Monday 23 July 2012

It's that time again...

1.       Happy Birthday Mandela (for Wednesday)! 94 and still going strong! And the whole country celebrated by doing 67 minutes of community service projects in their area. At Living Hope, we had some navy guys and school students come through to spruce up our grounds and the Health Care Centre gardens. It’s looking so good.

 
I went with some friends to paint some rooms in a women’s and children’s shelter yesterday. It takes a surprising amount of organisation and planning just to paint a room! But after the usual confusion of absent staff at the shelter and misunderstandings of which rooms we were decorating (there had already been several other groups coming to serve in this way before us!), we finally got busy cleaning, and taping and painting. Sadly I had to leave at lunch time, but I’m hoping to see some pics of the finished rooms soon!
2.       I’ve just come back having had an elegant sufficiency of the yummiest lunch ever! I was visiting my gran at the clubhouse of her retirement village. We had Sunday lunch together and it was sooooo delicious. I’m salivating just thinking about it now! And I think it's the first Sunday roast I've had this year.
3.      Talking about food, I’ve definitely been spoilt this week. One of the short-term teams at Living Hope, held their annual Mexican dinner on Thursday night. This started about 6 years ago and has steadily grown in popularity so that there were over 70 people at the Teamhouse enjoying the authentic burritos and taco salad. And I should have listened to all the conversations in the office about starving/eating tiny amounts during the day so that the maximum amount of space was left in our stomachs for the food! Again, salivating right now!
4.       Maybe it’s a good thing I’ve been so spoilt this week. Because from tomorrow morning until midnight on Wednesday, I’m going to the take the ‘Live under the Line’ challenge. This is happening through the church I go to on Sunday mornings, where we are all being challenged to spend only R10 a day on food for these three days, as if we were living under the poverty line, like the 13 million of our neighbours in this country for whom this is actually a reality. I’m so excited about this challenge. It’s going to be hard, but the aim is to help us to understand and identify with those who live like this so that we can better show compassion to them, as part of living a right life before God (Micah 6:8). So far, I’ve done the shopping, which was already an eye opening experience – having to pass by pretty much everything in the shop (even the special deals!) and buy the minimum basics: apples, bread, peanut butter and pap is what I will be living on! And then I realised that this isn’t even the true situation for the poor – they have to make their R10 stretch to more than just food – what about toiletries, transport, electricity, education etc. etc.? My mind = blown! I probably would have given up before the challenge even started if we had had to go that far. Which already tells me something...

Monday 16 July 2012

Sunday Four!




1.       Right now I’ve barricaded myself into my flat – that is as much as is possible when the balcony door and several windows can’t actually be closed fully or locked – because we have some chancy neighbours wandering around Capri. I arrived home to find this guy casually swing himself over the gate of the neighbours across the road: 

      My landlord’s dogs were going mad inside our garden. So, while I was waiting for the baboons to move on before opening the gate, I got to thinking...if it came to a showdown, who would win – baboon or boxer?
2.       Yesterday was a sort of first for me. I and 44 other people (that’s right, 44!), mostly from the States, went to watch the rugby at Newlands. It was the final game for the Stormers in the Super Rugby before the play offs stage. I’ve never been to see a game with that many people, but once the action started I hardly even noticed. We won...of course ;) Now if we can just reach the final, it will be a home game. I wonder how many people I can go with to watch that match!
3.       I’m very excited to go to MBC here in Cape Town tonight! That’s Meadowridge Baptist Church, not Mutley, obviously. It feels weird to be calling another church MBC, but also slightly appropriate because so far it’s the closest church to Mutley that I’ve found. And after the rainiest week and day here it will feel especially like home!
4.       On a serious note, after doing a lot of reading and thinking, I’ve finally woken up to the seriousness of sexual abuse and how it impacts victims’ lives in so many ways (socially, emotionally, physically and spiritually – this penny dropped after several of sermons preached on sex and marriage the last few months). This is now horrifying for me when I see and hear of so many children who are affected by this. Someone told me that in our area, sexual assaults happen every 43 seconds. And the worst part is that it has just become a part of life for people in the communities – in fact this week we caught a group of 4-6 year olds ‘sexing in the bush’ (luckily, this time it was just an innocent game of playing ‘mommy and daddy’). Hopefully, Living Hope as an organisation can start to make a stand against this abuse and help to bring God’s healing and restoration to all who need it.

 

Monday 9 July 2012

The Sunday Four

1. The time has come to say goodbye to Lesli, a fellow volunteer who was based in Red Hill as a Life Skills Educator. We worked together on Saturdays with our girls group. It was a weekend of sad times, last meals and laughs, and the only reason we are letting her leave is because we know she'll be coming back. Goodbye friend! Thanks for all the Mexican dinners and hilarious stories of taxi-drivers and planned bank robberies! And what an awesome legacy you are leaving behind in Red Hill, through your relationships with the team members and the kids - especially our Saturday girls. I'm looking forward to letting you know about all the fruit growing from all the seeds you've planted...

2. Since Lesli's flight was on a Saturday afternoon, it seemed appropriate to bring the regular Red Hill girls to the airport to say farewell. Thankfully, it wasn't too emotional with only a few tears shed outside security! But the experience for the girls was amazing (or at least that's what I think). For them to go somewhere that they've never been before and learn about travelling by plane, pilots, flight attendants etc. etc. was eye-opening. A chance to broaden their horizons and maybe start some dreams about their own futures and where they could go or what they could do. Such a simple thing could turn out to be life-changing! Crazy thought!

3. Lesli managed to escape just as the weather has become winter with a vengeance! There's been so much rain, the rainbow count is up to six in two days. And lots of monkey's weddings, which would be why all the baboons were out in full force on my drive to and from Red Hill yesterday!

4. I don't have anything else to update, but here is a link to an awesome news story I read this week: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-18703171 Enough said.

Thanks for reading. Enjoy the week ahead!

Friday 29 June 2012

Oops, three months went by...

Wow, keeping up a blog is difficult! But I have a solution (which I have absolutely stolen from one of my favourite authors’ blog): The Friday Four!
1.       My highlight of the week, or maybe even month, for our OVC programme is one of the girls from our Mountain View Club. This week we have started helping her to become formally looked after (fostered?) by a neighbour when we realised she was at risk of neglect at home. The LSEs say that she has always coloured in black and grey and dark colours, but this last week they showed me a photo of her in holiday club holding up her picture done in bright rainbow colours with a huge grin on her face! What an awesome reminder of why we’re doing this.
2.       Something I’ve been thinking about a lot this week is how we glamorize mission work. It’s so easy to say to people back home I’m going to help the poor, starving, vulnerable children on the other side of the world. We tend to think that the people out there are so oppressed by the broken systems of the world. And yet there are people and children suffering on our own doorstep. Why don’t we feel the same call and compassion for them? Why is it that Living Hope has probably more than ten times the number of volunteers and churches supporting it from overseas compared to locally? Being here and trying to untangle the messiness of family situations has shown me that yes, there are broken systems, but these people, like the rest of us, are also broken themselves. The more I’ve tried to help, the more I’ve found myself judging them for their faults. So, really, what I’m trying to say is that mission work ‘out there’ is just as difficult as mission work in our home town. The closer we are to people the easier it is to see their imperfections, and the harder it becomes to romanticise the issues. And I sympathise with anyone who feels called to minister to me!
3.      I have needed a lot of patience this week. I have two nemeses to deal with on my own doorstep...my landlord’s dogs! They are driving me insane. Every morning when I leave, I have to open the gate to drive out. And no matter what I try the dogs are just waiting for the chance to escape and run up and down the road outside. Of course, they don’t listen to me because I’m just the lodger. So I have to spend 5 minutes running around outside shouting and waving after them until they finally decide to go back inside. Grrrr. At least that's my excuse for being late a few times this week!
4.       I’ll finish with a huge THANK YOU to some special people who sent me a small package of chocolatey goodness this week! It was the best surprise on Tuesday morning when I got to work. Even if most of the chocolate had melted flat. Chocolate is still chocolate! And I pretty much inhaled one bar right then and there! What...it was a rough morning having to chase after some dogs....
That’s all for today. Hopefully catch up next week!

Friday 23 March 2012

Masiphumelele wedding

Last Wednesday was a celebration in Masiphumelele!
Several Living Hope staff and volunteers have been walking alongside a family living in Masiphumelele since last September. Really, they have been the beginning of the whole OVC journey for us. Well, through the weekly meetings with them, the two grandparents (who are caring not only for their own 3 children, but also their oldest daughter's three children) said that they want to get married officially in church. This was awesome news since there is not much precedent for its. The culture goes along with having multiple girlfriends, cultural marriages or just living together.
So Wednesday was the culmination of all the planning and working out of arrangements to help this couple make right before God. The service took place in Masiphumelele Baptist church as part of their regular Wednesday evening service. I'm not sure the bride and groom knew what hit them! But it was great to be part of this act of worship. The pastor spoke it out so well:
"I thank you because you are not just doing this for yourselves, whether you know it or not! You are doing this for the young ones here. Today, you are planting a seed in their hearts so that in the future they will say I want to do it this way, God's way."
My prayer is that this is truth; prophecy spoken out over the children. And that one day in the future the church would be having a wedding every Wednesday service!

Friday 9 March 2012

Another moment

I am so blessed to live in a place of such beauty that at least once a day I get to stop in wonder and awe of God's creation. It makes all my problems seem so small in comparison.

Friday 2 March 2012

One of those moments

I've just come back from a meeting with some lovely people at uThando leNkosi - a home for children who need temporary safety care. It was so great to be able to share visions each of us have for our ministries and how we can partner together in supporting the vulnerable children in nearby communities.
The most amazing part was when we were standing in the house kitchen chatting and I actually felt the unity in the Holy Spirit - real fellowship I guess - hearts getting excited as we talked about how God has moved and is moving in our own spheres and beyond. I can only describe it like as if you have taken a step up, out and above the 'world' of day-to-day concerns, and you can see the view below with God organising and leading and bringing certain people together and making other things happen. So cool! It makes it so much more exciting to go back into that everyday world again.

Tuesday 14 February 2012

My Red Hill Dose

Being involved in the OVC programme for Living Hope has meant that I do not have time to be part of the Red Hill ministry, where I was based for the last 7 months I was here. I have missed being in that community and seeing the children and teenagers that we were working with and that I started to build relationships with. I have had to balance and increase my compassion to cover all the communities we work in, but secretly I know that Red Hill does hold a special place in my heart.
So it has been great to be a part of a Red Hill teenage girls discipleship group with a fellow volunteer, Lesli, who started this up while I was back in the UK. At the moment it is just two girls who turn up regularly on a Saturday afternoon to the church in the top camp. We do a bible study and play games and try to build up a deeper relationship and honesty with them, because good, Christian role models are so desperately needed in the community where almost everyone around them lives in hopelessness, despair and the behaviour that goes along with it. Once every two months we plan to have an 'outing' where the girls decide what to do and contribute something (R5 = less than 50p). This last Saturday we went down to the beach and spent the morning hanging out and swimming and then had a picnic lunch. It was great fun, especially with the local penguins to watch and laugh at! My favourite moment was when Lesli offered one of the girls Ladyfingers (sponge finger biscuits?) after lunch and she honestly thought we meant ladies' fingers. She asked if the fingernails had been taken off! And her face as she watched the rest of us biting into the biscuits was priceless! It was only after she took her own first bite that she said with suprise, "It's a biscuit!" Love it! Another memory I will keep for a long time is that the girls decided to write letters to Lesli, myself and each other. On the front of the envelope of my letter was written 'You are an inspiration to me.' When I read that, my heart was so thankful to God in that moment, for bringing me here to be able to know these girls and come alongside them for a part of their lives. I hope and pray that I am able to share a hope for their future and see them fulfil the potential that God has so richly blessed them with in their lives.

Monday 23 January 2012

Getting to know the South African wildlife

It has been a crazy weekend!
To start with, I was greeted on Friday morning by several maggots crawling all over the floor of my flat! Ew, right? Well I made the super fast decision to get them out of the flat ASAP and got to work hunting out the creepy crawlies and sweeping them outside onto the balcony. So, that done, I was staring at the tiny beasts through the sliding door glass wondering what to do next. With some help from Google I found out that to kill them I had to pour boiling water on them. Easy! So I boiled the kettle and prepared myself to face the maggots. I have to say it was not a fair fight, me being about a hundred times their size! As I managed to flood the last one, I looked up to see the neighbours staring my way, frozen halfway through getting into their car. It was only then I realised how crazy I must have looked. Prancing around on the balcony in my pyjamas, trying to avoid stepping on the maggots and every now and then thrusting out the kettle and pouring scalding water on the floor and then jumping back as drops of boiling water splashed onto my toes. I may even have lost myself in the moment and uttered several half-crazed 'Ha's!' and 'Die, maggot, die!' at the little creatures! Anyway, I think I just smiled at the neighbours and jumped back inside quickly.
I wish I could say that that was the end of it but I kept finding more maggot friends the rest of the day and on Saturday too. And then, on Saturday night, when I thought I had finally got rid of the nasty creatures and was able to have a good night's rest. I woke up on Sunday morning with a swollen eyelid. Apparently the maggots had found a friendly spider who got their revenge on me and bit me ON MY EYELID! Seriously! Luckily the swelling has gone down pretty rapidly, but I had to take an antihistamine and it meant that I was so sleepy all Sunday.
I never found the spider but I hope that since the sores are even now there will be no more attacks.

Tuesday 17 January 2012

Home Sweet Home

Last week I was saying how it was hard to have two homes because you're always saying goodbye to people. Well, I want to add to that... The best thing about having two homes is that you leave home but you also come back home! You say goodbye to friends and then hello to friends! It has been so easy to come back to Cape Town and settle into life here again. To catch up with people and hear about what I've missed and carry on where we left off. I have had a real sense of peace and rightness througout the moving process. And I'm loving the new flat that God has provided for me to stay in:
 I am still so amazed by how He has provided everything for my return and I want to hold on to this fact and privilege and hopefully be a good steward of all that He has given me.