Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Kris's Update: October 2014


 Continued Connections to LAMB

   Hello to you all:  no, I have not gone back to Bangladesh, but am serving in a different way here in the States. My last letter described a bit of how I continue to connect to LAMB and Bangladesh during this season, so I’ll update a bit on what has been going on.
    First, to report back on an opportunity I talked about in my last letter, I did teach at an Ohio State University global health short course this past summer.  It was only for 1/2 day, but the contact with students was great!

   I also had a meeting last week with Samaritan’s Purse (the organization of the doctor and nurse who contracted Ebola and were brought to the States this summer).  LAMB hopes to receive medical volunteers, so we talked about our set up.  They sent a survey including questions such as what our electrical supply is (often generators), whether we have ventilators in the operating room (no), how do you get to LAMB (sadly the only airline that was flying to the airport nearby went bankrupt). 
   I also continue to be in touch with future medical volunteers, to talk about everything from nearest ATMs for cash to what the food is like!
 These photos are from the most recent LAMB Annual Report (available online at http://www.lambproject.org/?page_id=1489). Our nurse’s training is in full swing (above) and our community health workers (documenting neonatal health (weight, growth, feeding practices) via tablet computer! (below)

This is the link to a short video (3.5 min.) from our InterserveUSA national director, Dr. Pat Krayer, describing the work my organization does among the ‘Unseen 1/4’. It is a new way to think of what had previously been described as the ‘10/40 Window’, the geographic area located from 10 and 40 degrees north latitude, from West Africa to East Asia.  It is where Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists live, 1/4 of the world’s population, among whom only 3% of Christian workers serve.
Pat Krayer says: “Why is this so tragic? How did you and I come to know Jesus? Most of us came to faith due to a series of ongoing relationships with followers of Christ. Since this is the case with most people, and since such a small number of Christian workers live and work among these 3 billion unreached people, most have little chance to discover what Jesus has done for them.” 

   I’ve been asked why I am studying more.  Basically, to serve well when I return to Bangladesh, with fresh insights from a deeper relationship with God.  The program is for 3 years.
   I started classes at Fuller in June on Christian Ethics and Church and Mission in a Global Context.  The first (ethics) was as I expected, learning to construct an approach to various ethical issues based primarily on the Bible, with tradition, reason, and experience as secondary resources. I wrote a final paper on giving/lending in Bangladesh, with MY message being that I must give (from Jesus’ words ’give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who  wants to borrow from you’ Mt 5:42), but best when in the context of a discipling relationship.
    
   The second (Church) was quite unexpected, sort of an overview of church history through to ‘fresh expressions’ of church.  It led me to experiences of Orthodox, Catholic, Pentecostal, and most outside the box: street church!  That was a regular Sunday morning service held on a street corner outside a boarded up convenience store, with all the neighborhood invited: disabled, single moms, some suffering from mental or physical health issues. I got to give first aid to the one whose hand I held during prayer when I found blood on my hand from a wound on his arm...

Film Recommendation:  Weapons of the Spirit: a documentary story of a French town called Le Chambon of Huguenots and a few Catholics where many European Jews found shelter and survived the Holocaust. ‘A conspiracy of goodness.’

World War II Vets to Too Many Pets...(Door to Door Doctor)

   Well, too many pets is probably in the eye nose of the beholder.  I have enjoyed my work, driving home to home to assess and teach preventive care to elderly and disabled persons on Medicare (WWII vets have great stories). 
    
   I am sent by an agency to see clients (of insurance companies) in a 4-county region (1st OH, now IN).  I may be in a central hotel for a few weeks, radiating out to various small towns or cities for a day. My favorite days are when I am more rural, driving from farm to farm talking to characters who are usually still working in their 80s. 
    
   But there are sad stories: 90 yr. old ladies taken advantage of by neighbors, or even their own family. I am glad to bring a listening ear, and do just a bit of teaching about everything from what is a living will, to why it is a good idea to get an eye check (fall risks) or a colonoscopy (cancer risks). My plea: get to know your isolated elder neighbor, offer a helping hand!

On a Personal Note...

   I spoke to a group of Minster Mission Commission ladies a month ago, telling of LAMB’s work.  Someone asked ‘How long are you home?’  I paused, then responded, “Well, I usually serve there, and now I am serving here for however long it seems right.’ By that I meant I, along with my Dad and siblings, will help care for my Mom during her illness. She is newly on hospice, after deciding to stop chemo with continued slow progression of metastatic disease (especially bones and around the lining of the lung cavity). 

   I feel odd in terms of not really having a fixed timeframe, but I keep busy, as the rest of this letter describes.   I have sometimes  frittered away too much time on the internet...but really want to be available in the moment, just taking what comes and not trying to fix things. I’m working to pay tuition, but I am grateful for those who continue to support me through Interserve, covering my health insurance as well as giving me a bit more flexible time to serve in this different way.

Friday, March 21, 2014

Magnets and Mom (and Mega-family)

Dear friends,

I just finished a prayer letter, which will be coming your way via post if you're on my mailing list.  If not, I copy it below. 

The title to this post = 2 things I forgot to put in the letter:

Magnets.   I am slight chagrined that I sent out lovely frig magnets this past Christmas as reminders for prayers for LAMB and Bangladesh, since I am not actually in Bangladesh at the moment....

Mom.  She continues to feel well enough to be out and about fairly regularly.  Steroids are a wonderful thing:  the powerful doses she takes before and after chemo give her lots of pep!  She has mostly good day, a cause for joy.  Please pray for continuing to manage the pain reasonably well.

Mega-family.  The above photo is my youngest cousin's wedding.  About 2/3 of my cousins were there! (31 out of 45, I am just over the shoulder of the groom.)

Thanks--Kris

[NOT] Being in Bangladesh 

Psalm 119:105  Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.  



This group includes most of my closest colleagues at LAMB during the visit of our former medical director, Dr. D, and his daughters—which I was sad to miss!  So when you pray for LAMB, it is for this group!

Missing (and Helping) My Friends At LAMB
My plans have developed quite a bit in the last few weeks: first, NOT going to LAMB for a short visit this Spring. One part of that plan included meeting my niece Lydia in India at the end of March, but the place she’s visiting discouraged her/me from an additional visitor, so I decided not to go. 

Within a day or 2 of making the disappointing decision to not visit Bangladesh, I was encouraged by my Interserve International Director to pursue seminary study, with a view to future responsibilities in leadership. That helped me think of how I could maintain my sense of missionary identity while remaining here with family at this time. 
LAMB wasn’t very successful in 2013 in funding proposals, so I am currently helping rework one to the US gov’t for a new building.  As part of it we are talking about an ‘Institute of Integrated Rural Health and Development.’ We want to creatively defend the proposal toward our non-medical training capacity—my CHDP work helps me articulate that.
I might have an opportunity as a volunteer instructor for part of an OSU global health short course, which I think would be fun.  And a former colleague has asked me to co-write a series of articles about LAMB, to capture ‘lessons learned’. 

Future: Pre-Med, Medical Schools  

During the last month or so, I have spoken to pre-med groups and Christian Medical Assoc. medical student groups at several Midwestern universities.  These times are always hugely encouraging, in meeting those God continues to call to future careers in medical/health mission.

I’ve explored with them questions of finances (eg Indian Health Service), specialties (family med vs Ob/surgery), impact as single/ married.  At my last talk, several good questions related to what I have learned about prayer, how do I find friends when I am so different as a Westerner,  and how did I get where I am today (being obedient one step at a time as God revealed the path).

Theological Study 

When my Interserve International Director heard I would be remaining in the States for some time, he recommended I think about seminary study in 2 areas of interest:  Leadership and Intercultural Studies. Since I had considered that when I first came home, it wasn’t too big a leap. 

One school I am aware of from colleagues’ previous study:  Fuller Theological Seminary, with campuses in California and Colorado.  But I would do most of the work online, as is common these days.  That would allow me to remain available at home, to work, and I would be able to continue the total 2 to 3 year course when I return to LAMB.
I have been nervous in the past about leadership, feeling myself temperamentally unsuited as well as unqualified. But my pastor reminded me that when strategic vision is part of a leader’s charge, it makes sense to study God and His kingdom first.  He said one of his professors had once told him ‘If you are clear about what you want to say, you’ll find a way to say it!’ So I hope to gain some practical skills of leadership (eg team-building, finances) and complement those with clarity of Jesus’ enduring Great Commission purpose in this time in my region of South Asia. I pray for many years of fruitful service there!

Working...Oh My!

In my Christmas letter I wrote of employment options if I stayed home for longer.  I am in the process of credentialing for home visit work doing risk assessments for Medicare. I can only work in Ohio with my current license, but depending on how this goes, I might pursue other licenses.  

It gives me a chance to visit elderly folk with one or more high-risk diagnoses.  The orientation information included the types of problems I would be assessing, including the ‘empty frig sign’ of neglect, too little money to buy food, or both. That feels like ministry; it basically means doing physical exams for medical complications. 

The bottom line is I will need to pay for the theology studies I talk about above.  I have not been great at self-directed learning in the past, so I pray modern methods of online instruction will keep my accountable. PLEASE PRAY for wisdom so I can manage time between work, study, and home!

Book Recommendation:  The Locust Effect  by Gary Haugen, International Justice Mission
“...It is possible to transform broken public justice systems in the developing world so they effectively protect the poor from violence.”

So if I stay home, what happens with Interserve?

I so appreciate all your support, sustained throughout the past 17 years!  In this extended leave, I am able to stay on with Interserve. My health insurance and such can continue through them (the job I hope to begin soon has no benefits associated with it).  

So if you want to through my leave, you can continue to forward support to Interserve as usual, to pay for such logistic support.  You’ll remember, it was similar when I did my MPH studies:  I paid the tuition on my own, and continued a living allowance via Interserve thanks to you.

However, if it seems right to you, you can inactivate your ongoing contributions.  Then when I am ready to return to Bangladesh, I’ll let people know, to choose to re-activate at that time.   I can appreciate that plan!
It has been such a joy to be able to continue relationships forged in various places and times—and now continued through visits (including to 11,000 ft. in the Rockies with a Colorado friend). If home longer, I’ll maybe see some of you more than once!