Showing posts with label Compassion International. Show all posts
Long Time Gone
6:58 PM
It has been a really long time since I wrote anything here. My first reason is that I have become very involved in Compassion International. I have a website where I share information about Compassion and the children that I sponsor that is located here. It is still very much a work in progress and there is much more I want to write and link to and share. The second reason I have not written anything here is that without health insurance my medical situation was forced into a holding pattern. I actually have had to discontinue a few critical medications, including an antiseizure medication also used to control my migraines, due to cost prohibitions. I can not afford prescriptions that cost $400-$500 let alone the ones that cost thousands. God has provided with my two most critical expensive medications and somehow each time I reach for it there it is. It is like the fishes and loaves multiplying. I am very nervous today, even though I should be at peace and trusting the Lord, because tomorrow is my social security hearing to determine whether or not I qualify as disabled. I am frustrated that it has come to a hearing and scared the judge is not going to see the severity of my illnesses. If I could work, do any job, I would rather do that than be as I am now. I feel so useless. If they do find that I qualify as disabled this will allow me access to medicare and increase my odds of getting medicaid. Any and all prayers will be appreciated. Hopefully tomorrow I will update with good news!!
UPDATE: The social security judge was unable to make a determination today regarding my case. She is really torn over what to do and at one point had her head in her hands on the table. The problem seems to be that my medical records lack "objective data" to support my claims. My MRIs and Lab work and DNA testing are not abnormal (or abnormal enough) to warrant a case. However, several doctors who all got the idea from my first hospital admission have used the term somatization, or the physical manifestation of emotional issues. I know this is not the case and do not want this label. She feels it is a well fitting label because there need be no objective data. I may have to go for a psych consult to prove that this is not in my head. I don;t know how emotions could cause contractures, bone shifting, documented weakness, an abnormal EMG, and dangerously low blood pressure. I am frustrated but trusting that somehow God has a plan for all of this. Please keep praying.
UPDATE: The social security judge was unable to make a determination today regarding my case. She is really torn over what to do and at one point had her head in her hands on the table. The problem seems to be that my medical records lack "objective data" to support my claims. My MRIs and Lab work and DNA testing are not abnormal (or abnormal enough) to warrant a case. However, several doctors who all got the idea from my first hospital admission have used the term somatization, or the physical manifestation of emotional issues. I know this is not the case and do not want this label. She feels it is a well fitting label because there need be no objective data. I may have to go for a psych consult to prove that this is not in my head. I don;t know how emotions could cause contractures, bone shifting, documented weakness, an abnormal EMG, and dangerously low blood pressure. I am frustrated but trusting that somehow God has a plan for all of this. Please keep praying.
I Got Mail!!
4:43 PM
Yesterday I received my first letter from one of my girls!! It was written on January 13 so it took about a month to arrive here. Letters can take as long as 2-3 months to reach some children, and then for return mail to arrive depending on where the child is located. My letter was from precious Monique in Burkina Faso. Before I share her letter I want to share with you a video clip that I found that explains the power of the work that Compassion International does in Burkina Faso.
Now on to my letter from Monique! The translator was not the most skilled, as I was able to catch mistranslations and I do not speak nor read French. But the main points of the letter are very sweet, if a bit addled by translation.
Dear Bethany,
Monique is so glad to be your sponsor child. All her family thank you for your love. She lives with her parents, her father Mathieu, a farmer, and her mother Marthe who sells firewood in market. She has older sister Elizabeth. She is in grade 7. She has 2 younger brothers, Azaria (6 years old) and Samuel (2 years old). Monique likes playing hopscotch with friends, The weather is very cold here. She would like to know about the weather over there. Do you have children? She wants you to pray for health and her family. She loves you and hopes to hearing from you soon, Thanks, Happy New Year 2012.
I have written to Monique three times so far (last night was the third as I responded to her letter), so I think at least my first letter crossed paths with this letter in the mail and hopefully she has it by now (given how long it took her letter to get here). She dictated her letter to an administrator at the Compassion Program center she attends, and then that was translated from French to English. There are some cute little drawings at the bottom of the letter.
I just wanted to share my wonderful, delightful little one with you all!!
And Stella Makes Three
11:52 AM
Yes, I am crazy. I adopted one more little girl to sponsor as I had a feeling that something was left undone, that someone was waiting. That someone was Stella, an 8 year old orphan in Uganda who lives with her grandfather. Her chores are many and include washing clothes, cleaning the home, buying and selling in the market, and carrying water. Like most little girls she enjoys playing with dolls, playing hide-and-go-seek, jump rope, art, and storytelling. She is in the equivalent of Kindergarden and is doing above average in her schooling. I do not have her full sponsorship packet yet, but I wanted to share my newest (and last - at least for the foreseeable future) little girl. Please pray for her as she has already had a very difficult life.
Holding on to Hope
10:11 PMMy "words" that I want to live out with passion this year are faith and hope. Faith includes believing that the Lord will provide in all circumstances exactly what is needed without fail. Hope is the joy that comes from faith, the belief in something more, the intangible that you hold on to when all seems lost. Faith and Hope are meant to be shared, and so I would like to introduce to you two very special little girls that are now my very special little girls.
Meet sweet Miangeda! She is six years old and lives in the mountains of Haiti. She was chosen to be ours by my mother and I as she just captured our hearts. She looks so solemn for such a little thing. I have not yet received the full sponsorship packet for her, but I do know that she loves reading and playing with dolls, and is doing above average in school. Please add this little one to your prayers!
I would like to introduce precious Monique! She is nine, going to be ten in August (her birthday is only 5 days after mine!) and lives on the flatlands of Burkina Faso, one of the poorest countries in Africa. I fell in love with her and can not wait until the day I receive a picture of this sweetheart smiling! I do not have her full sponsorship packet either but I do know that she has few if any toys and instead enjoys playing with boxes. Boxes, it just breaks my heart. She too is doing above average in school despite all obstacles. Please add her to your prayers!!
This is the Bethelehem Child Survival Program in Bory. Haiti. Haiti's maternal mortality rate is 630 per 100,000 while the infant mortality rate is 86 per 1,000. The Child Survival Program provides monthly health screenings for pregnant mothers, a monthly food kit of healthy nourishing food, immunizations and health screenings for infants and young children, education, parental skills training, and job skills training. Please pray for the mothers and children who receive care here.
Yes, I live on a very limited budget. Yes, I could use the money elsewhere. But elsewhere is not where I am called to use it and elsewhere is not going to make a difference in the lives of two beautiful, precious little princesses who already look so weary. Elsewhere is not going to provide immunizations to babies, elsewhere is not going to feed pregnant mothers, elsewhere is not going to educate a community of young mothers on how to meet the needs of their child - simple things like hygeine and avoiding infections to how to read a book together. Elsewhere and Some other time are always going to be there. These children are here, now and they can't wait. I believe that living with passion means giving until it causes sacrifice. I can not change the world, but for now I can change a few lives. God will provide the rest. And I get to share with these little ones the fact that they are in fact true princesses of the Lord, real princesses and instead of being forgotten they were chosen and so loved!! It all comes down to faith and hope!














