Monday, January 25, 2010

Our Big Vaccination Day





We made it through six injections each and lived to tell. Honestly people it was no that bad. Now we had heard horror stories about grown men crying with the yellow fever shot. Not the case for Bob and I am still on the fence about the yellow fever since it does have some side effects and I am the queen of getting anything a drug might potentially cause. Our nurse made the morning far less stressful than we expected and frankly the hardest part was waiting for her to draw up all the syringes. I will say it was a bit frightening to review all that Ethiopia struggles with in terms of diseases. Of course we will be in one area and we will not be traveling remotely. All I could think of were the many brave souls now in Haiti who are working with no sanitation and no supplies. They must be serving each day in fear of things such as typhoid and Hep A and B. Our nurse explained that many who left quickly for Haiti were not able to be vaccinated properly first. Such a selfless thing to do- serving the hungry, the lost, the injured and the dying in Haiti. I am amazed by the heros who do so. They inspire me to do greater things with my time and my life. We are one step closer to our daughter and my heart is with those tonight who are being stirred by the call to adopt. May they see that even busy families with full lives can make room for one more. We can find the time to get to the shots and complete the many hours of paperwork. One more thing to check off our list!

2 comments:

Rachel said...

we are number 19 officially on the girl list. oh it feels like we are getting soooo close. i think we are unofficially #15. which shots did you guys get? i wasn't sure when we needed to get ours? my email is rdorlo@charter.net
maybe we will travel together, who knows? we are in TN.

Melanie Strobel said...

Hi there:
We are all getting close! Just wish we would see some movement. We followed the advice of the awesome travel nurse at the Health Center. There is very little direction as to when to get started but we figured why not. Some of the shots need boosters too. I need better direction on how to follow people and their blogs. I just noticed that you had left a comment. OK sorry but I need to run. Official numbers soon?????
Blessings to you!

Into Our Arms Forever!

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welcome home ava! from melanie Strobel on Vimeo.

Meeting Ava during our first trip to Ethiopia

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Meeting Ava Ethiopia Trip July 2010 from melanie Strobel on Vimeo.

Korah- Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

During our recent visit to Ethiopia I felt very called to the village of Korah in Addis Ababa Ethiopia. There have been numerous rumblings lately about the tremendous need to help the children of Korah who are growing up in and around the local trash dump. The village was established 75 years ago as a place to send people with leprosy who were said to be cursed. Now there is a 3rd generation of people living in Korah with nearly 100,000 suffering from such things as leprosy, HIV, misc disease and of course malnutrition. There are many children of Korah who have been forced to live and work at the trash dump in hopes of finding food and possible items to sell in Korah's center of town. With the start of the Great Hope Church in Korah and the building of a shelter, along with the ministry of local Sammy Liben and Sumer Yates, there is now a feeding program and a sponsorship program in place to rescue the forgotten children of Korah and send them to boarding school where they can escape the horror of the conditions of living and working in a large trash dump. For more information please visit: www.help4korah.blogspot.com or www.p61.org where you can learn more about how you or your organization can help the people and the children of Korah. Please send me a message or email Erin Allen at erin@p61.org to request sponsorship information. I will soon be posting the photos of my day recently spent in Korah. I must tell you it was life changing and beyond anything I have ever done to stretch, change and rearrange myself. God helped me to help the people who I met. Much of what I could offer was nothing more than the snap of my camera or a warm touch or an inviting smile. The needs in Korah are beyond our wildest imagination yet God is over Korah and there is already amazing work being done. I invite you to view the following videos to learn more about the beauty and the needs of Korah's people.

CLICK HERE TO LEARN HOW TO SPONSOR A CHILD

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Hannah's Hope Orphanage- Ethiopia

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