Saturday, January 31, 2009

La familia Read!

This Goes out to Sierra and Noah Read! The best friends Ever! You will be great Parents! I'm so excited for you and am praying constantly that all will go well and sooooon you will have a beautiful baby girl! Thanks for wonderful examples and your friendship!!!!! Love you!

Friday, January 16, 2009

Value Life

This is the blog for my little Cousin. He passed away not long after he was born but his families love and reverence for him and his life is inspiring. So watch the little slide show of his life on the blog.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Mountains Beyond Mountains

The book Mountains Beyond Mountains, written by Tracy Kidder, tells the story of Paul Farmer's efforts to improve health in Haiti. This book has many inspiring qualities that warrant mention. However, one seems more salient than the rest. For me, the example of caring for the poor came from Christ. I have a strong faith that not only does Christ live, but that He approves and encourages us to love and care for others, especially the poor. There is an excerpt from the book that addresses Dr. Farmer's experience with contrasting appreciations of faith in the two dominating venues of his life, Harvard and Haiti.
The combination of Harvard and Haiti had begun to form a new kind of belief in Farmer. He would tell me years later: "The fact that any sort of religious faith was so disdained at Harvard and so important to the poor-- not just in Haiti but elsewhere, too-- made me even more convinced that faith must be something good."

And if the landless peasants of Cange needed to believe that someone omniscient was keeping score, by now Farmer felt the need to believe something like that himself. In the peasant phrase, an unnecessary death was "a stupid death," and he was seeing a lot of those. "Surely someone is witnessing this horror show?" he'd say to himself. "I know it sounds shallow, the opiate thing, needing to believe, palliating pain, but it didn't feel shallow. It was more profound than other sentiments I'd known, and I was taken with the idea that in an ostensibly godless world that worshiped money and power, or more seductively, a sense of personal efficacy and advancement, like at Duke and Harvard, there was still a place to look for God, and that is in the suffering of the poor.
This quote resonates with me because it echoes the fundamental frequency that drives my work too. Faith is something good. God can be found in serving the poor. So when we feel overwhelmed by academia and get too caught up with money or our own personal accomplishments, it is essential that we look beyond ourselves to others. There are infinite types of poverty and I propose, that like Farmer, as we serve we will find that believing won't feel shallow but will perhaps lead us to the most complete feeling of wholeness possible to attain.

Friday, January 9, 2009

better

Jerry Ternin and his wife Monique of the Save the Children program, working on malnutrition in Vietnam, "focused on finding solutions from insiders. They asked small groups of poor villagers to identify who among them had the best-nourished children... The villagers then visited those mothers at home to see exactly what they were doing. Just thae was revolutionary. The villagers discovered that there were well-nourished children among them, despite the poverty, and that those children's mothers were breaking with the locally accepted wisdom in all sots of ways. ... In two years, malnutrition dropped 65 to 85 percent in every villages the Sternins had been to. "
Better by Atul Gawande pg.25

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Go Panacea!

Just preparing for our little dream!