Friday, April 8, 2011
Fun In & Around Antigua (+ Photos)
The girls go ziplining near Antigua; one of the surrounding volcanoes.
By the stables Finca Filadelfia; on the terrace with volcano in background.
The Latte Lover Girls' Club.
Saying we worked the entire time would be stretching the truth - note: photos! Upon arrival in country, Steve slept in while I visited a coffee plantation/"resort" outside of Antigua in Jocotenango. 5 of us ladies decided we'd like a birds eye view of the area, best served by ziplining! Whoooo! Hooo!
Photos:Share the Gifts & the Love
Clinic Photos: Patients & Volunteers
Giving Thanks
In the end, although we gave of our time & talents, we're better individuals for the experience & nourishment we receive back multi-fold. God has given us our own special gifts/talents & it's our responsibility to share them with others! We were infused with the generosity & love of the local people and we came away better ourselves.
Thanks to several patients & organizations who donated products & supported us: Dag & Jim of Crest/Proctor & Gamble, Dr Er-Jia Mao, Scott Keene of Burkhart Dental, Tidi Products; Tom & Laurie Perricone/Chesley, Maureen Searle, Evanthia Nanou, Arian & Harold Giesholt/Lane, & my sister, Laura Benjamin (who mailed me 2 dozen reading glasses!)
Thanks to several patients & organizations who donated products & supported us: Dag & Jim of Crest/Proctor & Gamble, Dr Er-Jia Mao, Scott Keene of Burkhart Dental, Tidi Products; Tom & Laurie Perricone/Chesley, Maureen Searle, Evanthia Nanou, Arian & Harold Giesholt/Lane, & my sister, Laura Benjamin (who mailed me 2 dozen reading glasses!)
Photos: In Clinic
Local Routine
We entered into lives where a daily routine of a family's survival includes a basic multitude of mouths to feed, clothing to wash, corn to grind, seeds to sow, tortillas to prepare, dirt floors to sweep, water to fetch, babies to carry & keep healthy. We attended to dental abscesses, rotted teeth, smiles filled with blackened cavities, headaches, backaches, stomach pain, eye damage (from sun & dust), blurry vision, to name a few maladies. Others were a bit tougher: a leg so infected, a little boy couldn't walk, a man with severe flesh burns & holes due to electrical wiring malfunction, an verbally & physically abused young lady.
Photos: In Church, Getting Acquainted & Clinic Set-Up Sunday
Sunday at the Nazarene Church
Our Guatemala team of 27 arrived for a 10-day medical-dental volunteer work stint in Raxuhá (Rah-shoe-HA), a small town in central Guatemala, Alta Verapaz. We were warmly welcomed by Pastor Antonio & wife, Rosemary. Sunday churchgoers filed in slowly over time and after all the usual ceremony, a group of children sang & performed for us. Afterwards, we got busy moving church pews & setting up a temporary but functional "clinic". On Monday, the crowds drew near & started a line that didn't quit till our last day, Friday.
Photos: Around the town of Raxuhá
March Volunteer Work in Raxuhá, Guatemala 2011
Arriving in Guatemala always seems to me as a time-altering landing some centuries past - when the dust kicked up from dirt roads trails behind the walker like constant exhalation of smoke puffs; when the roosters cackle nightly in juxtaposition with yipping dogs; where colors are so intensely vibrant they make your eyes hurt; when people carry loads on their heads, backs or strapped to their foreheads typically destined for pack mules or horses; where travelling a few miles to the nearest well or river is where precious liquid silver, water, is drawn.
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