open wounds and love and flies

if any one person on this earth is responsible for pulling me out of my “dark” years and encouraging me to get back into my faith, it was kristi. you’ll read a little bit about her in mad church disease. she was the first person that ever held me accountable to anything in my life. she was my coffee date. my late-night movie friend. she was the maid of honor in my wedding.

then life took her to wichita, ks and me to dallas and then finally we are here in nashville and she is in south africa with her husband doing anything. anything at all. whatever is needed.

she wrote this on her blog today and it was too powerful to not share.

i have no action steps to give you. no thought-provoking questions. just read kristi’s words…and tell me what your heart tells you.

I have always been sensitive. Always. I cry at simple commercials, I laugh easily, I am more likely to embrace rather then give a handshake. That’s just me. But I am never really ready for the shock of seeing somebody dying…every time I walk into a room when it’s happening, I never really get over it even though I have been practicing now for 2 years.

Nosakhe, one of our Community Care Workers told me she got a new “patient” this week and wanted me to meet her. She needed my help to assess the situation. She said she was very sick and suffering. She was right across the street. So we walked over and I was drawn to this woman. She was probably 35 or 40 years old with a few stray gray hairs mixed into her head of black. She was facing the wall as we entered the room and didn’t stir as we made our way in. I became immediately aware of the stench of her urine and body odor, even though I understood immediately she was the only one to be left alone in this huge room for quite sometime with two beds. I left the door wide open and forced open the window beyond the limits till it creaked. She stirred. She was incapable of speaking her aunt/mom/sister told me. So I got close to her ear and told her my name and that we were there to love her.

It must have been 100 degrees in there and she was naked but covered in 4 blankets that reeked of waste. I put my gloves on and started removing the layers. She was sweating and rolled her eyes towards me. I started praying in my head and removed all offensive jewelry so not to scratch her sensitive skin. My watch, rings…anything that could be abrasive on her sweet body. I knew I would be here for hours. The people in the house started watching and I asked for a bucket and all of the supplies. She was gritty and neglected. I asked a hundred questions. After I stripped the bedding I instructed that they needed to be washed and dried at least every week, I started showing them how to bathe her. I never stopped talking to the woman. My eyes never left hers. I told her how beautiful she was and that we both were going to get through this crazy.

I showed them how to clean her raw bed sores and how to dress her wounds. How long has she been in this condition? I then changed her adult diaper and for the first time in my life didn’t really know what I was made of. I walked the people in the room as well as myself through the process…as long as I kept talking I figured I wouldn’t pass out from the smell or from what I was seeing. Her whole back side as well as her delicates were covered in sores and swollen. How long has she been left to rot? I brought with me baby wipes and prayed that they were sensitive enough. She was full of puss and heartache. She was so brave. I still was talking to her and tried my hardest to keep my eyes on hers and not only on the task. I kept speaking to the other woman as they were the ones to clean her from this day forward…I was merely training.

So I tried to turn her and noticed one more sore and I could then see into her body and the tissue within. My stomach turned and I prayed once more. How long Lord? Please heal this woman. I told the ladies watching me that it was essential to clean this wound. I could here the flies in my ears. I finished and then put the new diaper on. She weighed so little, we could have been using one designed for a child. The only reason I struggled was because she was tall, not because of weight…I assumed she weighed 60 at best. I changed gloves and gave further instruction to the woman watching my every move. I then used aloe to soothe her skin and spoke tender words to love and unlock her joints. I never broke eye contact. She started following me with her head and I was so gentle.

In my former life before mission work, I was a licensed massage therapist…but this was beyond all of my training there (draping, keeping the clients modesty…) but since she was already so exposed and nude, I just rubbed her down. I assumed she wasn’t being touched or cared for and by her response, I am fairly certain I was correct. Her ribs and naked breast all sucked to her body because her skin clinged tightly to her. She was so dehydrated. I was so careful and slow and worked my way, head to toe with the aloe…working between all the sores and ribs and places I thought she was hurting. She never dropped my gaze. I then put chap stick on her and she opened her eyes wide and I put more on.

Relief.

I stared telling the woman how we had to be careful as to not to overwhelm her and not to feed her too quickly as to damage her delicate stomach. I started with the water. She clearly couldn’t sit up…so I spoon fed her water. She was so thirsty. We stopped to let it settle and then I gave her more. We then gave her some watered down porridge and I told them that her body would most likely reject the nutrition and that we had to be super careful to feed her a little at a time at first so her body could adjust. I also instructed them to get her out of that room. She needs air, she needs people, she needs to live. We talked about being around people and how important it was to read or spend time with her. I was smitten by this woman because she is somebodies daughter, mom, sister, aunt and I loved her immediately.

Comments

33 responses to “open wounds and love and flies”

  1. Andrea Emerson Avatar

    That is beautiful and inspiring, and so Christ-like. Thanks for sharing and reminding us that we were created for relationship.

    Have a blessed, fruitful 2009.

    Andrea

  2. David Ballard Avatar

    No words. Only tears. And prayer. And hope. And faith. Thanks Anne.

  3. Brad Huebert Avatar

    Wow, Anne. Thanks for sharing this post. My first thought is, “Here’s this woman loving someone who could turn her stomach with disgust, seeing her beauty and value within, refusing to be petty, while we North American Christians endlessly self-justify when God asks us to love people who might take some work, are a little annoying, or have baggage of any kind.”

    We have so much to learn.

  4. Angie Avatar

    i feel like i should comment, but i don’t even know what to say. how can such an ugly situation be so beautiful at the same time?

  5. Carole Turner Avatar

    The tears are flowing. I dare not look away. Your friend is living!! She is being Jesus to the dieing! I want to be more like her. Thank you for sharing this.

  6. Susie Avatar

    Thank you for sharing this Anne. Your friend is a treasure and probably the closest thing to being Christ I’ve seen in a long time.

  7. adam Avatar

    oh my. kristi is a saint. praying for them!

  8. Lisa Avatar

    No words are needed….this is love in the most real definition of the term

  9. Elora Avatar

    Namaste. Recognizing the love and beauty of Christ in another. This touched me in so many ways, Anne. I’m sitting here in my classroom, fighting the tears flowing out of my eyes because I have to teach a class of teenagers here in about five minutes, but I needed this more than you know. Thank you so much for this precious reminder of every soul’s absolute need for love and relationship and community. Your friend is an incredible blessing.

  10. DaveAllen Avatar

    Such a beautiful thing. With all the emphasis on creativity and innovation, this is ministry. This is Christ in action.

  11. Summer Kelly Avatar

    I can’t even begin to type… but thank you.

  12. bethany hoang Avatar

    I am so struck by her wordsm ‘I didn’t really know what I was made of.’ I can’t help but believe, as I read her stunning narrative of love, that this, truly, is what we, who bear God’s image, who have Chrsit living in us, are made of. she is living what we are made of. she is truly living what it is to be Jesus to others. I long to live this… to be obedient to the fullness of what I am made of, of what we are all made of…

  13. Lauren Biggs Avatar

    Jesus, teach me this kind of love.

  14. Paige Avatar
    Paige

    Wow. I have words worthy. Give Kristi a huge hug from me and tell her thank you. Thank you not only for the kindness shown to someone neglected, but for the reminder of how we are to be the lonely and neglected right in front of us!

    Paige

  15. Sarah Valente (kingdom mama) Avatar

    I have no words…but this is what it’s all about.

  16. Jennifer Griffin Avatar

    My eyes are tear-filled. What a blessing Kristi is to this woman. I am praying for her and for Kristi. The love she had for someone so full of pain and sicknes…someone she didn’t know. I am humbled today. I pray God touched this ladies heart as much as she did her body. Amen…she is the hands of Jesus.

  17. Faye Avatar

    Words fail. Wow.

  18. adam herod Avatar

    Beautiful. Thanks for bringing tears today. Blessings to Kristi for being Jesus to this woman.

  19. Heidi Reed Avatar

    This is what I aim for. This is why I am trying to go to school to become a nurse while raising a young brood. This inspires me. I can’t wait until it’s me putting on the gloves, cleaning the wounds, talking to the women, and smelling the stench. May God bless Kristi and all those like her. May God heal the woman in Africa. Thanks for sharing, Anne. I just know this is what God meant for me to do and I am anxious, even if it takes 20 years, to get started.

  20. Joni Avatar

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  21. Andy Depuy Avatar

    Anne Thank you,your friend is one of God’s angels,Has i write this I crying like a baby but i m just like her I cry @ anything. Let her know that the Prayer Warrior is praying for her and will continue to pray for her. I love you for sharing this your amazing Godly friend with us

  22. gretchen Avatar

    wow…beautiful. Amazing what it means to people when we acknowledge them. touch them. look at them.

  23. Crystal Renaud Avatar

    i had no words earlier — but i just wanted to say… wow. like… the way she describes this with such beauty, grace and detail — it is like she carried us into that room with her.

  24. John Ireland Avatar
    John Ireland

    that, anne, is a sweet example of Heaven intersecting Earth

  25. David Depoister Avatar
    David Depoister

    Thanks. This is so inspiring.

  26. candyce Avatar
    candyce

    the part of this story that makes me saddest is the part where kristi describes the woman’s height. she was made to stand tall…

    i’m thankful that kristi shared this story. that she was Jesus’ hands in that room. thankful for how the Holy Spirit grants us the ability to act beyond ourselves. (love you annegirl and kristiapplesauce.)

  27. Kari Byrd Avatar
    Kari Byrd

    What a privilege it is for you to know and love Kristi.

  28. Dawn Avatar
    Dawn

    Isn’t this what the Father did for us. Got close to our ear, whispered His name>Jesus< and told us He was here to love us. No more beautiful word picture has ever been painted.

  29. Kari Byrd Avatar
    Kari Byrd

    I can’t stop thinking about this post. I just keep picturing Jesus tending to the wounds of this woman and it blows me away.

  30. Aimee Avatar
    Aimee

    love

  31. mandie s Avatar

    Wow. This is amazing, touching, and inspiring, but also so sad and depressing at once. Thank you for sharing this.