempt it. As we delivered the second one, horribly deformed and macerated, I remembered humility. I remembered my own weakness as this broken child was birthed into the world lifeless. In the face of such a brutal reality, nothing and everything makes sense. All I could do was lean on the strength I’ve learned this week I am desperately dependant upon. Samson and Adam, my saving graces, beautifully perfect baby boys. Life in the face of death. The madams asked me to do more that afternoon than they have asked me to do in the three months we’ve been working there. Despite the fact that I was somewhat overwhelmed, drawing medicines, changing IVs, drawing blood… it felt good to be trusted, it felt good to finally feel like a team. I remembered when we were told we could only observe, and I was overwhelmed by the faithfulness of God.
Friday we did an orientation with the DTS that just arrived from
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Thomas A. Kempis
I know you live this, even on the hard and humbling days.
I love you
Kathy