Friday, September 4, 2020

Life continues


 August 2020

Life continues

As we wade deeper into 2020 and the unprecedented changes that have ensued following the Coronavirus, we are seeing more of what some of the long term effects may be, specifically in developing nations. As the nation slowly begins lifting many restrictions, the lasting effects in Guatemala are hunger and malnutrition skyrocketing, unemployment, and the collapse of hospital system.  Some time back, overloaded hospitals said that if you were injured or sick, you were on your own.  Many thousands are desperate for food.  Everyone is hurting in some way or another.  


Families are walking from a few towns over for the
chance to recieve some rice, beans, and powdered milk.  


Hogar Rosalinda 

(Nutrition Training Center)


Lockdowns and travel restrictions have presented a challenge.  Although malnutrition is on the rise, Hogar Rosalinda has not had an influx of participants.  Many families are working very hard to provide for their families.  I have been using this time to help in other areas of the ministry including the homes, and distributing food in hard hit areas.  (Although truthfully, nearly all areas are becoming hard hit areas).  I have also begun experimenting in coordination with our directors of sustainability in ways to grow food in small, urbanized areas such as rooftop gardening vegetables and herbs.  Hopefully with more input, better direction can go to help families learn the best things to plant in their homes to help sustain their families.  


Big news for this side of the ministry came with the addition of half an acre of land on which the Tuckers can begin efforts toward long term self sustainability for the ministry, and to teach families.  Their lives are now full with planning and utilizing this new land and preparing for the future.  




Hogar de la Esperanza homes


The homes continue to provide quality and love filled care to the children we get to hold.  Hearings have been suspended for a few months now, and all outside visitors are restricted.  Our caregivings staff is asked to use caution when outside the homes.  We have seen God’s protection over the kids, and none have become sick with COVID-19.  Some of our staff have been positive, and others have lost family from the virus. For the kids however, life remains full of love.  One favorite for the family, and the kids is watching baseball.  Life may be different now, but God is still good, and life goes on.  


The adult home is up and running!  On July 6, we helped move our olders into their new home without head nanny Luisa.  Luisa and her family had the passion to continue caring for our new young adults as they turn 18 and are required to move out of the childrens’ homes.  We don’t want to lose them into a system that does not track or look out for adults with special needs, so we were naturally thrilled when Luisa, an already loved member of our team, stepped up into the role of heading this home.  The olders are thriving with her, and continue to learn about Jesus while receiving top quality care.  Checha, Alejandra, Brayan, and Yenni were the first to move, and within a week, Walter also will celebrate his 18th birthday and join them.  


The kids love watching
the game with us


Helping with Supper

Video calling friends in the ministry

Read more about the different homes here:

Fulp home: Daryl Fulp:  http://hopeforhome.blogspot.com/ 

Wanda Fulp: http://wandafulp.blogspot.com/ 

Blessing Angle, home intern:https://blessingjessica01.wixsite.com/website

Chapin home: Carissa Chapin:  http://carissachapin.blogspot.com/ 

Alvarez home: on facebook at @light2guate

Our Kids

Walter

Walter is about to celebrate his 18th birthday!  He has Cerebral Palsy, and is pretty tight and twisted.  Walter does not see very well, but he always seems to know when something funny is happening and laughs hysterically.  Walter seems to love everything about life and squeals with laughter whenever he hears music, laughter, other children running or playing, or whenever things get noisy.  Walter loves being rough-housed with and when you spin him a few times before setting him in bed.  The only thing he does not seem to enjoy is therapy!  The Fulp home will miss him as his joyful disposition joins the other olders with Luisa next week.  We praise God that the courts have allowed him to stay in our homes.  




Ruavis

Ruavis also celebrated a birthday recently.  He is now 7 years old!  Ruavis has Microcephaly and Cerebral Palsy.  He has been with the fulps longer than I have and arrived as a chunky baby.  He is blind and does not interact very much, but he always loves to be held.  Recently Ruavis has been declining in health and experiencing more painful spasms and seizures.  At times he screams in pain and there is little we can do.  We know his time with us is limited.  Ruavis loves cuddle time, although at times the tightness of his muscle spasms are intense enough to give bruises to whoever holds him.  We used to be able to coax out some deep belly laughs, but now about the only way to catch a smile is during a seizure.  Please pray for peace and comfort for this little man.  



Sleeping is about the only time
his muscles are not tense

Happy Birthday!  
Sadly smile is during a seizure.

Snuggles always help bad days

El centro de partos el pozo 

(Birthing Center)


El Centro de partos el pozo also has some changes in the middle of a changing world.  Director Stephany is getting married in less than two weeks and will be moving to a remote area in Canilla with her husband.  Please pray that God will continue to bless them and grow them as they begin the next chapter of their lives together.  Jow Woodie will be continuing on at the birthing center to train local women to give competent and loving care during pregnancy. Each day they build relationships with the women in this community, and their presence shares the love of Jesus with every woman who walks through those doors!   



Moms and babies are always welcome
back for well baby checkups



To learn more about el Centro de Partos el Pozo, follow Stephanie Konrad, at: https://stephaniedkonrad.wordpress.com/ 

Also check out the Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/CentroDePartosElPozoEscuintlaGuatemala 


Aliento feeding program

Aliento continues to serve the community of Florido Aceituno during the pandemic.  They have had to adapt some things like spending only the minimum time in the community, changing cloths after visiting, reducing the number of people who go each day.  Although they have doubled the soup they take each day, they still run out after only 20-30 minutes.  Director Taryn underwent a surgery on her ankle, so her team continues in her place during her recuperation.  


Buying veggitables locally brings
much needed income to the town



Learn more about Aliento by following the Director, Taryn, at https://tarynfulp.blogspot.com/ 

You may also want to check out their instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/aliento_37.56/?hl=en 

Rural village ministry

The rural village team continues to serve others.  They still visit their families each month, build relationships, and encourage families with the hope only found in Jesus. With the increase in need, they also have had to step it into high gear and much food is distributed.  In addition, food distributions can provide food to remote communities to the most desperate.  These days work in conjunction with local leaders to determine the families with the greatest need.  Each distribution, local leaders try to keep social distancing, and our team has the opportunity to share the love of Christ before beginning.  It is a big deal here in Guatemala that no government or specific church receives credit for bringing food, but God alone receives the glory.  It is a powerful reminder to each family that God sees their need.    


For those following closely on facebook, you may have seen food distributions slowing somewhat.  This is because the emergency response to this need has continued for months unabated now.  Essential work in other areas of the ministry can no longer be pushed off, and the problem of hunger is now understood to be a very long term problem lasting beyond the restrictions that contributed to it.    To be able to sustain aid in this form, a more long term approach has been adopted.  


This applies at home too.  We had to set a number limit on how much food we give out in out town each month because word spread that we would give food.  The word spread fast.  Our town is hurting, but has far more resources than places farther out.  People are hurting here, but not yet dying as in more remote areas.  Within 3 days, 70 people had come to the door to receive a number to get food later this month.  Please imagine 70 people asking you for food in just 3 days.  Now understand that this doesn’t stop when the numbered slips are gone.  


As word spreads, more people come. This week, the abount of numbers doubled and they were gone in one morning. 150 numbers gone in hours.


Imagine waiting in long lines
in the sun for a little food


Dick and his team leading prayer with families

To learn more, you can check out Dick Rutgers at http://blog.dickrutgers.com/ 

Or follow Daryl Fulp, Dick Rutgers, or Emanuel Alvarez on facebook.  

Personal

Life is overwhelming.  I don’t know how many times I have spoken or written those words in the last few months.  Restrictions are slowly lifting here, so for the first time in months we are allowed to be out after dark since curfew was pushed back to 9pm!  Many aspects of life will be a long time to return to normal.  


Perhaps the biggest thing we face here is very personal.  The needs are so many and the resources so few.  Every conversation leads to how a family is severely struggling, or someone died due to hospital negligence and lack of resources.  There is a great heaviness that comes with this.  


In US hospitals we talked about caregiver role strain- the idea that the family member caring for a sick relative has their own very real struggle holding the weight of giving medical care for another person as day after day they give their all to help their loved one, only to watch them slip away a little more each day.  I see this here.  The more you want to help others, the more you are exposed to situations in which you cannot help enough or at all.  It’s a crushing weight to leave for your house and be stopped by another elderly woman explaining another heartbreaking need, and to know that in that moment you can do nothing.  It’s an impossible weight when the doorbell rings over and over, but you have already given out all you can right now so you have to say I’m sorry over and over and over with tears in your eyes.  


Life is overwhelming, but God is still good!


I don’t say this flippantly.  These words are very full.  God is still good and He is still hope.  I can’t give more food to people who are asking me right now.  But I listen to their situation.  I cry often for them, or with them.  I apologize and say with intent that I will pray for them.  Then I do.  I pray for them with tears.  Jesus Christ is the only hope in a world so heavy.  In him there is great joy even when the weight presses down.  Our God is a God who sees.  


Prayer

Please pray for the hungry.  Give thanks to God if you have food today, and remember to pray for those who don’t.  Never again will I take food for granted.  

***If you would like a list of specific names to pray for, I have begun praying for individuals who I talk to by first name.  There are so many names.***


Pray more so that God will use these times to turn the hearts of His people back to Him.  


Pray earnestly for the Hope of Jesus Christ to be present in the livers of all who are hurting.  



To learn about Hope for home in Liberia, follow: 

Don Riley at http://www.liberiacalls.blogspot.com/ 

Susan Mclay at https://www.instagram.com/suzieinliberia/?hl=en 


To learn more about the ministry as a whole, check out https://hopeforhome.org/ 

Director’s blog: http://hopeforhome.blogspot.com/ 



Sunday, May 24, 2020

The new normal





May 2020

The new normal

Amidst frequent life altering changes from the coronavirus and it’s side effects, life is change.  The new normal here in Guatemala is unpredictable change, and unchanging desperation.  There are almost daily changes to what is allowed or restricted.  It is challenging to live through these as some greatly affect life and ministry, but we have to remember that what is inconvenient to us is devastating to so much of the world.  As christians let’s not be the ones pointing fingers and complaining, and start loving as the church ought to shine like stars in these dark times.  Let’s share the hope of Jesus that the world may hear.  

Tiny masks are pretty cute, and required by law whenever
out of your residence.  That doesn't keep away Alison's joy!

Hogar Rosalinda 

(Nutrition Training Center)

Painting
We have made it to our new house!  In the middle of curfews, social distancing, and lockdowns this was a bit of a challenge, but God is good, and we are home.  This first week at the new home we expected 2 mothers to come.  One mother came from a very remote area with her two children.  Her background was sad, and we looked forward to getting to know her better.  Unfortunately the changes of leaving her remote area, traveling 5 hours by car (a new experience), and arriving in a town that is busier than her old one, she decided to return to her hometown.  This was an emotional two days, but her children are actually quite healthy and not undernourished at all.  Please pray for God to continue to bring healing to her heart through the hands of the ministry in her local area. 

Moving day
The other mother we expected lives in the town where Taryn has her feeding program.  For about 2 months now he has been in limbo.  We would decide he should come, then he would do a little better, and his mom would decide to stay home and see.  Then he would drop weight or go to the hospital.  He would almost leave the hospital, then take a turn for the worse.  He lost a lot of weight in the hospital.  That is, until he was able to receive the ministry formula we had been providing while in the hospital.  Immediately he began to gain weight, and in just a few days, he was discharged and had gained enough weight that he did not even look like the same child!  Praise God!!  He is out of danger now, and they have chosen to remain in their community for the time being.    

Hogar de la Esperanza homes


Ready for school with Anny
The three group homes remain as isolated as possible under the circumstances.  There are now positive cases in our town, and this is a close community.  Restrictions are pretty severe.  As I type this, we are in the middle of a full weekend lock-in from 5pm Friday to 5am Monday.  This is in an effort to track cases during the week- no small feet in crowded communities.  Restrictions on what stores can open, when, and how many people are allowed inside make it extremely difficult to stock the homes and care for so many.  Despite papers stating that homes are exempt from some of these restrictions, at the store level, these exemptions are rarely honored.  For example, one store had a 3 of each item limit, and allowed the home to buy 5 items.  But 5 bags of spaghetti is not enough noodles for one full meal at the main home. 

Further challenges include getting our staff here and home with curfews inplace.  By law they can travel to and from work because care for the kids is essential, but in reality many local police may not know what to do with the paperwork presented at checkpoints. 


Ale's 18th birthday
On a positive note, in 2 months, Hope for Home will be opening our first adult home for our children who turn 18 and can no longer live on site with the children.  We are not willing to let them take their chances in the system and end up who knows where, so when our head nanny approached with the desire to take them in, but had no means to do so, we began praying.  Now we have a house in preparation, and are working to furnish it.  In a few months 5 of the Fulp home will be 18 or over and will be moving up the street.  We are praising God that he is providing for these who are our family to remain in our town.  





Read more about the different homes here:
Fulp home: Daryl Fulp:  http://hopeforhome.blogspot.com/ 
Chapin home: Carissa Chapin:  http://carissachapin.blogspot.com/ 
Alvarez home: on facebook at @light2guate

Our Kids

Checha

Checha is the oldest in the homes.  He celebrated his 18th birthday with us, and was mentally competent to choose for himself at the courts to remain in the Fulps home, but move out of the boy’s room.  He is now 20, and has grown into such a gentleman.  He is one of the kindest people I know, and a real friend.  Checha loves hanging out with the olders at night, and spends hours coloring intricate pages he sells for a few Q.  Checha loves Jesus, and he shows it in how much he loves and tries to care for the little ones despite his CP.  
Checha playing iwth the girls
Checha loves it when we ask
him to help sooth a fussy little one

Anali 

Anali is a beautiful little girl.  She lives in the Alvarez home and arrived almost  a year ago.  Anali is 3 years and has hydrocephalus.  She is a forever baby-what I like to call the precious little ones who will  forever need full care, and are forever cute and cuddly!  The Alvarez family love to snuggle with her and enjoy her pouty lips.  They also love her way of communicating without noises or words.  Anali is a treasured gift and brings joy to the Alvarezes as they love her with the love of Jesus.  

El centro de partos el pozo 

(Birthing Center)

With lockdowns and isolations, Stephany and Joy have continued to love and serve their expecting mothers, while taking strong steps in protecting themselves and their patients.  Hospitals are less predictable now, and have turned away some mothers in need of help, so closing such a necessary resource is not an option.  They now work in Escuintla’s heat under masks and face shields using social distancing.  There have been a few quarantine babies born after curfew, but thanks to the clinic, mothers had somewhere to go.  Another victory- The ladies have been training a local woman named Luki to work with them as a midwife.  She was an astute learner, and recently completed her training.  The ladies are doing great work in the name of Jesus.  

Image may contain: one or more people, people sleeping and close-up
 Luki got to catch this little guy 
Image may contain: 1 person, food and indoor
Celebrating Luki's competing her final exam


To learn more about el Centro de Partos el Pozo, follow Stephanie Konrad, at: https://stephaniedkonrad.wordpress.com/ 

Aliento feeding program

Taryn and her team have continued to serve the Aceituno community even under the restrictions.  There have been many times when the rapidly changing restrictions altered their plans and they were unable obtain the vegetables or reach the town.  Sadly, the team must now operate under social distancing restrictions.  They can no longer hug the children that they love, and can only go for the minimum time it takes to fill each family's container for them to take home to eat.  It is hot work with masks, gloves, and extra layers of clothes to shed once leaving the town.  Taryn shared recently the encouragement of a few girls who have chosen to work on memorizing scripture since they could not go to school in this crisis.  

Image may contain: 1 person, sitting, close-up and outdoor
Jeff on April 3
Image may contain: 1 person, standing, outdoor and close-up
Jeff on May 11

Learn more about Aliento by following the Director, Taryn, at https://tarynfulp.blogspot.com/ 

Rural village ministry

The rural village ministry team has been busier than ever.  In addition to continuing to drop off supplies for the families they already have been visiting, they are now working to try and help combat the hunger crisis caused by all the shut downs.  Malnutrition rates have tripled in this already struggling nation.  More than 25 tons of food have entered our bodega, been sorted into family sized portions, and distributed to families in need in communities near and far.  The hard part is, as many as receive food, thousands more are hungry.  As cases are found in healthcare workers, some hospitals have shut down, and sent home sick or injured patients.  White flags signal that a family is desperate for food- but the flags are inumerable.  It is hard not to be discouraged by all the need and hurt.  
 Image may contain: one or more people Image may contain: one or more people, people standing, hat and outdoor

The only hope is in Jesus Christ, and it is in his name that food is given.  So many churches or local governments here try to take credit for and resources given out, but with every bag of food given, we emphasize again and again that it is not from a ministry, or a specific church, but that God has seen their need, and provided food for them through his servants, in his name.  This should be a time of unity in the hope of Jesus.  In social media let the voice of the church across nations be hope in Jesus, not complaints about minor inconveniences or restrictions.  So much of the church has stepped up and given help to buy food.  Let that be the image that the world sees of the church-- hope, love and words of life.  '



To learn more, you can check out Dick Rutgers at http://blog.dickrutgers.com/ 
Or follow Daryl Fulp, Dick Rutgers, or Emanuel Alvarez on facebook.  

Personal

I have gotten to bounce around various roles in the ministry to help where help is needed while Hogar Rosalinda is empty, and gathering for nutrition classes is prohibited.  Sometimes this is direct care for the kids in the homes, assisting Taryn with tracking kids in her formula program, helping with some of the food distributions, and so many food packing parties. It is an honor to get to help in this work.   Adoption paperwork is on hold since I can’t collect everything or get legal translations or copies.  Sadly I may have to start over when I pass the 6 month mark on the documents I do have. 

Prayer

In this crisis let christians not complain about the situation, but seek God in prayer.  Please join us in prayer! 
Pray for developing nations across the world. 
Pray for Liberia where it isn’t a request to wear a mask at costco, but mandatory at all times in public, and breaking this means a public beating. 
Pray for Guatemala where malnutrition rates have tripled during this crisis, and healthcare is horribly incapable of handling the situation.  
Pray for safety for our fragile children. 
Pray for the leaders of the world who have to make the most impossible decisions imaginable- losing thousands to the virus, or losing thousands to starvation in trying to prevent the virus. 
Pray for the church around the world to be the ones to step up in the name of Jesus and bring words of life. 
Pray for moments of rest for frontline workers in top of the line hospitals and hole in the wall clinics, out of unemployment offices or pickup trucks on mountainsides, and for those patrolling streets for safety.  They are tired and overwhelmed. 
God is still in control, and he will use even this.  He holds these things in his hands, and God is still good.  

Image may contain: one or more people and people sitting

To learn about Hope for home in Liberia, follow: 

To learn more about the ministry as a whole, check out https://hopeforhome.org/ 

Director’s blog: http://hopeforhome.blogspot.com/