Friday, November 7, 2014

Rainy Day Reminders


     The last two days have been a pretty constant torrential downpour.  School was cancelled and most people aren’t even leaving the house.


     There have been a lot of problems because of the rain.  The internet has been down for over a day with no sign of being fixed anytime soon.  I’m out of propane with no way to get more.  No cooking, no baking, and no warm showers.

Last night as I was taking a freezing cold shower and longing for warm water, I thought of the students who live in Balan (the impoverished area around my school).  How many of them are showering in muddy water from the street right now?
This morning when I wanted to bake cookies for some friends but couldn’t because my house needs propane, I thought of my goddaughter’s house.  I remember watching Miverdine’s 12-year-old brother climbing to the roof to string up a tarp to keep the rain from leaking onto the family’s one bed.  And that was weeks ago, after only a small rain.  What kind of shape is their house in now, after 12 inches of pouring rain?
And now, as I sit in my safe, dry house writing this blog post, I think of the way my American neighbor had to use a kayak to get her Haitian friend out of a completely flooded house.

So what’s the conclusion of this blog post?  That I’m a selfish American for caring about things like propane?  Is it wrong to be frustrated because I can’t work due to lack of internet?

No.

The only point I want to make is this:
Don’t take things like power, internet, clean water to shower in, a safe house, or a dry bed for granted.  Not everybody is blessed with those things.

So as you read this post on the internet, and as you take a relaxing shower, and as you lock your front door and then slip into your warm, dry bed, say a prayer for the kids in Balan.  For my goddaughter and her family.  For so many others whose lives are turned upside down by a single rainstorm.



1 comment:

  1. Thank you Erin, you do an amazing job of showing people the real concerns, and tribulations that people in Haiti face, without an approach that makes people feel too negative or guilty: you help people see they must be simply grateful. Im praying for you, you're doing an amazing job!

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