August 31, 2012:
The day I left Haiti.
It was just
barely getting light when my ride arrived. Annie walked with me to the stairs,
and Gerda walked the whole way, very South African. We hugged, and I climbed
into the back seat of the car and closed the door. There we went. Just like
that, up the palm-lined driveway and out into Haiti.
As soon as we
passed through the gates of Club Indigo, I saw three Haitian women carrying
buckets on their heads. Early in the morning, heading up the hill, skillfully
balancing the 5-gallon buckets.
T.I.H., as the
saying goes among foreigners here. This is Haiti.
I thought of that
as I rode through the little town of Montrois, along the coastline, through
towns and past banana plantations and shacks and people and animals and
colorfully painted buildings. T.I.H. Driving is a little crazy there; I found
myself praying that no one would get in the way of our car as we careened down
the road, sometimes passing a slow, overloaded tap-tap even though another car
was in sight coming the other direction. T.I.H. We passed a tent city in Port
au Prince on our way to the airport. I had never actually seen one before, but
I guess the sea of blue plastic is a common scene there. T.I.H. Occasionally,
you see empty plastic bottles all over the edges of the road, or a tipped-over
dumpster, or burning tires in the middle of the road. Protests. T.I.H.
Now I am home,
back in the United States of America. The streets where I live are not lined
with trash. We have reliable hot water in the house. The grocery store across the
street carries almost every kind of food I could ask for. People observe the
traffic laws, for the most part. It is familiar here; I know the language, the
customs. The general public appears more busy than hopeless, even though I know
many of them are.
T.I.N.H. This is not Haiti.
It’s been almost
three weeks now that I’ve been home. Leaving Haiti was hard on many levels, but
coming home was a delight. I don’t know when I’ve ever found so much delight in
being with my family, cooking dinner with my mom and sisters, and settling my
things into my cozy little room. It’s been great.
One day as I went
about my room, unpacking things I had in boxes and making the place beautiful
again, my heart just filled with thanksgiving. And then I thought about those
people—those many, many, children and adults and elderly—who have no home and
family like I do. And I sat in the corner in my room and cried.
Do I miss Haiti?
Parts of it, yes. I miss Annie and Gerda and Lily and Reese and Nessa and Carla
and Annika and Hunter and the cleaning ladies and the teal-blue water and the
colorful busy streets of Saint Marc and… so many things. Here’s a couple
pictures of some of the people I miss (the really good ones were taken by Annie Wesche):
You want to know
something funny? I get encouraged by my own blog posts. I know, it sounds
weird. But the things that God teaches me, sometimes I forget... and then I read what I wrote, and I remember.
Like tonight.
Someone commented on an earlier post, and it made me think about it. Then I
went and read it, and I was challenged and convicted by what I had written just
a few weeks ago! But I guess that makes sense, since it was Jesus who was
teaching me, not just my own nice thoughts. J
I really need to
go. We are preparing for a graduation of some students in the year-long
Ellerslie program tomorrow, and then early Monday morning, a group of us plan
to leave at a ridiculous hour to head down toward México! I am super excited
about what God has in store for this trip. It’s definitely going to be all Him,
not us… (inward laugh) but He’s the only one who can change hearts and save
lives, anyway, so that’ll be great. I hope to keep up blogging on the trip. We need any
prayer we can get!
So… tonight I
just want to declare His goodness, and His faithfulness even when it’s not
blatantly obvious in the natural. There are a few things about my future that
in the natural cause me a lot of fear and self-protection--just unknowns about what I'll be doing for this next season, etc.--but I choose to hand
them over to my good and faithful Father, knowing that He will guide, He will
keep me, and He will never leave me.
Why? Because I’m
so good that He is obligated? NO!
It is just because
that is who He is.