



These are the thoughts of a group of friends from Minnesota and elsewhere doing orthopaedic surgery in Haiti. Our volunteer group works at Hopital Adventiste d'Haiti, in Carrefour, near Port-au-Prince. We went in July 2010, November 2010, May 2011, and September 2011, and are excited about our March 2012 trip! Read on, and learn about the adventures of this hard-working, fun-loving group of misfits as they battle bugs, sweat, and fatigue!
So we had a mildly nervous couple of days but everything's OK. Looking back on the week there have been some encouraging signs of progress here in Haiti... organized teams of workers sweeping the streets. Stoplights. Road crews pouring concrete. It gives you a lot of hope for the future of Haiti and we look forward to seeing even more progress the next time around!
As on previous trips, we visit Franz Bastien's family's orphanage on Saturday and visit with the children. For me this is always the high point of the trip! If someone needs a second and third washout of an infected femur fracture the week we're there, as necessary as that is, it might not give them that much immediate joy. In fact it gives them a lot of immediate pain. But visiting the kids, playing Changez Movement with them, and handing out joys and treats is both fun for us and gives the kids a lot of immediate joy. Just one more reminder to them that despite living on a dusty concrete floor with siding for a roof and sleeping multiple kids to a bunk smelling of pee, they are not forgotten and someone outside their four walls, the outside world, cares about them. Pat E. and Beth have made up about 50 little packs of pens and notepads and brought a bunch of beanie babies. Tom has brought a bunch of soccer balls so the kids don't have to play soccer with an empty pop bottle. I've got the leftover flipflops and shoes we couldn't fit in our bags on our last trip - thanks to Tom Slater and Paige Saunders, who couldn't make it this time, but are there in spirit (everyone asks about them ... where's Tom? where's Paige?). And again as previously, it's hard to leave. There are little things I'll never forget. The flies buzzing around three dirty toilets - three toilets for 45 kids. The complete, rapt attention the kids give you when we get up in front of the class to address them - so well behaved! Handing out packs of nuts (thanks Leah Otterlei!!), and watching one 5-year-old boy, without being asked, share his with a little girl who didn't get one. So touching!
Haiti has left us all with lasting impressions. Despite the mixed emotions, some things aren't mixed. The people are beautiful, both inside and out. The country despite the poverty and trash has a lot of natural beauty. As we all split up, Priya back to project management and an uncertain future in trauma at DePuy, Liz back to nursing at Hennepin County, Fil back to Macallan TX for Teach for America, Tom back to Michigan state to study medicine, Pat and Pat back to our orthopaedic surgery practices, Kris back to putting people under anesthesia at Hennepin County, and Beth back to assisting and setting up surgery at an ambulatory surgery center, we're all going back to our normal lives, but a little different as a result of having our horizons widened a bit. Taking back some lessons home. First but not necessarily foremost, learning to be flexible - you can really get by in the OR and outside the OR with simple things and a bit of resourcefulness (like the hip spica cast table we improvised out of a board and few boxes). Appreciating what you have. Appreciating that everyone has something to offer you. Appreciating that everyone's an expert in something and knows more than you about something. Realizing what really matters in life, and how happy you can be with how little material stuff. Realizing that the dream of a life we all live back home isn't reality, it's an unsustainable fantasy world that the rest of the people on this planet can only dream of. These lessons that are different for each of the eight of us I'm sure, about what's important in life and how we'd all like to grow as a result of this brief sojourn in this beautiful country.
After the OR and clinic, Jimmy Decilia (he's from Brooklyn but has lived here in Haiti for the last 5 years) tells us about the nearby orphanage he and Joe McIntyre sponsor. We all walk down to a local market and buy a poop-ton of rice, dry spaghetti, and oil, load it into the back of a tap-tap, and drive about a mile up the road to the orphanage ... well almost to the orphanage. The last 100 yards is an uphill climb up a rocky path that the producers of Survivor must have engineered to weed out the weak, by adding obstacles such as fine slippery gravel and piles of trash. And did I mention we're each carrying a big sack of rice, spaghetti, or a crate of cooking oil? Once we get to the top however it's totally worth it: an orphanage of 15 smiling kids who are just the cutest things and so grateful to have friends to play with, sing with, and pretend kung fu with (yeah, I know, you just gotta play along). Way up here above the rest of Carrefour I can totally see how one would get the impression that the rest of the world has forgotten about you.