Monday, 19 August 2013

we're here!

be confident in this, He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion
philippians 1:6

hour number one

Sitting still and quiet and staying sane on a plane for 21 hours is not my thing. It's never going to be my thing. No matter how homesick I've gotten, the memory of those 27 hours of travel keep me happy that I get to stay in Kenya for a long, LONG time. Praise God. Side note: Belgium Airlines do keep the food coming; ice cream bars and free wine are two very happy things on a 12 hour flight. You go Belgian Airlines. 
hour number eighteen

We flew into the Nairobi airport, which was burned to the ground 5 days earlier, so not the most comforting greeting. But props to the airport, we had a relatively easy time getting our visas and our baggage considering the international terminal, immigration and baggage claim are now a massive pile of ashes. We lined up under white tents to get our visas, which was a much less intimidating process than I thought it'd be. It felt more like we were waiting to get into an amusement park than waiting to see if we would be allowed into another country. A couple hundred of us were held under another white tent that I guess was baggage claim until some one yelled GO! and we all rushed out, crawling over each other, into a pitch-dark parking lot full of hundreds of bags, to try and find our own. Once we had our 400 pounds of luggage in one pile, the real adventure began of trying to get all of it from baggage claim to a car we knew nothing about. Top ten biggest struggles and top ten funniest moments of my life. Mollie said "this is the joke of the century" 45 times and she nailed it. Can't tell you how many people asked us if we were okay or if we needed any help. 
 
BUT WE'RE HERE! And we're so happy about it. We live in a gated house with a guard so we're safe everybody! We spent the first few days just getting adjusted, learning about cold showers and dirty feet (always), alarm clocks being replaced with roosters and having lizards in the shower, milk that doesn't have to be refrigerated and lasts for a year (???) and avocados the size of my face, and most of all, seeing the beauty of our Creator in a real and tangible way every single place I look. 
  
the freshest flowers everywhere

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our fierce guard dog tucker, keeping all the bad guys away 

 
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my shower friend
 
fresh produce for a just few cents; can't beat it. 


Update on Kimbilio: We've got our eye on a house, PRAISE JESUS. It's perfect y'all, and we ask for you to cover this time in prayer with us as we make an offer and hopefully set a move-in date. We have started the long process of getting the Kenyan government's permission to take in babies and we are trusting in God's timing which is much different than our own. My flesh gets frustrated and overwhelmed with the task ahead. The thought of babies suffering and alone in a cold hospital breaks my heart and haunts me. I want to have a home to bring every single one of them into right this second, but the Lord's timing is better than my own and that humbles me daily. He is telling me over and over again that in this waiting time there is so much need and so much of Jesus to share. There are babies that need to be loved. Hundreds of them, thousands of them with in a few miles of me. So in the mean time, while we wait for our own, we will love the ones in homes around us who need it so badly. Visiting these homes to love on the precious little people that have been orphaned or abandoned, and visiting these homes to learn what to do in our own and what we'd like to do differently.
 
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it's winter in Kenya right now, so a high of 76 during the day: the mommas at the homes keep the babies in literal snowsuits to protect from the cold 
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the toddler's play pin at on of the homes we visit 
 
We walk into a home and the smell of urine is overwhelming. The playroom floors are covered in dirt and the toys in mold. Babies laying in cribs covered in mucus and spit up, some emotionless, some screaming, some sleeping peacefully but all in desperate need of love. If that's not enough to inspire better orphan care not just in Nairobi but across the globe, I don't know what is. This is not to say we haven't visited a home that was full of love and attention, with out a speck of dirt, but just the knowledge that tonight, there are babies in homes all over the world that don't have a mom to rock them to sleep and the hope of Jesus in their heart, keeps us moving to the day we can open Kimbilio's doors. 
 
 

5 comments:

  1. This is an amazing gift you have and knowing you are willing to share with those in need so far away is truly amazing. You are giving so much to those in dire need. God Bless.

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  2. THIS. IS. AWESOME, ER! Thinking of you from Florida :3 can't wait for the next update. Praying for you both and for all of the little ones :)

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  3. Your momma misses you and would probably tell you to not drink that milk if she was there :)

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  4. More pictures!! keeping praying for you!

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  5. Wow! God is doing a great work in and through you!

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