Monday, March 25, 2013

12 months, sigh


happy 12 months baby big girl!


I call this post 12 months, sigh for a reason. I'm feeling very sad that this will be my last "picture of the month" posting. I suppose I could take a size comparison picture of her every month for the next 18 years, but I'm suspecting that I need to cut the cord sometime. That and a single paper is getting kind of crowded. Perhaps I'll still do bi-annual photos so ya'll can marvel along with Jeremy and I at how fast and fabulous little ones grow. 

365 days ago today, and about this same hour, I was wondering whether the effort was going to be worth it. I was pretty sure this child was trying to kill me, and at 10:26 pm, when the labor was all over, she didn't even smile, or say thank you, or anything. Luckily, I decided not to hold any of that against her, and instead proceeded to slowly fall in love. Watching this little one grow first in my tummy and then before my eyes has been a beautiful reminder of the miracle of a child. Thank you Lord for this gift!

We celebrated her birthday with the village on Saturday which was a blast. Thanks to our dear friend Cheng Wong, (a 70 year old, Asian-American Peace Corps Volunteer!) we have approx 500 pictures to sift through and upload for your viewing pleasure. It was so much fun for us, we seriously can't wait to share it all with the rest of our friends and family! I have some other thoughts also on the significance of our little girl turning one, and I'll try to put all of these things down on "paper" as I get a chance. For now, I choose to revel in this day. Our baby is happy, fat, healthy, friendly, creative, adventurous, and cuddly. Her strong will is starting to show and her desire for independence and autonomy shows up at less than opportune times. But as I see the grace we've been shown in the first year of her life, I have no doubt that God will be faithful to guide us through this next phase of parenting adventure. 

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

when death is merciful


Yesterday, Bronwyn’s friend Robert died. Bronwyn started a friendship with Robert when I went to visit his mother and talk about feeding practices. (the culture of motherhood: fat babies part 3) Over the last several months, these two have become fantastic playmates. Robert, being a few months older than Bronwyn, would apparently call her name and one of his aunts would come ask for Winnie to come and play. I’d give her to Memory or Monica, strapping her onto one of their backs with a chitenge and wave goodbye, reminding the girls to keep her out of the sun and make sure she didn’t put anything in her mouth. Robert’s grandmother, Bana Louisa (mother to Louisa who is the mother to Robert) would always bring her back to me an hour or so later and tell me all the details. “She and Robert just played and played and played! Robert LOVES Winnie!”

Bronwyn & Robert back in November

We woke up on Friday night to a knock on our door. Bana Louisa’s grief-stricken voice spoke past Jeremy at the door and directly to me, the one still in bed attached to a sleeping child. Through groggy ears I heard, “Bana Winnie please we need transport to town; Robert has died and Louisa is in town with him and the family they are with has kicked them out because they fear the spirits if they keep a dead body in the house and its raining.” She had to say it three times before I caught on completely to what was happening, so fast was her speech to my almost, but not quite awake mind. Jeremy asked me if he should go, and all I had to say was, “if it were me in Louisa’s place…” Two minutes later, in the dark and the rain, Jeremy sped off to fetch a body, and I just cried.

As much as I am “pro-mama” in this place, and hate to speak poorly of anyone, I mourn the fact that there are certain women who simply have a hard time keeping their children alive. My friend ba Champo went through a bitter divorce last year after her husband left her because their first two children had died before the age of one. Bana Magoo, a woman who just completed her 13th pregnancy (one three, thirteen.) was sharing her obstetric history with me last month and revealed that her first five children had died. And sadly, Robert is Louisa’s second child, the first one also deceased. Blame and fault finding are difficult and dangerous roads to traverse, and in the middle of the night, as I waited anxiously to hear the rumble of the landi pulling back up to our house, I asked God why? Why do children keep being born only to be under-fed, under-medicated, under… gah, so many things… keep being born only to live short, helpless lives? I didn’t receive an answer to that question, but it did occur to me that allowing some of these children to pass away while small may be an act of mercy on God’s part. I cringe at that too, though I have seen the hurt eyes of small children who have grown old enough to perceive the neglect and abandonment conveyed through lack of food, prolonged illness and cold. A more emotionally developed child associates parental failure with unmet needs regardless of whether the failure is stemming from maternal ignorance or intentional neglect.

I know Louisa loved her boy. As we walked up the path to the funeral house, wails came from the front porch where sat Louisa, writhing in pain of the heart. As she saw us approach, she started to scream, “Roooooooobert!!!! Come see Winnie! Roooooooobert, come play with Winnie! Winnie is here, Robert, come play with her!!!” Over, and over, she called to her son to come back and play with his friend. Jeremy sat with Bronwyn to the side as I joined the women in the cooking shelter, huddled together in mournful union, listening to Louisa cry out in pain. Every time Louisa told Robert to come back and play with Winnie another tear rolled down my own cheek.

All the women I know who have buried babies, loved their children. The grandmother (Bana Louisa) asked me to talk to Louisa who had communicated that she would no longer eat - that if Robert was dead, she ought to be too. No, I believe Robert died not for lack of love, but because of a long string of actions that were palatable for his mother, but too much for his own small and delicate frame. Links in a chain that are cognitively misunderstood by these moms who aren’t reading articles from the AAP, having routine chats with a perceptive pediatrician, and following a dozen mommy blogs.

These things are gut-wrenchingly sad and equally complex. There are social, economic, educational, spiritual and traditional forces at work in every woman’s situation affecting her decisions regarding the bearing and raising of children. I’ve started ignoring anyone who gives a response to these intricate questions starting with “we just need to…”

The only thing we “just” need to do is pray. Beyond that, we proceed humbly, treating both mother and child with dignity, resolving to do our best, admitting that we are not the Savior, regarding each life as precious, and accepting that we may still get a sorrowful knock on the door in the middle of the night.

We’re still growing in these things, and we’re very thankful that Bronwyn is still oblivious regarding much of life. I’m not sure we’re ready to translate into toddler speak that which we can barely articulate to ourselves. I suppose we’ll cross that hairy ugly bridge when we come to it. For now I shall snuggle my baby till she can hardly breathe and give thanks for all those who have helped keep her happy and in my arms.







Friday, March 15, 2013

making friends

Bronwyn thinks Timo is awesome, and Timo is forever trying to figure out why this little girl won't leave him alone. Timo's mom and I find this all very humorous. We thought we'd share it with you.

Timo be my friend!

but I love you!

be my friend pleeeeeease!


daddy i need a hug!

it's ok baby girl, just keep trying

I'm still here Timo...




Wednesday, March 13, 2013

farm baby


 I am not a farm girl. I’m a descendant of farmers, have visited farms and appreciate farm folk, but I myself did not grow up with the farm life under my nails. The last six years have done wonders for my soul in terms of bringing me back to the basics: Hard labor produces abundance. A little dirt never killed anyone. You reap what you sow. Valuable life lessons.
As we raise our daughter in the context of farm life, I have stopped to think many times about her environment, and I have determined that farm kids are extremely blessed. There’s a lot of fun to be had out there, adventures waiting to be discovered. But more than that, I sincerely believe that farm kids have a different, even, (dare I say it?) a better understanding of the gospel itself.




Matthew 13:1-10 talks of the sower and the seeds that fell on rocky soil and those that fell on good soil. It talks of roots and soil depth and withering and flourishing.

1 Corinthians 3:9 tells us that we are God’s field.

Mark 4:26 says that the kingdom of God is as if a man should scatter seeds on the ground.

Hosea 10:12 commands that we “sow for ourselves righteousness; reap steadfast love; break up our fallow ground and seek the Lord.”

John 15:1 teaches us that Jesus is the true vine.

And John 12:24 teaches us that “unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.”





I wish I could have read these things through a farmer’s eyes long ago! I regret knowing that my eyes used to only glazed over certain verbiage that, to me, had no reference point and therefore little meaning.

I therefore LOVE the fact that my daughter is growing up in an environment where she is surrounded by the tangible display of these truths. She sees the farmers toil. She watches the seeds fall. She hears the prayers for rain and the thanksgiving for the harvest. Truths come alive on a farm. And I pray that those truths land on a heart of good soil teaching the wee one how to truly live.






Wednesday, March 6, 2013

rain rain go away


Rainy season is allllllmost done and I have to say, I’m looking forward to some dryness in my life again. I used to really love rainy season – the beautiful skies,  pitter patter of rain drops on rooftops, an excuse to exfoliate my feet in mud. 





But with a baby, it has gotten a little stressful at times. We wash diapers daily and hang them to dry, but with the air (inside and out!) being so damp and wet, we’ve had a hard time getting things clean and useable in a timely fashion! I started a rotational system of drying on the line outside, then into the house to dry some more, then into the tubs again. 




I try really hard to let her clothes sit in a dark, fully dry space for three days to make sure that no bot fly eggs are able to thrive. These nasty little creatures lay eggs on wet clothing and then those eggs get into your skin and hatch little worms and its just gross. I’ve dealt with these things myself and I really don’t want to have to excavate any wiggly worms out of my porceline skin child! Leaving the clothes to dry for several days was only a problem once or twice as we literally ran out of anything clean/dry! But I want to say thank you to everyone who helped stock us with an obscene amount of cloth diapers and covers. You have made rainy season possible, bot-fly-free and rather cute and happy. 






Monday, March 4, 2013

Reflections on malaria


Two weeks ago now, Bronwyn came down with  malaria for the first time. She began with vomiting and we thought she just had some kind of stomach bug. I think I changed my clothes 12 times in 3 days as Bronwyn managed to bury her face in my chest 2 seconds before every projectile vomit. (It’s a good thing I love her more than myself. We both smelled pretty rank by the end.) We monitored the vomiting and focused on keeping her hydrated. We weren’t terribly worried until she spiked a fever, and that’s when we decided to get her a malaria test.
We drove into town to take her to a clinic with a lab so that they could look at the parasite count under a microscope. Whenever Jeremy or I get tested for malaria at our local clinic, we question the diagnosis - probably due to the fact that they tell us we have malaria even when the test comes back negative. With a finger prick and a blood slide, the lab techs were able to confirm that there were indeed little parasites floating around inside my darling daughter’s body, making her feel all kinds of crummy. 





We got her medicine and brought her home. After several pitiful attempts of getting her to swallow it without spitting it out or puking it up, we called in the reinforcements: two Mwewa’s a Chama and a Moze – a group of funny boys who soothed Bronwyn’s aching heart with side splitting laughter. Three days of meds and Baby B was back in working order!



I’ve thought a lot about her sickness this week. Before we came to Zambia, I told people that my number one fear was that Bronwyn would get sick. It’s true that Malaria kills thousands of Zambian kids every year. It’s true that it’s a nasty disease and needs to be taken seriously. But at the same time, there is something in my heart that keeps prompting me to not live in fear. I’ve been challenged in the last nine months to reevaluate my belief that Bronwyn would be safer if we moved elsewhere. It is true that there is no malaria in New York and fewer dangerous snakes and less giardia and other intestinal yuckies. But isn’t “safer” a relative term? Has my American-ness and my (relative) trust in US doctors swayed my emotions to hope in things that I shouldn't? Have I given way to misplaced fear based on factors that I think I should be able to control?



The truth of the matter, and that which has sunk deep into my heart in the last few weeks and months, is that no harm will befall my daughter without the Lord allowing it. Regardless of location, our God is still the same. If a holy God sees it fitting to let my baby fall ill or even to take this precious one home, it does not matter whether we live in Fimpulu, Zambia or Ithaca, New York. The decision is His and I must trust its perfection.



I often sing to Bronwyn the song “Trust and obey, for there’s no other way, to be happy in Jesus, than to trust and obey.”

We tenaciously do all we know to do... and we trust. We obediently live in the bush, even during malaria season. We obediently use the wisdom God has given us to act wisely, sleeping under nets and screening for parasites and giving medicine. And we trust wholeheartedly that our very lives are held in the hands of our all-wise, all-good, sovereign Father. 

Is God then not the Lord of life and death? He is. None lives and none dies but by God’s sovereign decree. “See now that I, even I, am he, and there is no god beside me; I kill and I make alive; I wound and I heal; and there is none that can deliver out of my hand.” (Deuteronomy 32:39)

“He does according to his will among the host of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth; and none can stay his hand or say to him, ‘What have you done?’” (Daniel 4:35)

He declares “the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose.’” (Isaiah 46:10)

“Who has spoken and it came to pass, unless the Lord has commanded it? Is it not from the mouth of the Most High that good and bad come?” (Lamentations 3:37-38; see Amos 3:6)

“Many are the plans in the mind of a man, but it is the purpose of the Lord that will stand.” (Proverbs 19:21; see 16:9)

Therefore, “if God is for us, who can be against us? . . .Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? As it is written, ‘For your sake we are being killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered.’ No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us” (Romans 8:31-37).

These are hard words for a non-believer but oh what security for the Christian! We will continue to keep doing everything we know to do to keep our precious little one healthy and safe. However, if she is ever taken from us, for whatever reason, we will not “blame” the disease, or grumble against Africa, or run “home” where it is “safe,” but instead we will trust in the name of the Lord our God.



Saturday, March 2, 2013

par-tay

We are pleased to extend to all our friends an invitation to Bronwyn's first b-day party!




Hopefully the invite explains it all, but if you have any questions, let me know. We've been thinking about this birthday for a long time. Birthdays for children and adults alike are really not celebrated in the village. Most children do not know when their birthdays are, and when I ask their parents, they almost always have to look at the child's under-5 card to remember. We want to help people see what it looks like to thank God for the gift of children, and celebrate each life individually. We told some of our high school students about American birthday traditions, and after hearing about all the present giving that goes on, the students told their friends that they would be Americans on their birthdays henceforth. Not wanting gift giving to be the central focus of celebrating Bronwyn's first year, we opted for a slightly less conventional party plan. Zambians love singing, dancing and performing, and we have a suspicious that this "program" will help communicate the specialness of a birthday without the fixation on material gift giving.

We think it will be a lot of fun and hopefully many of you will be able to participate!