Saturday, October 20, 2012

Our first day, we were met by 4,000 displaced people....

A couple of weeks ago,  I traveled 10 hours via a Cambodian night bus to Poipet, a border city of Cambodia next toThailand.  I met up with a medical team from England to help with a 3 day medical outreach.  Our original goal was to team up with a local Christian organization for a week of medical clinics in local villages.  About a week before we arrived, massive flooding occurred in the area causing many Cambodians to become displaced.  This radically changed our plans for the week.


Distributing supplies to 4,000 displaced flood victims
On our first day,  we were met by 4,000 displaced people (women, men, & children) as a result of the flooding.  TEAR fund and CHO (Cambodian Hope Organization) donated a set of supplies for the flood victims: 1 mosquito net, 20kg sack of rice, 1 large box of noodles, and soy sauce.
Our next day we traveled to the center of the city.  There on a concrete slab covered by a plain metal roof were about 300 displaced people.  No running water, no toilets, no relief.  Each family had created a temporary shelter which consisted of one rattan mat and a few personal belongings. Each family's mat was directly adjacent to the next family. We quickly set up a temporary clinic on the edge of the concrete slab and worked until the evening.


Organizing 300 displaced people at temporary shelter site
The second medical clinic was outside the city. We were ministering to 3 local villages where many had been displaced from the flooding.  One of the 400 people we were supposed to see was already waiting for us. She was carried in on a wood bench by the local villagers. She was a 16 year old girl, crying.  Tears of pain rolled down her face as her grandmother held her hand. She was suffering from an advanced stage of  breast cancer.

Her family was desperately poor. They were without resources. She was terminally ill and was suffering tremendously.  We soon  learned from the translator that she had no medication for pain relief.  We quickly adminstered  pain medication to her.  After about 45 minutes, once the pain medication had time to start working, I cleaned and placed fresh dressings on her chest wounds.  We gave the grandmother 2 months worth of pain medications and dressing supplies. Our ministry team prayed for her, and shared God's love to her. She prayed with the team. We helped her grandmother place her back into the tuk tuk, and she left back to her village.


City of Poipet, flooding of homes throughout the area
The next day several of our team members traveled out to where she was living. The area was flooded, and difficult to reach.  Even with a 4 wheel drive vehicle, it took the afternoon to travel to her home which was just a short distance away. She was living on a mat on the floor. Our team brought her a soft mattress pad, pillows, and sheets. Several of the village people thanked our team. They said "We don't know what medicine you gave her yesterday, but she is smiling now and eating, and she wasn't before". What a blessing to know she was comforted and through Christ we were able to minister to her. 
We finished up the week with two more medical clinic days, and I returned back to Phnom Penh.  Less than a week later, I received an email.  This young girl had passed away.  I was grieved deeply by such a tragic loss, but at the same time thankful that God used our team to minister to her and bring her comfort.

These are the times that make living in Cambodia difficult.    

Saturday, October 13, 2012

On The Roof


During the last year of living in Cambodia I have done a number of things that take me out of my comfort zone, and most of the time they are done in interesting places that are also "out of the comfort zone". This week was no exception!

Each year, thousands of young Cambodian men and women leave their homes and families in rural provincial areas, to move to Cambodia’s capital city Phnom Penh. Seeking after education, careers and income, these young people leave their family homes in the hope of forging a better life for themselves, and the family members who depend upon them.

Young Cambodians leave their homes to live with distant relatives or family acquaintances in Phnom Penh. Mostly forced to fend for themselves, these young people pay their hosts for housing and meals in a variety of manners.  Unfortunately they only have a modest education, few marketable skills and are unequipped for an urban environment.

Every week “on the roof” our church has a team of talented English teachers who welcome hundreds of these young people to come and learn the English language for free. Classes start at 6:30am and run hourly until 6:30pm. These amazing teachers reach out and not only teach the students English, but provide them with life skills for surviving in their new city and begin the process of sharing the Gospel and discipleship. As the students begin to speak English they can then enroll in university, technical training schools or find jobs that provide a higher wage.

This week I had the privilege of being a guest teacher in one of our English classes. I went up “on the roof” and taught English using the Bible and the scripture 1 John 4:19 “We love because God first loved us.” I keep saying “on the roof” because our classes are actually “on the roof”. We use every inch of our facility, every day! The only place for English classes is “on the roof” under a tin cover. The same area "on the roof" serves as the children's church for hundreds of kids ages 5-12 on Sunday morning. 

This particular day there were about 40 young people. Almost all of them were from villages in provincial areas. My contribution this day was minute compared to the tireless efforts of our faithful teachers, but it was exciting to teach some English and share the Word of God. We spent time discussing what love truly means and talked about several examples. One young man talked about the selfless love of a mother for her child. When I asked him why a mother and father love a child, he answered “because the mother and father create the child.” Everyone agreed this was one of the purest examples of love.

My favourite moment was when one young lady asked the question “Why did Jesus love us first?” I was able to remind her of the young man's example and share with her that Jesus is the Creator of all life and that as a mother and father love their child, so Father God loves His children. We were then able to discuss God as Creator and as Father. In a culture where only 2% of the population is Christian these basic truths are new to most people. Thank God for the opportunity to use such a simple tool as teaching English to introduce people to Father God!

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

More than a Good Cup of Coffee!


Coffee Cart purchased by Mother's Heart

Sustainability is one of the main goals at Mother’s Heart when it comes to helping the women in our program become financially independent in their communities.  Most of the women at Mother’s Heart enter our program with little or no specialized skills that, along with being single, create an enormous hardship financially.

Once the women enter our program, we provide them access to either job placement or vocational training of their choice such as cooking, hospitality training, and sewing from fair trade organizations throughout Phnom Penh.  Before the training, the majority of the women only have the capacity to earn about $50-70 per month. After vocational training, their incomes increase substantially to $100-$130 per month.



Several months ago we had a creative and unusual request by one of the women in our program. Along with the help of her mother, she wanted to start her own micro enterprise business. Her idea was to sell coffee just outside a factory close to her home.  We were impressed with her idea as well as her recognition to select a location that would provide her with the most customer traffic.



The staff at Mother’s Heart shared in her and her mother’s vision by purchasing a coffee cart as well as the start up supplies necessary to allow them to start their business.  It has been both fun and exciting to partner with this family in raising their income level.  Micro enterprise is widely recognized as a powerful tool to help the very poor but business-minded, throughout the world to rise above poverty.  For as little as $200, we were able to make an incredible investment into the lives of this family!

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

If You Need Leaders - Make Disciples!


This week Reaksmey, our church’s Internship Coordinator caught me in the hallway and was really excited. “Wayne, this week during the opening week of our new internship group, 3 of our 17 new interns have accepted Christ.”

Interns in our church’s ministry apply to give one year of their life to learn about God, study the Bible and serve in church ministries. These are usually individuals who do not have any financial resources, yet voluntarily ask to participate full-time in the internship without compensation!

Many people who read this might ask the questions, “How can someone who has not accepted Christ serve in church ministries?” “Why would they volunteer a year without compensation?” “How do unbelievers have faith to believe God will provide for their daily needs for a year?”

I have to admit I am amazed at the hunger for God in a country where 98% of people are unbelievers. We have to turn away as many young people each year as we are able to accept in the internship. One of the things I have noticed in Cambodia in the healthiest, life-giving churches is that they do not focus on making converts, but focus on making disciples. Many of their ministry approaches are not focused on getting people to make a one-time decision, but focused on a long-term plan for discipling individuals. That means they develop ministries like the internship to build on current relationships with people wherever they are at on the spectrum - from seeking to know who God is to becoming a fully devoted follower of Jesus.

At the same time Reaksmey (who is a graduate of last years intern class) told me about the good news, another of last years graduates found me and told me he had just been hired by one of the top Christian supplemental education organizations in Cambodia. Out of a large number of candidates he was selected because of his leadership abilities and his visible relationship with the Lord.


Seeing these young men and young women, who have been intentionally discipled by mature believers, being placed into leadership positions has helped me to understand some gaps I’ve had in my understanding of leadership development in the past. From my experiences I think we in the western world spend a considerable amount of time on making converts and then try to place them in leadership positions, without taking the long road of making true disciples.

To quote Landa Cope: “A reached community is not a discipled community.” God uses the process of personal discipleship to bring about spiritual transformation in individuals’ lives, and in turn, those transformed individuals influence their business, family, school and, in time, whole cities and nations.

The biblical mandate to make disciples (Matt 28) and the example Jesus lived should be enough to convince us that discipleship is the missing link and the true key to developing leaders. If you stop to think about it, the core qualities of a good leader are developed through the transformational process that discipleship provides.

If the church is to steward the message in the same manner as Jesus, we must make disciples who know, love and obey Jesus. This means that every aspect of their life must be different: how they work, love their family, tell the truth, handle money with integrity, and reach out to the poor.

Floyd McClung says this: “But if you want to build a leadership culture, if you want to impart apostolic passion to your church or movement, and if you want to see the gospel have its desired transforming effect on people and nations, it will happen because you make disciples.”

Matthew 28:19  “Go and make disciples of all nations”


Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Peanut Butter Friends in a Chop Suey World




This week marks the one year anniversary of our family moving to Cambodia. I vividly recall many unanswered questions  as we boarded the plane for Cambodia. The issue of taking Micah, Reece, and Kyler to Cambodia and raising them overseas was a difficult choice for Wayne and I. Our families asked us, “Will they be safe? How will they be educated? Will they have proper medical care?” Some say that one of the most challenging tasks for many missionaries is that of raising their children on the mission field. While Wayne and I both asked ourselves these same questions when we decided to make this move, the one answer we did have was this:  God called us as a missionary family to serve in Cambodia. He has a plan for our family to live and minister as successfully in Cambodia as we could in the U.S.

Micah handing out snacks at "Joy Club"
This last Thursday Wayne had an opportunity to take Micah out to the slums with the “Joy Club” at our church to minister to over 200 kids through Bible stories, hygiene lessons, and handing out snacks. When we asked Micah what he thought about it all he said:


“I feel sad for them. I feel blessed.  I feel like I should do something for them. Like more than just 10 cents or 20 cents. More like $25,000 so I can build a house for them.”

Micah, Reece, and Kyler are confronted daily with special opportunities and unique challenges. Wayne and I continually take steps to help them understand the world through their eyes.  While it’s true the USA is considered the land of opportunity, we believe that Micah, Reece, and Kyler are experiencing 'other' opportunities while living in Cambodia. They are seeing things and experiencing things differently than those living in the United States - but equally as beneficial. They are learning to relate on a new level to others who are not like them and learning to appreciate those differences. They are learning how to step out of their comfort zones. They are experiencing different cultures first hand - rather than just reading about them in geography books. They are learning to be resourceful, flexible, and adaptable.

Watching Bible Lesson
In preparation for our move to Cambodia a year ago, I read a specific children’s book to help me understand what the boys would go through and the challenges they would face. This book describes the experience of a little girl  moving to Taiwan with her parents to become a “missionary family”.  I recently recalled an excerpt from the book as I was reflecting over what the boys have experienced over this past year. 


 “Sure, my peanut butter (American) friends would never be the same as my Chinese friends. But  I had a wide variety of peanut butter friends, and I was beginning to realize that my Chinese            friends weren’t all alike either.  Friends came in all kinds of flavors.  And all of them were good.” ( Peanut Butter Friends in a Chop Suey World by Deb Brammer)

Thank you God for the amazing journey you have brought us through this last year. Thank you for our family and our friends both abroad and here in Cambodia. 
-Tricia




Friday, July 13, 2012

Miracle at 33 Weeks!


When we first met one of our new clients, our concerns for her health and the health of her unborn baby were at the forefront of the management of her case. For the safety and confidentiality of our clients we do not use real names and so for this story I will use the name Sopia. When clients first enter our program at Mother’s Heart, we accompany them to RACHA (health clinic) for general prenatal checks. It was this checkup that confirmed what we suspected from our preliminary screen. Sopia’s blood pressure was high. She was suffering from a condition called “preeclampsia” which basically means “before seizures” . Our staff began praying immediately for Sopia and her unborn baby.


Pre-eclampsia is a diagnosis given to women who suffer from high blood pressure and swelling under the skin during pregnancy which untreated can ultimately result in dangerously high blood pressure, seizures, and death. It occurs all over the world regardless of age, culture, or ethnic background. Access to an obstetrician is a luxury for most. According to the World Health Organization an estimated 12% of maternal deaths in Cambodia are as a result of this condition. It is estimated that 1 woman out of every 1,666 women will die in Cambodia from complications of pre-eclampsia, however in  comparison to the US the maternal mortality is 1.5 in every 100,000.


 Our Nurse Midwife, Sreytouch, continued to monitor Sopia closely over the following weeks. When Sophy was only 33 weeks pregnant, she developed complications from the preeclampsia and her baby was delivered by emergency C-Section weighing only 2.5lbs! Sopia’s baby boy was admitted immediately to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit here in Phnom Penh. He was placed on a ventilator, feeding tube, and I.V. Our staff continued to pray for a miracle that his lungs would be healthy and mature enough to sustain his breathing. God’s grace and answered prayers quickly followed. Sopia was discharged from the hospital a week later. Her baby boy continued to gain weight daily and after a few short weeks became independent from all the tubes and IV’s. He is thriving wonderfully and was discharged from the hospital just 4 weeks later. Thank you to everyone who prayed for Sopia and her son.

Please pray that pregnant mothers throughout Cambodia will have access to prenatal, labor, delivery, and post-partum care necessary to keep them safe and give birth to a healthy child.


-Tricia

Friday, June 15, 2012

Bicycles Break Barriers


Transporting donated bikes to Mother's Heart
At Mother’s Heart, one of our goals is to assist the girls and women in our program in obtaining access to either vocational training or job placement. One of the biggest barriers to these opportunities is transportation and the cost that surrounds it. However, a bike can change a life in a poor country. Yet for most of the women and girls in our program, a bicycle is financially out of reach. Bicycles help to ensure that the girls and women in our program are empowered through improved access to food and water, employment, healthcare, education and social opportunities. This month, Mother’s Heart received a generous donation of bicycles from the Cambodian Bike Project. Thanks to their donation, 7 women in our program will now receive a bicycle to assist them with both affordable and sustainable transportation

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Human Currency: Trading Freedom in Southeast Asia


I was recently reading an article in the Southeast Asia Globe titled the “Cambodian Maid Trade”.  In the past three years up to 25,000 Cambodian domestic workers  who are from impoverished rural communities have migrated to Malaysia following promises of a better future. But, the reality for these women and children is the risk of abuse at every step of the migration cycle. These Cambodian women and underage girls are paying for the chance of a better life.  Once they enter the country of Malaysia, the legal system provides them with little if no protection by the Malaysian government in the recruitment process and regulation of private agencies. According to Malaysia’s labor law, Cambodia’s domestic workers are defined as ‘domestic servant’s, and employment conditions are left to the discretion of the employer.  I realize at this point it gets quite graphic, and apologize if this becomes to blunt.  But as a result, Cambodia maids are routinely over-worked, physically abused, under-paid and burdened with inflated ’handling’ fees and debts.  The worst is that many of them are starved, exploited, and sexually assaulted by their employers according to Tenganita, an anti-human trafficking organization.

Up until recently, I had heard of these rumors and read of these cases. However, this past month at Mother’s Heart has been quite difficult for me.  We have recently taken into our program two young girls (one who is underage) who were sent back to Cambodia by their Malaysian employers. They are both pregnant as a result of sexual assault by their employer. One of them, who is 14 years old, has never been paid in the past two years since her employment as a maid.  My heart is so broken to actually see these women face to face and graphically hear their experiences. They are no longer stories I read on a piece of paper, but have become a reality in my everyday life as I see them come and go from our office as we help integrate them back into Cambodia.

These are the moments that I can say how truly humbled I am to work at Mother’s Heart. To be able to help these young girls is a great honor. Please pray that not only can we help them through their pregnancy, but we help walk with them to restore hope and love them as Christ loves each of us.  One of them began at one of our partner organization for vocational training this last week.

Tricia

"For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery." Galatians 5:1


 

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

What is BorBor?


Making minced carrots, spinach and chicken


You may not recognize this word, but for a young Cambodian woman trying to feed her baby it is a very important concept.  BorBor is a simple Cambodian term which means “rice soup” or “porridge”.  It’s a process which consists of adding more water to the white rice when cooking it so that it is a thin consistency making the texture in such a way that babies can eat it. Rice itself before its brown shell is removed is actually very healthy. However, in Cambodia, only the animals and prisoners are given the brown, unshelled rice.  The Cambodians eat only the white, polished rice. Unfortunately, the brown shell is what gives the rice its nutrients.

It is not uncommon for many babies and children in Cambodia to become stunted in their growth due to micronutrient deficiencies (which basically means very little vitamins and minerals are in their diet).  Stunting means their bodies are not able to grow in height to reach their full potential due to a lack of vitamins and minerals.  Rice is the main staple for all their meals.  Once the mother stops breast feeding, foods high in calcium and iron such as cheese and milk along with vegetables high in vitamins are commonly absent from the diet due to poverty, culture, and a lack of education.  Malnutrition remains a serious problem for Cambodian children specifically Vitamin A and iron deficiencies.   


Baby food must be made fresh daily because most
mothers don't have refrigeration.
When Micah Reece and Kyler were all babies, I decided to make my own baby food. I could easily buy jars of baby food at the store, but decided I would make baby food for them from fresh vegetables and fruits. I didn't realize how fortunate I was because when I was tired of making my own baby food I could just supplement it with store bought baby food. Little did I know, that God would use that experience in my life again some day.

This month, we held an afternoon workshop for all our mother’s in the program at Mother’s Heart on how to add more nutrients to the BorBor which makes it healthier for the baby than just rice alone.   Mother’s Heart staff taught the women how to chop up locally grown cooked vegetables like carrots or green leafy vegetables which adds vitamins like Vitamin A, B, and K.  We also taught them how to chop up cooked chicken or pork to add protein to the BorBor. Once the chopped and minced ingredients are added to the rice porridge, it then becomes a nutritionally dense baby food.   To many people, these concepts may seem very basic and common knowledge. However, in Cambodia, these concepts are foreign and access to information like nutritionally healthy baby foods remains a barrier to most women.  Don’t forget that few homes have any type of refrigeration, so most of these foods have to be made daily. 

Monday, April 30, 2012

Courage and Leadership


My friend Phka sharing the gospel to a group in a village home


Life was going nowhere. Everywhere he looked Josh saw a bleak future for his community, businesses, his faith family, and his personal family. That is, if things continued to follow the status quo. They had been operating the same way for 40 years and it had worked, but the outlook for staying with the current model was pretty bleak. To top it all off the community’s primary leader was now out of the picture.

Then came the appointment Josh had been waiting for!

“Josh, it’s time.” “I want you to be the lead on taking everyone in the direction I set for them 40 years ago.”

Josh knew exactly what he was being told. Years before he and one other man had encouraged the group to move into a new region. Back then his advice was quickly thwarted. The vast majority of those making decisions only saw the risks and potential costs. Josh had seen the benefits with his own eyes and hadn’t been afraid to voice his opinion.

“You are the man for the job. It’s going to require courage and there will be obstacles, but the opportunity is there for the taking!” “I’ll give you everything you need to get the job done.”

Josh went away from today’s meeting excited and making plans. However, in the back of his mind he wondered how people would respond. He knew some would oppose him because they were comfortable with the way things were, while others would be afraid of the risk or the unknown. But that didn’t slow him down, he headed straight for his friend Caleb’s house to tell him the great news. Like any great leader Joshua knew it was time for change.

I’ve been encouraged lately to spend some time with great leaders. Leaders who aren’t afraid to ask the tough questions.  Leaders who aren’t afraid to personally act based on the tough answers to those questions.  Leaders with great depth of character who possess courage.

When God spoke to Joshua and told him to take the Israelites into the Promised Land He told Joshua: “Be strong and of good courage.” There were giants in the land where Joshua was about to lead 2.5 million people. In the past there had been many who were afraid and it was likely that hadn’t changed. Yet God was calling Joshua to lead in that direction anyway. This is a good picture of the way author Richard Daft defines courage. He says “the defining characteristic of courage is the ability to step forward through fear.” Courage doesn’t mean the absence of doubt or fear, but the ability to act in spite of them.
Students in a village school

It seems every week in Cambodia I face a new unknown. God continues to challenge me to push past any personal fears, press past identity and self-esteem issues, to attempt new things and take greater risks. I’ve been reminded in God the possibilities are endless for our lives. However, this is only if we welcome God to be everything He desires to be in our lives. The problem with that is sometimes who He is or what He wants us to do in us can be scary. God is often just plain confrontational with us and sometimes requires us to be confrontational in our approach to life with others.

I wanted to share an answer from one of my favorite textbooks, The Leadership Experience, to a question I’ve been asking, “What does it mean as a leader to possess courage? 

“As a leader courage means to develop the backbone to accept personal responsibility for achieving desired outcomes, go against the status quo, and stand up for what you believe. Push beyond your comfort zone and break through the wall of fear that limits you.”



Monday, April 16, 2012

When You Are Out Of Options

Andong Slum just outside Phnom Penh

I am daily reminded how many safety nets I have and how many more I used to have. I have come to realize I relied much more on resources available to me in my everyday life instead of a reliance on God. In some ways this is not a bad thing given that God has provided many of those resources and provided us with the wisdom to use them. The real lesson I have learned in Cambodia is about what I do and where I go when I am out of those natural options.

Very soon after we arrived in Cambodia we were faced with a dilemma that has stuck in my mind and is a signpost for me to keep my faith and life focused in the right direction. We were having dinner in the home of a new friend. At the end of dinner we had a time of prayer and he asked us to pray for one of his Cambodian friends. The man had a motorcycle accident and had a head injury. Fortunately, he was transported to the hospital in the capitol city and received basic care. He had swelling in his head and was in a coma. His family sold many of their personal possessions to get him to the hospital to receive emergency care. After a couple of days the family ran out of money. In Cambodia the medical system has very limited resources and cannot offer free medical care. The doctors told the family if he did not start waking up the next morning or if they did not pay the $100 per day fee the hospital would have to release him and the family would have to take him home with no medical care.

The family was out of options. Our friend was telling us the story during the prayer time. My natural reaction was to consider how I could get the $100 per day the family needed. Then I realized I was personally waiting on a bank transfer and wouldn’t have access to any funds for at least two days. After thinking a moment I too realized since we were in Cambodia we didn’t have options to help. It was at that moment I was filled with both faith and conviction. Our “only” option was to pray for him to wake up the following morning and I was immediately convicted because this should have been my first and the best option.  I asked the group to agree with me in prayer the man would wake up the next morning. The next morning I received an excited phone call saying, to the doctors’ surprise, the man had come out of his coma just before the doctors arrived.  I had the privilege of going the hospital the next day to visit with the man and his family and witness an amazing recovery. 
In the village of Kampong Pluch during the floods.
Many families were displaced. 

Time and time again in Cambodia I have seen people out of options and seen God do the miraculous. I recently read a report that showed 20% of Cambodian Christians said they came to Christ after seeing a visible miracle take place in their life or someone close to them. While I in no way feel that Cambodia’s current situation is God’s best for the people who live here, I have seen when people have few options they most often search for God and His help. Being a loving Father He answers and as a result this country is ripe for harvest. In the midst of hardship and the most difficult of circumstances people are accepting Christ and the church continues to grow. The majority of pastors in Cambodia have at most a primary education. It’s not biblical knowledge people are searching for, but relationship with the Living God.

If you find yourself in a place where you feel you are out of options (or better yet as your first option), try following Dr. Dean’s advice:

Go to the source of truth. Go to God in prayer, in His Word or to someone you know who is the “real” deal. Not to your credit card, google or gossiping girlfriends.

Submit to God's directives by faith. The bible is filled with stories of the miraculous. Too often we focus on the miracle and not on the point of the stories. It was the acts of obedience and trust in God by those who received.

Trust God's perfect provision and timing. Ephesians 6:13  “Therefore take up the whole armor of God, that you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand firm.”

Simply put. When we are out of options, God isn’t. 

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

From a Mom’s Perspective

Cambodian Suburban

I wanted to stop for a moment to just share our family’s week from a mother’s perspective.

When we returned from Thailand for our visa renewals, four out of five of us came down with “Montezuma’s Revenge” as we call it in Texas.  We recovered from that illness, then Kyler, began running a 102 fever during the night after we returned. Although I am a registered nurse with an emergency room background, my reasoning goes out the window when my children are ill.  I wasn’t sure what was causing his fever which catapults the situation to a much more serious position….malaria, dengue fever.  I began praying asking for peace and wisdom from God for what action to take next. 

In the US, I knew that at any moment I could pick up the phone and called Dr. Wiley.  Or, I could walk into any hospital and Kyler would receive whatever high quality emergency medical care he needed. But here in Cambodia, the situation is completely different.  We are living in a developing country where hospitals are operating at a very basic level. High quality pediatric emergency services are non-existent. These are the moments that are difficult for me.  Wayne and I watched Kyler closely throughout the night, and praise God he slowly improved over the next couple of days.

Wayne and I received a designated financial blessing earlier in the year giving us the opportunity to upgrade from pedal bikes to motorcycles.  Wayne purchased a “new to us” motorcycle on Friday.  I chuckled this week just thinking of how we have integrated into Cambodian lifestyle by trading our  red 4X4 Ford extended cab family pickup in Texas to a red 125cc family motorcycle. Not the most glamorous or comfortable lifestyle, but wouldn’t trade this experience for the world. And yes, we promise that we will all wear our helmets!
Hester version of the priestly garments

I was really proud of Micah this week. In Christian Perspectives at school, his class is studying the Tabernacle of David.  Micah’s assignment was to recreate the priestly garment.  He spent quite some time researching the attire. Smiling from ear to ear, he proudly announced to us that the entire class clapped for him as he gave his presentation.  Micah is happy at school which brings so much peace to me on the inside that we are at the right place for our family.  He still has moments when his Autism creates challenges, but he is thriving so well at this international Christian school.

My week ended by helping a close Cambodian friend of ours.  Her 3 year old son needed a simple surgery which in the US would have been done at birth.  It’s was quite a simple surgical procedure, but untreated her son could eventually become septic causing his kidneys to fail.  I am happy that God brought this little boys need to our attention and now he's healthier than ever.   I also had to stop and ponder my gratefulness to God to have been blessed to be born in one of the greatest countries in the world with access to an amazing health care system.

Thank you God for the health of my family while we are on this journey in Cambodia. Please continue praying for our family as we process through these difficult times and celebrate with us in our times of joy;  only through God’s  grace we will continue our calling here…….for we don’t know what tomorrow will bring. 

Tricia

Friday, March 23, 2012

Starting A New Job!



The talented team of social workers and nurse midwives
I serve with. 

As my five month public health internship with Samaritan’s Purse came to an end back in December, I knew I wanted to remain serving in Cambodia.  We already had plans to return to Abilene for the Christmas holidays at the completion of our internships. Wayne and I made a decision at that time to return to Cambodia, not sure where exactly we would be serving, but knowing God has called us there.  Just before we left for the US, I came in contact with an organization called Mother’s Heart-Cambodia.  It is the first and only Christian crisis pregnancy center in Cambodia (www.mothersheart-cambodia.org/). During that time, I had an incredible opportunity to visit at length with the Founder and Director, Katrina Gliddon who is both an Australian midwife and nurse practitioner. She began to share with me the extreme challenges that the young, single, pregnant women of Cambodia face. I was moved with compassion.  I had learned a lot from my public health research regarding women’s health while at Samaritan’s Purse. The information and statistics I recovered was both unbelievable and staggering.

Cambodia ranks among the highest in the region for maternal mortality with 1/3 of deaths being attributed to “backyard” abortions. Unplanned and unwanted pregnancies are recurrent and consistent hardships among the youth.  Access to reproductive health services remains a barrier for most women due to poverty and a lack of education. An estimated 73,000 abortions take place per year.  Abortion inductions and the use of easily accessible over-the-counter abortion pills as forms of contraception have become a pandemic in Cambodia.  89% of those occur in unsafe, illegal clinics.

 During my visit with Katrina, she continued to share with me the vision of Mother’s Heart : To empower women with choices and to be a voice to those who have none. Last year Mother’s Heart helped over 100 girls, young women and their partners, infants and families by providing resources and programs. Through education, counseling and mentoring MH has helped their clients sustain healthy choices for their own lives and the lives of their baby. 
One of God's miracles!*
When Wayne and I returned to Phnom Penh in January, I was excited to get a phone call from Katrina. She asked that I meet with MH board members.  Following the meeting, I was offered, and with joy accepted, a position with Mother’s Heart as Assistant to the Country Director.   I have been working with Mother’s Heart now for the past three weeks utilizing my management skills as well as my skills as a registered nurse.  I have seen some great hardships and some incredible miracles during these short few weeks. Please continue to pray for me in my new job:  that God would touch the lives of these women and their babies, their identity is transformed and their lives are changed.

*Babies names and photos of mothers are not made public for safety and confidentiality reasons. 


Monday, March 5, 2012

No Longer In Debt...




Everyone has specific principles they are passionate about. For Tricia and I one of those principles is to live and help others live a life free of debt.  You may be familiar with Proverbs 22:7 “The rich rules over the poor, and the borrower is the slave of the lender.”

In countries like Cambodia where 70% of the population live in poverty, debt can be a very dangerous problem for families. They can lose what little they do own if they find themselves in a cycle of debt and even the smallest of crises happen.

This week I visited with a family and was inspired by their story of becoming debt free. Like most people the solutions are often simple and require basic knowledge, a helping hand, and changed behavior.

In 2009, Sang village was selected to be one of target communities in implementing a Samaritan’s Purse project. Most of the people in this community were living by producing wood charcoal, collecting wild fruit for selling, and rice farming.

Ms. Saing Saran, 27 years old with two children, is living in Sang village, Kampong Chhnang province. Her family was in serious debt with a microloan and she was identified as one of the Seeds of Hope project beneficiaries. She was given building materials to build a compost house and given material for building a fence for her home garden and given six types of vegetable seed.

Before the materials were distributed to her, she was trained in how to take care of the garden, produce compost, use the compost in an efficient way etc… “I used compost that I produced for growing vegetables such as morning glory, cucumbers, eggplants, and gourds. I used these vegetables to feed my family also I earned 5,000 – 10,000 riels( $1.25-$2.5) daily by selling the surplus during the growing season.” said Mrs. Saing Saran.

We were really impressed in how the compost house helped her family physically and economically. “Normally, we borrow money to buy at least four bags per hectare of chemical fertilizer to apply to our rice field. But after we had the compost house, we no longer borrowed money and the chemical fertilizer usage was reduced” said Mrs. Saing Saran.

For those of you who have helped others to work their way into a life of freedom from debt  I say “Thank You!” To those who have found themselves in a cycle of debt I hope this story encourages you to look at the most unlikely of solutions around you for freeing you and your family from the bondage of debt. Freedom from debt was one of the key life principles that empowered Tricia and I to live out God’s dream for our lives and come to Cambodia!

Thank you to Chet Phanna who was able to capture this wonderful story!




Sunday, February 26, 2012

Dreams Do Come True...




Often as I travel across Cambodia people tell me they dream of starting their own business. 81% of Cambodians earn their living through agriculture. The majority of these are poor rice farmers with small plots of land only able to produce enough rice for their family to simply survive. Whenever there is a flood or drought the family is plummeted into a crisis. Many of them dream of having their own business and are willing to work hard, but lack the start-up resources to begin a business and break their families cycle of poverty.

A few weeks ago I heard the story of Mrs. Sem Sam Ath from Chet Phanna, one of our amazing Samaritan’s Purse field staff.

“This year, we might not have enough rice to eat because of the floods affecting our rice field. But we might sell our pig to get enough capital to start a small grocery store in the village to provide for our family. said the 34 year old, Mrs. Sem Sam Ath. She has two children and is living together with her husband and children in Sang village, in Kampong Chhnang province.

Every year this family provided for their members by cultivating rice and some additional vegetables around their yard. She was looking to start a small store in front of her house in order to earn additional income to provide for her family. Unfortunately she didn’t have enough money to start this enterprise. With Seeds of Hope (a Samaritan’s Purse Project) help she was actively involved in most of the trainings which our field officer provided in her village such as compost making, fish farming, and home garden sessions.

In the last five months, she was selected to benefit from the pig project and she was trained in how to effectively raise pigs. After the training she also was provided with building material to build a pig house and was given two vaccinated piglets.

Since that time we saw her pigs grow really fast and remain healthy. When we first started the pig project, we indicated that over a four month period from the day we distributed the piglet that the pig’s weight should be at least 154lbs. This month her pigs were measured using our calculation and we found that each pig weighed about 198 pounds.

After I sell these two pigs, I will buy two more piglets to replace the previous ones and with the remaining money I will construct a store in front of my house to sell products to gain more income to provide for my family. Finally, we would like to say a big thank you to Samaritan’s Purse for helping improve both our knowledge and living conditions and for supporting us” said both Mrs. Sem Sam Ath and her husband.
Proud of her village store! 

The end of the story is that this week I was able to visit and see the fulfillment of Mrs. Sem Sam Ath’s dream. Not only was she able to buy 4 more piglets after the sale of the two pigs she raised, but she was able to open her village store.

I share this story with you because I know many of you have helped purchase fish ponds, pigs, chickens and other livelihood projects, but might not have ever seen the outcome of your generosity. Mrs. Sem Sam is a great example of someone who works hard and has taken your helping hand to make her families dreams come true.