I’m no stranger to feeling my way forward in the dark. Spending five years in an un-electrified village (with a chronic shortage of candles and kerosene), living out the years since with daily power cuts, having only weak Indian batteries in my flashlight and frequenting outhouses at midnight (due to multiple mugs of chai) have provided me with ample practice in the aforementioned art. Despite having this niche expertise, it is still uncomfortable to find one’s self driving along precipitous Himalayan roads at three in the morning with the headlights... off. The discomfort approaches alarm when it is compounded by the fact that there is a man bleeding to death in your back seat. Driving slow would mean to risk his death. Driving fast would be to risk everyone’s. In such a situation, one can’t help but ask themselves once again, “How did I get here?”
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Monday, December 19, 2011
The Fools' Christmas
The three who came from the east, who were they after all? Some call them kings. Some call them Magi’s. Some call them wise men. There is enough ambiguity to their tale to make one wonder about their story. The stars had painted a map for them which led to Bethlehem. Perhaps they really were kings because they were regal enough to be received by Herod. Their intent for visiting his palace was to ascertain were the foretold child had been born. It must have been surprising to find that they who came from a distant land knew more about this strange birth than the local ruler.
_____
The Donkey was busy ferrying mothers to the hospital so Mom, Shepherd and I took the Rhino to Darjeeling. In the office I sat down with the Matri Yaan officer and the new doctor in charge of Maternal Child Health for the District. Not only has India guaranteed free care at the time of delivery to its mothers but also free transport to its institutions as well. With the giant satellite map ECTA/Dayasagar created hanging on the wall, I outlined all of the technical problems inhibiting the government from actually fulfilling its promises.
_____
The Donkey was busy ferrying mothers to the hospital so Mom, Shepherd and I took the Rhino to Darjeeling. In the office I sat down with the Matri Yaan officer and the new doctor in charge of Maternal Child Health for the District. Not only has India guaranteed free care at the time of delivery to its mothers but also free transport to its institutions as well. With the giant satellite map ECTA/Dayasagar created hanging on the wall, I outlined all of the technical problems inhibiting the government from actually fulfilling its promises.
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Birth Announcement: Just Before Sunrise, by Ryan Phillips
Just before sunrise I was dreaming. The Assistant Chief Medical Officer was sitting in front of me and we were having a discussion. In real life she’d asked us several times not to deliver our own child in Kaffer. It seemed a bit incongruent considering that she had also told us that our little birth room was better equipped than the government Primary Health Centers that are assigned to take care of the majority of “normal” deliveries in our district. But still, even being fully aware of this discrepancy, her request made me second guess myself. It made me think about how detrimental to our work (let alone our family) it would be if something were to go wrong with the birth of our own child at our center. There were certainly some legitimate reasons for concern considering Amanda’s history and that VBACs (vaginal births after cesareans) aren’t practiced in India. But yet, in my dream, I was confident in telling Dr. Lingdo that we had the baby at home anyways, that not only was it a “normal” delivery but that it was a blessed one as well. It involved a mother doing what her body was created to do, everything needed to help her do it, a midwife there to help when required or desired, a husband and family to support her, and an ambulance waiting outside in case of any complications. The room prepared for her was clean, comfortable, and safe. The baby was born into an environment of love. All went well. All was well. In my dream I was telling her that it was good enough for my wife, so it is good enough for their wives, and that I was asking for official permission to take care of all the “normal” deliveries at our center.
Waking at six in the morning, I
found Amanda sitting upright. She was having contractions every six minutes and
it was finally time. Having seen a lot of traumatic births in recent weeks, a
sense of foreboding had been growing in my heart, but I awoke with a sense of
peace. One concrete reason for this was that Kara Rowley, a midwife from Kansas
with a lot of overseas birth experience, had volunteered to come for the
delivery. It was comforting that everything wasn’t riding on me, which too
often is the case despite my efforts. Another more ethereal reason for
my peace was my nocturnal conversation with Dr. Lingdo. Even as the contractions became more frequent, my
feeling didn’t fade. I was grateful that we’d been blessed with a week of rest
and preparation after a preceding month or so of mayhem. As the day progressed,
everything went according to plan, in fact, better than we would have hoped
for. It turned out to be an uneventful birth, but by that I do not mean boring.
I mean uneventful in the same sense that when you ask someone who has been
soaring at 35,000 feet at 700 mph and crossed half the globe in a single
technologically-enabled leap how their flight was and they reply, “Uneventful.”
My wife’s pain took off, she soared through the dizzying heights of maternal
sacrifice, Kara sat as co-pilot and helped everything stay on course and, after
half a day’s journey, my son gently landed in my arms in the middle of the
Indian Himalayas.
In those mountains, our village is
situated in the midst of a large protected forest. It is mostly composed of
Japanese Cedars: tall, straight, quick growing. In the Bible, cedars are often
used as a symbol for strength and integrity. Any single tree is quite majestic,
but it is much more beautiful when part of a forest. So we named our four-kilogram,
twenty-and-three-quarter’s-inch son Cedar Milan (milan meaning a union or unification). We hope that he will
grow quickly to be a man of integrity and find kindred spirits to stand beside
him in this journey of life.
Since the miscarriage of our
daughter Leaf and the traumatic struggle to save Amanda’s life, a main thought has driven me forward, “I
don’t want any of our neighbors to have to go through that.” But
after Cedar’s birth, a new thought will push me on, “I want all of our neighbors
to experience this.” Both thoughts are legitimate. Both are needed, but
I think the second is better than the first. Our work so far in Kaffer has been
like running life boats for a sinking ship. It has been a survival operation. It
has taken a monumental effort just to ensure that my neighbors don’t “have to
go through that” (not that this goal
has even been fully realized yet). Our work to come is to give an opportunity
for “our neighbors to experience this.”
What is the “this”? “This” is life instead of survival. “This” is grace instead
of fate. “This” is compassion instead of compulsion. “This” is love instead of
duty. But we won’t be able to do it alone, like two trees standing on a hilltop
just begging to be struck by lightning. We’ll need a forest of kindred spirits
to make it happen.
Just before sunrise I was dreaming
but just before sunset I was holding my dream in my arms. So I think I may go
and have that conversation with Dr. Lingdo in real life as well. The first part
of my dream has come true, why not the second?
In Him,
Ryan, Amanda, Linda,
Asher, Shepherd, AND Cedar.
Tuesday, October 18, 2011
The God of Broken Things: Part Three, by Ryan Phillips
Here is the final of the three weeks I
mentioned in the first newsletter entitled The God of Broken Things. Thank you for giving me a way to process the
last month and come to grips with everything that has happened. I hope these
stories bless you.
Wednesday, October 5
Monday and Tuesday provided a little time
to rest and heal from my case of cellulitis (the worst pain I’ve been in for
years), even though I was the only one on duty for the Rhino. Purna drove the
Elephant down to Gayaganga on Tuesday with Sandeep in tow for treatment. Saran
was juggling the non-stop maternity cases in the Donkey without any major
hang-ups or bang-ups. On Wednesday, the last thing I wanted to be doing was
heading to Siliguri, again, but there I was riding in the back of the Rhino
with Purna (who was supposed to be on holiday already) behind the wheel. Despite
the fact that I’d incised the central abscess with a scalpel and self-extracted
the “eye,” I was far from healed. An anti-embolism stocking on my left leg was
helping to keep the edema down, and a gauze pad was absorbing the fluids, which
constantly leaked from the sinus. That morning I’d woken up to Amanda holding
her chest and coughing. She was having strong and abnormal heart palpitations
in her thirty-seventh week of pregnancy. Asher’s emergency C-section, Leaf’s
miscarriage, and Shepherd’s threatened miscarriage came hurtling back into my
mind. I was seized by a sense of doom, which is abnormal for me. My mind
instantly started concocting dreadful scenarios.
On a broken section of road, en route to
the cardiac center, we passed a body lying in the middle of a blind curve on
National Highway-31A. I blurted out, “Oh, come on buddy. If you’re going
to drink, at least don’t pass out in the middle of the highway.”
There was a bandage on his leg that was
stained with blood. His arm was limp and outstretched. It seemed to beckon acquaintance
with a tire. The cars were swerving around him, coating his body with a fine
grey dust. My conscience darted back and forth. Amanda was the one to speak up,
“Shouldn’t we stop and help him?”
Purna pulled over. I hopped out of the back
and hobbled back around the bend towards the body. In my mind I was saying,
“Oh, come on, Jesus. Are you really putting me to the test right now? How about
a break today? Can’t I just care for me and my own . . . just for today?”
I was relieved to find that he was alive and simply drunk. It
wouldn’t have been surprising to find he was having a heart attack or something,
which would have required loading him into the ambulance. Being a bit
indignant, I gave him five hard smacks on the face before he regained even a
semblance of consciousness. The wound on his leg was well-bandaged . . .
perhaps back at the hospital in Rambi. Doing a fireman’s carry, we stumbled
together . . . his legs shaky from drink, mine from pain. He mumbled
incoherent sentences about his pants to me and I gave him some sharp reprimands
that were probably equally as incoherent to him. There was a nice cozy patch of
grass thirty meters away. I’d like to say that I made him a comfy little bed of
leaves and pillow of heather to sleep it off in. I’d like to say that I held
his hand and prayed for him until he came out of his stupor. In actuality, I
did little more than drop him in a heap in the first secure spot I could find. It
looked safe enough and comfy enough . . . for a drunken stranger.
While Amanda’s symptoms did last for
several hours, by the time we reached Siliguri and met the cardiologist they’d
mostly subsided. The ECG came back clear. Her condition seemed to have
been caused by high levels of MSG in the momos and barbecued chicken (chased with a strong cup of hot
chocolate) she’d had the night before. Relieved but exhausted, we began
the long journey home, with me hoping that we wouldn’t run across any bodies or
even anybody else. Then, as we came upon the spot where I’d left our inebriated
speed bump, I saw that it was empty. It looked like it was good enough after
all. But would it have been good enough for my son if he were the drunk? Would it have been good enough for
me?
Thursday, October 6
The next
morning brought another surprise, this time a pleasant one. I was able to walk
without much pain. After breakfast, Mom and I went to wash the Elephant (which
was still puke streaked from Tuesday’s mass transport). The Bengali tourists
were teeming up at the lodge, taking in the views of Kangchenjunga, and
breathing fresh mountain air. I brushed the road dust off the Rhino with a wand
made of chicken feathers and called it a day. In between patients we spent the
afternoon sipping tea and sunning in the porch swing. I even had time to read a
book.
Friday, October 7
Within an
hour we received four calls for maternal transports: one from Lolay, one from
Pochowk, one from Nok Dara, and one from Nimbong. Two were in labor and needed
transport to the hospital and two were postpartums needing a ride home. There
was an extended volley of calls and misunderstandings. The four parties were,
of course, located at four distant corners of our region of service. The Lolay
group was by the roadside and ready to roll, but the Pochowk group had called
first. They had been “going to arrive in Buddhabare in five minutes” for well
over an hour. In reality they were rigging plastic over the homemade stretcher
to protect the mother from a freak fall shower.
Saran
returned from Kalimpong later that evening, transporting both postpartums at
the same time. We met at Deorali around sundown. He headed off towards Nok Dara
with one family and I headed off towards Nimbong with the other. We were both
alone and had rough roads ahead. There was still a large open sore on the back
of my calf, but fortunately I could operate the clutch without pain. Halfway
there, the newborn began to cry. Pulling over the Rhino in the middle of the
jungle, I told the new parents that the baby was hungry. The first-time mother jostled
the baby, still adjusting to feeding a child. The father smiled and played with
the baby’s cheek. The forest was illuminated with bright moonlight and was
alive with cicadas and bird calls. For fifteen minutes we sat in the semi-quiet
as the baby suckled deep draughts. It dawned on me that I do actually love my
job.
The new
parents lived only a stone’s throw from Basil’s house. Of course it would mean
a late night but I ducked in to see them just as they were getting ready for
bed. They made me a hot cup of Nescafé and we chatted after a
long absence. Jen Boyd and a team of medical volunteers are scheduled to
come in late November. Basil and I plotted together where to have the camps. Would
Ghanti Dara be best, or how about Paila Line? Let’s not forget Sungure and
Manzing! Would the vehicle make it? We chatted about politics, faith, and
health. As they tucked in for the night, I headed home, listening to good music
and the roar of the diesel engine.
Saturday, October 8
In the
morning, I received multiple calls from Dabling and realized that the first
week of our “month of rest and preparation” had blazed by at a furious rate.
The first case was only “thirty minutes below Dokan Dara” and it sounded like
congestive heart failure. Thirty minutes didn’t sound that bad . . . but it
ended up involving around 1,500 feet of descent. I wondered how long it would
take to head back up, and there were still the other houses to visit. Inside
the kitchen, the family was gathered. The grandmother sat on a bed, propped
vertical by pillows, swollen like the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man and fighting
for breath. Her bronchi sounded like a waterslide. Her hands were the size of
grapefruits which retained two-inch-deep pits in them after I let them go. After
a good evaluation, I gave her a Lasix (furosemide) injection for the swelling.
It was only when the family beckoned me to come for tea in the main house that
I realized the full story.
The
traditional mud and stone walls were spider-webbed with cracks from the recent
earthquake. Part of the rear wall and the supports for the upper story had
collapsed outward. They served me tea and biscuits in their broken home.
“Look,” I said, “I can’t come down here
every couple days to give her this injection. Even if I did . . . I’m just
doctoring the symptoms here. Her heart is failing. If you do nothing, it could
be a slow miserable death.”
“Yeah. We
would like to take her down to Gayaganga, but our house is ruined and we’ve got
to fix it as well. We’re just figuring out how to manage it all.”
“Okay . . .
but I really think you should go on Tuesday. If you need any help, we’ll find a
way.”
As I headed
out the door, the grandmother was heading to the toilet. The fluids had already
begun to drain from her body. By evening she would be breathing normally and able
to fit inside her skin again.
While still
climbing back up from depths of Panditgaon, the second house was already on its
way to fetch me. It was Michael’s house, where I’d delivered a baby just a
month earlier. His mother had been in the hospital the day of the delivery and
was now home. They’d spent thousands on her treatment but she hadn’t had an
ounce of relief. I perused her meds and paperwork and found that she’d been
treated for an ulcer. There were multiple other meds that didn’t match up,
including Lasix. I didn’t find any gastric symptoms in her checkup, but she did
have a cardiac problem. Her heart sounds were shockingly loud, and there was a
pulsating bulge between her ribs just beside her heart. Although she was a
grandmother, she was still in her mid-fifties.
“Your mother
has a very serious heart condition. In fact, there is no telling when things
could take a turn for the worse. She really needs to go to the hospital.”
“We just spent
so much on her treatment, for nothing. They didn’t say anything about a heart
problem. They treated her for gastric.”
“I know, but
look . . . she is really in a fragile state. It would be best if she went
today.”
“We can’t go
today . . . but perhaps we can go on Tuesday to Gayaganga with the others. That’ll
be cheaper.”
They brought
out tea and biscuits, of course, along with the new baby. I had to give the new
parents the breastfeeding talk again: No, babies can’t digest cow’s milk, and yes,
mother’s milk will be enough. I looked over the meds again and it clicked.
“Hey, you have Lasix tabs here and your
mother doesn’t need them. Take them down to Panditgaon . . . that will help the
other patient make it to Tuesday.”
After making arrangements and saying
farewell, I was led on toward’s Sugen’s in-laws house. In between rapid
difficult breaths, Sugen’s father-in-law told me, “I get this sharp pain in my
chest. Then everything goes black. There is this tingling sensation that rushes
over my face and shoulder’s. Everything feels so tight and it’s hard to
breathe.”
“Oh, and he
also has really bad diarrhea,” Sugen interjected.
His heart
was arrhythmic and his pulse had skyrocketed. His breathing was painful to
listen to. I told Sugen, “Look, he’s probably having a heart attack. We need to
go to the hospital now. I’m really concerned for him.”
Sugen
studied the floor for a few moments, “Sir, the rest of the family isn’t here. We
really can’t make that decision alone. There’s money that has to be arranged
and someone to go with him.”
I told Sugen
again, “I’m really concerned for him. I can’t say what will happen if we wait.”
flashing eyes which strained to silently say, “This guy could kick the bucket
any minute.”
“We’ll talk
about it as a family and let you know this evening.”
The tea and
biscuits came again. It was hard to enjoy them, listening to the not so old man
gasping beside me. I taught them how to deal with the diarrhea and the warning
signs to watch out for (at this point little more than clutching his chest and
sudden death) and headed on towards lunch. During the five-minute walk, we
passed a home for which Amanda had done a delivery. The mother-in-law was lying
on a mat in the sun.
“I threw my back out working this morning. I
can barely stand up. Got anything for that?”
“Um . . .
sure,” I said, half chuckling to myself at how ridiculous this day was getting.
Up at Purni’s a feast was being prepared. As
I was sipping another round of tea and munching on biscuits, it turned out that
Grandma was sick. In fact, she was having an asthma attack and, oh yes, her
daughter had a 103 degree fever as a result of a case of tonsillitis so bad
that her airway was half obstructed. Good thing there was an entire case of
medicines up in the Rhino.
Back in
Kaffer, I decided to sit in the sun for a bit and also that it was time for a
haircut. Still prickly and unbathed . . . my phone rang.
“This is
P.B. Sir. My brother-in-law is quite sick. In fact, he’s really bad. Would
you come down to the house and check him out?”
“Umm . . . I
just got home . . . and I’m covered in hair . . . I mean I just had a haircut. Let
me get a bath. I’ll try to be fast.”
The Dashain
festivities were in full swing. All the far-flung family members had come home
and it was time to celebrate. But when I arrived at my neighbor’s house, the
local shaman in residence was circling a bronze plate with a burning lamp
around the patient. I waited patiently for the flowers and rice to be cast into
the air and the mantras to finish. The shaman’s work done, D.B. exited the room.
I joked, “Now that the local doctor is done, its time to try the foreign doctor
as well!”
We both had
a good laugh, but I stopped quickly when I saw the patient. I listened to his
heart sounds. Every time the arrhythmia flared up, I watched him wince in pain
and clench his fists.
“I get so dizzy and this tingling feeling
shoots out to my extremities. I get breathless and throw up. There’s this pain
in my chest.”
I sat
speechless for a second. Part of me wanted to scream out, “What the heck is
going on here? Why is everybody’s hearts broken?”
The speech I
gave to the family was starting to sound really canned that day. Tea and
biscuits came out again and I wondered if I could handle anymore caffeine and
sugar. The brother-in-law ran out of the room and wretched repeatedly. He sat
down holding his chest with his hand and his head with his knees. This family
decided to go “immediately” because,
well, because they had money. Any of the other families would have chosen the
same if they’d had the resources. I readied the Rhino and got out the AED
(automated external defibrillator). How was I going to monitor this patient and
drive at the same time? [Sign of the cross.] Cross that bridge when you come to it. Drive.
As I drove, I thought about the other
cases. Why had I hopped up at an instant and traveled to Siliguri half-hobbled
when my wife had the least palpitation? Why was I willing to spend every
last rupee and dollar to my name for her? Because she is my wife. Because
I love her. But what about these others? Why wasn’t I willing to do the same
for them? Why was the man with a monthly government salary the only one to
reach the hospital in his time of need? Why did the others have to wait till
Tuesday, fighting for blood and for breath? Are those with more valuables more
valuable? Are those closest to us more human? Is the stranger a lesser
creation?
Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday provided enough
rest for my leg to heal up most of the way. There was a steady stream of
patients at the house but fortunately no more heart attacks. We tried to rest
and prepare for our own upcoming birth.
Wednesday, October 12
The most
common reason I wake in the middle of the night is my phone. The second most
common is the racing of my own mind. In a not so distant third is nausea
complemented by sulfurous belches. That is why I was not too surprised at three
a.m. to awaken to the gaseous discomfort. After fifteen minutes of the standard
denial, I stumbled over to the clinic to get some Metronidazole and an
anti-emetic. At sunrise I woke again, this time due to my second most common
reason. But the thought which was racing around my mind said, “I’m not going
anywhere today. I’m not doing anything.”
I rolled over and went back to sleep. It
was not simply a result of the giardia still churning my gut and zapping my
life force; September had spilled into October and it was hard to shake the
exhaustion. It was going to take more than a few sunny afternoons sipping tea
to recover. Even in bed I could hear the patients coming to the door and asking
for “doctor.” Amanda took care of them all. The Matri Yaan paperwork, which had
to be submitted in Pedong, was delegated to Saran. After barely stomaching
breakfast, I meandered into the office to check some email, to do some writing.
Not too surprisingly my phone rang soon after I sat down. It was a call for the
maternal ambulance. I let the party know that I would dispatch it immediately
but then something unusual happened.
“My wife wants to say something to you. Here
. . . here she is . . .”
“Dadju (older brother),” she said, “Please come. Please come for me quickly.”
“Okay . . . I will.”
It was an unexpected exchange. I’d never
received a direct appeal from the mother. It was always the men who spoke on
their behalf. There was something in her voice. She called me older brother,
instead of “sir” or
“doctor.” It sounded like Amanda calling me from
a different dimension. The feeling of doom came over me again, but even
stronger than before. Before I knew it the Matri Yaan papers were back in my
bag and Saran was taking me to Deorali to meet up with the Donkey. There
were multiple frantic calls en route asking us where we’d reached, but when we
got down to Hari Golai . . . the family wasn’t there. We waited for awhile before
a girl came up to inform us, “She’s better already. It happened while they were
carrying her. Don’t worry about coming.”
Still not able to shake the feeling, I
grabbed a birth kit and BP cuff out of the Donkey and started walking. The sun
was hot for the fall and it was melting away the little bit of strength in my
reserve. In the bushes beside the trail, I spotted an enormous snake hissing at
me. It was a sisirey, five to
six feet long and fat as a ferret all the way up to its head. Sandeep hit it
with a large rock full force but it only jumped and slithered back into the
undergrowth. “What’s up, does this kind of snake not die or what?” he
exclaimed.
It took almost a half an hour to get to the
house, and my head was really foggy by the time I did. The blood-covered mother
was sitting on a dirty burlap sack beside a Hindu temple, her child between her
legs. Everyone was standing at a distance shaking their heads and tssk-ing. The tssk-ing was like the hissing. Looking at the mother’s
condition and the situation, it felt like sometimes the snake and curse just
won’t die.
“How long has it been since the baby was
born?”
The father came near, “The baby was born at
ten oh-five.”
It had been an hour already. In front of
the small crowd that had developed, I had the mother squat and I tried a little
cord traction, expecting it to drop right out. The placenta wasn’t budging.
“We’ve got to get this mother in a house
and get this placenta out. Whose house is that?”
An old lady sheepishly said, “It’s mine but
. . . how can we bring a sutkeri (unclean postpartum mother) into a temple house?”
“She’s already delivered here beside the
temple! The blood is already here, it’s already polluted. What’s going to
happen?”
After hearing something mumbled about it
not being permitted, my temper flared, “Look, do you think God takes pleasure
in sending people to their death or saving people’s lives. Taking care of this
mother is God’s work . . . now knock off that silly superstition and open the
door.”
The mother moaned, “But the baby’s still
attached . . . how can I walk there?”
After breaking open the birth kit and
clamping the cord, I heard the mother protest, “Don’t cut it. Don’t cut it. The
cord will go back inside and it’ll never come out.”
I said, “No, it won’t go back in. Look how
long it is. It will come out.”
As soon as the cord was cut, the father
grabbed a hold of it for dear life. The baby was very lethargic and had some
significant swelling in its face. A bit of massage brought on some weak cries. It
was wrapped in a clean, warm blanket and handed to the father. We headed in
doors. Just as the mother was lying down on the clean sheet of plastic the
government ANM (Auxiliary Nurse Midwife) from Lolay arrived. She instantly
spotted the problem and got out a catheter. It took a few minutes for the
bladder to drain and I had the mother’s sister massage her nipples to stimulate
contractions. Anu finally removed an intact placenta and I administered an
injection of methergine. The uterus began to clamp down and the bleeding
stopped. It was a good thing too, her dress was soaked with blood up to the
back of her neck. Neither of us had everything we needed to do what was
required. I was thankful for Anu, and she was for me. The ANM started in on the
usual postpartum dialogue, “Why didn’t you go to the hospital earlier. This
baby was forty-three weeks! Why were you so careless?”
The exhausted and aching mother said
simply, “I didn’t want to go there. I didn’t want to go. All they do is cut you
and stitch you back up.”
The ANM decided to accompany her up to
Kalimpong. There was a significant risk of infection and the baby was
presenting some abnormal signs. I made the stiff walk back. Saran came from
washing the Elephant to pick me up. The Matri Yaan reports still had to be
submitted in Pedong. Within minutes, I was asleep in the back of the ambulance,
in a giardia induced coma, barely able to be roused when we reached our
destination. A few days earlier I’d given Sandeep a big lecture about how he needed
to care for his own health, that if he wasn’t healthy himself he couldn’t
contribute to the health of others. The hypocrisy was running thick but what
was I supposed to do? While submitting my reports to the Block Accounts Manager, he received a
call. A Matri Yaan operator from Algarah wanted to meet me. Alarm bells went
off in my mind. Hadn’t some people from Algarah been involved in the scuffle
over the Samthar vehicle? Who was this and what were they up to?
On our way home, we passed through Algarah
and Dushant was waiting for us at the chowk. He
led us to his home and sat us down in the receiving room., saying, “I’ve wanted
to meet you for a long time. I heard about your work even before Matri Yaan
came up. The medical officers are saying that you’re doing an incredible job
and have the best ambulance around. My hope was that you could show me how to
do this job better.”
My cynicism faded and the tea came. As we
munched on the biscuits he continued, “I’ve wanted to talk to someone about my
experiences. Listen to what happened on my very first transport. There was this
mentally handicapped lady up in Lava. Her neighbors called in the delivery and
we headed out to pick her up. No one knew who the father was. She
didn’t have any family or friends . . . so I made the neighbors come along. I
don’t have any experience in this or any training after all. Then, halfway
to Kalimpong, the baby was delivered in the vehicle but not all the way . . .
it was kind of stuck. I had no idea and was totally shocked, so we rushed on .
. .”
He continued his tales and two plates of
chow mein came out for Saran and I. We prayed before starting. “Oh, I see that
you are Christians as well. I am too. I wanted to do something for my community
. . . to provide a really good service. Then this opportunity
came along. I’m not in it for money like the others. Can you help me? Can you
help me do a better job, perhaps get some training?”
“Let me think a bit and talk to some
people,” I said. “We’ll figure something out. Every driver should at least
have some basic training and a couple of birth kits on hand.”
It was getting late. We had our Small
Christian Community meeting/dinner scheduled at our house that evening. It was
time to head home. On the way, I thought about the day’s events. It was a huge
relief to meet an ANM who kicked off her heels and ran barefoot on a rocky
trail for a mother in need. It was a blessing to meet Dushant, a man of faith
who was putting his belief into action. We live in a world that
teaches to care for ourselves first, those nearest and dearest second, our
community third, and the global situation last of all. There is logic behind it
just like there is behind a mother putting on her own oxygen mask before her
child’s in an in-flight emergency. But when does it come time to break from
logic, to scrap wisdom, and to act anyways? If it is my own wife, I would
gladly hobble to Siliguri on an afflicted leg without a second thought. So what
if it is their wife instead of mine? What if we are sick and run down
after one of the hardest months of our life? How do we know when to draw the
line, to say enough’s enough?
We like to philosophize and theologize
about obscure scriptures, doctrines, and dogma. But I’m still trying to crack
the most basic teaching in the whole darn book: Do to your neighbor as you
would have done to yourself. Love your neighbor as yourself. Why couldn’t there
have been some more law: Thou Shall Have
Sunday Off. Thou Shall Work Only Forty Hours A Week. Thou Shall Take Sick Days.
But instead of a law we have freedom; freedom to love in an ever deepening definition of the word. I hope that I never have to pick
a bleeding stranger up off the side of the road again while rushing my wife to
a Cardiac Center. That is surely a once in a lifetime event, right? But if I
do, I hope I do it in a spirit of love and freedom instead of submission to a
law.
While that exact set of circumstances will
more than likely not happen again, we are all faced with that decision every
day. Who do I love first? Myself? My kin? My community? My nation? All humanity? And if we pick to love all humanity
equally because of our “high ideals,” are we ready to face the ramifications of
that decision. But if we pick “me and my own” today, we will soon find that our
security is on shaky ground. In a world striving for individualism, we think of
health as an individual, private matter. The reality is that no one, not even a
very small group, can be independently healthy for long. Think small pox, think
tuberculosis, think polio—as long as one is ill we may all become ill. The only
way to achieve health for “me and my own” is by achieving health for all. The
only way to achieve health for all is for us to wholly embrace a reality that
we only pay lip service to. His wife is as important as mine. Her children are
as valuable as mine. He has just as much right to life, liberty, and health as
I. Why are there so many people who are sick, so many hearts that are broken? Perhaps,
it is because some can buy for cash what others can’t even get for blood. Perhaps,
it is because even though we acknowledge that all men are created equal, we do
not live lives of equality and justice. The only way for anyone to be healthy
is for ALL of us to love our neighbor as our self. So when it comes down to it,
even if your wife’s life is on the line, or even your own health . . . yes, we
are still called to help the stranger bleeding on the side of the road. The
entirety of the law and the prophets hang on it. Thank you for reminding me,
Amanda.
In the end all I can pray is, “Father in
heaven you are holy. Your kingdom come. Your will be done. Let it be here on
Earth just as it is in Heaven,” even as I am half terrified, half elated to
find out how good Heaven really is.
In Him,
Ryan and family
Monday, October 17, 2011
The God of Broken Things: Part Two, by Ryan Phillips
Friday,
September 23
Sometimes I feel like a liar. Sometimes
I feel like I must be spinning yarns. Then the images, the faces, the
blood, the smiles come back to my mind in high definition and I remember that
the stories are true. But it is easy for the truth to be distorted. I’ve read
articles on the internet and in the newspaper, which paint an overly flattering
picture of our work. They skirt near to making us into saints who have fixed
everything and saved the day. Just reading the articles makes me squirm,
because I know the truth: that we’ve done little more than snatch a handful of
pebbles from the summit of human suffering. So when a New York filmmaker
contacted me early this year saying that he wanted to shoot a documentary about
our story, I felt a bit apprehensive. The fear was that the truth would be spun
into something that seemed to be more but was actually was less.
Chris, Manjula, Eric, and Emily emerged from the
belly of Bagdogra International Airport with their trolleys of camera cases and
accoutrements. Chris is a Steadicam operator from New York City who has
spent the last twenty years on the sets of major motion pictures. Manjula is an
ayurvedic physician who was raised and trained in Kerala (a state in South
India) but later settled on the east coast of the US. Eric and Emily are from
Portland, Oregon, but they grew up in Louisville, Kentucky, and Jasper, Indiana,
respectively. They came along to help on Chris’s project as film production
assistants. Back at Gayaganga, Sister Alphonsa guided the film crew around
Navjeevan Hospital, I darted back and forth meeting patients and talking to our
trainees. Lyang Mary looked like she was doing well, fortified by the blood
transfusions. Biren talked with me about the patients that’d come from his
village, Kolbong. Chandra seemed like he was more satisfied with the classes
since I’d spoken with the instructor. Jyoti was prepping to help out with the
camp in Kaffer. Simon readied the vehicle; I was glad to have him behind the
wheel again. Tshering begged permission to come along for the camp. Anu, dressed
in her white coat, was busy attending to patients.
The Elephant was packed with twelve
cases of camera gear and countless cartons of medicines. Eventually, the group filed into
our bus and we were underway. Along with the film crew there was Dr. Sister
Rhinda (a physician and Daughter of the Cross), Drs. Mr. and Mrs. Sonar (a
couple who had done pioneering medical work in the remote state of Arunachal in
the ‘70s), Simon our ambulance driver (currently undergoing Critical Care
training at Gayaganga), Sister Jyoti (to run the pharmacy), and Jyoti Rai (who
we lived with in Daragaon, now undergoing Home Nursing training). The vehicle
was heavily burdened but we crawled our way up into the hills.
Chris shot some pictures of me from the passenger
seat as I was driving. The misgivings I’d originally had surged up again. The
stories about Pharisees who only performed their religion to be seen, the story
of the widow’s mite, and teachings such as “when you give to the needy, do not
let your left hand know what your right hand is doing”
popped into my head. It felt as if the eyes of the nuns and doctors sitting in
the seats behind me were boring into my skull and examining the purity of my
intentions. Was I just “loving the needy” for my own selfish, ulterior motives:
to be seen, to be respected, to score brownie points with God and secure his
blessings, or to “earn my name” as it is said in Nepali. In fact, why do I
write my monthly newsletters? Love with expectation and agenda is not love at
all. If I’m not truly loving my
neighbor as myself, then I’m using my neighbor for myself. The difference could not be
any more profound. Amanda and I had
talked openly with Chris about these hesitations and also the fact that the
presence of a film crew could spark jealousy and intrigue in our village. We
told him that we were newcomers to the Kaffer region, just beginning our work,
and that many people had been there (some for decades) doing the foundational
work which made our current efforts possible. Over several long phone
conversations Chris earned our trust and he agreed the film would not be about
“us” but, instead, the realities of this region and all the people who are
addressing those issues.
Over the years, Amanda and I have noticed a
trend. The things that we pursue fervently and try to make work, fall apart. The
things which simply happen and spontaneously materialize often produce lots of
fruit. Similarly, God has always provided in interesting ways: America’s
Funniest Home Videos, VG Reed printing a book about us without our request,
insurance checks from car wrecks, etc. This documentary film seemed to share
the same fingerprints, so despite our hesitations we consented. But when the
lens was actually out and vehicle drive-bys were being staged on the road to
Lava, I felt again a prick of conscious. Just as when I’d driven the route the
week before, I also felt a small prick of pain in my leg (this time in my left
calf). Again, due to circumstances, I ignored it.
We arrived late to Kaffer. I’d booked the DGHC
lodge for the doctors and crew over a month in advance. But at the last moment
Bimal Gurung, the political figure head of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha, decided
to travel to Kaffer with his entire entourage and commandeer the property under
the guise of “evaluating earthquake damage throughout the region.” As we pulled
into the parking lot, I saw that not only had they ousted our guests from their
accommodations they’d also boxed in our ambulances with their jeeps. Our
drivers tried to rouse the drivers to move the vehicles in case of any
emergencies in the night, but they were too drunk to even answer the door. Good
thing I made a back-up plan with Zorgay, a new proprietor in town. As we
carried bags and equipment towards the Hotel Alpine in the dark I pondered the
irony of it: the political elite (coming into town to take much, promise more,
but give nothing) taking priority over a group of doctors coming to give health
and a filmmaker working to bring awareness about the region.
Saturday,
September 24
The Sai Samiti came out to cook kichardi for all the patients who’d come from far away. Binita’s
SHG (Self-Help Group) stepped forward to cook breakfast and dinner for the
doctors and staff. Our Small Christian Community from church erected a tarp to
protect the patients that were waiting from sun and rain. They offered to cook
dinner as well. The Health Club from Asher’s school picked up trash, ferried
supplies, and assisted with the set up. The Shanti Kiran Sangh registered
patients and policed the entrance and exit of the community hall. Binita,
Jyoti, Simon, and Dawa took information and recorded vitals for the doctors. Sister
Johanna and Adesh translated for Dr. Manjula and Dr. Sister Rhinda. It struck
me again how little we can do alone and we were glad to have the community turn
out in force.
Over breakfast we all agreed that
our goal was quality not quantity. I asked the doctors not to be troubled by
the crowds, to take their time, and give full check-ups. The minor cases often get
impatient and leave, but that leaves time to give good treatment to those who
need it most. The crew set up and started filming. I was instantly impressed by
how conscientiously and discreetly they went about their work. My phone was
ringing off the hook. Bus loads of patients needed to be picked up from Git
Dabling, Dabling, Middle Kaffer. The fifteen-seater Elephant earned its name by
carrying a load of thirty-seven patients at one time, just to turn around and
carry another full load. As the crowds began to swell and the lines grew longer
and longer, it was a relief to finally NOT BE the health provider. It was a
relief that our region was finally receiving something better than me. Many
familiar faces appeared in the crowd: those who we’d been treating, those who
we’d been unable to treat, those who we’d taken for operations. Those too weak
to wait in line were guided into our little clinic beside the community hall. A
fifteen-year-old girl with a raging fever and all the signs and symptoms of
shock stumbled into our house. Amanda took her to lie down in the birth room. The
doctors administered IV antibiotics and fluids, but her condition continued in
a moderate decline. As we carried her out of the house on a stretcher, through
the crowds and towards the Rhino, I winced half expecting a camera man to come
dashing after us, making an enormous scene in front of everyone. I expected my
Pharisaical Debut. Chris was busy inside
covering the work of the Gayaganga doctors; I breathed a sigh of relief and
refocused on the patient. This guy was going to tell the
full story.
People came from places as far away
as Rambi, a solid six-hour walk from Kaffer. The earthquake had disrupted
transport and redirected people’s finances away from health. The timing was
perfect. Some patients saw a doctor for the first time. Many more saw for the first time what a check-up from
a doctor should be like. As evening was drawing to a close, a family appeared
on the public ground, the father carrying his daughter. They’d left home at
seven in the morning and caught four different vehicles to arrive at the
Medical Camp. The girl who was just coming into her teens looked delicate and
wasted. She was an epileptic who’d suffered a case of meningitis a few years
before. Since the fever, she’d been in a vegetative state. Large portions of
her brain had been irreversibly affected. As Dr. Sonar evaluated her, I
straddled up beside him and told him of their long journey to reach us. He
looked at me with a pained expression and said to me in English, “There is
nothing we can do for her. There is nothing to be done in this case. We don’t
even have any anti-epileptics in the pharmacy.”
Given the lengths the family had
gone to, neither of us wanted to say it. A hundred and fifty patients had
already come and gone. They’d received medicine. They would, more than
likely, recover from their minor to major illnesses. Those who came from houses
five minute’s walk away returned home with hope of a cure, but this family, the
one who had gone to the greatest pains, the greatest expense, and risked the
greatest hope, would return empty handed. As I broke the news to them their
countenances dropped, again. It was obviously not the first time. The mother,
still clinging on, said, “Please, she’s so weak. She barely eats anything. Look
how her body is wasted. Isn’t there something you can give her to make her
stronger?”
I emerged from the pharmacy with a
bottle of vitamin tonic for them to mix into her porridge. It was like handing
someone a BB gun for trench warfare, but it was something. The evening was
getting dim and misty. Clearly too poor to reserve a jeep, the family had no
hope of a ride home; it had taken them all day just to arrive. The
politicians had cleared out mid-morning, speeding off in their brand-new white
SUVs. The family stood up to walk somewhere, despite having nowhere to
go. Then I noticed that the wasted girl’s hair was brushed. Her nails were
trimmed. Her clothes were clean. She was freshly bathed. I looked at the
clothes of the family, which looked a bit shabbier and well worn. This broken,
withered shell of a girl was loved. Her mother’s eyes were moist for her
daughter again. This family, who had
taken the least from Kaffer that day, left behind greatest gift: a tangible
illustration of unconditional love. The politicians, those who had taken the
most from Kaffer that day, left nothing save empty promises, false hopes, beer
bottles, and tire tracks.
Sunday,
September 25
The Sabbath graced us with a little rest. We
spent time getting to know the film crew and prepping for the week of training
ahead. I sat down and put a hot water bottle on what was now obviously another
abscess, this time on my left calf. My phone rang and Maria was on the line
from Gayaganga.
“Sir, Lyang Mary had her blood transfusions and
was doing better. But then she started getting these really bad fevers. The
donation we brought from the private blood bank was contaminated with malaria.”
“How’s the baby?”
“Fine. But labor still hasn’t started.”
“Ok, keep in touch and let me know if you need
anything.”
Monday,
September 26 through Thursday, September 29
The training was in full swing. Dr. Manjula
taught us how to use plants from our backyards and spices from our kitchens to
cure many of the common ailments. It was impressed upon me again that God has
provided everything we need but that we have to seek the wisdom to use those
things properly. Kagen sat and learned what he could do to manage his diabetes.
Nearby, the Hayden Hall paramedics sat scribbling page after page of notes. Many
of the paramedics were illiterate women. In the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, when
there was barely a road in the region, Kagen and the other Hayden Hall staff
travelled from village to village setting up night schools. They walked most of
the day, taught Adult Literacy classes most of the night, slept in cow sheds,
and woke up to do it all over again. They would do this, for weeks on end,
without rest. Most of the original paramedics were selected from this program. Kagen
was too busy learning himself, with a childlike curiosity, to take pride in his
handiwork coming to fruition around him. The HIMSERVE TBAs (Trained Birth
Attendants) were new to the scene but fervently learning as well. Every time
Dr. Manjula asked the group what plant or disease they’d like to learn about
next, hands shot up all around the room. Seemingly benign household regulars
such as fenugreek, teetey pati, coriander, betel leaf, black pepper, ginger, basil, and cinnamon
transformed into healing agents in their minds, and ours as well. Chris and
Manjula had developed a laminated flip book with pictures of all the plants and
instructions as to their use. Gopal from Hayden Hall volunteered to translate
all the text into Nepali so that we could give each work a copy for community
teachings. Three days of scheduled training spilled over into a fourth, and
still they wanted more. Chris and the
crew would film some of the sessions and then nonchalantly slip out to shoot
some scenics, stage some shots with the ambulance or capture the action teeming
down at the weekly bazaar.
Even though everything was going much better than
expected, as the week wore on an oppressive exhaustion swelled, along with the
infection in my calf. It was much more than a simple abscess and I reluctantly
started some erythromycin. Hot compresses weren’t bringing it to the surface
and I was having a hard time walking. By lunch on Thursday, I was spent. It was
a good thing that it was Amanda’s time to teach. She was giving an afternoon
session on retained placentas. Four women in our region have died of retained
placentas in the last few months, so this seemed the most important topic to
cover. After Phulmit shared her painful experience with Sumila’s death and
received support from the group, I slipped out the door and headed back to
Kaffer with the crew to shoot an interview.
I called Saran to make sure he’d picked up the
maps I’d had printed down in Siliguri.
“Yes, Sir. I didn’t have any problem picking them
up . . . but I might be a little late. A part in the suspension cracked and I’m
having it welded back on. It was about to drop off.”
“Okay, okay . . . Don’t forget to pick up the
HIMSERVE folks on your way back for the meeting tomorrow.”
Friday,
September 30
The final day of activities was set
for the big Unity in Health Services meeting. We’d invited all NGOs, charities,
religious orders, and government service members involved in health promotion
in our region. Our hope was to eliminate division and competition amongst
different groups and create solidarity between multiple parties that in reality
shared the same goal. We unrolled the big ten-by-twelve-foot map of our region
and hung it behind the chair and table set up front for the officials to sit
in. It dawned on me again at what an enormous area we are attempting to cover
and that even if ALL the parties I’d invited came to the meeting, it would be a
daunting task.
Years of fruitless searching for a
good map of our area had left me frustrated. But when I found Google Earth
a few years back, the gears started turning. As we became familiar with our new
region, I slowly added place-markers to all the unmarked villages. South of
Kalimpong there wasn’t even a single name or road plotted on the satellite
images. I zoomed into the areas and recognized schools I’d done health
teachings at, patient’s homes which I’d visited, or landslides which had ripped
a village apart. After a couple years of travel and input, the map was filling
with names. Back on July 1, the first day of the Matri Yaan program, we were
contacted for a maternal transport and I called the ambulance dispatch in
Darjeeling.
“Where are you calling from?”
“Git Dabling”
“How far is that from Darjeeling?”
“We’re on the Kalimpong side.”
“Is that Block One.”
“No, it’s Block Two. Look, the government has a
PHC (Primary Health Center) there and it is the station for one of the
ambulances.”
“Oh, yeah . . . I see the name on the list now. Okay,
alright.”
If the ambulance dispatch wasn’t
familiar with Git Dabling, a major bazaar with a hospital and stationed
ambulance, what was going to happen when villagers called #102 from places like Katarey and Sungurey? I shuddered to think
about the volley of calls and multiple layers of confusion for both ends while
the patient sat there, perpetually delayed. It could potentially mean the
difference between life and death for someone. The map I’d been working on for
personal use sprung into mind. I’ve got
to print one of these for the dispatch at the Red Cross . . . and for the
health department . . . and for the Sisters . . . and Hayden Hall . . .
Over the following weeks,
I zoomed in on the satellite images as close as possible and used my mouse to
trace all the rough roads I now know by heart. It was time consuming but
gratifying work. In the end, I’d produced the first functional and accurate
road map of our area. Lora Smith (our website designer, who has donated all of
her time) painstakingly and seamlessly pieced all of the images together and
created a beautiful high-resolution picture of our region. My brain was buzzing
with all the ways it could be used to coordinate services in our region.
But back at the meeting, less people
had shown up than hoped. The earthquake, a spiritual retreat for the Cluny
Sisters, and a meeting for the ICDS (Integrated Child Development Services) workers
had disturbed our plans. Dr. Lingdo, the Assistant Chief Medical Officer of
Health, arrived fashionably late but the other Block Medical Officers weren’t
in attendance. Hayden Hall and HIMSERVE were well represented but the Sisters and the
government workers were almost completely absent. From the PHC, a stone’s throw
away from the meeting, only the pharmacist showed up. But still, there were
fifty or so of us and that is a good start. Each group had a chance to share
about their work: what they do, why they do it, what challenges they face, and
what help they need. After lunch, I told Sumila’s story again. I spun the yarn
in hopes of knitting the community together for a singular purpose. We picked a
focus for the year as a health community and broke off into groups to set
attainable goals and an action plan. The health workers, from their own ideas
and experiences, came up with the following agenda.
Focus for
the Year: Maternal and Newborn Health
Goals:
1) To meet and form a relationship with all women who marry into
the village before they become pregnant.
2) To recognize all pregnancies early on, so as to teach all mothers about
safe and healthy child birth.
3) To get every
mother to the nearest Government
Sub-Center to receive her three antenatal care check-ups, vitamins, immunizations,
and free Matri Yaan Ambulance vouchers.
4) To educate the entire family on
their role in ensuring the mother has a safe and health pregnancy and birth.
5) To work with the mothers after birth to ensure the newborns
receives its immunizations.
As the meeting broke up and everyone went their
separate ways, I looked at the map again. Only a third of the area I’d mapped
was represented at the meeting. Again, I felt like we were trying to fight
trench warfare with a BB gun. I was tired after ANOTHER long day. My leg was
throbbing and swollen with edema. It takes so much to even get started, and
there is still so much that needs to be done. Amanda was sitting nearby,
she had come through the week as well—carrying a full-term baby. I watched as
the health workers packed up and headed back to the goats that needed feeding
and families they’d left behind. They traced their way back to their villages
across the giant flex-print map in my mind, like yeast scattered across a lump
of dough. It’s a start, a small start. When looking at the overall picture, it
is almost an invisible start. But yeast is like that. It is silent and unseen,
but yet it sets to work and transforms everything around it. It takes time, one
has to be patient.
As Dr. Lingdo, one of our greatest advocates, was
prepping to head back to Kalimpong. I beckoned her over. “I wanted to
give you this. I figured it would help out in your efforts.”A four-by-six
version of the map was laid out on a table. It was shockingly clear. Every
landside, river, rivulet, and hilltop was visible.
“Thank you, Ryan. I was looking at that big map
all day. I think . . . I think this may be the best gift anyone has ever given
me!”
It made me happy to be able to give a good gift
to someone who has worked so hard and overcome so many challenges in her
selfless service to the community. Out in the Elephant several of the
health workers were waiting. Fifteen or more girls, trying to head out for the
holidays, swarmed into the empty seats like a tribe of monkeys, throwing their
bags and bed clothes into the aisle. It was time to head home.
Saturday,
October 1
All week we had a very full home:
the camera crew, the drivers, Devaki and Sushila from HIMSERVE, and of course
our growing family. It was a blessing to get to know Chris and to learn the
motivation behind his project. We found that we had many strange points of
connection. We both lost our fathers at the same age and were the youngest of
three (with an older brother and sister). Manjula always had something
interesting to share. There was no lack of conversation with her; we were
Americans who’d moved to India and she was an Indian who’d moved to America. There
was also an instant connection with Eric and Emily given that they, like us, had
grown up in the “Kentuckiana” area and then moved west as adults.
Elevation and ibuprofen had given me
a bit of relief, but my full blown case of (what was now obviously) cellulitis
was barely tolerable. Dr. Manjula applied a paste of sesame and layer of betel
leaf to draw the infection up to the surface. The final interviews for the
documentary were scheduled for that morning and afternoon, so I limped over to
the hotel where the crew was staying for the final shoots. After dinner and
more conversation, the Elephant pulled up to the DGHC lodge. Saran and Kara
Rowley, a midwife who volunteered to come from America for Amanda’s birth,
stumbled in the door looking rather bleary eyed. Sometimes our house feels like
Grand Central Station: travelers arriving just as others are getting under way.
But I’d rather sleep on a mat of cardboard in Grand Central Station than on a
four-poster California King in the main vault at Fort Knox.
Sunday,
October 2
“Sir, this is Maria again.”
“Oh, I heard that Lyang Mary’s baby
was born yesterday. Was it a boy or a girl?”
“The baby died at three this
morning.”
“Oh . . .”
“Bahini (little sister) has to stay
because she just had a cesarean. But we can’t bury the baby here. We don’t know
what to do. Some family members are coming.”
“Okay, talk it over. If you need any
help just call.”
The moment after I hung up the phone
Chris appeared in the window. “Hey, we’re headed out to Daragaon now. Before we
left we just wanted to give you a little something. I know there will be
someone that needs some help . . . so we thought we’d leave this with you.”
He passed a wad of gandhis (similar
to benjamins) to me. “Actually, Chris . . . that someone has already called. It’s
been great having you. Have a safe trip.”
I dialed the phone as soon as Chris
disappeared from the window. “Maria, I’m sending the ambulance to bring the
body home. Don’t worry about the cost . . . it’s already been covered.
In the afternoon Sandeep arrived to
work out the Matri Yaan reports. As we were finishing up, our maternal
ambulance driver blurted out, “Sir, I was hoping to go on break starting
tomorrow. I’ve been sick for awhile now and Dashain is coming up this week.”
“I told you that if you need a
holiday you need to ask at least a week in advance, so I can rearrange drivers
and cover the vehicles. Purna’s already asked off to go to his in-laws for his
first puja since getting married. I
also told you to tell me if you were sick as soon as you got sick. That we’d cover for you. How long have
you been sick?”
“Quite awhile now. My family said I
should come home and rest a month. The doctor in Kalimpong said I should
rest a year.”
“What? A month? A year? You’re
telling me a day in advance? What’s wrong?”
“I’m peeing blood. This always
happens to me after I’ve been driving a few months.”
“Okay, okay . . . you’ve put me in a
tough place here. Tomorrow . . . you’ve got to drive. Saran won’t be back until
evening from taking the crew to Rimbick. Purna’s not experienced enough to run
on Matri Yaan yet and I can’t drive. Tuesday, I’ll put Saran on your duty and
you are going to Gayaganga. After that you take the rest of the week to rest
and I’ll look at your tests. I’ll manage here somehow”
Looking down at my swollen inflamed leg, I wasn’t
so sure. In fact, I’m never so sure. It was October 1. October was to
be “the month we gear down and rest up for the birth of our own child.”
Yet there I was again, on the brink of what would prove to be another epic week.
Could I even operate the clutch of the ambulance? I was exhausted. Did I even
have anything left to give? Did the family of the epileptic child at the
medical camp have anything left to give? They’d spent it all. They’d risked it
all. They hadn’t even planned for the return journey and yet they gave me a
priceless picture of love. They loved their daughter extravagantly in the midst
of their nothingness.
So, could I?
Yes, so could I.
We aren’t hopelessly fighting trench warfare with BB guns. We’re
sowing seed and dusting yeast in hope that life will spring forth again, that
things will be transformed. I spin my yarns and tell my tales to remind myself
of that. Every month, I have to tell these tales so that I don’t forget. My hope is to knit people together
with them, to remind them. If these, the last and least of these, can do and
give so much, then perhaps we, the privileged, can leave more than tire tracks
and empty bottles when we leave this world. My friend and former pastor Peter
Hiett used to say, “When you have nothing left to give . . . give your
nothingness.” When we invite the god of broken things into that nothingness, he
lays his broken form aside and becomes again The Creator. Just as when the
universe was created, he speaks in to the blackness—the void—and there is an
explosion. I'm not a liar. I just see something where many see nothing.
In Him,
The
Phillips Family in its present form
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