|
Just a girl and her mono! |
|
Newest member of the community. |
Things have yet to slow down, but I'm still here, alive and well. The
last month and a half included a visit from Chantelle's parents, Cody,
our director Shannon, a trip to Iquitos in the Amazon, then the last two
weeks were consumed by a medical campaign and a group of Villanova
students. So where do I even start....?
While Chantelle's parents were still in Chulucanas, I met up with Cody
in Lima for his first weekend in Peru. We saw the sights of, Miraflores,
Barranco, El Centro, La Parque de Amor, La Parque de Los Aguas, etc. We
witnessed the changing of the guards at the President's house, a two
hour long ceremony done on horseback, band and all. We also went to the
biggest food festival I've ever seen. Here we tried smoked pork and
rabbit, fish, beef heart, pisco, and chocolate dipped strawberries. The
options were endless and the people were from all over Peru and South
America. Back in Chulucanas Cody went to school with me, saw the
Chulucanas sights, met and played with my host family, hung out with my
community, and taught Christian how to swing a baseball bat better than I
could. We went up to the beautiful mountains for a day to hike and walk
around Conchaque. But, more than anything he got a taste of where I
live, why I'm here and who my new friends and family are. It's one thing
for me to try to describe my experience to you all and a whole
different thing for you to see it. It was a blessing to get to have him
visit, a really fun and awesome week to say the least and will
definitely help in my transition back in the U.S.
|
Conchaque! |
|
Stop putting the head in front of my face lady! |
|
Good thing I have way better aim with a shotgun! |
Three days after Cody left, Shannon arrived. This final sight visit
included a trip to Iquitos a city surrounded by rivers in the middle of
the Amazon rainforest. Iquitos was hot, humid, buggy, and very over
populated. The streets and houses were built unlike any other Peruvian
city I've seen, the streets were beyond full of motos and trash, the
houses were built out of wood and half them were built 20 feet off the
ground. Due to the fact that half of the city is flooded December
through May up to where the houses either look or are floating, buses
are boats, taxis are canoes, and no one leaves their houses on foot.
Because of the rain and rivers, they have 100,000 different kids of fish
here, they eat alligator (pretty delicious), fry up worms for good
health keeping, and have a different kind of plant for every sickness or
disease imaginable. The land is greener than green, monkeys really do
like cuddlying, and paranas are vicious fish. We saw and held tocans,
parrots, anacondas, turtles, slothes and manatees. We saw jaguars, pink
dolphins and other amazonian animals in the zoo. And, we even made new
friends who took us out.
|
Paddle boating in the Amazon. |
Four days after our return to Chulucanas arrived 48 medical professional
gringos. The second medical campaign was full of surgery teams. This
campaign was a whole different experience, much more full of hope,
happiness, love, miracles, friendships, and extreme gratitude. The five
teams completed 200 surguries of general operations, plastic sugery,
opthomology, pediatry, and gynocology. As a translater I worked with the
surgeons talking with the parents or patients before the surgeries to
ease their nerves, then again afterwards to tell them everything went
well. Then I worked in the PACU's with the kids and the second week with
the adults translating for the American nurses and the Peruvian nurses
as they worked as a team with the patients and families. I got to
witness serveral hernia surgeries, see prolapsed uteries, cleft lip
plastic surgery (almost passed out during this one), removal of a
gallbladder and pancrease cancer. I learned a lot about what an
anotesiologist does, and how calm and natural an operating room is (they
play music, tell jokes, and are willing to answer questions about
anything and everything). I also learned a lot about general procedure,
post operation care, and had the oportunity to really get to know
patients that were there for several days.
It was really amazing to be able to look these moms in the eyes and tell
them the doctor was going to take good care of their babies and that
they were gonna come out not in pain but all better. These moms
responded back with the most beautiful poetic way of expressing their
deep gratitude. The most disappointing part of this campaign was that
the doctors one, couldn't understand these women, but two that they were
too busy to even let me explain what these women were saying to them.
They were in too much of a hurry to get to the next person to listen to
what I could never even imagine an English speaker saying. My favorite
thing a mom said to me was, "my child is in your hands, and you are in
God's hands." The people here have such powerful faith in God, such a
way of trusting in him that they trust literally anything I could have
told them. Being a translator the people would obviously ask me all
their questions, and sadly only about 50% of the time I actually had to
ask a nurse or a doctor for the answer. The other half of the time, I
could answer it just because I have been to a doctor before, I know what
basic health care is like. To us a lot of these questions would be
common sense, but to people that have no idea what a doctor does, they
were very valid questions. Even basic health care we take for granted in
the US, but the people here are so thankful for any care at all.
|
The river from the sky |
Chantelle and I got invited to watch a C-Section, both of us went in
excited to see a baby born by the Peruvian team, but then we heard it
was an emergency operation. However, no one seemed to be in much of a
hurry. Finally close to 40 minutes later they made the first cut, there
is a lot of blood and A LOT of juice that comes out of the uterus. Then
the nurse and the surgeon grabbed the skin on each side and literally
stretched and pulled it apart, it was terrible looking! But, before we
knew it we could see the baby's head, then all of a sudden it was out,
but instead of hearing crying, the cord was wrapped around the baby's
neck and he was completely blue. He wasn't breathing, was extremely
skinny, then started to seize. The doctors were doing everything they
could to save him, CPR, oxygen, etc. Nothing was helped, so we called
our doctors back, they got him on better air as they waited for news of a
spot in a better treatment facility in Puira. The baby was transferred
there 5 days later, I haven't heard how he is doing, or what permanent
damage was done. It's hard not to ask what if they would have been in a
bigger hurry to get the baby out, what if they had the technology to see
the cord was wrapped around the neck and the baby wasn't breathing
earlier on? Overall, the saddest thing I've ever witness. Fortunately,
the following day I got to see a healthy baby born and watching that mom
kiss her new baby was absolutely beautiful, her eyes instantly filled
with tears of happiness.
|
Medical campaign beach day! |
The biggest
miracle of the week was a 34 year old man named Porfirio who got wheeled
into the examination room the first day with a plastic bag dripping
nasty brown SMELLY stuff from it. It was very hard to understand his
complete story because he was very shy and nervous. But, what I
understood from it was that he started getting weird spots on his leg,
when they started to spread, and not go away, they only explanation he
could come up with was witchcraft and therefore the only cure he knew of
was to burn the spell off. After lighting his own leg on fire, it
became very infected to where the only thing our doctors could do was
amputate it. After the amputation they did not think Porfirio would
learn to walk again. He proved that wrong, he was walking three days
later with walker on one leg. I will never forget his smile, how red he
turned when you told him he was handsome, and that awful smell before
hand, he was truly a miracle.