“There comes a time when the world gets quiet and the only thing left is the sound of your own heart… so you’d better learn the sound of it. Otherwise, you’ll never understand what it’s saying.”
- Sarah Dessen
So
much can happen in seven days, I find, after another week here on the
compound. Really, so much happens in
even one day, or even one hour. Time
flies by most of the time, but at other times it stands totally still. The clock here operates by its own rhythm and
tempo. Hours fly by during parts of the
day and it’s all I can do to just barely catch up. Then in other moments I wonder if the minute
hand of my reality has become stuck.
Maybe I should start wearing a watch.
This
week seemed the busiest yet, with a handful of kids having fresh bouts of
malaria, two of the other five missionary staff being acutely ill, one new
baby, and the arrival of delightful eight-member mission team from Canada. The
past seven days have not been exempt from the children’s apparent quota of cuts, scrapes, and other various boo-boos; they also had several
exciting adventures of the gastrointestinal variety, and one child even bit
three others (one of whom suffered a superficial near-degloving of his thumb). We
made trips to the local clinic in Sibanga every day (as usual) to see the local
doctor and nurse practitioner, and they continue to teach me
“how-its-done”. It seems like someone is
always in need of another shindani (injection)
or has discovered another spot of shilingi
(ringworm). Most of the time when I
am in the middle of something, another issue comes to light that requires
tending. I’ve discovered another unique
feature of time here that has taught me its lesson: the word “later” has little
meaning; I use the word sincerely, but unless it is concretely scheduled and
its completion is practically chased-down, it doesn’t get done. “Now” seems to be the only time that anything
ever gets done. It’s in those “nows”
that time skips a few ticks and I can focus on what’s right in front of me.
Out
of the many things that happen here regularly, “silence” continues to not be
one of them… at least not on my clock. This
is what I expected, pretty much, but for someone who likes her “quiet time”, it
will continue to take some getting-used-to.
Life, especially life with children, seems to run a course of its own
that is unpredictable and unscheduled.
As much as the amount of work I have to do seems to have increased
steadily, it has actually become less of a struggle; my acceptance of things
exactly as they are in the moment seems to be directly proportional to the
resolution of the day’s challenges. The
more I “go-with-the-flow”, however unexpected or inconvenient that flow may
turn or gush, the easier the task is to complete.
Instead
of me asking the first thought that runs through my head, being awakened at
three o’clock in the morning by one of the aunties, “What do you mean that
child is seizing? She is on medication for her seizures. This shouldn’t be happening,” I just get my
keys and say, “I’ll be right there.”
Sometimes though, once I “get there”, it is not so simple to sort out a
solution. It’s those minutes of silence
that can seem like eternities. When I’m
kneeling on the floor, over the crib of a six-year-old girl who chronically unable
to walk or speak, watching her body twitch and squirm in a suspiciously
epileptic manner, I hear it: silence. “Now,
really? This is the time I need to know
what to do.” It’s in those first few
moments when I realize silence is happening that I wish my mind would un-button
its lips and “dish”.
Its what’s been happening next,
lately, that’s caught my attention this week.
In between the ticks of the clock, my mind hushed like a child being
asked why she stole a cookie from the jar, there’s another voice that steps
forward to answer the question before my eyes.
It affords me a moment to consider the situation, and speaks softly, directing
my attention toward the next task. Its
gentleness calms me and reminds me that I’ll never have all the answers, and
that I only need address the most urgent feature of the most urgent problem,
first. That night, I was grateful to
recognize that voice and “follow its directions” to deal with the problem, but
after-the-fact was disturbed to remember that this was not the first instance, especially
this week, of “hearing” that voice.
There there had been a few other times when I had not listened to what
it “told” me.
A few mornings before the
middle-of-the-night seizure episode, I noticed this particular girl, sloppily
eating her breakfast, and her facial expression seemed slightly, but
uncharacteristically, less animated. A
few times I noticed her putting her fingers to her ears (like you do when it’s
too loud) – which is something I had seen her do before, and something I often
feel like doing when I am in the veranda after meal-time when the children are
just starting to enjoy their post-meal spikes in blood sugar. I stopped myself, and leaned over to “talk”
with her (she follows commands but doesn’t respond verbally; she makes
eye-contact and has appropriate facial expressions) and see what I could
observe in her. After a few moments my
mind says, “Julia, you’re overreacting.
She’s fine. It’s loud in here and
she’s sensitive. Quit being a
hypochondriac for her.” But deeper
within, a clear and quiet voice within me speaks up, “Something’s not
right. She’s not feeling well. She’s sick. I wonder if she has malaria.” I asked the aunties how she had been eating,
if there had been any changes in her behavior, and they confirmed that she had
been “just fine” with “no problems”.
Still, I stood a moment looking at her, unable to reconcile the
unsettled feeling below my mind’s surface.
I still had a plate-full of meds to give, and I walked away. This happened three days in a row – my
clinical mind dismissing my hypervigilance, while the “other voice” told me
with increasing urgency that something was the matter.
Okay, I know how this might
sound. “Great, Julia’s really lost it
this time, she’s flown off to Africa and is hearing voices at that
orphanage. Time for a psych consult.” Really, though, I wonder if you are all so
unfamiliar with the phenomenon I’m talking about. I’m not exactly “hearing voices”– it’s more
like experiencing thoughts that are on different levels of my conscious
awareness. It’s the uncomfortable and
mysterious experience of knowing that I’m generating two different responses,
both seeming to be correct, to one situation.
It’s the gap in which my mind and my heart disagree.
Two
nights before the seizure episode, an auntie came to me and said, “What’s going
on with _____?” She spoke the name of the child about whom I had been
concerned. I said, “I believe she is
sick, but don’t know why, and everyone has said she isn’t. What’s wrong?” She then told me how she had witnessed her
having a seizure the day prior, and we found that there had been a simple and
innocent miscommunication in me getting the message about it. That night we were able to get her some
medicine to help her, and her condition improved. But still, I wondered, on some level if we
were doing all we could to help her.
Fast-forward to three-a.m. a couple of nights later, as I am dealing
with her seizure, and I am wondering how long it will take me to listen to what
I believe, rather than what I see.
I’ve heard the “other voice” called
many things and described in many ways with which I identify: intuition; belly-voice; God-consciousness. I’ve been instructed in many ways to listen
to this message within me, with “trust your guts,” and “to thine own self be
true.” Today, though, there’s one phrase
that has surfaced within me as a result of this experience that I hold on to.
Listen to your heart.
Yesterday I was indulging in my
late-morning/early-afternoon routine, when the kids are outside and the sound
coming from the veranda in the main house is not so riotous, of reading. Usually I’m checking out a medical article,
trying to school myself in useful topics like malaria, or malnutrition. The clock got slow and I realized I had an
hour before the clinic run – I didn’t hear anyone crying (no anticipated
injuries for the next few minutes) and I knew it was around the babies’
naptime. I walked out to the veranda,
feeling the heat radiating down from the tin-roof ceiling. I saw the little
angels, some sprawled out on the mattress, sucking their fingers, asleep. A few of them were awake, tottling around
after each other, or fumbling with a toy.
I saw one of the boys – about sixteen-months old – and he sat up off the
edge of the mattress and walked over to me, arms stretched up. I knelt down as he was clumsily walking over
to me and he pretty much threw his little self into my arms. (This one loves to do that. It’s kind of our thing.) I turn to the aunties and say, “I’m stealing
this one for a little.” They’re used to that.
Something wasn’t right about
him. That voice again. “He’s not feeling well, something’s
wrong.” We played for a while and I
tried to get him to nap. He felt a
little bit warm in the head, but this is not uncommon for the kids especially
around midday – if you feel everyone’s forehead around lunchtime, you’d swear
they all have fevers, but their measurable temperatures are normal – their skin
just throws off excess heat. I wanted to
justify the gut feeling, and I checked his temperature. 99.5 F.
Not even a fever. Still, I had
enough justification to bring him to the clinic, I believed. My mind said, “Julia, he is just getting over
a bout of malaria (for which he was effectively medicated) and is probably just
getting back into the swing of things.
He doesn’t even have a fever and you’re just trying to justify an emotional
response to this baby. Here you are,
overreacting.” But that other voice, the
one that spoke from a deeper level and nudged me about the girl who ended up
seizing, was what I chose to listen to this time.
We took three kids to the clinic
that afternoon to be tested for malaria – two older girls and the baby. Out of the three, this little boy had the
fewest symptoms – the others had headache, GI complaints, exhaustion: much more
consistent with malaria than what my little man showed. Out of the three, who was the only one with
malaria?
Yep.
The
wee man.
Glad I listened this time.
The other morning, drinking tea, I
was talking to one of the other five missionaries, and there was just something
off about him to me. I asked him if he was sick. He denied it.
The next day I come back from a trip into town (hoo boy, what an
adventure THAT was) to find him crumpled up in a ball in the medical room,
having vomited, with a temperature of 101.
A visitor had complained to me of a slight headache that then went away,
and mentioned she was feeling better, but still, my guts clearly said that
time, “She has malaria.” Unfortunately I
wasn’t surprised when I heard the poor dear vomiting later after dinner,
confirming what my guts had told me.
So, what? Do I think that I have
some special ability to magically know which kids are sick and which aren’t
before they have any outward signs?
Negative. Each one of us is
subjected to a barrage of information at all times, internal and external. We have each learned far more than we can
ever realize, and I believe the majority of that learning is
sub-conscious. Maybe part of me is
recognizing patterns in their mannerisms that indicate to me, on a level below
my realization, that they’re sick. Maybe
it’s “nurse’s intuition”, a likely subset of “mother’s intuition.” Maybe God is just nudging this girl, with her
ear turned everyday to His instructions, however distracted she may be. Maybe it’s something far more psychologically-underpinned. Maybe it’s something far more magical. I don’t have to figure it out. What I
do have to do is learn from this,
whatever this is.
The way I’ve described this
phenomenon makes it seem so cut-and-dry; a manner of simplifying of a confusing
internal process. I’ll tell you that
this is not what usually happens. On a
daily basis I go through a thousand lines of internal dialogue, many of which build
upon unresolved questions or ongoing debates.
I ask myself what I think is logical versus what I believe is correct;
what I think is appropriate versus what I believe is loving; what I think is
likely versus what I believe is true; what I think is reasonable versus what I
believe is right; what I think is known versus what I believe is real. Most of
the time, I’ve made decisions throughout the day with my head and my heart
needn’t speak about them. But this work –
which is more a life than a job – requires both, in a proportion which
fluctuates as inconsistently as the minute-hand seems to.
And
then there are those matters about which no decisions can be made, over which
the heart demonstrates day after day that it has complete reign, and yet no
control whatsoever.
This place, these children, these
people – they speak to my heart and my heart speaks back. I recognize God’s amazing power with my mind,
which I must use on a daily basis to sort through the many different medically
technical issues that regularly arise.
All the while through the day, I can focus on the Loving Presence I feel
in my heart. The Lord’s guidance does
not seem to be exclusive to either faculty.
It
is only in God that I find the gap between the heart and the mind can be
closed. I find it mended together, woven
expertly. He is stitching up the frayed
ends in myself, sewing together who I am everyday. It is in this – His closure – that I find the truest opening of my mind, and the most willing opening of my heart. Perhaps
this gap – existing in my confusion, corrected by His grace – can be
simultaneously described by the name of the third faculty, unmentioned as of
yet in today’s discussion... the spirit.
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| Baby Lavendar |
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| Sunrise |
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| our newest baby, Lavendar |
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| Evening |
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| Brighton |
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| bringing kids to the clinic |
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| sunset over the compound |








Thank you for sharing your heart here. You are doing an amazing job!
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