Friday, October 29, 2010
Mil Mesi (1000 Thanks!!)
Sunrise anyone?
Thank you so much for your wonderful support! We woke up at 430am Sunday, ready to run. The race itself went well and at the end, we all said that in the moments when we were feeling tired and sore, we were pushed forward because of the women we were running for.
On Monday, Beth (one of the midwives in Haiti) posted that they had to transfer a patient for a c-section that morning and were grateful for God's timing in raising this money.
Mom and Baby are doing great!
With your support, the three of us raised over $12,000 - that's 12 women who will have a dignified, safe c-section.
From the bottom of our hearts, we thank you.
Sarah O, Sarah D and Megan
Friday, October 22, 2010
From Megan, fellow runner
Dear Friends and Family,
Last May, I had the opportunity to visit Haiti post-earthquake. The devastation of the country and people that I’ve grown to love was difficult to swallow, and even harder to stomach. Fortunately, Haitians are strong and resilient and have not been forgotten! I was so lucky to get to meet the people of Heartline Ministries, who seek to meet the physical and spiritual needs of the most marginalized individuals. While there, I got the experience of a lifetime, to be part of my very first birth. Ahh! The midwives, Beth and Joanna, were amazing! They are unbelievably loving, caring, and self-sacrificing women, giving prenatal care, post-partum care, and clean, healthy birth experiences to Haitian women. Here in the U.S. those things are expected, but in Haiti they are an extreme luxury and act of love. Heartline is fully equipped to help women with natural birth, but what happens when a woman needs a C-section? Are they supposed to take them to the free hospital that is dirty, with blood and fluids on the floor, dirty stretchers, rude doctors and nurses, and just hope for the best? Is that what you would want for your wife, daughter, sister, or best friend?
Here’s where we can help: It costs roughly $1,000 for a woman to have a C-Section at a good hospital. On Sunday, October 24, I am running the L.A. Rock ‘N Roll Half Marathon in honor of Heartline and these women who deserve the same quality medical care as we do.
Please consider donating to provide Heartline with the money needed to give the best care possible. All donations are tax-deductible.
You may donate by clicking on the “Chip In!” on our running blog http://running4heartlinec-sections.blogspot.com/
Or send a check made out to: Heartline Ministries
Megan Blaze
270 Ohio St. #10
Pasadena, CA 91106
Thanks in advance for your love and support!
Megan Blaze
Last May, I had the opportunity to visit Haiti post-earthquake. The devastation of the country and people that I’ve grown to love was difficult to swallow, and even harder to stomach. Fortunately, Haitians are strong and resilient and have not been forgotten! I was so lucky to get to meet the people of Heartline Ministries, who seek to meet the physical and spiritual needs of the most marginalized individuals. While there, I got the experience of a lifetime, to be part of my very first birth. Ahh! The midwives, Beth and Joanna, were amazing! They are unbelievably loving, caring, and self-sacrificing women, giving prenatal care, post-partum care, and clean, healthy birth experiences to Haitian women. Here in the U.S. those things are expected, but in Haiti they are an extreme luxury and act of love. Heartline is fully equipped to help women with natural birth, but what happens when a woman needs a C-section? Are they supposed to take them to the free hospital that is dirty, with blood and fluids on the floor, dirty stretchers, rude doctors and nurses, and just hope for the best? Is that what you would want for your wife, daughter, sister, or best friend?
Here’s where we can help: It costs roughly $1,000 for a woman to have a C-Section at a good hospital. On Sunday, October 24, I am running the L.A. Rock ‘N Roll Half Marathon in honor of Heartline and these women who deserve the same quality medical care as we do.
Please consider donating to provide Heartline with the money needed to give the best care possible. All donations are tax-deductible.
You may donate by clicking on the “Chip In!” on our running blog http://running4heartlinec-sections.blogspot.com/
Or send a check made out to: Heartline Ministries
Megan Blaze
270 Ohio St. #10
Pasadena, CA 91106
Thanks in advance for your love and support!
Megan Blaze
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Love Empowers (Re-Post)
Here is a recent post from a Heartline Staff Member, Tara Livesay. We hope you get a sense of their heart and mission by hearing directly from Tara, in her own words. We hope you'll support them as they support women like Angena and her family. We hope you'll support US as we (Carb Load) and run 13.1 miles next week. It's for the countless Angena's and this vision that we want to run & support Heartline!
LOVE EMPOWERS. 10/15/10
When working in a place like Haiti, it can be easy to get overwhelmed by the needs. This is especially true when so many of the women we meet share a similar story and a similar large need.
It has been our goal to truly get to know each woman in our program and to glean a little bit of her story - to take the time to understand specific details about her life and her situation. We want to know more about them than, "they are poor". Whether we can help in each situation or not - we truly desire to know about the ladies and their lives and to enter into relationship with them. We believe that love transforms, redeems, and empowers.
Today I want to share Angena's story of strength and perseverance.
Angena is 29 years old and has four children. They are Angelo, 7 years old, Erna, 6 years old, Woodson, almost 3, and Rose Gerlande, 17 months.
We first met Angena when she came to us pregnant in late 2007. At that time our programs were still very young and in development stage. She attended class and was given prenatal vitamins for a couple of months and her baby boy was born healthy at home in early 2008.
Angena had attempted to benefit from our sewing school but unfortunately she was unable to keep up with the requirements. It was very difficult for the sewing school director to make a decision to remove her from that class. After that, the sewing director took a special interest in looking out for Angena and attempting to find ways to support her. Angena continued coming to the Early Childhood development classes with her new son, Woodson.
In our program we cover many topics. Some of the topics we teach about are: parenting, bonding, public health, hygiene, breastfeeding, STDs, birth control, and first aid. Some of the teaching is fairly basic and aimed at changing long-held cultural beliefs, and misconceptions due to rumor and superstition or lack of education. (For instance, most Haitians believe if the mother has a cold, she can pass it to the baby through nursing and she will not nurse her baby while she has a common cold.)
Many (if not most) women do not have any power when it comes to choosing to say no to intercourse. This problem is systemic and endemic and grievous. Because of this lack of power women find themselves pregnant over and over at a young age. Often times by the time the baby is born the father of the baby has moved on to a new relationship - leaving the woman to fend for herself and her baby without help. This story is told thousands of times over and over all across the island.
For this very reason, teaching about birth control is very important. We hope to empower the women by giving them at least a few options to try to reduce unplanned multiple pregnancies. Being forced into sex is incredibly unfair and horrible; becoming pregnant and trying to provide for a baby all alone as a result is far more difficult. In our program we cover the health benefits for spacing children and we offer them a couple of family planning/birth control methods.
Despite our best efforts and Angena's plan to use birthcontrol, she found herself pregnant again just 8 months after Woodson was born. Angena was devastated. She told us that her husband lives and works in Santo Domingo and just comes home occasionally. He sends money from his job when he can. She is left in Port au Prince to handle the children alone. She is left unprotected from the advances of other men. The situation is overwhelming.
At times Angena was very depressed, and understandably so. During those low times we were careful to pray for her even more and to remind her that we care and will continue to help her whenever possible. Angena desperately needed our encouragement and support. We asked her to start coming to prenatal class again, she re-entered the prenatal program. For the next 27 weeks we were able to see her on Thursdays. Each week were able to remind her that she was not alone and that we cared for her. Angena was able to receive prenatal vitamins that allowed her better health throughout the pregnancy.
In the summer of 2009 Angena delivered a healthy baby girl and named her Rose Gerlande. The father of the baby was still out of the country, as he was for the entire pregnancy.
After delivering Rose Gerlande she moved into the Tuesday Early Childhood Development Class. The benefit for her is to meet other Moms and to learn tools and skills to help her bond with and raise her kids. She is supported by people who love her. She is able to have her kids looked at by a missionary nurse when they are sick. This saves her a lot of money that the "village doctor" might charge to guess at what is wrong with her child.
It is easy to fall into thinking, "Why did she get pregnant again? Doesn't she learn?" Some might even think, "Well she got pregnant - it is her fault she is so poor." While a very small portion of her situation *might* be a direct result of her own choices, the fact is MOST of her life circumstances have much more to do with the culture and country she was born into. Her culture allows her very few choices and opportunities. She needs a hand-up. She needs love and empowerment.
Our program does not exist to fix Haiti or change Haiti's culture. That is a battle we won't likely win no matter how hard we try. We can change a few misconceptions. We can make a dent here and a dent there in long-held incorrect beliefs. WE can empower the women we serve, but we won't always succeed in convincing our Moms to use birth control or to plan ahead or to breastfeed their newborn. Sadly, we won't be able to protect our women from forced sexual intercourse. (Rape) While it is easy to get stuck being frustrated with what cannot be changed, our challenge is to focus on what can be done.
Our program exists to show mercy and grace and love to the forgotten and to be to them a little bit of Heaven on Earth. We hope that by feeling unconditional love, they might desire to know the unconditional love of the Father. We pray to that end. We are here to love and serve ladies that "don't learn" and that have incredibly hard challenges with very little hope for an improved living/financial situation.
Jesus came not only for me and for you, but for Angena. He loved the prostitute, the unclean, and the serial mistake-makers. He did not give up on them or turn away. It is for this reason that we won't ever turn Angena away. We hope and pray she does not have another unplanned pregnancy - we're doing everything we can to educate her about that - but if she returns to us, we will love her and serve her and see her through another pregnancy - because love empowers.
LOVE EMPOWERS. 10/15/10
When working in a place like Haiti, it can be easy to get overwhelmed by the needs. This is especially true when so many of the women we meet share a similar story and a similar large need.
It has been our goal to truly get to know each woman in our program and to glean a little bit of her story - to take the time to understand specific details about her life and her situation. We want to know more about them than, "they are poor". Whether we can help in each situation or not - we truly desire to know about the ladies and their lives and to enter into relationship with them. We believe that love transforms, redeems, and empowers.
Today I want to share Angena's story of strength and perseverance.
Angena is 29 years old and has four children. They are Angelo, 7 years old, Erna, 6 years old, Woodson, almost 3, and Rose Gerlande, 17 months.
We first met Angena when she came to us pregnant in late 2007. At that time our programs were still very young and in development stage. She attended class and was given prenatal vitamins for a couple of months and her baby boy was born healthy at home in early 2008.
Angena had attempted to benefit from our sewing school but unfortunately she was unable to keep up with the requirements. It was very difficult for the sewing school director to make a decision to remove her from that class. After that, the sewing director took a special interest in looking out for Angena and attempting to find ways to support her. Angena continued coming to the Early Childhood development classes with her new son, Woodson.
In our program we cover many topics. Some of the topics we teach about are: parenting, bonding, public health, hygiene, breastfeeding, STDs, birth control, and first aid. Some of the teaching is fairly basic and aimed at changing long-held cultural beliefs, and misconceptions due to rumor and superstition or lack of education. (For instance, most Haitians believe if the mother has a cold, she can pass it to the baby through nursing and she will not nurse her baby while she has a common cold.)
Many (if not most) women do not have any power when it comes to choosing to say no to intercourse. This problem is systemic and endemic and grievous. Because of this lack of power women find themselves pregnant over and over at a young age. Often times by the time the baby is born the father of the baby has moved on to a new relationship - leaving the woman to fend for herself and her baby without help. This story is told thousands of times over and over all across the island.
For this very reason, teaching about birth control is very important. We hope to empower the women by giving them at least a few options to try to reduce unplanned multiple pregnancies. Being forced into sex is incredibly unfair and horrible; becoming pregnant and trying to provide for a baby all alone as a result is far more difficult. In our program we cover the health benefits for spacing children and we offer them a couple of family planning/birth control methods.
Despite our best efforts and Angena's plan to use birthcontrol, she found herself pregnant again just 8 months after Woodson was born. Angena was devastated. She told us that her husband lives and works in Santo Domingo and just comes home occasionally. He sends money from his job when he can. She is left in Port au Prince to handle the children alone. She is left unprotected from the advances of other men. The situation is overwhelming.
At times Angena was very depressed, and understandably so. During those low times we were careful to pray for her even more and to remind her that we care and will continue to help her whenever possible. Angena desperately needed our encouragement and support. We asked her to start coming to prenatal class again, she re-entered the prenatal program. For the next 27 weeks we were able to see her on Thursdays. Each week were able to remind her that she was not alone and that we cared for her. Angena was able to receive prenatal vitamins that allowed her better health throughout the pregnancy.
In the summer of 2009 Angena delivered a healthy baby girl and named her Rose Gerlande. The father of the baby was still out of the country, as he was for the entire pregnancy.
After delivering Rose Gerlande she moved into the Tuesday Early Childhood Development Class. The benefit for her is to meet other Moms and to learn tools and skills to help her bond with and raise her kids. She is supported by people who love her. She is able to have her kids looked at by a missionary nurse when they are sick. This saves her a lot of money that the "village doctor" might charge to guess at what is wrong with her child.
It is easy to fall into thinking, "Why did she get pregnant again? Doesn't she learn?" Some might even think, "Well she got pregnant - it is her fault she is so poor." While a very small portion of her situation *might* be a direct result of her own choices, the fact is MOST of her life circumstances have much more to do with the culture and country she was born into. Her culture allows her very few choices and opportunities. She needs a hand-up. She needs love and empowerment.
Our program does not exist to fix Haiti or change Haiti's culture. That is a battle we won't likely win no matter how hard we try. We can change a few misconceptions. We can make a dent here and a dent there in long-held incorrect beliefs. WE can empower the women we serve, but we won't always succeed in convincing our Moms to use birth control or to plan ahead or to breastfeed their newborn. Sadly, we won't be able to protect our women from forced sexual intercourse. (Rape) While it is easy to get stuck being frustrated with what cannot be changed, our challenge is to focus on what can be done.
Our program exists to show mercy and grace and love to the forgotten and to be to them a little bit of Heaven on Earth. We hope that by feeling unconditional love, they might desire to know the unconditional love of the Father. We pray to that end. We are here to love and serve ladies that "don't learn" and that have incredibly hard challenges with very little hope for an improved living/financial situation.
Jesus came not only for me and for you, but for Angena. He loved the prostitute, the unclean, and the serial mistake-makers. He did not give up on them or turn away. It is for this reason that we won't ever turn Angena away. We hope and pray she does not have another unplanned pregnancy - we're doing everything we can to educate her about that - but if she returns to us, we will love her and serve her and see her through another pregnancy - because love empowers.
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Sharing: From Tunics to Hospitals
Even though you and I are probably not from Haiti, as I sat with the women at Heartline yesterday I realized how very much alike we all are.
We love our babies something fierce.
We want what is best for them.
We are proud of our children.
We all fail and yet find grace and forgiveness at the feet of Jesus.
But there's something we don't have in common with the women in Haiti.
Moms & Babies at Heartlines' Child Development Class
Recently Beth McHoul, founder of Heartline had to take two of the women in her care to a nearby Haitian hospital to deliver. Let her words really soak into your soul...
"...the conditions of this hospital sent my head spinning. I saw two doctors and one nurse for many, many laboring women. The plight of Haiti - understaffed and overworked. Broken equipment, no sheets, no supplies, bare, dirty, rooms, no clean up crew rushing over for every spill of vomit and blood. ...I stood there, looking around, trying to keep back the flood of emotions. I so wanted to grab our ladies and head back to our clean, sterile maternity center. But they have what we don't. An operating room for a possible c-section. We know our limits, we know when care is beyond our skills.
I envisioned our ladies grabbing our bodies and hanging on as we headed out the door. They didn't. They hugged and kissed us with promises to call when babies were born. They accepted this. They are poor, Haitian and this is what hospital means to them. They were not as appalled as we were. They were not fighting back tears. They were not thinking human beings should not birth in places like this. They understood.
Mom laboring at Heartline with Beth and Joanna T
I don't understand. And as a person with power I have to advocate and fight for them. We can be a voice for them. Our prenatal program services 20 pregnant women at a time. We lavish them with good care, dignity, love and respect. All women should have this. We feel ownership once a woman joins our program and we have a commitment to see her through till that child is six months old and flourishing.
Sometimes pregnancy means complications especially with an impoverished population. We can only go so far when dealing with these complications. I want a better transport option. I want quality care in decent surroundings. This should not be a luxury for the wealthy only. All laboring women should be guaranteed good care in a clean environment.
If we can't find it here then we have to take action. We either need more money to send our ladies to the hospitals that only the rich and powerful can afford to go to or we expand and provide a hospital ourselves. Let's do it. A small hospital with clean sheets, equipment that works, a caring staff and patients that come out whole in body and spirit. Our field hospital showed us that this is a possibly. We can do it and we can do it well."
This verse came to my mind as I sat with these women yesterday...
Luke 3:11
The man with two tunics should share with him who has none, and the one who has food should do the same.
I wasn't thinking about tunics, cause I'll be honest...the last thing the women of Haiti need are tunics. Heck, it's so hot here, if it's got sleeves on it, no one wants to wear it. Thankfully, Jesus wasn't talking specifically about tunics. Jesus was making a point. If we have an abundance of something, we need to share the extras with others.
There are two beautiful hospitals in the town I call home in the States. Both of those hospitals are filled with doctors and nurses who love and care for the women who come to their facility to deliver their babies.
My heart hurts that women here in Haiti do not have a safe, clean birthing experience like we do in the States. Today we have to admit that we don't have this in common with our sisters in Christ in Haiti. We have lots and lots of incredible hospitals in the United States where we can deliver our babies while the women of Port-au-Prince have none.
Heartline is attempting to remedy that in Haiti. They are trying to build a birthing center for the ladies in their program. Because of the work that Heartline is doing these women currently have access to the gospel, they are surrounded by people who love them and share God's love with them, they take classes every week that teach them how to love and care for their babies. Heartline provides literacy skills and job training so that these women can be free from the chains of poverty. They are fighting the orphan crisis and caring for the orphan by providing mothers the resources they need to successfully raise their own babies. But Heartline wants to build a woman's hospital. (Originally posted by Heather Hendrick)
Will you join us in building this hospital? In providing good care for our Sisters in Haiti? Please donate today!
Beth laboring with a Heartline mom
We love our babies something fierce.
We want what is best for them.
We are proud of our children.
We all fail and yet find grace and forgiveness at the feet of Jesus.
But there's something we don't have in common with the women in Haiti.
Moms & Babies at Heartlines' Child Development Class
Recently Beth McHoul, founder of Heartline had to take two of the women in her care to a nearby Haitian hospital to deliver. Let her words really soak into your soul...
"...the conditions of this hospital sent my head spinning. I saw two doctors and one nurse for many, many laboring women. The plight of Haiti - understaffed and overworked. Broken equipment, no sheets, no supplies, bare, dirty, rooms, no clean up crew rushing over for every spill of vomit and blood. ...I stood there, looking around, trying to keep back the flood of emotions. I so wanted to grab our ladies and head back to our clean, sterile maternity center. But they have what we don't. An operating room for a possible c-section. We know our limits, we know when care is beyond our skills.
I envisioned our ladies grabbing our bodies and hanging on as we headed out the door. They didn't. They hugged and kissed us with promises to call when babies were born. They accepted this. They are poor, Haitian and this is what hospital means to them. They were not as appalled as we were. They were not fighting back tears. They were not thinking human beings should not birth in places like this. They understood.
Mom laboring at Heartline with Beth and Joanna T
I don't understand. And as a person with power I have to advocate and fight for them. We can be a voice for them. Our prenatal program services 20 pregnant women at a time. We lavish them with good care, dignity, love and respect. All women should have this. We feel ownership once a woman joins our program and we have a commitment to see her through till that child is six months old and flourishing.
Sometimes pregnancy means complications especially with an impoverished population. We can only go so far when dealing with these complications. I want a better transport option. I want quality care in decent surroundings. This should not be a luxury for the wealthy only. All laboring women should be guaranteed good care in a clean environment.
If we can't find it here then we have to take action. We either need more money to send our ladies to the hospitals that only the rich and powerful can afford to go to or we expand and provide a hospital ourselves. Let's do it. A small hospital with clean sheets, equipment that works, a caring staff and patients that come out whole in body and spirit. Our field hospital showed us that this is a possibly. We can do it and we can do it well."
This verse came to my mind as I sat with these women yesterday...
Luke 3:11
The man with two tunics should share with him who has none, and the one who has food should do the same.
I wasn't thinking about tunics, cause I'll be honest...the last thing the women of Haiti need are tunics. Heck, it's so hot here, if it's got sleeves on it, no one wants to wear it. Thankfully, Jesus wasn't talking specifically about tunics. Jesus was making a point. If we have an abundance of something, we need to share the extras with others.
There are two beautiful hospitals in the town I call home in the States. Both of those hospitals are filled with doctors and nurses who love and care for the women who come to their facility to deliver their babies.
My heart hurts that women here in Haiti do not have a safe, clean birthing experience like we do in the States. Today we have to admit that we don't have this in common with our sisters in Christ in Haiti. We have lots and lots of incredible hospitals in the United States where we can deliver our babies while the women of Port-au-Prince have none.
Heartline is attempting to remedy that in Haiti. They are trying to build a birthing center for the ladies in their program. Because of the work that Heartline is doing these women currently have access to the gospel, they are surrounded by people who love them and share God's love with them, they take classes every week that teach them how to love and care for their babies. Heartline provides literacy skills and job training so that these women can be free from the chains of poverty. They are fighting the orphan crisis and caring for the orphan by providing mothers the resources they need to successfully raise their own babies. But Heartline wants to build a woman's hospital. (Originally posted by Heather Hendrick)
Will you join us in building this hospital? In providing good care for our Sisters in Haiti? Please donate today!
Beth laboring with a Heartline mom
Friday, October 1, 2010
Healing Hands
These are the hands of Beth McHoul, the midwife who founded Heartline's Birthcenter. They have a prenatal clinic every Tuesday for expectant moms where they talk about health, nutrition, and how to care for themselves/their babies. Moms in their program deliver with them in a place filled with Hope and Love and Tender Care.
This is the scar from a C-section on a mom expecting again. You can help make sure her birth is a safe and happy one. Thanks for donating! :)
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