Monday, 25 May 2015

rich and beautiful

7 months in Madagascar. Rich and Beautiful. That’s what it has been.

It’s been a topsy turvy few months and if I could pick out a few things that I’ve tried to learn along the journey, this is what they would be…

Live in Heaven – you have access to EVERYTHING you need
Be Un-offendable – you can afford it
Dream big – NOTHING is impossible
Yours to carry – not mine (burdens)
Don’t listen to monsters
It’s Jesus I serve – no-one else

I could expand… but… I don’t know if I need to. It all comes down to love… to having an understanding who I am a daughter of… to knowing the life of freedom that I am called to… to living as someone who knows they are LOVED. I haven’t figured it out yet but I am thankful for all the ways He has allowed me to love – the opportunities to express my Father’s heart. It’s been a tough few months – but I am thankful for the journey that it has brought me on and for the rich and beautiful places it has taken me.

The repaired cleft lip smile, the sweet giggles of those whose obstetric fistulas are now closed, the running feet of those once bent, the waving arms of the ones that were once crippled by terrible burns, all those who have been empowered with knowledge, with love, with the tools to do what they were made to do… the pure joy of the market seller whose smile broadens when my eyes meet hers, to those who have so much to share, whose hearts are so rich and beautiful beyond compare, to those who know what it is to hope, to trust, to love even when they have so little in terms of ‘stuff’… to the endless sea of lush green rice fields, to the mountain peaks and rainforest galore, to the jumping lemurs and to the sweet sweet tastes of your plentiful fruits – mangoes, coconuts, litchis, apples, bananas, pineapples, oranges, limes, passion fruit... strawberries even!. Madagascar you are rich and beautiful and it has been a joy and an honour to serve you and your people!

One of my beautiful friends got a few people on board to summarise our last few months here in Madagascar and I think she’s captured it really well… (see if you can guess which my line is J ):

Psalm 136 – The Africa Mercy version
Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good… His love endures forever.

He opened up an entire new region of Africa unexpectedly… His love endures forever.
To Him who equipped us for the task… His love endures forever
Who brought us through the mist of the unknown and rough seas… His love endures forever.

And kept us safe in our precarious berth… His love endures forever.
To Him who kept us safe from tropical storms… His love endures forever.

Who provided all of our water…
His love endures forever.
His faithfulness confirmed His promise in ways seen and unseen…
His love endures forever.
Who connected our paths with the right patients…
His love endures forever.
He saw us through every surgery… His love endures forever

To him who heals bodies even when surgery or medicines fail… His love endures forever.
He healed every wound… His love endures forever.
Who restores movement to contracted joints…
His love endures forever.
Whose presence filled our Hospital causing infections to vanish, new skin to grow and left hearts overflowing with hope… His love endures forever.
During stress filled times, He answered my every page… His love endures forever.

To Him who provided our largest HOPE center ever!... His love endures forever.
He saved lives through training! … His love endures forever.
Who provided a way for us to minister to orphans, the elderly, prisoners, the deaf & disabled… His love endures forever.
To the ONE who created the colourful richness of harmony in the music of Madagascar and blessed us with a day crew that sings praises while they work…
His love endures forever.
And opened the floodgates of the internet…
His love endures forever.
For the everlasting supplies of fruit & veg…
His love endures forever.
For the day when the cheese came…
His love endures forever.

To Him alone who created all the lemurs…
His love endures forever.
Who provided a close friend at just the right time…His love endures forever.
He kept us safe in 3 different countries… His love endures forever.
To him who alone does great wonders… His love endures forever.
Let us give thanks to the God of heaven.
His love endures forever.



And so I find myself nearly on my way home – 7 months of surgery and it’s time to pack up this floating Hospital and let it sail again. My heart is full and I can’t wait to be a part of the adventures that are planned for our next 10 months here in Madagascar this August. From a hugely expanded health education program that will span the nation, to setting up a Regional Fistula Centre that we hope will leave a lasting legacy that will bring hope and healing to thousands of women in Madagascar, to a Ponseti clinic which will treat 100s of young children with club feet… not to mention the 12 towns around Madagascar that will be visited by our teams to find patients that need the help of our usual array of life transforming surgeries on board or the many many rich and beautiful spirits that I will get to share life with… friends, patients and colleagues… I truly cannot wait!

But first, I look forward to seeing some of you back home…

Until then… live as someone who is LOVED.

Rich and beautiful. His love endures forever.


KWW xx

Saturday, 14 March 2015

unforced rhythms of grace

It 's good to remember, isn't it, that life isn't just about us or even the people around us. Well in some senses of course it is, because we are part of one very beautiful body and without anyone to share it with or to complement what each of us bring to the table or without someone else to hold up our arms when we feel weak, we would likely frazzle and whither away. But in the midst of it, it' s not all about me getting it right for anyone else, or anyone telling me I 've done a good job or even about adding a shiny gold star to my lapel - when it seems like it is for these things, I enter a relentless cycle that never seems to find completion. I 'm never good enough, I 'm forever wishing I did better and I 'm always longing for more and wishing I didn't let myself or others down. The uncompleted cycle leaves me in this twisted trap of guilt and pride and fear and insatiable want and it steals from the simplicity and beauty that was meant for me. It keeps me from remembering that it 's Jesus I serve.

Come to me. Get away with me and you'll recover your life. I 'll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me - watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won' t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you'll learn to live freely and lightly. Matthew 11: 28-30

Read it again... slowly... it will take a few weights off your shoulders and likely loosen a few chains you might have let settle around your neck.

Come to me. Get away with me and you'll recover your life. I'll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me - watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won 't lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you'll learn to live freely and lightly.

So in amongst our busy lives and the things that try to take a sneaky piece of our peace, I am slowly learning that we have to actively, consciously, whole-heartedly reach out for another way. The way that doesn't treat you like a puppet and demand that your limbs and heart jump with every fleeting tug, but the way of grace. And even when you long for the stillness of that grace and even when you know what it looks like, it is hard to find. I can testify to that. These last few months have been far from a walk in the park. I feel like my job has forced me to embrace all sorts of newness and challenges that have been way too big for me - big enough to overwhelm me and big enough to make me feel awfully small. But in amongst it all, I have found that all my heart really needed to know, even amongst a million unknowns and a million challenges and a million times when it has felt like the waves are too big... all I really really wanted to know is that I am a child of God. No longer a slave to fear, but a child of God. Surrounded by the arms of my Father.

And so this journey continues. May be you were hoping for lots of patient stories from me - don' t worry, there are plenty of those. Our Hospital doesn't stop pouring love out and that kind of love can' t help but transform hearts, inside and out. It' s beautiful. The tumours keep disappearing, the cataracts vanishing, legs are made straight and the signs of deepest fear and rejection are cut out with a sharp knife, leaving healthy places for love to grow. These things never stop happening in this incredible place.

Sambany was a fine example of that this last month. For 19 years he walked around with a growing facial mass of over 7 Kilos and when told of the risk of death that surgery would bring, he commented that it didn't matter, his spirit was already dead. So you can imagine the joy it is to see a tumour free, liberated Sambany. New life before him. And there are hundreds of others like him, not as noticeable on the outside, but perhaps even more powerfully changed on the inside. It' s why I am still here. There 's nothing my heart wants more. The lure of money or a nice house or a fancy car or a bit more independence just doesn't cut it. I can ditch those things fairly easily but - even then - it' s something more sneaky that lures me in. It 's something that you can' t walk away from as easily as those other things. It follows me, it haunts me and it steals from me: the opinion of others. It' s without doubt the hardest thing to walk away from. And it 's without doubt the most powerful thing that keeps me from remembering in this place: It's Jesus I serve.

And that 's why working here is about so much more than the surgery we do, or the people we meet or the lives that get transformed. Yes those things are huge. But bigger than that, Jesus is guiding me by the hand, he is leading me towards the day when I won' t care about what others think but instead will boldly declare, ' I am a child of God' . I reckon I have walked a little closer these last few months, a chain or 2 has gone. I 've been desperately discovering what it is to learn the unforced rhythms of grace and to know that... it' s Jesus I serve. But I 'm not there yet.

We' re here in Madagascar until early June, when we'll hop over to South Africa for our usual Ship MOT and then we will make our way back to Madagascar for another 10 life breathing, spirit transforming, mountain moving, impossibility defying, love overflowing months. I will pop home for a few weeks in June and also try to learn some more French for a few weeks in Switzerland in June/July. Sharing God s love, His life and His truth is all I really care about and for that, relationship is key. One of the privileges of my job means that I get to build vision and communicate with key leaders in the countries we work in. The most effective way to build relationship is to learn the language and I hope to make some strides forward with that. I want to do my job well and I want to serve the nations we are called to with excellence and with deepest respect. My stumbling French has a long way to go, but I will take one step at a time...

Praying hugest love over you. May his abounding grace wash over you where you need it most and may your fears be drowned in perfect love.

Love always, KWW

Friday, 13 March 2015

It's Jesus we serve

It’s Jesus we serve

It’s good to remember, isn’t it, that life isn’t just about us or even the people around us. Well in some senses of course it is, because we are part of one very beautiful body and without anyone to share it with or to complement what each of us bring to the table or without someone else to hold up our arms when we feel weak, we would likely frazzle and whither away. But in the midst of it, it’s not all about me getting it right for anyone else, or anyone telling me I’ve done a good job or even about adding a shiny gold star to my lapel… when it seems like it is for these things, I enter a relentless cycle that never seems to find completion. I’m never good enough, I’m forever wishing I did better and I’m always longing for more and wishing I didn’t let myself or others down. The uncompleted cycle leaves me in this twisted trap of guilt and pride and fear and insatiable want and it steals from the simplicity and beauty that was meant for me. It keeps me from remembering that it’s Jesus I serve.

Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly. Matthew 11: 28-30

Read it again… slowly… it will take a few weights off your shoulders and likely loosen a few chains you might have let settle around your neck.

Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.

So in amongst our busy lives and the things that try to take a sneaky piece of our peace, I am slowly learning that we have to actively, consciously, whole-heartedly reach out for another way. The way that doesn’t treat you like a puppet and demand that your limbs and heart jump with every fleeting tug, but the way of grace…. And even when you long for the stillness of that grace and even when you know what it looks like, it is hard to find. I can testify to that. These last few months have been far from a walk in the park. I feel like my job has forced me to embrace all sorts of newness and challenges that have been way too big for me – big enough to overwhelm me and big enough to make me feel awfully small. But in amongst it all, I have found that all my heart really needed to know – even amongst a million unknowns and a million challenges and a million times when it has felt like the waves are too big. – all I really really wanted to know is that I am a child of God. No longer a slave to fear, but a child of God. Surrounded by the arms of my Father.

And so this journey continues. May be you were hoping for lots of patient stories from me – don’t worry – there are plenty of those. Our Hospital doesn’t stop pouring love out and that kind of love can’t help but transform hearts, inside and out. It’s beautiful. The tumours keep disappearing, the cataracts vanishing, legs are made straight and the signs of deepest fear and rejection are cut out with a sharp knife, leaving healthy places for love to grow. These things never stop happening in this incredible place.

Sambany was a fine example of that this last month. For 19 years he walked around with a growing facial mass of over 7 Kilos… when told of the risk of death that surgery would bring, he commented that it didn’t matter, his spirit was already dead. So you can imagine the joy it is to see a tumour free, liberated Sambany. New life before him. And there are hundreds of others like him, not as noticeable on the outside, but perhaps even more powerfully changed on the inside. It’s why I am still here. There’s nothing my heart wants more. The lure of money or a nice house or a fancy car or a bit more independence just doesn’t cut it. I can ditch those things fairly easily but  - even then - it’s something more sneaky that lures me in. It’s something that you can’t walk away from as easily as those other things. It follows me, it haunts me and it steals from me: the opinion of others. It’s without doubt the hardest thing to walk away from. And it’s without doubt the most powerful thing that keeps me from remembering: Its Jesus I serve.

And that’s why working here is about so much more than the surgery we do, or the people we meet or the lives that get transformed. Yes those things are huge. But bigger than that, Jesus is guiding me by the hand, he is leading me towards the day when I won’t care about what others think but instead will boldly declare, ‘I am a child of God’. I reckon I have walked a little closer these last few months, a chain or 2 has gone. I’ve been desperately discovering what it is to learn the unforced rhythms of grace and to know that… it’s Jesus I serve. But I’m not there yet.

We’re here in Madagascar until early June, when we’ll hop over to South Africa for our usual Ship MOT – and then we will make our way back to Madagascar for another 10 life breathing, spirit transforming, mountain moving, impossible defying, love overflowing months. I will pop home for a few weeks in June and also try to learn some more French for a few weeks in Switzerland in June/July. Sharing God’s love, His life and His truth is all I really care about and for that, relationship is key.  One of the privileges of my job means that I get to build vision and communicate with key leaders in the countries we work in. The most effective way to build relationship is to learn the language and I hope to make some strides forward with that.

Praying hugest love over you. May his abounding grace wash over you where you need it most and may your fears be drowned in perfect love.


Love always, KWW

Sunday, 21 December 2014

who put me here?

Clambering into the rusty rickshaw and nestling myself into the somewhat torn plastic seat next to one of my most precious friends on Earth, we gave our instructions to take us to a local hotel where we would sip a beer and eat something yummy... and off we went - the drivers skinny little legs, pedaling round and round to take us to breathe some fresh air and some fresh thoughts... sometimes it's just good to do that here. The journey from the ship through this small port town is hardly something to write home about but there's a gentleness and peace in this place that swoops over you as you leave the port. The cars are few and the rickshaws are plenty. You get pedaled along past giant mounds of coconuts, ladies cooking samosas over an open fire and guys on the side of the road selling branches and branches full of lychees. The trees are a mix of palm, mango, lychee and some beautiful blooming frangipanis too. This time of year they are laden with fruit and my taste buds are tantalized at every sighting. You see people on bikes everywhere - from an old man with his bike weighed down with fresh flowers tied onto the back, weaving in amongst the collection of other 2 or 3 wheeled get arounds that there are - to cute little ones piled on bikes on their way to school. It makes driving with an actual motorized vehicle a dance just to get down the road. The streets aren't littered with chewing gum, but instead with mango and lychee stones. The sun is warm, the humidity not too bad and the breeze... pretty nice. It's not West Africa, that's for sure and 8 weeks on, I am still finding myself wondering... who put me here? It's a phrase I could use to pretty much summarise the last 3 and a bit months...

Cos many things were just never part of my plan.

- Ebola infesting West Africa... heaping yet more hopelessness on nations who are already struggling to survive...

- Promotion to a new job that started way earlier than I expected...

- A change in direction for the ship as we headed to Madagascar...

- An 18 day sail to Cape Town...

- A whirlwind week at home to witness a brave and miraculous recovery of my precious nephew from brain surgery (even 15 year old nephews can be precious, right?)

- A rather rough 8 day sail to Madagascar... a most beautiful Island off the East coast of Africa - hailed for it's natural beauty and yet overwhelmed by inequality in terms of access to health care...

...And so here I am.

It was never my plan. I don't even believe it was God's plan. Not Ebola. Not my God of life and love.

But sometimes we find ourselves not in plan A or plan B or even C...

As I left Benin and found myself back on the ship and then soon after sailing down the coast of Africa, I found myself wondering how the heck I got there... My heart for heading to Benin last June to help prepare for the ship arrival was to connect with the people there... to get out of my office and to connect with hearts that I knew had so much to teach me in a country we were preparing to stay the next year in. And yet Ebola hit West Africa and forced us to leave and there I was in early September, sailing to a Country I have never been to, doing a job I have never done, dealing with a million changes and fielding a thousand crises' that came as a result of all our changing plans.

And yet... there is beauty. There is grace. And there is great pleasure in stepping out into deeper waters. There's a joy and a privilege as I realize I am being trusted with more and a deep humility as I realize even more that I cannot do it alone. If I tried, I'd sink. And I've done that a few times. It's forced me to discover more of the beauty that has been planted around me. It's in these deeper waters that I have found yet more of myself that needs to be refined. Where I thought I'd learnt to be free from control and pride and fear... I have seen them raise their ugly heads again - they sneak in from different angles and they have done their fair share of trying to make me feel weak... but in doing so, the redeeming, reconciling, refining love of God has found me and, in these deep waters, I have even more beautiful stories to tell.

We've been busy these last few weeks trying to find patients and our teams have worked hard to filter through the 1000s that come hoping to find the ones we can really help. Cos truth is, we're a specialized surgical ship so there's lots of people we need to say no to. It's not easy and whilst every fibre in each of us wants to say 'yes' to the help they seek.... we can't.... and watching hope rise and then fade away is no easy thing. For these people it's not plan A or B or C or D or even E.... they leave wondering why someone else has said no to their plea for help once again and I always wonder what they are thinking. If my heart and mind stay in that place too long, it begins to lose hope it self. I have to believe that there is hope.... eternal hope... and even to the ones who hear a 'no'... I have to pray that they catch a glimpse of it...

I've just spent the last few days in the capital, Antananarivo for a few meetings. It's a short 45 minute flight away and as I set off, I had no idea how much life that little trip would bring. It's a beautiful city - situated around a lake that has purple blossoming Jacaranda trees all around it. It was a breath of fresh air to me - perhaps it was the hilly landscape with cobbled streets or the cute little buildings nestled into them, or the rickety collection of 30 or 40 year old Renaults and Citroens that form their taxi fleet, or perhaps it was the enjoyment of the cooler highland air, or the friendly smiles of the patients we were selecting for surgery... or may be it was merely a few days independence away from my Ship-land. I'm not sure what it was exactly and even more, I have no idea how I got there. How I got to be speaking to government officials or to be a part of making decisions for the future of our surgical plan...

And so you see, I've had a collections of, 'how did I get here's?' ... and I'm still not sure how we got to be bobbing around here in the Indian Ocean, but I do know that just like God's grace has got me through and just how abundantly I have known that, the same is true for each person who crosses our path. He works all things together for good and for the people we can say yes to, they are truly grateful there is a plan G... there is delight, there is hope, this is a reality that some have dreamed of for years and for those we say no to, I have to believe that plan X or Y or even Z will come through... that my God of hope and life will shower himself on these precious ones too.

So as we embrace 15 more months of surgery (we'll be here until June 2016), shout out a little prayer for the ones who are still looking for hope and rejoice with me for the ones who have found it... and pray it blossoms to even more as their precious lives are transformed forever....

Praying for you whether you're in plan A or B or C... may you know His unfailing grace and abounding love this Christmas and in the coming year.

Love always, KWW

Saturday, 23 August 2014

hope redeemed

It was late in the evening, the air was heavy and thick with humidity and even though there was a breeze, you would never describe it as cool. I was going through the motions, putting one foot in front of the other - I had to - but as I lifted my foot from the tarmac onto the steps that would lead me to my plane ride home, I wondered if I would ever be back again. I wondered if God would ever trust me again, I wondered if I would ever trust myself again and I was wondering what hope lay before me. I tried to face it bravely but all the while my heart was broken. I felt like I had to tuck the love I had for sweet Africa away and I wasn't sure if I would ever be able to let it out again. It was April 2009 and after 3 years of working on board my big white ship, I was leaving the Africa Mercy from Benin. I was tired and feeling weak and it left me feeling like I had failed in many ways and I needed to go home to find rest. I knew I was walking towards a place where I would find life... but it wasn't easy.

A lot has happened since then. A lot of beauty has grown. Someone commented a while ago that I look like I am in love! And I am. I couldn't live life without the hope and redeeming love that Jesus has poured out on me. I have been relentlessly pursued, I have been believed in, I have been trusted, and treasured. I hear His cry of delight as I become more of who I was made to be and I hear a call of courage as I walk forward on new ground.

So you can imagine how I might have felt as I set foot back in Benin 2 months ago. Who would have thought? How does He do it? How does He hold all of these pieces together? How does He know... how did He know that it would mean so much? Why does He care? Surely there are more important things He needs to deal with? But He relentlessly pursues and His heart is always for life. And that's what He was leading me to...

I've been in Benin these last 2 months working as part of our Advance Team. It's a team that goes ahead of the Ship to 'Country Next' and prepares the way for the ship to arrive. I had been feeling a bit office-bound and dry in my job on the ship and was desperate to connect with the beauty of Africa that I had known, so jumped at the opportunity to join the team. I worked as the Healthcare Education Liaison and the position gave me opportunity to meet some of the most amazing people I have ever encountered. From the Ministry of Health, to the Nursing and Medical Schools, from Hospital Directors to the nurses on the wards... goodness gracious, I have been blessed. It was a privilege to share our vision and hope to be able to partner with them. They are each eager and hungry to learn. We say that relationships are the most important thing in West Africa and for this reason the Advance team does some crucial work. It isn't just about arranging logistics, but it is about getting to know each other, taking time and conveying value and respect. I have worked alongside an incredible translator and have enjoyed playing games in my head as I would try and beat him to translation as my French slowly improved. It was fun! The work has been beyond a privilege and as well as that, I have also made some special friends.

So it is with great sadness that the whole Ebola outbreak is shaking up our plans. Well, let me get that right... It is with great sadness that the Ebola virus is destroying so many beautiful lives in countries where they are just not equipped to deal with it. Not only do they lack simple infection control measures, but they lack good education that would help the deadly virus from spreading. People are scared and hope is being destroyed. It is just too sad. With it being so close to us in Nigeria, Mercy Ships has decided to delay the arrival of the ship from the previous arrival date of August 26 to better assess the situation. It's a time of tough decisions because not only do we have to make sure we keep our 400 crew safe but we also don't want to make matters worse for Benin itself. The ship is like a magnet and draws people from all over... and we can't be the ones to make the situation worse and make it spread further.

And all this can't help but leave me wondering... what does hope look like? How can we spend a few months in a Country, sharing vision, putting hope in people's hearts and then wonder if we might even be prevented from delivering our promises and watch those dreams fade away? What was all the relationship building all about? All I know is that it breaks God's heart too. And I know as well that He can restore, He can redeem and He is the one who puts hope in people's hearts.

The ship is going through some leadership changes and since our work in Benin is kind of on hold, myself and one other of our team have been asked to go back to the ship in the Canaries to help with work there for now. So as I reflect on the goodbyes to the rest of the team, I am sitting on the plane with a heavy heart because I'm leaving friends and I'm leaving a country that has so much life and hope to share itself. I'm wondering if I'll ever be back and questioning: what does Hope look like for Benin?

Right now, I don't know, I really don't know. But I do know that my God will relentlessly pursue this nation with His love. I wanted to be one of the ones to shower it on them... but if Ebola keeps us away for a while, I rest assured that He will keep pursing. I know that His heart is to overwhelm Benin with his love and to put an eternal hope in their hearts.

Hope Redeemed. That's my God. He did it for me and He will continue to do it for them. I need to know that right now because it hurts. I need to remind myself that God is restoring all things for His glory and that He can make all things new...

So wherever I am - Benin or the Canary Islands - and whatever I am doing - may people see you in it, Jesus, and may it all one day come together and crown you with many crowns...

Love always, KWW

Wednesday, 18 June 2014

rich

It's like trying to get out of a hot shower - the warmth and feel of the water just seem to call you to stay... just a few more minutes? Or just one last eye-full of sunshine glistening on the ocean blue? or one last wave to carry me to the shore... weeeeeeeeeeee... or one last strawberry or one last sniff of an extravagantly scented garden rose... or one last squeezy hug. Leaving home is never easy and, I'd even say, gets harder.

Richness is costly. Richness pays a price. Richness leaves you wondering how much love your heart can hold. I feel like a roll of tape that has rolled around a thousand different beautiful places and rolled in and out of the hearts of so many these last few weeks... and picked up a million pieces of love along the way that leaves my heart bursting and feeling so so rich. Richness doesn't come from money... I can testify to that. I laugh at myself as I dart around and point out the obvious to everyone, 'did you see the moon tonight?', 'did you smell that rose? ', 'can you feel that breeze?' ... it s all so rich to me and it has been so good to be home.

My dad joked as we used our 30+ year old body boards yesterday for, 'just one more surf ', that we should ask for our money back because they're looking a bit worn... and he always asks me as we get out of the water, it was worth the money wasn't it? ... as if we'd spent thousands of pounds on some rip off adventure... but all we did was carry an old board into some chilly waters and play in some waves. It cost next to nothing... and yet, has to be one of the richest things my heart knows.

It's rich because it takes me to a place where it' s just me and my Maker. We sing, we chat, we share thoughts, I tell Him the stuff that hurts, the dreams I have, I take time to breathe and acknowledge the rich before and behind. And as I wade into deeper waters, I find myself singing, 'You make me brave - you call me out beyond the shore into the waves. No fear can hinder now the promises you made.. .'. And I smile, because here I am again, trying to soak in this richness because my heart knows that it is soon time to leave. It s soon time to be brave. Again.

So here I am... about to start my journey to Benin and meet 8 others and, together, we form the Advance Team. Our job is to prepare the way for the ship s arrival in August. I'll miss this rich home, but am truly excited to get the opportunity to play a part in this team. The rich beauty of West Africa awaits... and I cannot wait...

Will you join me in praying richness over Benin? I long for hearts to know Jesus, for them to know a new depth of God s love for them and that we, as an organisation, would steward the love and gifts we have well so that we can share them in a way that will transform lives and share tastes of rich beauty that will last into eternity. And no doubt, Benin will show share their rich beauty with us too. Even the thought of such a privilege leaves me on my knees...

Sending the hugest hugs to you all - especially those of you I didn't get to see... and praying rich beauty over each of your hearts too.

Love forever, KWW

Tuesday, 22 April 2014

Hope born

Happy Easter, friends! Isn’t it incredible that we get to believe that hope rises from dead places and that impossible stones can be rolled away? As I pondered on these words the other day, I was reminded once again what a privilege it is to be part of bringing hope and healing in this place. As I sit and type in my little cabin, I’m thinking of friends around the world who support me in all sorts of ways to be here and I’m forever grateful for each one. It’s difficult to know how to express that thanks – even to those a few feet away on decks above and below me. But I hope this little taste of life in our Hospital will fill your heart and come as a huge thanks for being a part of it.
Imagine having lost your baby in prolonged labour. Imagine having a hole in your bladder that means you leak urine – the whole time. Imagine being rejected by your family because, basically, you don’t smell very nice. Imagine living with the stench of stale urine that never ever goes away. Not ever. Imagine the hopelessness. Imagine thinking that this is forever. How would you feel? How would you heave yourself up from your sleeping mat on the dusty floor every day? Imagine thinking that you’re the only one – that there’s no one else who understands. It’s a story that we’ve heard told again and again during these last 7 weeks of Obstetric Fistula surgery on board. But the stories didn’t end there. Imagine finding out that there is a place where hope is born every day. Imagine hearing that there are people who can help… imagine stepping foot on our big white ship for the very first time.
And so these ladies arrive. We group them into a ward of their own – not to isolate them, but to give them a safe space so they’re not surrounded by children running around or people who have no idea what they have been through. They each share a living space for anywhere from a week to several weeks whilst they have their surgery and recover from it and what happens is simply beautiful. They share their stories. They realize that they are not the ‘only one’. They begin to hope. They begin to believe that life might get better. They begin to believe that their impossible stones might just get rolled away. People sit with them and hold their hands. They make friendship bracelets and they play Jenga. And in this beautiful place, a haven is created and a hope for a different future is born – and not only that – a hope for each other is born as well. A few weeks back, we had one lady who was not doing so well – she was in pain, still leaking urine and feeling generally pretty yucky. One of the nurses saw her crying and when asked why, she discovered that they were not tears of sadness or self pity but tears of joy. She said she was just so happy for the lady in the bed next to her who was now healed.  How easy would you find it to rejoice when others rejoice… even when your deepest hope is not yet realized for yourself? Isn’t it beautiful?
And in amongst this haven of hope, the ladies sing. Most of our patients get to climb up to Deck 7 every afternoon for an hour or so of air and a glimpse of life beyond our windowless Deck 3. But since this special group of ladies aren’t allowed to climb the stairs whilst they heal, the nurses and translators have created a daily – twice daily – sometimes even more often than that – routine to keep them from lying in bed ALL day long. They just simply walk up and down the corridor and sing and there’s nothing like the sound of it wafting it’s way into my office. It’s eerily beautiful and I know in these moments it’s not just about the singing. They harmonise and sing words of thanks to God. It’s stunning in itself but something far bigger is happening than just that. As the ladies sing, I know that God’s Spirit is thick upon them. There’s safety, there’s acceptance, there’s love, there’s freedom, there’s healing for hearts that have lived with the deepest kind of rejection I could ever imagine and the hope that was born continues to grow. Whether they know it or not, Jesus is walking those corridors with them and breathing new life into them. I know He is. I can feel it. And I can see it written on their faces. Chains are being broken and it makes my heart soar. 
We’re finishing up 40 something weeks of surgery in the Republic of Congo – almost hard to believe, but it’s true. We have 3 weeks of surgery left and then a couple of weeks of clearing up and packing before we hit the big wide seas. This year my plans are looking slightly different and instead of joining the sail, I’ll be heading home at the end of May for 3 weeks before I fly out to Guinea to be a part of our Advance Team. The team of 6 goes ahead of the Ship to prepare the way for the ship’s arrival… and I have to say, I’m pretty excited! For a while now, I have felt a bit of a tug in my heart because doing the job I do leaves me feeling a bit cut off from patients or the country we’re in a lot of the time. Sounds silly maybe, but it’s true! So this little heart is thrilled to go and help prepare the way – my role will be to help with the hiring process of nearly 200 local Day Crew whose jobs range from providing translation to cleaning, cooking and all sorts of other jobs that are vital to us successfully doing what we set out to do.  As well as that, I hope to be able to set up some of the education that we’ll provide for local nurses and for the rest, my plate is open – I’m happy to do whatever we need to do as a team to prepare the way for the ship’s arrival. Others will be liaising with immigration to prepare for the arrival for hundreds of volunteers over the coming year, arranging things in the Port, spreading the word of what we do and who we can help and all sorts of other things that need doing before the Ship arrives. It’ll be interesting and challenging, I am sure...  I look forward to living on LAND and with a small team… I look forward to open windows and crazy West African hustle and bustle… I look forward to a bit of independence and even perhaps digging up some French… but I know without a doubt, I’ll look forward to the day my floating home comes into sight on August 21st… cos I also know, I’ll miss it like crazy too.
I look forward to seeing some of you soon and in the meantime, here’s to believing that hope can rise from dead places and impossible stones can be rolled away… cos they really really can. Happy Easter!

Love always, KWW