Hello everyone,
This is Joe Myers, Jessica's husband.
Over the next week or so I will be posting my journal of our trip to Nairobi Kenya. Quick background: We partnered with AIM Air for my college internship for Mission Aviation.
We want to thank you all for sharing in our endeavors, for your support and prayers. God really has shown us amazing things this year, and you have all been a great encouragement to us.
May 12: We arrived late Thursday night in Nairobi Kenya. We were met by Jim, and Randy from AIM Air, who took us to the Mayfield house, an enroot complex owned by AIM who offer housing and three meals a day for missionary travelers. We were scared that Ben (our 6 month old) would not sleep but he ended up sleeping better than any of us. Friday morning we woke up in time for 7:30 breakfast. It's hard to miss, due to the man who walks the halls clanging his triangle.
May 13: After breakfast we met with Cammy (an AIM wife) to review the weeks itinerary she had put together to help us get started, and some culture need to knows for our success. We have been going through AIM Air’s orientation and meeting many missionary families. We are staying at Mayfield, a transit guesthouse owned by AIM. There are people coming and going for short and long periods of time. We have met many remote missionaries, in town for a break or for supplies. Gregg (my good friend from school, also doing his internship) and I took public transportation (Matatu) to find the hanger. A Kenyan named James who works at Mayfield guided us. The public transportation is mini-vans outfitted with as many seats as possible, and loaded to the max with people. Many times there were not enough seats, but that didn’t deter the doorman from cramming more people in.
The doorman is a partner with the driver. His job is money exchange and to communicate to the driver that he needs to pull over and let someone out or in by tapping a coin on the window. He is very aware of everything going on, a woman behind me reached over me and touched him with one finder, not a poke or even a scratch, a simple light touch. Instantly the man tapped rapidly on the window and the driver barreled through three lanes of traffic to reach the next stop. When you hear of a city without traffic law enforcement Nairobi Kenya must be at the top of the list. Police men are posted at busy roundabouts on foot, armed with a small club. If they choose to stop someone and ticket them, they get in that car and ride with that person to the police station. On they way their goal is to talk the driver into paying them off so that the police officer can pocket the money and the driver gets away without a ticket. The highway, now under construction, has no lanes, and often drivers will take the off road rout to get one more car ahead. Defensive drivers have a life expectance of about 30 minutes. After that drivers are in one of three places: heaven, hell, or born again into offensive driving.
James also took us to the slums, where over one million people live in tin built shacks, with filthy living conditions, in a lower than poverty environment. Every house is connected to the next following a narrow dirt path usually washed out by the rain. Small shops are set along the walkway, to sell daily supplies of food and other things. Also they have radio, and shoe repairs, and people sell used cloths that have been shipped in from other countries. I have not reached a caliber in my writing or language that can describe this area. Pictures would be useless in trying to bring justice to the slums of Nairobi, and I felt ashamed at the depths of my being for simply walking through and knowing I did not have to stay. After 20 minutes of walking we had arrived at a gate. A door opened and we walked through to see children running and playing. James had taken us to his Church that is also a school. I don’t have pictures, because James instructed me to leave the camera back at the guesthouse. A small wooden building and multiple smaller tin buildings, and boxcar building surrounded a dirt yard with only 2 slides to play on. To the right of the yard is the cement framework of a new building that has been in work for the last five years. Though the slums look and sound like a horrific place, some people take full advantage of its convenience. Yes, I said convenience. The slums were started from people who traveled from out of town to work in the city for the week and return to their family for the weekend. Often these were people who owned farms and had family or employees to work their land during the week. To them the slums are rent free housing, with everything they need at the very reasonably rate. After a while people who lived in the city moved into the slums because there is not many who can loose a job and financially recover. Just over the last five years Kenya has discovered payment plans for things like cars and houses. They don’t have recovery plans like bankruptcy, so if you loose a job or something drastic happens in life, you just move to the slums in order to stay alive.
This is Mayfield where we stayed.
On our way to Africa
Monday, May 9, 2011
It was 2am on Friday as we packed up our car got our baby snuggled into his car seat with a warm blanket and headed out to Dallas to catch our first flight of our summer trip. Once we got on the high way we drove for 35 min before seeing another car on the road, just us and the semi-trucks. We got to the terminal in plenty of time and Ben did great on the airplane!
Our first stop, Burlington, Vermont to visit with Joe's mom & step-dad. I finally got to see the town that Joe went to high school in and see his old room. Ben made friends with their cat, Charlie right away. That night his mom fixed us steaks to celebrate Joe passing his classes and enjoyed some time sifting through a memory box she kept for Joe. He had some pretty funny hair-do's back when he was a little tike.
Saturday came and we were going to get mother's day pedicures, but the car was messed up. So instead we made some yummy breakfast while Ben napped and the boys piled sand bags around the back of the house (they had record breaking floods this month). After breakfast (around 10:45) I took my first anti-Malaria pill. At 11 I started feeling sick, 12:30 I was having some serious pain in my stomach and at 1 I started vomiting.
Joe's parents planned a barbecue so that friends of the family could say hello to Joe and meet Ben and I. So, people were showing up around 3, and by this time I was lying on the floor in his parents room which is just across the hall from the bathroom. One of his mom's friends does Reiki and asked if she could work with me. I didn't know much about it so I just said it was ok. She started by praying to mother & father god. So I instantly started to pray too, to the real God. I prayed that He be glorified somehow through this even if it is by me getting worse. She did calm me down with her gentle voice and soft touch and I did get worse. I got feverish, I had cold chills, I could not keep anything down, and I was starting to get dehydrated. By 8pm I could not take the pain and the dry heaving anymore and Joe took me to the emergency room.
At the emergency room I was hooked up to an IV and given medicine for nausea, a bag of saline, and some anti-inflamitories for the pain. I was also ordered to stop taking the medication. So I am going to Africa with just bug spray and garlic pills for mosquito protection. I felt a whole lot better by the time the bag was emptied. By the time they discharged me I was starting to feel a bit sick again. They sent me home with 2 more Nausea pills and I took one when we got back to his parents. I drank a big glass of gatorade and had a couple bites of a bagel.
While we were gone Ben had 3 huge fits and had refused to eat a bottle. He had calmed down and was a sleep when we got back, so I waited until after I got settled before I took him from Grandma. He was so happy that Joe and I were home and he slept in-between us all night. I threw up 2 more times in the middle of the night and I was still pretty uneasy all Sunday.
At about 3am Joe woke up feeling nauseous and couldn't go back to sleep until about 6. He slept almost all day Sunday. So my first Mother's day was a recovery day for us.
Monday we woke up early had some coffee, packed up the car, and drove back to the airport. It was a short hour and 20 min flight to New York. We got picked up by a driver and he took us to Pearl River where AIM's United States headquarters is. We had cold hamburgers and freezer-burned fries for lunch and I was still feeling a bit sick. After lunch our other team member Gregg showed up and had a tour of the facility and met the people we have been coordinating with through phone and emails. The facility here is beautiful and our room has a crib in it for Ben! The people are pleasant and they lent us the community car to drive to Target to get a couple things we forgot to pack.
Tomorrow is our first day of Orientation and training. It is going to be a very busy day. Ben is going to be in the nursery so we are not distracted from important information. Hopefully he does not give the care taker too much trouble.
Ok, time for sleep.
Our first stop, Burlington, Vermont to visit with Joe's mom & step-dad. I finally got to see the town that Joe went to high school in and see his old room. Ben made friends with their cat, Charlie right away. That night his mom fixed us steaks to celebrate Joe passing his classes and enjoyed some time sifting through a memory box she kept for Joe. He had some pretty funny hair-do's back when he was a little tike.
Saturday came and we were going to get mother's day pedicures, but the car was messed up. So instead we made some yummy breakfast while Ben napped and the boys piled sand bags around the back of the house (they had record breaking floods this month). After breakfast (around 10:45) I took my first anti-Malaria pill. At 11 I started feeling sick, 12:30 I was having some serious pain in my stomach and at 1 I started vomiting.
Joe's parents planned a barbecue so that friends of the family could say hello to Joe and meet Ben and I. So, people were showing up around 3, and by this time I was lying on the floor in his parents room which is just across the hall from the bathroom. One of his mom's friends does Reiki and asked if she could work with me. I didn't know much about it so I just said it was ok. She started by praying to mother & father god. So I instantly started to pray too, to the real God. I prayed that He be glorified somehow through this even if it is by me getting worse. She did calm me down with her gentle voice and soft touch and I did get worse. I got feverish, I had cold chills, I could not keep anything down, and I was starting to get dehydrated. By 8pm I could not take the pain and the dry heaving anymore and Joe took me to the emergency room.
At the emergency room I was hooked up to an IV and given medicine for nausea, a bag of saline, and some anti-inflamitories for the pain. I was also ordered to stop taking the medication. So I am going to Africa with just bug spray and garlic pills for mosquito protection. I felt a whole lot better by the time the bag was emptied. By the time they discharged me I was starting to feel a bit sick again. They sent me home with 2 more Nausea pills and I took one when we got back to his parents. I drank a big glass of gatorade and had a couple bites of a bagel.
While we were gone Ben had 3 huge fits and had refused to eat a bottle. He had calmed down and was a sleep when we got back, so I waited until after I got settled before I took him from Grandma. He was so happy that Joe and I were home and he slept in-between us all night. I threw up 2 more times in the middle of the night and I was still pretty uneasy all Sunday.
At about 3am Joe woke up feeling nauseous and couldn't go back to sleep until about 6. He slept almost all day Sunday. So my first Mother's day was a recovery day for us.
Monday we woke up early had some coffee, packed up the car, and drove back to the airport. It was a short hour and 20 min flight to New York. We got picked up by a driver and he took us to Pearl River where AIM's United States headquarters is. We had cold hamburgers and freezer-burned fries for lunch and I was still feeling a bit sick. After lunch our other team member Gregg showed up and had a tour of the facility and met the people we have been coordinating with through phone and emails. The facility here is beautiful and our room has a crib in it for Ben! The people are pleasant and they lent us the community car to drive to Target to get a couple things we forgot to pack.
Tomorrow is our first day of Orientation and training. It is going to be a very busy day. Ben is going to be in the nursery so we are not distracted from important information. Hopefully he does not give the care taker too much trouble.
Ok, time for sleep.
A Moment of Peace
Friday, April 15, 2011
God is good! Two nights ago Ben woke up 4 or 5 times and was a bit cranky yesterday due to teething. I cried to God to give me rest. That is exactly what he did!! I put Ben down last night at 7pm and he didn't wake up until 4am to nurse and went back to sleep. It is 7:22 and he is still sleeping! So I get to enjoy a moment of morning silence with a cup of coffee and my bible. Which is precisely what I am about to grab right now. Just thought I would throw out this little tid bit of praise to God for answering a tearful prayer!
WE MADE IT!! PRAISE GOD!!!!
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Thank you all so much for your prayers and your financial support. I am happy to say that met our goal and we raised the money needed for our whole family to go to Kenya!! :D So exciting! Thank you so much everyone to help make that happen!
For a couple days I thought I might not be going because there was another girl in our group who came from a church that only sent out their missionaries going on missions from their church directly. So she was shunned from raising support from her home church, therefore she was not going to be able to raise the money necessary to go. So I was going to give her all the support money for me to go so that she would be able to go. Two days ago she backed out and decided not to go until next year. So I'm going!!! Sorry if that didn't make a whole lot of sense, it is late and I am tired.
So one HUGE PRAYER REQUEST!!!!! I can't find my passport. It is lost somewhere in our apartment, unless I accidentally threw it away. So, if I do not find it by the end of tomorrow I need to apply for another one and have it rushed. :/ So prayer for me to find it, or for a new one to get here in time.
HUGE PRAISE! I have found, or rather God placed in my life, a very wise woman who is on fire for Christ to be my Mentor! :D I am finally going to have some good solid fellowship with another woman! I have not had this since we left Okinawa so I am so happy! Thank you to all who were praying about that for me!
well, I am going to hopefully get some good sleep tonight. Tomorrow I have to do some laundry first thing in the morning and help get Joe packed up and send him off to Chicago for the Gospel Coalition Conference.
For a couple days I thought I might not be going because there was another girl in our group who came from a church that only sent out their missionaries going on missions from their church directly. So she was shunned from raising support from her home church, therefore she was not going to be able to raise the money necessary to go. So I was going to give her all the support money for me to go so that she would be able to go. Two days ago she backed out and decided not to go until next year. So I'm going!!! Sorry if that didn't make a whole lot of sense, it is late and I am tired.
So one HUGE PRAYER REQUEST!!!!! I can't find my passport. It is lost somewhere in our apartment, unless I accidentally threw it away. So, if I do not find it by the end of tomorrow I need to apply for another one and have it rushed. :/ So prayer for me to find it, or for a new one to get here in time.
HUGE PRAISE! I have found, or rather God placed in my life, a very wise woman who is on fire for Christ to be my Mentor! :D I am finally going to have some good solid fellowship with another woman! I have not had this since we left Okinawa so I am so happy! Thank you to all who were praying about that for me!
well, I am going to hopefully get some good sleep tonight. Tomorrow I have to do some laundry first thing in the morning and help get Joe packed up and send him off to Chicago for the Gospel Coalition Conference.
Project 52: Dog Food
Thursday, April 7, 2011
I sat Ben down on the ground with a couple of his toys, fed the dog, and started de-cluttering our house. It was a good night. Ben was happily playing by himself and not making a peep. I took a break from cleaning and looked down on the floor where I left him to find him playing in the dog's bowl. I couldn't help but to crack up laughing and grab my camera and my hubby.
Luckily I have a very well behaved dog who loves Ben! So instead of getting food aggressive and mean, he just ate around Ben.
Luckily I have a very well behaved dog who loves Ben! So instead of getting food aggressive and mean, he just ate around Ben.
Zulilly.com
This site is so awesome. When I first signed up I thought I would never use it. Until today! Charlie Banana cloth diapers were 40% off and Joe and I were talking about switching to Cloth diapers for Ben. They are so much money, but in the long run it is way cheaper. So I bought 8 cloth diapers that were one-size-fits all!!
So if you want discounted cloth diapers, baby clothes, maternity, and fun things like purses and such Zulilly.com is the place to shop.
You have to be invited so here it is... I am inviting you to shop Zulilly...
Click here for the invite
So if you want discounted cloth diapers, baby clothes, maternity, and fun things like purses and such Zulilly.com is the place to shop.
You have to be invited so here it is... I am inviting you to shop Zulilly...
Click here for the invite
Pay Pal donations now Tax Deductible!!!!!
Monday, April 4, 2011
We got a phone call the other day from the AIM representative who is helping us put our trip together and told us that they will make sure all donations are tax-deductible. So if you have or are planning to support us financially using the paypal tool you get a tax-deductible receipt too! All we have to do is send a list of the names, addresses, and amounts along with a check from us and they will send out receipts to every individual who is supporting us! So if that was a worry of yours... WORRY NO MORE!!! We are so excited to be able to provide that for you!
On another mission note...
I am so excited about this trip! The amazing thing is that ever since I became a Christian I have had a burning heart to go to Africa! I have known that one day I would step foot on African soil, I just didn't know when. And who was to know that I was going to be taking a baby with me! I have no idea what to expect or what it is going to be like at all. This is my chance to find out what full time mission work will look like and what my roll looks like.
One thing I do know about what I will be doing is documentary. As much as Ben will allow me to do anyway. I will be photographing our trip and what we do... all except our team flying around. I wont be with them during that part. I'm also hoping that one of the women out there will braid my hair for me. That way I don't get lice, plus I think it would be fun! :D
I am also thinking about creating some calendars full of photos from our trip. I may sell them for money for a future mission trip or to donate to somewhere.
The part I am most excited about though is to see how God moves out there and to see if Africa is where God may use us full time. We will see!! Is there a permanent move to Africa in the future for the Myers family? Only time will tell. :D
On another mission note...
I am so excited about this trip! The amazing thing is that ever since I became a Christian I have had a burning heart to go to Africa! I have known that one day I would step foot on African soil, I just didn't know when. And who was to know that I was going to be taking a baby with me! I have no idea what to expect or what it is going to be like at all. This is my chance to find out what full time mission work will look like and what my roll looks like.
One thing I do know about what I will be doing is documentary. As much as Ben will allow me to do anyway. I will be photographing our trip and what we do... all except our team flying around. I wont be with them during that part. I'm also hoping that one of the women out there will braid my hair for me. That way I don't get lice, plus I think it would be fun! :D
I am also thinking about creating some calendars full of photos from our trip. I may sell them for money for a future mission trip or to donate to somewhere.
The part I am most excited about though is to see how God moves out there and to see if Africa is where God may use us full time. We will see!! Is there a permanent move to Africa in the future for the Myers family? Only time will tell. :D
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