So we arrived in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on the 1st. Honestly I’m not sure exactly what day it was, but around the 1st. The months all seem to be running together lately. My team rode an overnight bus from Thailand to Malaysia with three other teams from my squad. We all discovered our visas were expired by two days at the border and had to pay a fine. On WR budget this didn’t seem good and this also took up a lot of time. We thanked God it all worked out with only some money and time.

   In KL we stayed at a restaurant/church. The bottom floor was a restaurant where we got some good food. It’s owned by a Pastor and his wife and the upstairs is the church. We slept on the floor and I took a bucket shower in the bathroom. Little did I know this was preparing me for the next location. Our team was told we would be working on an organic farm a little over an hour outside the big city. At this point we are used to being in the middle of nowhere on a farm. We also had some cultural briefing about the Islam religion. This is the main religion here and the first closed country we have been to. I was excited to learn more about Islam.

   Off to the farm we go! The drive through the highlands of Malaysia was beyond beautiful. So green and just mountains and jungle everywhere. I thanked God once again that I don’t get motion sickness. Our squad should buy stock in Dramamine. I have never seen people pop so many, but I don’t blame them on the rough, long rides since leaving America.

   We arrive at the farm in the early evening just to have a look around.
  All I really see is what looks like a large garden. The only thing I can identify is lettuce at this point. We next head to the house we will be staying in. Words wont do this house justice, so here are pictures.

 

   I sleep on a mat on the floor and use my sleeping bag. I just tell myself it’s camping to sound fun.
The toilet is what we are getting used to, a hole in the floor.

 

The “shower” is what looks like a concrete horse’s trough.

 
You just throw some cold water on you with a small bucket to bathe and wonder if you are any cleaner. When it rains the water looks pretty murky. This may also be a blessing as I probably don’t want to see what’s on the bottom. I once saw a leech in here clinging to the side and this is only the beginning of the little blood suckers. There are also ants everywhere and no kitchen. We do have a water boiler so that was pretty exciting. When you see a water boiler on the WR you think two things. If you are a coffee drinker that happened to bring your own French press with you (like every girl on my team except me is), you think COFFEE! Everyone also thinks, “Yes, at least I can eat Raman.”


   Day one at work. Any part of my whiteness that is exposed to the sun is covered in sunscreen. I have a large straw hat on and am ready for a little planting in the garden and getting to know the workers at the farm; No… We meet Maneek who works at the farm and he say’s, “follow me”. Off we go on a hike into the jungle. We go about a half a mile or so until we reach a field. He shows us that we are supposed to gather everything like branches, trees, and brush into big piles. These are to burn later when it is dry enough so they can eventually plant in this area.

 

I’m thankful for the work gloves they gave us. All of our arms got scratched up and I kept thinking of the water back home that I didn’t want to get in open skin.

   I noticed that my ankles were bleeding and it looked like something had bit it. There were many ants, but these seemed different then ant bites and they never bleed that much. I didn’t even think about it being a leech bite until someone else saw one on them. This was only the first of several leech bites as they seem to like me as much as the mosquitoes like Christy. Well the next day I was prepared with higher socks. That didn’t prevent them from getting me.

   There is also no way to really wash our clothes. So any dirt and blood pretty much stays. You can hand wash things, but it takes forever for anything to dry because it is so damp and rains often. Your clothes end up looking a little cleaner, but smelling worse.

   Some other time at the farm was spent cutting down and carrying bamboo.

 
 I think all of us women felt like mules by the end of those days as we just walked back and forth over and over again. This was hard for me. I would really like to say that I was just full of Joy working for Jesus, but I was really mostly thinking, “I left an awesome job doing something I love to carry bamboo in Malaysia”. What was I thinking? I was hot, stinky, had bruises from the bamboo, had pulled two more leeches off me (getting better at feeling the bite!), and I just plan dislike pretty much any repetitive work. I felt like I was using 0.1% of my brain power and none of my gifts at all which was frustrating.

   I do believe you can find something to be thankful for in any situation. I am so thankful for the other members of my team. Talking while working helped me stay sane. The women on my team are amazing and I have gotten to know them better while carrying bamboo. Just having great conversations (when we are not too out of breath to talk) was a blessing. The women on my team are strong! This work has also made me even more thankful for the fact that I’m a nurse and I don’t have to do work like this just to feed my family.

   The men that work on this farm are mostly from Bangladesh. Many have been gone from their homeland and family for more then two years. They come here to work and make money that they send home to their families. Many do not see their wives or children for years at a time. Carrying bamboo has taught me once again that I don’t have a right to anything. I don’t have a right to even be able to find work and live in the same country as my family. I don’t have a right to running water. I don’t have a right to food whenever I’m hungry. I don’t have a right to a bed. If everyone in the world does not have these things, then why would I have a right to them? All that I have is a blessing that I don’t deserve. All that I am and all that I have is from God and it’s so easy to take credit for some of those things and so wrong.

   These men from Bangladesh work. They work seven days a week for 12 hours a day and they smile!

They sing and they work with joy which is amazing to see. They say they do not like being here, but they are doing it for their families. It’s amazing to see that love and commitment.

   My team is praying for some of these men that we have been working with. It’s difficult with the language barrier for us to tell them what we believe, but there has been some progress. It would just be awesome if they could have even more joy and know that what is on this earth is not all there is. While their lives are hard here, they can still have hope of eternity with no pain, or loneliness, or work! Pray for my team and I also as we are in another location at the moment, but are heading back to the farm on Saturday.
 

“For you have been called to liberty; only do not use liberty as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another.” Gal. 5:13