Monday, November 4, 2013

a little bit goes a long way

“Money may be the husk of many things, but not the kernel. It brings you food, but not appetite; medicine, but not health; acquaintances, but not friends; servants, but not faithfulness; days of joy, but not peace and happiness.” - Henrik Ibsen 
"Not all of us can do great things.  But we can do small things with great love." - Mother Teresa

            I am remembering an afternoon just a few months ago back when I was in Kenya.  Afternoons were always very busy at the home.  After Ray and I would leave with the kids for the clinic run by three, we’d get back around four or four-thirty.  I’d administer whatever medications were just ordered (which usually required someone to hold the child to keep them calm so I could give a shot or two) and then prepare and administer dinner meds before having the meal of our own. 
I’m remembering an afternoon that was like many before and many since.  Once the predictable washout was drained from the sky each day around the time of the clinic run, and the air was made fresh with the breath of clean rain and an ionized breeze, the heavy and dark clouds would often part and lend a warm and golden light over the compound before sunset.  I remember this being my favorite part of the day.  I loved standing at the table in the medical room in this early evening, with the windows open and a yellow-orange sunglow pouring through the window, bathing the wall to my right.  It lit up the room and created an inviting atmosphere in my “sickbay” (as we sometimes called it) that countered its usually cold and unimpassioned character.  I felt like the earth was doing me a favor and making the place more cozy for the hour during which my babies were usually the most anxious, getting their shots. 
It was on this type of afternoon that I joined my team for dinner in the common room, as was per usual most days.  It was the perfect evening.  The uproarious happenings of the children’s supper on the veranda spilled down our hallway and filled our common room with the dull reverberations of a hundred-or-so children babbling, jeering, and shouting in mixtures of English and Swahili.  We were all usually tired and worn from the day – I knew the sound would sometimes even annoy me at times, hoping for a quiet minute over dinner, but I’d often find a smile on my cranky face when hearing punctuating volleys of laughter amid the riotous dinnertime chatter. 
A few of us missionaries sat around and ate supper – most of us eating the meal of the night which prepared for the masses, rice and “green grams” (something like lentil stew) – and made jokes and lighthearted conversation about the day.  It had been a long day and a lot had been accomplished: cleaning and organizing, treating sick kids, loving on the babies, and I think I even made myself sit and read some from one of a few medical texts I have.  I was surrounded by adults and children I loved, in a foreign place I had come to call home.  Those perfect little moments went such a long way to burn a new path in my spirit on a journey of faith that catalyzed my decision to give my life, for the foreseeable future, to this mission.  My spirit found its home and my heart had put down roots in this fertile ground God had revealed to me.
Too bad I was the only one in the room who wasn’t really home.
Wait, hold on.  Go back.  What was that last thought, mind of mine?
I remember experiencing the discomfort sneak in the back of my brain and whisper a fear into my heart.  I thought it as I looked around the room, now full of all six of us (and two kids, James and Lavender, who joined us nightly out of ritual and need, respectively) all sitting around smiling and talking, making fun of each other, and eating.  It was then that I realized that I was the only one in the room who didn’t really live there.  All the rest of them (the two directors, the preschool teacher, the builder, and the jack-of-all-trades) were funded and, for all intents and purposes, had unplugged from their “old lives”.  Then there was me: I was there for my six (turned two-and-a-half) month internship and was funded only for that time.  I remember what I thought next, and how disquieted I was by the thought.
“I’m not sure I’m capable of asking people to support me monthly, for the long-term.”
It was as simple and as prideful as that.  I remember feeling mildly uncomfortable raising money for the six months by gathering one-time donations from friends, family, and people from my church.  It wasn’t that hard, though, because it was for a well-defined purpose and length of time.  It seemed that people had little problem giving money when it was a one-shot deal to a “good cause”.  By June I had raised almost everything I needed and had set aside enough myself otherwise to cover the difference.  But it was something deep within me that evening that became dislodged and started to travel through my heart like a spiritual embolus, a clot of resistance in my soul to the mission to which I knew I was called, and it became burdensome.
I felt like those moments in our common room, on an ordinary African evening set on the backdrop of the sun setting through the acacia trees and fields of maize, are burned in my mind as still images.  I knew I wanted to live there for the long haul and make these days at In Step a career and a life.  I now see that these memories of a joyful scene are juxtaposed with the worrisome and anxious thoughts of the very same time, as I realized I was confronted with choices that seemed impossible to me at the time.   As I look back now, I should correct myself in that I know there really were no choices whatsoever, and that I was just accepting an unwelcome inevitability of my future.
The only way I was going to be able to live as a missionary is if I, first, accepted the fact that I would no longer bring home a paycheck, and second, humbled myself enough to ask people not just to donate money once, but to support me on a monthly basis.  My long-term livelihood was going to come to depend on the financial support of individuals, families, and churches.  My financial security was going to become inextricably founded on the support provided by other people.  In essence, I was going to have to give up control of my finances in two ways: I was going to have to stop making money, and then ask people to give me money every month for God-knows-how-long (literally) so I can cover my expenses and little else. 
I felt my stomach turn over on my rice and green grams as I swallowed a flash of awareness in what would “have to be” if I were to become “one of the team.”  I did not want to ask people for more money.  I did not want to feel like I was indebted to anyone.  I did not, did not, did not not want to be able to control how much money I made.  I did not want to give up control like this.  I did not want to become like a character out of Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire and embarrassingly state, “I’ve always depended on the kindness of strangers…”  Most of all I did not want to “just have faith that God would provide” or “leap into the net yet to appear” or “let go and let God.”  Can’t do it.  Won’t do it.
Obviously now, on the other side of fear, and on the other side of the world, I’m doing that.  All of that.  It looks different than I thought it would.

Idealistic phrases bubble up to the surface of my mind after having been drowned in college seminars about my “financial future” or “marketability” and “transferrable skills”.  I rejected these types of phrases for a long time, thinking myself foolish or naïve.  These phrases were “follow your dreams” and “you be whatever you want when you grow up” and “do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life.”  Some of these phrases still leave my heart unsettled when read them, wondering if its too good to be true.  Most of me knows its not, since I’ve experienced it.
I remember what it was like when I worked as a nurse in an intensive care unit for a couple of years.  It was my “real job” I had as a “grown-up” where I punched a clock for twelve-and-a-half hours every night, usually.  It was a challenging job full of joys and tragedies.  It was as rewarding as it was demanding: spiritually, emotionally, mentally, and physically.  There were days I looked forward to it and days I didn’t; days I walked out of there feeling like I accomplished something and others when I wondered why I had even gotten out of bed to come in for the shift.  I know that on the days I simply didn’t feel like going to work that there were a few things that I would think of to help motivate me.  I would think of the families who would appreciate a loving and attentive nurse, of the satisfaction I’d experience knowing that I was comforting and caring for a patient who was suffering, of what I’d learn during the course of the night, of the fellowship and camaraderie our staff often enjoyed.  A few times when I didn’t feel like mentally entertaining any of that, I tried to think of the “real reason” I was going to work (it’s not the real reason, though it was an important one) which was that I would be getting paid.  I can tell you that this, I found, was the number one way to short-circuit any motivation I would have for the night, to drain me of my desire to do the job, and to usually put me in a worse mood.  I don’t understand it, but having the thought that what I was doing was for the money (which I considered generous and competitive for our area) seemed to rob me of any incentive to want to do it.  Coming to understand this, sometimes I’d pretend that I wasn’t working for money at all, and that this was a volunteer job that would surprise me with a check every couple of weeks.  This really helped me work better, to focus on the task at hand, and to be present in the art of what I was doing instead of realizing I was doing a “job”.  It was a lot easier for me to work out of the joy of my heart when I wasn’t thinking about money than when I was.
I want to say that I was never much of a “money person”.  At the same time, I’m not sure what a “money person” would look like, and yet, I know I have spent a lot of time fantasizing about the ownership of material goods that I solely wanted and never needed.  I’d consider myself to be spoiled materially since I feel like I “am the one percent” of the world, being an over-privileged Caucasian woman from Long Island who never wanted for much physically.  I’m no shopaholic either though, and have made it a point to save money, but at the same time I know that I know nothing personally about poverty.  I guess what I mean when I say that I am not a “money person” is that I’m grateful I just haven’t wanted too, too many things, and I’m happy to haven’t been motivated into a career because of money. 
Some people are surprised to hear that we don’t get “a salary” when we work at the children’s home.  I’m not, and I explain it like this: every single dollar (or shilling, the Kenyan currency) that passes through our home for absolutely anything, like food, building materials or medicine, has come out of the pocket of a donor.  Supporters donate money to our children’s home in general, or to sponsor specific children, or to sponsor specific missionaries.  Any money that would come from the children’s home to us as missionaries would mean a cost to the home, and therefore would amount to less capital for the children’s or the home’s needs over time.  This is why each missionary raises their own support on which they live while they work – this covers their expenses, and maybe even a “want” now and then too.  This isn’t pay for working; we don’t raise our own salaried support.  We each raise our own support, usually monthly, identifying the amount each of us needs individually and uniquely, and it differs from person to person. 
At my old job I could always try to pick up an extra shift or work overtime if I wanted some more money.  Living at the children’s home is different – work is a part of life in a way that feels natural and organic.  I never punch a clock; I don’t work a set number of hours or meet any kind of quota.  I can be “on call” twenty-four hours of the day and sometimes treat patients in my pajamas, without even having brushed my teeth, in the middle of the night.  I say, “I love you” to my bosses, coworkers, and patients alike, and I’m even than allowed to hug and kiss them too (well, I’d only choose to do that with some of them, like the babies and Mama Carla, Beth Ann, and Ray too if he’s lucky).  I feel like a mom sometimes, a big sister other times, but a nurse all the time.  Technically I’m like an employee, but really I feel a lot more like I’m just part of the family. And it sure is one big family… one big happy, human, sometimes chaotic, always resilient, Kenyan-American, Jesus-loving family.
Right now I’m not an active member of the family, really.  Of course Ray and I are still part of the family but since we aren’t able to be present because of these circumstances it’s consequential that the children don’t get to experience the fruits of our work there, nor does the rest of the team.  When family parts are strewn across distances, physical or emotional or mental or spiritual, there’s a strain and an imbalance created by the absence of the part.  It reminds me of what Paul talks about in chapter twelve of his first letter to the Corinthians – he talks about the body of Christ, of there being different parts of this body which serve different purposes, and of the interdependent nature of these parts.  I feel that imbalance here in my own life in America, and I know Ray does too.  I know the team over in Kenya experiences it too. 
I don’t know what the kids are feeling, if they sense any change at all since their needs are still being met, but I’d bet that a good handful of them really miss us and wonder if we’re ever coming home, or if we’re just like the rest of the wazungu (white people) who come over for a little while and then disappear back into their real lives.  These kids are blessed by visitors and get used to people coming by and going again.  It breaks my heart that they could think of me in that same category because that opposes my intention.  I recognize the deep need of the child’s mind and spirit to create predictable, stable, safe points of psycho-emotional attachment, and it is important to me that I allow God to use me to promote the ability to have that attachment and love.  I need that too, I guess.  Don’t we all, child or adult?  Yeah, the kids need their nurse, and I need them too.  I want to go home to those kids for so many reasons and my heart breaks out of missing their adorable chunky little brown faces and pure hearts.  The desire I have in my own heart to return to them is difficult to put into words and is much easier to put into actions.
What I am doing right now is one of the actions motivated by this desire to go home to those kids and work for their needs.  I’m trying to share with you in this entry what its like to live out of the calling, and in a minute I’m going to address you and ask you for help.  I don’t feel comfortable doing this but I know that sometimes we have to make sacrifices to help our family that requires us to set aside fear and embrace vulnerability at a time when we may already be feeling rather exposed.  I’ve made the decision to be so open and frank with you in a forum public to the whole world because I believe that if you’ve taken the time to read this far into this entry then you obviously have an interest in this mission, are likely already supporting them or me in one way or another, and that you care.  You might have read these entries in the past, or maybe just looked at photos, or maybe not.  You might have heard me rant for hours about the Kenyan babies.  Maybe you were at In Step yourself and have a heart for the place.  Maybe you’ve never heard of any of this before and are just a friend or a family member who is trying to understand what and why I’m doing what I’m doing.  Whyever, no matter.
I’m just going to tell you the facts and not sugar coat this.  The immigration issues with the Kenyan government have been resolved for me and I will be allowed to re-enter the country legally.  I’ve decided I’m going to be the nurse at In Step indefinitely.  I can’t go back until I have raised enough support, in the form of monthly sponsorships.  I’m trying to connect with people, groups, or churches, who are interested in supporting a missionary.  You might be one of those people, or you might know one of those groups. You can make a big difference in the lives of these children by helping me get back there and stay there.  If you are one of the people, groups, or churches who feels like this mission is something you’d like to get involved with and support then I want to make sure I give you all the information you need to do that.  I am asking you to consider making a small monthly donation to this mission so I can now resume this work in Kenya.
I know you have, or someone in your family has, worked hard for the money you make decisions about so that you can take care of the people you love.  I’ve felt conflicted about “why it has to be this way” that I have to ask other people to support me so I can take care of the people I consider to part of a family that God has called me to be a part of.  I want to invite you to contribute to a cause that is so close to my heart that it has literally become my life.  Out of all the things I know I could be doing, this is what I choose with all my heart, all my soul, all my mind, and all my strength. 
Your monthly donation sends me to Kenya and keeps me there, but what happens on that journey is what matters.  Let me tell you what your monthly sponsorship does. 
Every single cent of your donation goes straight to this cause of my work, and allows children to have their nurse back.   
Your monthly sponsorship allows these kids to have another person who lives at the home who loves them, who cares for them, and who works for their needs. 
Your monthly sponsorship provides the children with prompt care virtually any time of the day, to have their own personal set of eyes and hands assessing them and treating them when they are the most sick. 
Your monthly sponsorship blesses the other missionaries, who have given [up] their lives to fulfill God’s calling in roles they play caring for the children, to receive attentive, focused, and timely medical care in the comfort of their own home so their work can continue as uninterrupted as possible. 
Your monthly sponsorship gives the Kenyan staff of the home with the opportunity to receive health information, medicine, and treatment for injuries on site, thereby preventing losses of productivity and maintaining a healthy work environment. 
Your monthly sponsorship will eventually make it possible for the completed In Step Clinic to open and become the new place of practice for a local Kenyan doctor, then enriching healthcare support for the children and staff, as well as for the communities surrounding the home.
Your monthly sponsorship helps me devise and implement home-wide health directives that promote wellness and prevent disease.
Your monthly sponsorship make sure that I myself am cared for with food, clothing, medicine, and insurance; it makes it possible for me to purchase phone time and data bandwidth to stay connected to friends and family, to recent medical literature, and to the internet otherwise; it covers my travel and furlough expenses; it preserves prudently reserved discretionary funds in case of emergency.
Your monthly sponsorship allows a nurse to share her heart, filled with love of God in Jesus, and her mind, filled with knowledge and experience from an esteemed university and hospital-system, in a mission to care for a large number of orphaned children in a safe, nurturing, high-quality children’s home.

            I think that covers it.  And so my mind wanders again.
Those early evenings in Kenya warmed my heart, reflecting on days where the smallest things we did for the kids meant the most in the long-term.  We sat and rested in fellowship at the end of the hard day knowing that although we may once have had aspirations to do great things to change the world, that the little things we did in love that day were the ones that left our children, our fellows, ourselves, and hopefully our God with the most satisfaction.  In Kenya with our babies I realized that a little always went a long way: a little extra love, a hug held for a few seconds longer, a smile into their eyes when I felt like I was too tired to give one, an extra sticker when the syringe plunger got stuck and I had to repeat their injection, a word of encouragement to a downcast spirit.  A little bit always went a long way.  Here in the United States I find that unfortunately a little bit usually goes a little way, and I want to give you the opportunity to make a little big go a really, really long way, across time and distance, instilling love and speaking life over a very special group of precious babies and diligent people.
For more information on how to make a little bit go a long way, and partner with me in supporting my mission and sending me back to Kenya, follow the instructions below.  If you have questions for me personally, would like to speak with me, or have me present this mission to you or a group you know in person, please contact me by email at jfracassa@gmail.com.  For as little as $10 a month you can send me back to work, and change the lives of more than one-hundred-and-eighty men, women, and children. 

                                                Thank you.








How to Become a Monthly Sponsor


Online
To make a tax-deductible donation, go to https://connect.egiving.com/where-most-needed120/rehema-ministries and fill out the form.  
Make sure to select a recurring frequency if you want to be a sponsor.
The drop-down menu can be left at its default setting of 
Important: In the "comment" and/or "note" box please type "Missionary Account JF"


Check by mail:
To make a tax-deductible donation, mail checks to:
            Rehema Ministries
            Attn: Joyce Panzero
            1117 3rd Street
            Anacortes, WA 98221
Important: Include in the memo line “Missionary Acct JF”.
If planning to donate monthly, please indicate "sponsorship" in memo.

Monday, September 30, 2013

photos

As I'm actively fundraising for the long-term, some people have asked for an easy way to see all my photos at once.  Here's one round of a number of them.  There are still more on the other entries, but here's a quick way to get a bunch at once.

The veranda at mealtime

Baby Chris when he arrived, age six months

In Step Academy, kindergarten class

Clinic at In Step - still under construction in June 2013

High-chair babies at mealtime

Japther

the acacia tree at the center of the compound

Ayub, age seven months here, not feeling too hot!

Chris, shortly after he arrived in June 2013 - still very underweight and malnourished

during a dressing change of Tracy's head - healing from scalp reconstruction surgery is going well

some of the older kids waiting for lunch

"until lunch comes, i think my fingers will do nicely!"

Baby Elizabeth, age sixteen months in June 2013

Babies Ray and Nate

Baby Elizabeth

Baby Chris starting to put on some weight a few weeks after coming to In Step



I'm holding Austin, who wasn't feeling well one day, here in the waiting area at the Sibanga clinic

James

Dorcas, age 2

the acacia tree in the field, with the farmland and cow area in the background

what a very light med-pass looks like... usually the plate is full!

Across our maize field and lawn

Tots gathering around outside

Preschoolers in Madam Beth Ann's class

Kids playing in the afternoon

Chris continued to put on weight, but needed a visit to the clinic for malaria

Chris got hungry while we waited for the blood test results

This is Brighton on my back - sometimes it was just easier to get work done with a baby keeping me company

Preschoolers drinking porridge with spinach juice (their midmorning snack - they like it!)

kids waiting for their morning snack

our laundry ladies do a TON of wash each day - all of it by hand!

I took a photo with Edith and Peris - they really get a kick out of seeing themselves in the camera

They sure are happy!

Brighton wasn't feeling well on this day and had a bit of a runny nose too.

Me with Brighton and Elizabeth, waiting to go to the clinic
Storm in the distance

Baby Lavender, July 2013

She was so tiny when we got her! She didn't eat well and had been sick for the whole two months of her life already.

Chris continued to eat like it was his job, and put on weight nicely

God really has a flair for evening artwork.


Edith with Baby Adam

The kids love to pose for pictures. 

Cynthia and I waited for lab results at the clinic.

In the afternoons during rainy season dark clouds come in and open up the sky like a faucet.

flowers on the compound

This is the x-ray lab at a local outpatient clinic - one of our boys (in the corner) needed a belly x-ray and Ray and I took him here on a friday afternoon. 
Me and Ray with the 12 older boys
Got baby Chris to smile!
This was the day we got Lavendar - I was giving her a first look once-over
Rachele took this of Brighton and me.  He was sick this day and had a high fever.

The view driving through town on a friday evening


Beverly drinking juice (with an ice cream mustache) at the happy birthday celebration


Rachele with Japther

Abraham at happy birthday sticker time

The kids doing sidewalk chalk and stickers at happy birthday

the kids gathered around when i took a photo of a heart someone drew...

and this one too!

these kids love to pose for photos!

Joy (she lives up to her name) and Ronnie

Brighton was feeling better, and got stickered all over!

Eliza, Veronica and Benny taking a break from chores with the cows to pose.

Rachele with Victor, 4 days old here, when we picked him up at the children's office

Man, he's sweet!

Baby Victor again

Tracey needed her head dressing redone (for her scalp reconstruction surgery)... Ray wanted to help her feel more in-community so he put on a dressing-cover hat too!

We all remark on how well Chris has put on weight.

There is beauty seen from every corner of the compound

Another beautiful morning

Baby Adam loves to snuggle, and climb on me sometimes

Poor Baby Nate was sick this day - it took us a while to rock him to sleep.

Abraham, the charmer :)

He's my little man!

I don't think I was feeling too well this day... but it shows how with a baby strapped to your back (kenyan style) it's easier to get through a day of work


Michelle, my sweet little princess

Today was Philip's turn to be sick - we're waiting at the clinic

All it took was a day or two of malaria shots for that smile to come back!

Tracy feels so pretty with her lovely dress and Canada sticker on her new head dressing.