Archive for December, 2007



Sunday, November 11, 2007

I woke up from a dream in which I was presented with two choices: do something entrepreneurial and creative, or unload a car and add more stuff to a place that was already very full. Axel was encouraging me to go with the creative choice but I got busy loading more stuff into the room which required organizing what was already in there. I am not sure what this is all about other than getting mentally ready for the workshop that begins in a couple of hours.

Sunday was very quiet as I had intended it to be. I did go to Quaker meeting. This meeting is different than ours in that there are books on the table, several Bibles, Faith and Practice and other holy books and one can do contemplative reading during the meeting for worship. One of the members read a passage from Mark. It is the story of Jesus driving out the evil spirit from a, presumably, epilectic boy. The father of the boy had asked Jesus “if you can do anything, take pity on us and help us.” To which Jesus replied, “If you can? Everything is possible for him who believes.” The story is about the transformational power of believing in something. This is very much the core of our leadership program, here and elsewhere. The transformation occurs when someone believes in something enough to propel him or herself into action; when others see that, some will follow and become believers as well, attracting others. If you have enough of those who believe, things begin to change. This is how social change happens.

The theme reminded me of an interview I once read by Edmond Desmond in 1989 with Mother Teresa in which she said “I am like a little pencil in his [God’s] hand. That is all. He does the thinking. He does the writing. The pencil has nothing to do with it. The pencil has only to be allowed to be used.” And then I thought about the three of us in the plane wreck, three broken pencils, unable to write. And now, nearly four months later, here I am in Nairobi, with a newly sharpened point. I may not be quite like a brandnew pencil, but I am very ready to write again. And the work, not surprising, is about transformation.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Whatever I had done on Friday, the effects continued the next day. I was so full of confidence about my progress but yesterday was discouraging. It was good that Eunice came for my massage at 8 AM. Even so, I had a hard time walking to the breakfast restaurant, which requires descending stairs and then walking over uneven pavement. I had wanted to go downtown and walk around a bit or to the museum, not wanting to stay in my room all day. Walking around did not seem a good idea anymore. I ended up going to the national archives, on Joseph’s and Kristen’s suggestion. It was small enough that I could manage a little less than one hour on my feet. It was hard as it was without any places to sit.

The Kenya National Archives are located in an old building that used to be the Bank of India in the very old days. It is a temple like building and must have looked quite imposing in the center of old Nairobi before it got overshadowed by much taller buildings. But now, with a new paint job, it looked quite charming in the middle of the pollution and chaos of downtown. The ground floor is filled with many artifacts from various Kenyan tribes, sometimes in unlit cases so you can’t really see what’s inside but beautiful craft work nevertheless. Then there are small displays of artifacts from neighboring and other African countries. Upstairs was a rather dusty exhibit of large photographs of many people, white and black, who are presented as heroes but who were in real life villains, crooks and criminals, who enriched themselves beyond belief at the expense of the country. Some were also responsible for unthinkable brutality. I found it hard to look at these glorified pictures. They are collectively responsible for most if not all the current messes.

I was dying to look into some of the old and worn file folders that were on display in glass cases containing official government correspondence on various topics. According to a sticker on them, these folders were open to the public for viewing as they were more than 50 years old. But you could not just lift up the cover and look inside them. I required probably something more than I was prepared to engage in.

The rest of the day I did stay in my room. I took a nap, did some reading and prepared for the workshop. I had a wonderful video skype chat with Tessa and Steve. The webcam allows me to have a full screen window into their room. I could see them play with the new puppy. With this new technology you have to get dressed and be somewhat decent before you sit down at the computer. No more skyping without any clothes on!

Friday, November 9, 2007

For a short while I could do an amazing trick yesterday during the day: standing on my bad foot only, I was able to push up on my toes and lift my heel about half an inch from the ground. It was a little easier with shoes on; then I could lift my heel even higher. I was so excited that I could do this finally. But then, in the evening, no doubt because of my physical therapy and the long walk, I reverted back to my earlier stiffness. And the few times during the night I got up to go to the bathroom my foot was so stiff that I could hardly walk. Now, in the morning I wonder how I managed my trick from yesterday. It seems impossible again.

This morning I woke up from many dreams. One includes Joan, doing well but with a greatly disfigured arm. In another dream I had lost my place in the middle of a powerpoint presentation which included a reading from a book. I even had forgotten the title of my presentation and the place in the book where I was supposed to read from. I had hoped that Axel would help me out but he didn’t. He was busy with something else. The people in the audience either did not seem to notice or were infinitely patient with me, until some weird screensaver kicked in. Then Axel started to search frantically with me. I am glad I woke up. There were many more dreams or parts of one long dream; chaotic, bizarre with me always looking for Axel who was busy or having a great time. I was the one who wanted to leave.

Friday was a half day at the office. Josephine and I worked hard on getting all the materials together and finishing the writing and copying of session handouts and teaching notes. We had a brief meeting with Mokaya from the Kenya Institute of Administration who will be part of our team. He is also teaching full time so it is hard to get a hold of him. We were able to meet with him briefly before the start of his class. He asked about Axel who he has never met. Because they are following our recovery on Caringbridge, many people feel they know Axel and follow his recovery like they are following mine. I get such a kick out of this.

When the lights in the office were being turned off and people started to leave I got nervous. During previous visits I was completely independent. I would walk to and from my hotel, an easy walk if you are sure-footed. Now I cannot do this so easily, especially with all the stuff I carry along. I felt a bit helpless as people are starting to leave and I had not been able to get a taxi. This is the part of my current condition that creates much anxiety; little things like this that I never even thought about before. The world is an entirely different place if you can’t walk that well. When Josephine finally left an hour later she noticed I was still there. Her husband, waiting for her in the car downstairs, gave me a lift to the hotel.

I had another physical therapy session with Karen and although it was once again pretty intense, I felt great afterward. Either foolishly or bravely I walked, far too long (explaining my current stiffness and soreness no doubt) over nonexisting or very uneven sidewalks to a nearby shopping center. It was very hard work. I walked partially because it would be faster than the traffic but also because I had wanted to check out Dr. Li’s Chinese Herbal Remedies and Acupuncture clinic. I was curious about acupuncture by a real Chinese doctor. He had successfully cured Karen’s son-in-law from allergies. Unfortunately the clinic is closed on weekends, so no acupuncture this time.

At the Uchumi supermarket, amidst thousands of Indian shoppers preparing for their Dawali festival tonight, I stocked up on such survival items as chocolate and chips for late night snacks next week. Gone are all my good intentions from the early recovery period when I avoided anything that was unwholesome and that would surely distract my body from healing. I am still avoiding the alcohol on behalf of the nerves, however.

Ida and I had a wonderful dinner in a garden restaurant and were finally able to catch up on our lives. When we meet in a work setting we never get around to that. Later Sita Skyped me and we watched each other on videos through our webcams. I showed her my hotel room and droopy flowers and I could see her cats and even the weather outside. We made faces at each other. She is off to Delhi in a couple of weeks for another interesting assignment.

There were loud bangs throughout the evening and the night. These were fireworks from Dawali revelers, not gunshots. They sound the same as I remember from Lebanon.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

Lots of wild dreams this night. They are spinning around in my head and as I grasp the tail of each dream it vanishes. Much was about trickery and dishonesty, people hiding things that cannot see the daylight. I think they were triggered by the book I am reading, The State of Africa by Martin Meredith. Annette brought me this book when she visited us in October. It is a great read; A history of late colonial and early independent Africa. There was lots of trickery and dishonesty, on all sides, in addition to enormous brutality and total disrespect of human rights. Unfortunately, there is still much of that goig on. The roots of these weeds are persistent and very deep. During elections time you hear of course more about this than during quiet times. During day time I get more of this via the newspapers.

Yesterday’s sleepless night caught up with me after lunch. I left the office to take a nap. During the morning Josephine and I tied up many loose ends for next week’s workshop and squeezed in a trip to make a courtesy call to a senior ministry of health official, our only chance to see her as she was on her way out to Mombasa for all of next week. She is an important stakeholder. All in all in took nearly two hours sitting in traffic for this visit that lasted barely 10 minutes. Traffic has a domino effect on appointments, with each one being delayed but somehow never cancelled. Boston traffic is a cinch in comparison.

In the early evening I was on a conference call with three of us on cell phones form East Africa (Kenya and Tanzania) and another four sitting in a conference room in Cambridge. It was quite an accomplishment that we got our work done this manner. Joseph was actually on his way to the airport while talking on his cellphone with us. Amazing!

I think the entire week of work, my first in nearly 4 months, is catching up with me as well. I find myself walking more and more slowly and acting less and less like my energetic self. I clearly need plenty of breaks. It is good that the weekend is upon us soon. It will be a very quiet weekend, starting with a massage by Eunice early Saturday morning and probably another quiet Quaker meeting on Sunday. Those are the only plans so far. If energy can be saved up and accumulated for next week, this is when I’ll have to do it. Next week will be intense. The workshop starts on Monday and lasts throughout the week with a team that still has not gotten together (and will not, before Monday).

Thursday, November 8, 2007

After having been more or less pain free for a few days I was fairly crippled again yesterday. It was humid and overcast and I find myself always in more pain on such days. Luckily I had only one meeting in the morning. I met up with my co-facilitator William. We sketched out the design for our training of trainers (TOT) workshop next week and William told me about the progress of the teams that we started training in May. It was wonderful to hear about some of the transformations he’d seen and heard about as he traveled to some far flung areas to coach the teams in between workshops.

He, and others who’d been involved in the coaching, told me there are now a few more confident people working in a few more hospitals in Kenya. William had plenty of examples of how that confidence manifests itself at work. These stories are immensely satisfying to hear and make up for all the hard work that went into the design and execution of the program. Of course some teams did not do so well. We talk a lot about team leadership, but when it is missing it is usually because no one is willing to step up to the plate. No matter what we call it, leadership always starts with indviduals who are willing to take some risks.

After William left my shoulders and foot were so painful that I decided to go back to the hotel and take a hot bath. This helped. I also tried to nap but just as I was about to fall asleep Housekeeping knocked on the door, or my cellphone rang, so I gave up.

I left early for my physical therapy session, not wanting to show up late for my appointment, the last one of the day, due to traffic. I arrived just in time. It was an experience that was much different from what I am used to in Manchester. The physical therapist, Karen, is from Danmark, born in Malaysia, studied in the UK, has a home in France and settled down in Kenya for the last 30 or so years. I brought the notes from Julia, my physical therapist in the US, as a reference. Karen glanced at them and then got right to work. While my shoulders and neck were being limbered up with heat pads she worked on my foot the way I imagine Betty works on Axel’s arm: no nonsense and none of that wishy-washy gentle stuff. It was very hard work and quite painful at times, which satisfied my inner Calvinist (pain and suffering is good). After about half an hour she switched to my neck and shoulders. She does not have any of that insurance business here about not being able to treat two different body parts on the same day. Patients pay cash for an hour’s worth of physical therapy: about 45 dollars. Despite the pain and hard work I felt good enough at the end that I made two more appointments with her.

Next to the physical therapy practice is the restaurant where I had lunch earlier. I had an early sandwich dinner and then went home to finish some work and take care of business with MSH Cambridge where my colleagues were still in the early hours of their workday. And then I could not fall asleep for hours. It felt as if something hard and painful was brewing deep down and I prepared for a night full of revealing dreams. Instead I tossed and turned until the early morning hours and woke up without any memory of dreams. A bit disappointing.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

I already know that my un- or subconscious is very active but I remain amazed how and why it picks up certain images or words during the day and spins them into magnificent movie scenes. One of my colleagues mentioned a party yesterday where the disc jockey, our very own Christian from MSH, played the YMCA song. She spoke about a thousand other things yesterday but my unconscious grasped this piece and spun it into a dream. I dreamed that I was at the YMCA and wanted to show Sita the cheerleaders that were marching through the streets. In the dream Sita was Dutch and had never seen or heard about cheerleaders. In order to get to Sita who was working up in the rafters (It must be all these invitations to world or regional economic forums) I had to climb up there myself. Someone helped me but it was either very courageous or stupid on my part as it was a bit above my ability and quite risky.

Yesterday I continued easing into work. I got a taste of early morning traffic in Nairobi but arrived in time for an eight o’clock meeting at our MSH office with first Abebe from Ethiopia and then Peter from Kenya. They are wonderful men with whom I had co-facilitated workshops in the past. It was nice see see them after all this time.

We then headed off for the US embassy to have lunch in the embassy cafetaria with USAID staff from the population and health office. This was the new embassy, on the outskirts of Nairobi (the old one was blown up some years ago). The security was intense. I had to give up my bags of green tea, two candies, lipbalm and much more. It was fun to see the security guards unpack my colleague’s bag. You learn a lot from people by seeing what they carry with them. It feels rather invasive this probing of something as intimate as one’s handbag. It was as if we were undressed in public. (We got everything back at the exit). The cafetaria was dominated by a huge (HUGE) screen with a football game going on, we were on American soil after all. I picked the seat with my back to the screen and watched in admiration how our USAID colleague eat her sticky and gooey spare ribs without getting anything on her white blouse. I admired her greatly. I would have been a mess. We discussed leadership and management in Kenya, of course, and got to know each other a bit better.

After lunch Ida took us around the outskirts of Nairobi in order to avoid as much as we could of the infamous and congested Thika road. Kristen and Joseph guided her expertly (with the help of maps) from the backseat through narrow roads that always seemed to have Garden in their name. Garden is a nicer way of saying rural I suppose. It was not a shortcut but more pleasant than sitting in traffic.

We arrived at the Safari Park hotel to see a group of nurses about some programs we are exploring and others we are launching. They were having a workshop there. In Nairobi everyone is always having workshops at one hotel or another. We arrived hours early because we did not want to be caught in the rush hour traffic leaving Nairobi on Thika road. As a result we had a very long wait (several hours actually) of sitting in a disgustingly beautiful garden drinking first tea, then sundowners. I tried the local pretend beer (Malta) which tasted rather malty and syrupy, more medecine, and a downer rather than a sundowner and really too sweet to even pretend. If Axel had been with us he would have, no doubt, be less disciplined and told his nerves to go to hell and partaken in the Kenyan sundowner ritual.

When the nurses emerged from their workshop it was nearly dark and we chatted by candlelight. One nurse had been in a virtual leadership program I led some years ago and it was nice to meet her in the flesh. It felt as if we were old acquaintances. I suppose we were.

Ida dropped us off at a Thai restaurant which has been in Nairobi for ever and, as always, was mostly empty. I have learned from Sita to suspect that it is a shell. But the food was good. Despite the slow rhythm of the day I was pretty pooped when I got home. I managed to squeeze the last energy out to review one document and participate briefly in a virtual conference that started yesterday about family planning in Francophone Africa. I marveled again at how easy it is to feel connected to a larger group of people who share a common vision through one’s computer, sitting alone in a hotel room. I am sorry I missed Axel’s Skype call. The eight hours difference is a bit much late in the day.

Monday, November 5, 2007

I did not think it was possible to dream about physical therapy. If I thought I could do without it for the next two weeks, I got a message to the contrary. In two-hour long stretches of sleep, punctuated by waking up, I dreamed up all sorts of schemes to fit physical therapy sessions into my work schedule. I cannot remember the details; it seemed all very complicated. So when I woke up I was surprised not to have to run off to an appointment. I guess I better make an appointment today.

I am learning about self care. Mary Wright is like my personal coach. She sends me frequent messages cheering on all my attempts at taking good care of myself. I am listening and so is my subconscious. One of my earlier dreams in the night was of a large horse trailer parked on the deck of an oceanliner. It was the horse that reminded me that the hay needed changing, and the water and food bins filled. I did that, which may explain the physical therapy dreams that followed.

So yesterday was my first day of work. I had only two meetings and everything took place at a slow pace, including my walking. I have finally slowed down to the natural pace at which most of Africa walks. It would be New York where I’d get into trouble, but here I fit in quite nicely.

After our morning meeting we went for lunch in a small sandwhich/deli type restaurant located right next to, indeed, a physical therapy practice. So I have the card and can call the number today.

I was rather exhausted and went to bed early after I had a long Skype chat with my colleague Sarah who is in neighboring Tanzania and later with Axel from home. I had brought my little notebook web cam in the hope that Axel and I could see each other but there is a Macintosh incompatibility and he could only see my Skype image. I also had wanted to show him my room. It is quite nice. I bought a bouquet of flowers yesterday (the markets overflow with flowers) which I put in a portable plastic vase that someone gave me a couple of years ago (was it you, Carol?). I am glad I stuck it into my suitcase at the last minute.

Monday, November 5, 2007

I just got a call that I will be picked up in a short while so this entry will be short. Yesterday was a restful Sunday. Ida and I did manage to go to Quaker meeting, a small and quiet affair with a cacophony of noises going on outside from the road and other worshippers. After lunch, just when I felt really sore, Eunice the massage therapist came with her folding massage table and gave me the most wonderful massage in my room. I took a bath and a long nap afterwards.

At the end of the afternoon I had asked Elias to come for tea. He is the kid who had found my name in the East African Aero Club guestbook and with whom I had corresponded for a few months. We had tea and talked about flying, dreams and not giving up. I liked him a lot. He is the same age as Sita and has led all but a charmed life. Somehow he got the idea of flying and although he has made some headway (he passed his ground school, which has already expired) he has a long way to go to pursue his dream of becoming a pilot with the Africa Inland Church. All I can do at this point is cheer him on, which I did. He calls me mum. We took a picture and then he left.

Ida picked me up in the evening and we joined my other colleagues Joseph and Kristen who are here for the week for dinner in a lovely restaurant. Despite the espresso I had I fell asleep quickly, slept well until a lone mosquito woke me up. After a couple of hours of being wide awake I managed to sleep through my alarm. The week has started. Off to work I go.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

It is Sunday morning in Nairobi. The city is already up at 7 AM. I am wondering whether it is too early to call the office of Friends International House to find out what time Quaker meeting is. I went there a few years ago. It is in a complex (International Friends House) where both the silent meeting (unprogrammed) takes place and the programmed meeting, in another building on the premises. The programmed meeting is noisy with much singing and loud preaching which goes on for 2 hours. At the end everyone streams out of their respective buildings and they greet each other with the words brothers and sisters. I asked Ida to come with me this time.

Ida made my welcome in Nairobi very easy. She had arranged for a ‘meet and greet’ at the airport to complement the wheelchair KLM arranged. At my arrival a wheelchair was indeed waiting at the door of the plane with a young woman named Karen. She wheeled me into the building and there was another young woman, Theresa, with a sign with my name on it waiting at the end of the jet way. I was pushed with amazing speed through immigration; they parked me near the baggage area and one got my suitcase while the other located my driver. It was the best landing in Africa ever. I also have never been more exhausted at the end of a trip. I could not have done without all this help.

In the plane the KLM staff put an empty metal container in front of my (frontrow) seat after take off. They covered it with a bunch of pillows and provided me with ice packs at regular intervals. The only difficulty was getting in and out of the chair. It was all very comfortable. I was able to do my foot and neck exercises from time to time, and stayed fairly limber throughout the journey.

At the hotel I found a note from Ida giving me the telephone numbers of a massage therapist who makes home (hotel) calls and a physical therapist plus two small washbasins that she had left with the concierge for my foot baths. It was the first thing I did in my room. After that I took care of my communications (internet set up and cellphone card) at the business office and went to bed. I slept a long dream-ful sleep. The only part I remember is a very long glass rowing boat and my surprise to learn that glass did not mean real glass but fiberglass when I noticed it did not shatter into a thousand pieces when it bumped into the side of a building. Something about expectations, I gather, being more resilient than I thought, may be.

By the way, Tessa filled her void quickly and now has a puppy.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

All our aches and pains were overshadowed by a call from a sobbing Tessa yesterday morning. Her pet rabbit Nijntje died, suddenly. Tessa was inconsolable. Axel and I cried along with her on the phone, wishing our arms could reach all the way into London to hold her. Her pain was made worse because she couldn’t locate Steve at first and there was no one to console her or simply be with her. Tessa had poured all her love in this little creature which she got on her 18th birthday and which had been so much a part of her life after high school. And now it is no longer there. Our hearts are aching for her.

Later, after we had hung up, it occurred to me that we got a glimpse of Tessa’s reaction when the news of our crash finally reached her last July. Not that rabbits and parents are the same, but when it comes to being the object of love, maybe they are.

This sad news colored the day, which was already sad because of our imminent parting; add to that the early nightfall, the leaves falling and hurricane Noel racing up the coast to soak the Northeast. It could easily have added up to a sense of foreboding and depression. But it did not. I was excited and looking forward to the trip while Axel knew that this going out into the world was another important milestone for me on my path to recovery. My excitement was matched by a most glorious sunset over Boston as Sita and Jim drove me to the airport. Axel watched it from the cove. The sky was lit up with brilliant orange and pink streaks of clouds against a dark background. I think the storm was announcing itself in full Technicolor.

Navigating the airport was a different experience than I had expected. I travelled with my plastic boot which helped me avoid a significant part of the security line which snaked for a long distance. I could not see myself standing in line that long and asked for a short cut. A couple of Brits were standing right where I was let into the line and got upset. When I pointed at my boot they softened a bit. They asked what happened to me. When I said ‘a plane crash’ all the women in the group crossed themselves and the men asked whether I was flying on Virgin. They seemed to think that I would be a liability on their plane. I told them I wasn’t planning on crashing ever again in my life and that I was going on Northwest which therefore would be the safest choice of airline.

Later, after security I discovered the stresses of being handicapped when the line in back relentlessly pushed forward while I was still trying to collect all my belongings and put on my boot. I know that travel is stressful, even for the totally fit. Security adds more stress and it becomes hard to see other people’s needs. We’re all in our own little balloons, trying to get wherever we want to go, in one piece and with all our stuff. That’s when the truly kind people stand out, like the young man who took my handluggage and said, hey, I’ve been waiting in this line for so long, I can wait this little longer, take your time.

I am posting this entry from Amsterdam. My next post, if there is anything to tell about a whole day of travel, will come from Nairobi, incha’allah. Please hold Tessa in your thoughts and prayers. She needs them.


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