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Life on Steriods



Season of Lifetree Groups

June is the month of Lifetree groups.  We just finished up our first week of 33 people.  During one night this past week, the power at the Guest House was going off and tripping the inverter even though we had EDH (city power).

As an aside, we have this happen pretty often every morning with a maxed out house. Once we start the coffee maker and toaster in the morning, it is usually the straw that breaks the camels back.  At that point, the inverter can’t handle the load and we begin shutting other items off.  This last week we had to resort to flipping the breakers for the the upstairs rooms.  This included forcing everyone’s fans off.  We felt bad but if people want breakfast we had to do it.

Back to the story – now it’s close to midnight and everyone is trying to sleep.  The power is flipping on and off.  This means fans in the rooms are flipping on and off.  People are uncomfortable as they begin to sweat from the heat.  Some make their way downstairs to ask what’s going on.

We began diagnoses by trying to turn all non-essential stuff off (internet, water coolers, lights, phone chargers, etc).  Eventually we came to the conclusion that the inventer had gone bad.  Did this mean that the guests wouldn’t have power all night?  No fans?!  They weren’t happy with that.  Eek.

Finally, with Frank and a handful of other tired guests gathered around, I looked at them, pretending to know what I am talking about, and said, “We could bypass the inverter and go straight from the generator to the house. Does that even make sense?”

The others agreed.

We just needed to find some way to do it.  Unfortunately, looking in the back tool room we have no supplies for this sort of thing.  I couldn’t even find a flat head screw driver. So we made our own!

ScrewDegaJeFrank and I did find some electrical tape and basically jammed wires together to bypass the inverter.  Of course, being overly tired at this point, we were just laughing about how we were going to blow up the house.

Amazingly, after a few tries, we did it – by “did it” I mean we had electricity again and we didn’t blow the house up :-D .  The power was back on and all the fans functioning for the guests to sleep the night away :-D .

Womens Center Graduation

The graduation was successful.  We got to see some of the amazing decorations made with plastic forks.  Haitian are amazing!

Women's Center Graduation Haitian made with plastic forks.  Amazing! Wedding dress made by student

Bakery

Josh has been making bread, bread, and more bread!  I have been overcoming issues with configuration of our point of sale system.  I think we got almost all the kinks worked out though!  I am pretty excited about it.

Erply Point of Sale

Next Group…

Who knows what will happen this week :-D .  The group this week is from TX, NC, VA, and MI.  All of the projects are out at the property.

 Nothing shapes your life more than the commitments you choose to make. – Rick Warren (thx John McHoul)

Haiti, Heartline    electricity, lifetree, team

Homeless in Haiti



Haitian painting along side the streets of Port au Prince, Haiti.

At the guesthouse, we have many extra suitcases sitting around that people leave behind after emptying them.  A while back, Judithe, one of our workers, asked if she could have one to keep her belongings in.  Yes, one suitcase for everything she owned.  So we said, sure, no problem.  A couple weeks later she reluctantly came up and asked me for a different one.  Why, I asked, we just gave her one.  Apparently where she was living there were a lot of mice and cockroaches, and they ate holes right through it, even destroying many of the few outfits she had inside.  So I gave her another one, along with some clothes of my own to help her get by.

Judithe is a quiet girl, but recently when I asked her how things were going, she spit out faster than I could understand that she is tired and worried all the time, and she has no appetite because of that.  She told me that she had been living at her sister’s house, but for reasons I don’t understand, that is no longer an option.  She is currently homeless, each night carrying her one suitcase to wherever she can find a place to sleep.  Sometimes at a friend’s house, sometimes on the floor at her church.  She has no family to fall back on, and is forced to fend for herself everyday.

Wow, I thought, how in the heck do I respond to her telling me that?  Ryan and I live in an apartment with two extra bedrooms.  We have a bank account and have cash to spend on going out to eat, the beach, trips to the US… things that are definitely not necessities.  Our closets have more than enough clothes to get us through a whole month.  We have running water and electricity.  And our stomachs are never truly hungry – we get three good meals per day with snacks in between.  And what does she have – a suitcase.

So we prayed and sought counsel from people who have lived in Haiti longer than us.  We were advised that is was not a good idea to have her temporarily move in with us, and the best option was to give her some money to rent out a room somewhere.  It’s tricky in Haiti because you have to pay for the whole year upfront, rather than month by month.  So you have to have quite a bit of cash saved up to do that.

Another tricky thing in Haiti is that when people get money, they use it for whatever need is most pressing.  For example, once we gave one of our workers money to go to school, and she used it soon after to get her brother out of jail, who had been put in there the night before.  In Haiti that’s not considered wrong or unchristian to do, it’s just logical.  We knew that giving Judithe money would be a gamble as to what it would actually be used on.  But we decided to give it to her anyway, and hope.  She smiled so big, thanking me over and over again, repeatedly kissing me on the cheek.  It was like she won the lottery.

We didn’t give her the full amount, as we wanted her to feel partially responsible in paying, and not as if it was just a hand-out.  But part of me feels that it was just me being selfish and not wanting to give up an uncomfortable amount of “my” money.  Or me worrying that if the other workers find out how much we gave her, they would be mad or asking for money then too.

In the mission circle, we talk a lot about how when us rich white people step in and offer hand-outs, it can actually do more harm than good to the people long-term.  But part of me wants to say - screw that theory.  The Bible says, “If someone has enough money to live well and sees a brother or sister in need but shows no compassion–how can God’s love be in that person?”

I guess we’re still wrestling with this whole thing.  We will find out next week when we see Judithe if she was able to move into a place.  Heartline is also offering her the opportunity to make some paper beads as a special project, so she will earn some extra money from that.  Funny thing is, this situation is just one of many that we encounter on a weekly basis.  Living in Haiti puts you smack dab in the middle of poverty and tough issues.  Though it’s hard, I’m thankful to be challenged and stretched, and hopefully become more Christ-like because of it.

 

Haiti    haiti, homeless

Last Week (w/ Towing Vehicles & Replacing Water Tanks)



It’s been busy at the Guest House.  I have been enjoying the repeat groups we currently have staying at the house.  It’s a chance to get to know them on a deeper level.

We had a mess of car things happen this past week.  I was going to write about it but then noticed that Nick already had a great summary:

Filling stations in Port-au Prince have been out of gasoline for five days. That’s 3 million people with no gasoline.

They say the reason is because an oil tanker from Venezuela is two weeks late. Probably Venezuela forgot to send out the boats after Hugo Chavez died.

The prediction is we’ll have more by Sunday. [FYI - We have gasoline again!]

In the meantime, traffic is thinning out on the roads. Diesel is still available, so most vehicles out running now are diesel.

Our cars were out by like Wednesday. For some reason we always run them on quarter tank anyways so it didn’t take long. So much for preparedness. Except then, in a back corner somewhere, a few extra gallons were found yesterday, so we dumped them in our Montero. Now we’re back in business!

Except today Ryan and I got stuck at the hardware store because the Montero wouldn’t start. The starter is bad. We just took the starter out last week and brought it to a starter repairman. He repaired it, but now it’s broke again. I’m not thinking he did a very good job.

John and Pierre came and towed us home. That was exciting, getting towed halfway across Port-au Prince. I was driving the Montero getting towed (with no power steering or power brakes) and Pierre (red hat and shirt below) drove the pickup truck pulling us. Sometimes Pierre drove faster than comfortable, all while dodging traffic and potholes. At one point he drove off the road to avoid some obstacle… without slowing down!

Ryan was with me and couldn’t watch. He kept trying to occupy himself looking down on his phone. He did take the following pictures though:

Of course during all of this car excitement, we had been having issues with the water at the guest house.  The pressure tank went bad.  For a while, we attempted to use the broken tank but it just kept getting worse.  Eventually, we purchased a new tank for the Guest House.  Below you can see our detailed diagram of the new tank ;-)  Also, we couldn’t empty the old one through the valve, so ended up drilling some holes in it – looks kind of funny.

Of course, the normal side-projects of installing fans!  Fans must be one of the biggest marked up items in Haiti.  These guys are $120/piece.  I suppose they can get away with it.

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Haiti    haiti, vehicle, water

Top 10 Qualities of Effective Mission Trip Teams



This entry is part 1 of 3 in the series Top 10 Qualities of Effective Mission Trip Teams Next »

Running the Guest House has allowed us the opportunity to see hundreds of missions teams come and go.  As part of Heartline, we have hosted many short-term missions (STMs) teams.  I am definitively no expert.  I don’t promise to have all the answers on this subject because, well, I don’t.  To be honest, the few STMs trips I have been on didn’t have all these qualities.

What I do know is that teams, we enjoy and we see as effective, have these qualities I will post about in this series.

short-term-missions

Effective qualities of short-term mission teams begins with:

1) Preparation

The mission shouldn’t start when the wheels of the airplane touch down in Haiti (or any other country).  A highly equipped team will start preparing a year or more in advance before leaving their home country.

Effective teams take the opportunity before they come to learn as much as you can about the culture before stepping foot on someone else’s soil.  Learn by watching videos, reading blogs, books, and anything you can get your hands on. You can be prepared by learning about:

  • The culture and history
  • The partnering organization
  • Other organizations in the same country
  • The long-term missionaries you will be supporting

Teams that have done this research usually ask the insightful questions and are able to grasp a new level of depth on the issues and solutions.  It also shows that the team doesn’t want to waste anyone’s time but are serious about being involved in making a difference.

In the short-term missions workbook by Tim Dearborn he says, The most important aspect of short-term mission service is preparation.  The long-term impact of your service will be deeply affected by the quality of your preparation.

Teams that make this upfront investment will increase the depth of their experience and make them a blessing to the culture, their long-term missionary friends, and gives a longer lasting impact for each individual team member.

Make pre-trip learning a requirement, not a suggestion. Simply wanting to go and coming up with the money is not sufficient to qualify somebody to join the team. If people don’t want to spend time to learn before they go on the trip are they really going to have a learner’s mind-set during the trip?  - When Helping Hurts

 

Starter Ideas…

Below are a few book ideas for cross-cultural travels:

  • Books to Read Before Visiting Haiti
  • Books to Read Before Moving to Haiti

Here are a few suggestions for digging into Haiti (though you could do the same type of searches for other countries):

  • Haiti history on Wikipedia
  • The Quake - PBS Special (and more)
  • Latest Haiti news on Google

Interesting…

One team, before arriving in Haiti, had setup a small tent city outside of their home town for a weekend.  They had setup a limited water supply and made Haitian food for meals.  They were attempting to simulate the experience and hopefully better prepare the team for the journey ahead to Haiti.  They weren’t going to be staying in tents in Haiti but they wanted to learn more about conditions and what was happening after the earthquake.

This same group spent 2 years preparing for the trip down to Haiti.  As you can imagine, when they touched down in Haiti, they were ready.

Haiti    haiti, missions, team

Recent Happenings



IMG_20130402_173221.jpg

 

Nick, the heartline driver / available for all things, recently said the following which I find true…

Rarely before have I been in a situation where the line between My Life and My Work has been so blurry.  

This week we’re hosting a team of 30.  If I counted the number of hours I’m putting into my job it would be pretty much the same number of hours I’m awake.  On the other hand, it could be said I’m not working at all, just living.  - Nick

This team has been very inquisitive.  Many have done their homework on Haiti and asked me questions that I struggle with on a weekly basis.  Here we are day in and day out facing real issues of injustice straight in the face.  See video below for an interesting perspective.

Here is what’s up recently

We visited Andrama’s church.  If you remember, Andrama works at the Maternity Center and cooked with Melissa on the Run For Life.  Melissa & Andrama became good friends after that.  She invited us to her church.  For some reason, what stuck out to me was these older ladies standing up waving their arms with the music.  Maybe it’s because I hardly ever see older people (the mean average age in Haiti is 27 years.)  The place as a whole just seemed free to worship, dance and sing loudly.

IMG_20130324_121516.jpg

Bench seats

The current team is helping us secure the bench seats at the Guest House from falling.

IMAG0159.jpg

Car Repair

Nick and I worked on the Mits yesterday.  We have been finding auto parts places and little shops that have the pieces we need.  We attempted to get our starter rebuilt.  Looks like today, I will go back and go for attempt #2 :-) It doesn’t quite work we will try it again.

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Bakery

Bakery propane tank has arrived and now Josh has started to experiment with recipes!

Baking Begin.jpg

Bakery Bread.jpg

Lifetree Team

Here are some Lifetree team pictures.

- I gave some of them some first hand experience buying food on the side of the street.

- Melissa & the ladies cooked a huge feast!  The picture doesn’t even show half of it.

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Police Ticket

Nick and I almost got a ticked.  One of our lights were out.  Pretty comical considering how many other cars have their lights out as well :-D

Police offered us a $50 bribe option or a ticket for the brake light being out.  We stood around not willing to pay the bribe figuring they would give us the ticket.  After some time staring at each other the police said we could take off!  No bribe & no ticked!

IMG_20130329_092136.jpg

Video

Great video on if justice is worth it… (Thanks Tara for the find)

Haiti    bakery, car repair, church, haiti, police, team, video

Guest House Website *New*



I have been working away on a new website for the guest house.  Your feedback would be welcomed!

Current website:

It’s been a great help and has all the information nicely condensed.

Old Guest House Website

New website:

This new website is now moved to http://heartlineguesthouse.com.  Since it’s on it’s own, I was able to add more details about the guest house.  My goal was to make it easier for those that haven’t stayed here before to explore the guest house in greater detail.  Wergsy has even translated the text into French :-)

New Guest House Website

Some questions I have for you…

  • Have you stayed before and know something you would like to have added?
  • Do you see something you have a question about that would be helpful to add?
  • Is anything confusing?
  • Something you really liked?

 

Haiti    guest house, haiti

Projects Focused on the Guest House



What a couple weeks!  Melissa and I are working fully on Heartline projects.  Thankfully we have had the help of close friends!  Barry, Nick and Josh have helped out so so much!

At the guest house:

- This week we were focused on stocking the gift shop… which was getting empty!  We headed to the tin market and stepped into a shop we have never seen before.  All I can say is… freeeaakkyyy.

Thankfully our shop is looking better:

- Preparing and working on the new “Information Center”.  Barry was the brains behind this project!  It looks so awesome!  Today we were able to wire Ethernet cable over to the VoIP international phone.  Now it will be very visible :-D .

IMG_20130221_160425.jpgIMG_20130221_160910.jpgInformation Center.jpg

 

- Fixing the downstairs shower.  This has been an issue for a while.  I wish I could say there were know-how behind this project but none of us really knew what we were doing :-D  Amazingly, it’s finished!  Soooooooo Thankful!

IMG_20130219_135523.jpgShower Fix Complete.jpg

- Modified the guest house introduction video.  This is to prepare for the coming summer months of teams that will arrive.

- Responding to email

- Most of my time has been spent creating a new website just for the guest house.  Troy helped take pictures of the guest house for the website!

IMG_20130216_091341.jpg

 - One thing I have been trying to do more of recently is doing a devotional before supper each night with the guests.  This hasn’t been happening every night but I usually like to read a story of those that have been killed or persecuted for their faith.  Very vivid stories but also thankful that we can all worship freely in Haiti and in the U.S.!

 

Haitian Creations

- Chandler and I met to start discussing updating the Haitian Creations website

- Helped Fabienne at Haitian Creations with new barcodes

- Here is a quick glimpse into the new shop – looks pretty amazing!

IMG_20130220_081418.jpgIMG_20130220_081428.jpgIMG_20130220_081559.jpgIMG_20130220_081603.jpg

 

Interesting

- While doing the shelves… Barry noticed this message on the can of stain

IMG_20130221_155554.jpg
Haiti, Haitian Creations    guest house, haiti

Christmas Party in Haiti 2013



We were in Haiti again this year for Christmas.  Technically we had two Christmas parties.  One with some guests and friends and the other with our guest house staff.

On Christmas, we had a progressive dinner with our friends who live around us.  We stopped at one house for appetizers, then the next for the main course and then our apartment was last stop for deserts and Christmas carols.

IMG_0197.JPGIMG_0198.JPG

 Guest House Christmas Party

You may remember last years party which we introduced the staff to some fun and games.  This year, a few days after Christmas, my dad arrived with many donations and gifts for our guest house workers and staff.  We had a Christmas party with them that included food, games and gift opening!

For games we had a cookie decorating contest, a timed race with a bowl on your head, and a penny (or Haitian Goude) drop :-D .

Here are a bunch of pictures from the event!  If you want to see all the pictures (maybe you didn’t see the thing you donated) let me know and I can send you the link to *all* the pictures we took!

Thanks to all who donated!!

CIMG6303.JPGCIMG6306.JPGCIMG6309.JPGIMG_20121229_125047.jpgIMG_20121229_132232.jpgIMG_20121229_132247.jpgIMG_20121229_132429.jpgCIMG6326.JPGCIMG6327.JPGCIMG6330.JPGCIMG6332.JPGCIMG6333.JPGCIMG6334.JPGCIMG6337.JPGCIMG6339.JPGCIMG6343.JPGCIMG6346.JPGCIMG6347.JPGCIMG6353.JPGCIMG6368.JPGCIMG6369.JPGCIMG6371.JPGCIMG6372.JPGCIMG6378.JPGCIMG6382.JPG

 

Picture with all the staff (Wergsy was the only one missing)

CIMG6359.JPG

Haiti    haiti

Highlights From the Past Month



Merry Christmas to you!  We miss you and hope you are getting to enjoy the winter!  Let us know how things are going – we would love to hear from you!

A lot has happened this last month from leaks coming from strange areas to… well…

Finding a time portal in Haiti:

Time Portal in Haiti

Time Portal in Haiti

Leaks!

Let’s take a look back in time over the last month…

Christmas Snow

The workers have never seen snow before but Melissa brought them snow this year :-D .  They had a day where they put up all the decorations and had a small Christmas party.

IMG_0115.JPGIMG_0121.JPGIMG_0126.JPG

Habitat for Humanity in Léogâne

500+ volunteers came to build houses for Habitat for Humanity (along with Jimmy Carter).  Melissa went one night to help work at a Haitian Creations booth to sell purses and jewelry.  Melissa got to hear Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood as they happened to have a little concert that evening.

IMG_0130.JPGIMG_0131.JPGIMG_0132.JPG

Clarel’s Birthday

Melissa did a birthday party for Clarel!

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Port Salut

For the run for life we took a trip down to Port Salut on Motorcycles.  It was fun!  Yet we spent 13 hours on the road there because we needed to find places that we could stay during the run.  So when we saw a sign like the one below – we would go check out the hotel to see if it’s really a hotel or not :-D .  You never know!  We found a few that the sign existed but we couldn’t find the hotel.

IMG_20121211_090251.jpgIMG_20121211_132322.jpgIMG_20121212_062854.jpg

 

New Driver Nick

We have a new driver!  His name is Nick.  We are thankful for him and have enjoyed hanging out with him.  He likes to run which is a good fit around here with Barry doing the run for life.  We have both been running with Barry at different times.

Here is an excerpt I liked from Nick’s latest blog:

Some company we hired put up a concrete wall this past week [at Heartline OK property].  It’s like 8’ high and made from blocks with vertical rebar.  But the blocks weren’t mixed correctly and therefore are the consistency of chalk.  I can take my pocket knife and crumble them away.  Many of the blocks already have cracks.  What’s worse, I pushed on the wall in the middle and it swayed back and forth!  We’re going to have to strengthen it.

This morning John gave a devotional from the Church in Sardis.  This is the church where God said he knew their deeds that they had a reputation of being alive but were dead and consequently God told them to strengthen the things which remained.

We talked about what it means to strengthen what remains spiritually.  John used the analogy of our swaying wall that needs strengthening.  He pointed out how it’s bad the wall is poor quality, but it’s good we noticed it so it can be fixed.  In the same way, it’s bad we are sinful, but it’s good if we recognize the problem and turn to God, who can make us whole through relationship with Him. (Read more on his blog).

 Other Things

Melissa making a recipe book for the guest house!  She will have all the recipes the guest house makes!  If you haven’t already checked it out… she has a bunch of the Haitian recipes on our website.

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Great quote…

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Haiti    haiti

3 Things I Can’t Get Off My Mind – Toilets, Cell Phones, and Second Hand Laptops



Recently I’ve had a few conversations with different workers at the guesthouse that I can’t seem to comprehend.  Even after being here for a bit of time, there are some things as Americans we just can’t relate to or understand – ever.

One of our workers is trying to fix up her house.  It’s just a little one or two room cement house, and it’s in rough shape.  Every time it rains hard, it floods with water and they have to take everything up off the floor so it doesn’t get soaked.  She told me yesterday that her family finally was able to purchase a toilet for the first time ever.  Up until now they just had a hole in the ground in a corner of the house, and she said often times it smelled really bad.  She said they had been praying to God for a toilet for a long, long time.  She was almost in tears because she was so happy that they were finally getting one.  Granted, they will still have to bring in buckets of water to flush it, since they don’t have plumbing, but she was overjoyed.  Have you every prayed to God for a toilet?  Me neither.

Another one of our workers only comes about four hours a day to help us out, so her pay is small, but it helps her get by.  She has been arriving early every day for the past couple weeks – like an hour early.  Here I’m thinking, if I didn’t get paid that much, why on earth would I come to work so early every day.  I finally talked to her today about it and asked why she is doing that.  She responded, “My cell phone broke one day in the rain, and I don’t have money to buy another one.”  (We’re talking less than $25 USD).  I said, “What does your cell phone have to do with anything?”  She then said that it is what she uses for a clock.  She said that they don’t have any other clock at her house, and no one else has a cell phone to tell her the time.  So since she doesn’t want to be late for work, she just comes plenty early to make sure she’s there on time.  So many layers of her story I can’t comprehend.

Asking for laptop in Haiti

Finally (for today at least), I was asking the guesthouse workers for ideas for what they wanted for Christmas.  I only asked about four of them before I realized that this was not a good idea.  Three of the four of them said that they wanted laptops.  I was a bit surprised that they would say something that was so expensive.  Then one of them suggested a second-hand laptop instead of a new one.  I asked him to check on the price, and he came back saying that they were about $300 USD.  The kicker was the look on his face when he told me the price.  It was as if he was hopeful, thinking, oh, this is no problem for an American to buy.  You can afford that, can’t you?  The conversation is still sinking into my head a week later, as I am trying to understand how much money they think we have.  I mean, obviously we have a lot more than them, when a good wage in Haiti is $5 per day.  But still.  What do they really think of us as Americans?  And what image are we projecting?

Haiti, Life    haiti, laptop, phone, toilet
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  • Life on Steriods - http://t.co/oQ2sUKwKNm (Alberts' Blog) 05:15:17 PM June 16, 2013
  • RT @QuincyDJones: Illiteracy is not a thing of the past for the poor. Let's provide digital literacy, start w/ Haiti w/@libraryforall : htt… 02:41:13 PM June 16, 2013
  • Inverter toast. No power at the GH. We are bypassing the inverter and splicing wires together with… http://t.co/g5ILZt8N9R 11:34:19 PM June 14, 2013
  • Bad EDH == pump overheated and not turning on. After resting the pump and putting the control box in the freezer I got it to turn on. 02:44:12 PM June 14, 2013
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