20 Apr

More Hugs, Please!

By Dany Hernandez — Littleton, Colorado … I was surrounded by a hundred strangers at a street-side restaurant in a small coastal town in southern France. If you took time to notice the conversations around you, you’d hear French, Spanish, German, Italian and of course the English of my family and friends. And although the only people I knew were those right across from me, I felt a strong connection to everyone around me. Why? Because laughter, joy, food and community, being key components of what makes us human, tap into areas of our lives that are communal to all of us and give us a sense of togetherness.

Well, and that’s why I hate COVID-19.

I’m not even going to pretend I know what New York or Italy are experiencing. I’m not going to make it sound as if I’m special in any way for getting up each day and heading to a hospital to provide support for families, patients and staff. Honestly, I feel honored and blessed to have work at a time when so many people are struggling. But, don’t be fooled this Covid-19 thing is emotionally and physically draining.

As chaplains, most of our ministry is simply being present. Many times, we sit quietly next to a family member or a dying patient with the only gift we have to offer, presence. And that is why these times are so difficult for patients, family, nurses, doctors, and chaplains. The one thing all of us can do well has been taken away from us. Many times, I’ve said that “togetherness has nothing to do with proximity” but it sure does help. COVID-19has taken from us the ability to hug someone who just lost their spouse, to shake the hand of a first-time dad, to high-five a nurse leaving the hospital after a 12-hour shift. Instead we’ve had to learn how to keep a 6-foot radius around other humans, to smile with our eyes since the rest of our bodies are covered with protective equipment, to look in the eyes of a daughter and say, “I’m sorry you can’t see your mom.”

There’s a reason God said, “It’s not good for man to be alone…” That’s not how we were created, that’s not how the divine exists. But instead we’ve been forced to watch a spouse of someone passing away in the ICU, unable to be in the room but watching from a distance. Hands on the glass door, tears down her face… talking softly and sometimes loudly, hoping the volume of her voice would penetrate the double pane glass and the unconscious state of her husband, assuring him that she was there – with him. This virus has forced us to take on much of the emotional stress of family members by sitting in their place next to the patient, by speaking the final words they’ll hear on behalf of the family, by holding a stranger’s hand until their last breath, because it was the only hand allowed in the room.

There’s a strange sort of stillness all around us these days. Our staffing needs in our hospitals have changes and what used to be a busy unit, now sits dimly lit and quiet like an abandoned western town at dusk. At the same time, our ICU, just a floor away, is the hub of frantic activity. But even in that frantic environment there’s an unsettled quietness. There’s a sense of anonymity when all of us are wearing headgear and masks. The identities and uniqueness of our caregivers erodes by blending into the common landscape of sky-blue scrubs of everyone around us. Now, we have to wear stick-on nametags on our backs and head covers, just so our co-workers and friends can know who we are. It’s easy to feel alone and unnoticed.

Our associates don’t need more snacks, although those are always welcomed. Our associates don’t need another pep-talk, even if those provide enough motivation to make it through the day. What our associates need is for the rest of the world to see their pain. What they need is to be reminded that, although this present moment sucks, this is the very thing they signed up for when they chose to pursue healthcare.

They chose to stand every day between the dead and the living, between the sick and the healthy regardless of consequences. They chose to put their lives on the line so other people, is spite of race, creed, or background, may have life. What they need is individuals from every walk of life to lift them up in prayer asking for strength, courage, peace and serenity.

And now, more than ever before we are literally standing next patients in the place of family. Now more than ever, nurses, palliative care and chaplains are sharing tears with one another and experiencing grief on behalf of loved ones.

Humans need hugs, and COVID-19 has taken those away. Community and presence are both part of the healing process, and now we’ve been forced to figure out how to incorporate those things into our plan of care without the ability to be next to one another.

As frustrating as that is to all of us, I have to constantly remind myself that love always causes pain. That suffering and grief will always be a part of our lives in this world. And, that our call, even after COVID-19 is no longer a threat, will continue to be difficult and challenging.

I’m honored to be part of such an amazing group of people.

“When you go out and see the empty streets, the empty stadiums, the empty train platforms, don’t say to yourself, “It looks like the end of the world.”

What you’re seeing is love in action. What you’re seeing, in that negative space, is how much we do care for each other, for our grandparents, for our immune-compromised brothers and sisters, for the people we will never meet.

People will lose jobs over this. Some will lose their businesses. And some will lose their lives.

All the more reason to take a moment, when you’re out on your walk, or on your way to the store, or just watching the news, to look into the emptiness and marvel at all of that love.

Let it fill you and sustain you.

It isn’t the end of the world. It is the most remarkable act of global solidarity we have ever seen.                                                     

-Author Unknown

Dany Hernandez is a chaplain at Littleton Adventist Hospital: selfie photo by the author

16 Apr

Let’s Play a Game

By Becky De Oliveira — Board games and puzzles have come back into fashion in recent weeks, achieving must-have status equal with hand sanitizer, toilet paper, and DIY hair dyes. But there is one game that is played in perpetuity. I call it, “You Are Being Deceived” AKA “I Have the Skinny.” It goes like this: You offer an explanation of what is “really going on” in the world. This will focus heavily on deception, and will emphasize the sheep-like nature of the average fool too blind to see it.

This game, conveniently, doubles as a puzzle that can quickly make you crazy: What if the real deception is the explanation itself? What if you’re being deceived by thinking you’re not being deceived? What if the opposite of what you think is true is the real truth? Or not the opposite even; just something different? What if it’s a double fake, this search for truth? What if the opposite of what you think is the real truth actually is the fake, so your original truth—that thing you believed to begin with—was true all along? What if whatever you’re thinking is just what someone wants you to think? But what if they want you to think it because it’s true? Or what if they want you to think they want you to think it because it’s true, but really, it’s not, and all they have is a hidden agenda with which to remove your God-given rights?

We have to trust in something, but we do not collectively have common sources of information that we accept as reliable. We can’t agree on truth or reality—and that is frightening. (How can it be that this person you adore has a crazy theory about 5G networks?) What if it turns out that most people are doing the best they can, hampered, of course, by their own limitations, but not by malevolence or the desire to harm? Maybe they are pretty much like you but with a different soundtrack playing in their head. What if neither you nor anyone else can control the overarching narrative of this world or how that eventually plays out, but each of us can display decency, kindness, and integrity in our own sphere?

Let’s call this game, “I Won’t Stoop to That Level.” Why? Because we serve something Greater and Higher and Bigger.

Becky De Oliveira is a doctoral student in research methods at the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley and is a member of Boulder Adventist Church.

16 Apr

Fairplay church members zoom into learning new technology

By Cathy Kissner — Fairplay, Colorado … Who would have thought in December 2019 that by Spring 2020, we would be holding church on Zoom and school online for the gamut of education, from the doctoral level to kindergarten? Or that Zoom meetings would be a daily occurrence for those working from home. Who could have imagined that many would be ordering groceries from their favorite store and having them delivered to their doorstep or that we would be sewing and wearing face masks?

Our normal has shifted. Now, technology offers the main safe method of contact, whether that be for church, school, work, or just keeping in touch with family and friends.

Learning to worship by Zoom has been a gigantic step for some in our faith community, but big steps have been taken and some quick learning has occurred. Let me introduce you to Fairplay, a small mountain community at an elevation of 9,953 feet, the fifth highest elevation for an incorporated town in the State of Colorado. This little church has an average attendance of 5-9 members, one of whom is tech-savvy. With his help, the little Fairplay Church has moved into the 21st Century of technology. “He has been very patient as he guides us through the ins and outs of this program. We now have Sabbath School and church service together each week. What a blessing that is,” commented Cherie, one of the members there. “Now we can see each other and actually visit and have our service.”

Prayer meeting is also being held regularly Cherie also commented, which was in hibernation “for many years due to their widespread locations around Fairplay. Using this Zoom technology, we are happy to see and talk to each other on Wednesday evenings and plan to continue this when life returns to how it was before.”

It will be a new normal from now on. They plan to alternate leadership for the prayer meeting. “This online gathering has helped so much, since we missed seeing each other regularly. It is so good to see and hear each other’s news using Zoom. God is so good and gives us the answers to our prayers in amazing ways,” Cherie concluded.

Cathy Kissner is RMC Adventist Community Services director; photo by Katy Young

16 Apr

Really “away from home” and in self-isolation; Campion international students reflect

By Ashley Herber — Loveland, Colorado … For most of us, self-isolation means staying home with family, but that is not the case for many of Campion Academy’s international students. Before last Friday, there were 14 international students staying in the dorms, two girls and 12 boys, as well as others staying with local host families. Thanks to the help of friends in Brazil, the Brazilian students were all able to go home over the weekend. Duda De Oliveira, a sophomore, said, “I feel really excited to go home, but at the same time I’m sad to leave the deans that were taking care of us.”

There are now only three Chinese international students staying in the dorm. To help pass the time, Rain Li, a senior from China, said, “I play video games with other people, watch videos, and have class.” Mrs. Fagan cooks for the students and they are able to go outside on center campus to enjoy some fresh air.

Gregory Lang, a freshman from China, commented, “It is definitely weird because you never see anyone. We have to clean every day. We have breakfast, lunch, supper, and online classes and a lot of homework.”

Being away from home is especially hard right now. Before she left to go home to Brazil, Duda De Oliveira reflected, “It’s really sad. Everyone else is with their family. We are here with the deans, and the deans are taking care of us really well, but I miss my family and I wish they could take care of me. If something happens, I won’t be there. My mom is a nurse and she has been in contact with a doctor who had the coronavirus. I thank God she has no symptoms, but it’s hard and I wish I could be with her.”

Yan Silva, a sophomore from Brazil, shared with me before he left that “it’s sad and hard because I miss my family so much.”

Jarrod Lang, a freshman from China, said, “I miss home and I’m feeling homesick.”

The Chinese students don’t know what this summer will look like, if they will be able to go home or have to find housing. Some students are still trying to get a ticket home where they will have to be quarantined. Other students who were able to go home, like Airi Nomura, a sophomore from Japan, are now having to do online school through Campion while dealing with a huge time difference. Please keep these students and their families in your prayers during this difficult and uncertain time.

Ashley Herber is Student Editor at This Week at Campion; photos supplied

 

16 Apr

COMMENTARY – IS SELF-CARE SELFISH DURING COVID-19?

By Dr. Heather Thompson Day — Denver, Colorado … Last week I was finishing a work project that took me till after midnight. I felt fine. Tired but, fine. Suddenly, as I was trying to re-read my document, my eyes went blurry. I literally couldn’t get them to focus on anything at all. I couldn’t see. A few minutes later I realized that I was unable to get words that I knew in my brain, to be said by my mouth. I knew that I knew them, but when I tried to say them, the part of my brain that controlled language, was simply not functioning. It lasted for about an hour, and it was very scary and frustrating.

This has happened to me only one time before. It was three years ago, and I was finishing my doctoral program and studying for comprehensive exams. I felt fine. Tired, but fine. Suddenly my eyes got blurry, and I could no longer read and then my brain struggled to provide me with language for words that I knew. I was scared I was having a mini stroke at 30. I went to the ER, and after a couple tests, was told that what I had wasn’t a stroke at all, but something called a migraine with aura, which often only occurs when someone is under acute stress. I was not fine.

I know how to take care of my family. I know how to handle tuck in’s and bath time. Every night before my kids go to sleep, I tell them one thing I am proud of them for. I know how to support my husband. I know what words to say to keep him focused, and what look to give to make him feel loved. I am really good at being a team player at work, writing the emails no one else wants to draft, and telling my boss he can count on me to tie up the loose ends.

You know what I am not good at? Taking care of myself. According to the American Institute of Stress, about 33 percent of people report feeling extreme stress. 77 percent of people experience stress that affects their physical health and 73 percent of people have stress impact their mental health. Stress is literally killing us in this country. We are buried beneath it and we all exist in it so deeply that we trick ourselves into believing it’s normal. Often, we don’t realize the toll it is taking on us physically or mentally, until there is an actual disruption to our daily lives. A panic attack, a migraine with aura, or worse.

This week, I want you to reclaim your Sabbath. The fact that as Seventh-day Adventists, we get to fully grasp a God who commands our rest, is incredibly beautiful. God doesn’t just want your worship; He wants your rest. What does that tell you about the character and image of God? Self-care should not be a privilege afforded to the wealthy. In God’s ideal government, it is a command afforded to all creation.

So, breathe. Watch the show you worry is a waste of your time. Read the book you know you won’t be able to put down. Take a nap, go for the walk, call and sit on the phone with a friend. Do something for you. Let your body take a break from the chaos that is COVID-19, and the worry that is life in 2020.

But above all that, this week, keep your Sabbath. Rest in Him. Because we serve a God who doesn’t just want your productivity. He wants your rest.

Dr. Heather Thompson Day is a member of LifeSource Adventist Fellowship, and a communication professor at Colorado University, and author of six books, including Confessions of a Christian Wife. Photo by Davide Cantelli on Unsplash

16 Apr

Caring communities combat COVID-19

By Erick Maldonado — Loveland, Colorado … Being outside can provide a nice break from being locked in during this long quarantine. Fortunately for neighborhoods across America, kids are finding a new reason to venture outside.

“Bear Hunts,” as they’re called, involve placing stuffed bears in windows visible from the street. Kids can then walk through the neighborhood and attempt to spot them all. It adds a little bit of interest to walking around the neighborhood, especially since that’s all they can do outside now.

“I noticed bears in windows around my neighborhood, and I thought it was cute,” says Naomi Boonstra, a senior at Campion. “I looked up what they were for and decided to get in on it. Now, I see the kids in my neighborhood stopping outside the house every once in a while, to point at my three little bears in the front window. It’s a nice way to stay feeling like a community when we can’t see each other as much.” Throughout this pandemic, we’re seeing more and more people finding creative ways to draw together.

Walking through his own neighborhood, Ben Maxson, a junior at Campion, noticed a sign on a house that read, “We love the senior class of 2020!” Then he saw another house with a similar sign. He noticed that the neighborhood was full of them.

“I think it’s really cool that people still want to show their excitement for the graduating classes this year,” says Ben. “It’s a small act, but it shows big character.”

Although the pandemic has forced us into isolation, it’s nice to see the spirit of unity among communities around America. Together, we can shine a little bit of light on a dark situation.

Erick Maldonado is a Guest Contributor to This Week at Campion; photo supplied

15 Apr

FLAMINGOS JOIN YOUTH GUTENPRANKS AT RMC

By Jessyka Dooley — Denver, Colorado … Like all good summer camps, Glacier View Ranch is home to a flock of flamingos, plastic flamingos that is. We’re also game for pulling pranks that spread love, joy and cheer. We call them, “gutenpranks,” and this is where the flamingos connect! These majestic birds hibernate up in the Rocky Mountains from September till May but are very active during the summer months.

At Summer Camp, a burst of pink can be found steadily migrating from one summer camp cabin to the next as campers pull a “gutenprank” by “flocking” each other’s cabin “yards” with the flamboyance of flamingos.

Because of COVID-19 keeping families at home, the flamingos awoke from their winter slumber early to migrate around the Rocky Mountain Conference, bringing joy to families! The Youth Department began by flocking the front yard of two GVR campers from last summer. They continued the fun by transporting the flock of flamingos to another friend’s home… and thus our flamingo friends have made their way around Erie, Arvada, and Fredrick!

Be on the lookout as more flamingos have heard the news and are making their journey to other parts of our greater Front Range community!

Jessyka Dooley is RMC associate youth director; photo by [selfie] Jessyka Dooley

Note #1: The Youth Department asks that families who participate in (or find themselves participating in) the gutenprank tradition of flamingo flocking continue to use proper social distancing, sanitizing, hand washing, and other precautionary actions as directed by the State of Colorado and CDC.

Note #2 from the NewsNuggets editor:  Flamingos tried to land on our lawn in Longmont. They changed their mind by seeing in the window HRH Prince Orek, our usually quiet and friendly canine. He was given a lecture. We welcome all flamingos on the Front Range.

15 Apr

MHA STUDENT BAPTIZED ON EASTER SABBATH

By Rebecca Berg and Karrie Meyers — Littleton, Colorado . . . For the Mile High Academy and Littleton Seventh-day Adventist Church communities, Easter Sabbath was extra special because MHA Junior Leilani Exson was baptized. However, due to current COVID-19 social distancing restrictions, her baptism took place with only a limited number of people present in the church. However, many tuned in via Littleton’s live streaming Facebook page and in the last three days there have been over 700 views.  During a special prayer Littleton’s Senior Pastor Andy Nash described for viewers the visualization that the church pews were filled with angels instead of empty.

“This just seemed like the right time on so many levels for Leilani’s baptism,” said Pastor Nash. “Leilani is a joy-filled and inspiring young lady that I have been honored to teach in my Bible class at Mile High Academy. And even though the church was empty, all of Heaven was with us last week on Silent Sabbath. It is a day we remember Christ resting in His tomb. But we also celebrated Leilani’s choice to symbolically rest in the watery grave and come up baptized in the salvation of her Savior.”

Leilani started her baptismal studies in January of this year with MHA Chaplain and Upper School Teacher Rebecca Berg after expressing an interest in growing closer in her relationship with Christ. Her excitement to be baptized grew as she continued with her studies. But then the COVID-19 pandemic hit and with it came the news Leilani’s dad, Warren Exson, was leaving on an extended trip. The family reached out to Pastor Nash and the Littleton Church.  It was unanimously decided to move forward with her baptism on Easter Sabbath. There in attendance with Leilani were her mom, dad and two brothers.

While her Mile High Academy family couldn’t join her on her special day, a video presentation was filled with greetings and well-wishes for Leilani.

Mile High Academy gives a journal to each of its students on their baptismal day. The purpose behind this journal is to provide a spot to write remembrances from their walk with Christ. The journal symbolically represents a link. The link of being included as a part of the chain of the followers of Christ.

“Leilani is an unbelievably special person,” said Mrs. Berg. “Her love for God is apparent and although she is often quiet, she was persistent and bold about doing the baptismal studies and taking the steps toward baptism. God has given her a spirit of love and newness. I know all the teachers at Mile High Academy, her friends and family were unbelievably proud of her and the step she made.”

To watch Leilani’s baptism, please visit Littleton Seventh-day Adventist Church’s Facebook page.

Rebecca Berg and Karrie Meyers

15 Apr

MHA FAMILY BRINGS JOY TO ELDERLY THROUGH Partnering for Eternity PROGRAM

By Karrie Meyers — Highlands Ranch, Colorado … Connections with people are critical to our wellbeing, both physically and mentally. During this unique time of social distancing, finding ways to remain connected can be challenging. But last week Mile High Academy students, Carter (3rd) and Elli (1st) Leno, found a way to bring cheer and connect with their elderly friends through their participation in Mile High Academy’s Partnering for Eternity (PFE) grant program.

Parents Casey and Erika Leno run the ThriveCare Assisted Living centers in the Denver area. There are approximately 25 residents living in four total assisted living homes. Carter and Elli’s PFE mentors are residents.

“Part of our mission at ThriveCare is to provide a place for the elderly that is more than just a facility; it’s a home,” said Erika. “When we heard about Mile High Academy’s PFE program and the inspiring way it connects students with elderly, we knew we needed to get our kids involved. When you take the time to show kindness and love to another person, you receive so much more back. It’s a wonderful thing to experience.”

Carter and Elli visit the residents each week, sometimes playing games, reading stories or just talking about their day at school.

“It warms our hearts when we see the kids interacting with the elderly,” said Erika. “Many of our residents don’t have regular guests so there are lots of smiles and happiness when the kids come for a visit. The kids have really taken the initiative to interact with them.”

Unfortunately, COVID-19 and the regulations of social distancing enforced by the CDC has changed the ability to conduct face-to-face visits.

“Instead of making COVID-19 feel like another restriction, we are trying to find creative ways to show our residents they are loved and that the kids still want to talk with them,” said Erika. “It’s the little things that make a big difference in the lives of the elderly. They appreciate and love having a friendship with the kids.”

Carter and Elli started brainstorming ways they could still connect with their friends.  “We had extra paper so we decided to handmake cards,” said Carter. They got to work. At first, Carter and Elli started making a card for each of their mentors. By the time they were finished, they had made 27 cards in total, enough for each one of the residents at the four different homes. And while they weren’t able to personally deliver the cards, they were able to watch through the windows to see the reactions of their friends.

“I got to wave hello to them and make silly faces with them,” said Elli.

Mile High Academy’s Partnering for Eternity (PFE) grant program is a service-oriented, tuition assistance scholarship program. Students enrolled in the PFE program are paired with elderly adults in the MHA community and spend time each week visiting, reading, playing games and doing light chores. Not only does this program bring joy to the adults, but it’s also key in fostering the value of intergenerational relationships as students learn from the wisdom and mentorship of the elderly.

“Mile High Academy’s PFE program was launched with not only the purpose of brightening the day of the elderly but to also serve as a platform for mission work in the community,” said Angelika Feldbush, MHA’s PFE Coordinator. “Our program is successful thanks to the amazing, caring and God-sharing students and families we have at MHA. We can all take pride in the fact our students are doing God’s work by spending a little time with the older generation and serving as a light in the community.”

For more information about MHA’s PFE program, please contact Mrs. Feldbush at [email protected].

Karrie Myers; photos supplied

 

15 Apr

FAITHFUL LIKE A CUBS FAN

By Doug Inglish — Denver, Colorado … If you love something, you can endure a lot to be near it. I definitely loved my job as a pastor of a church on an academy campus. I had a terrific group of elders, I loved having all the students with us in worship services, and the interaction with the teachers was great. So, for ten years I, a true-blue fan of the Chicago Cubs, lived in the land of the Cardinals.

It was not easy. While they stacked up annual playoff appearances, I talked about another year of ‘rebuilding’. They took home a World Series trophy; I marked off the 98th year without one. And even my closest friends took fiendish delight in reminding me of their success and my futility.

One day, I turned the tables on a tormentor. “You know, my marriage is more important to me than any sports team, but being a Cubs fan is good for our relationship because it makes my wife more secure,” I declared. “Think about it: she knows I’m around for good. If I was the kind of person who bailed when things got tough, I would have been rooting for the Yankees before the end of the 70s. But here I am, still faithful to a team that last won it all 41 years before I was born. She knows, in a way that few people can, that I’m with her to stay.”

It was a solid argument, and he had to concede the point. And about ten years later, he sent me a congratulatory text just minutes after the Cubs ended their 108-year drought in 2016.

The unspoken point I made to my friend was that it’s easy to be faithful when things are going your way. But when things get tough, that’s when we learn whether we are really faithful, or just fair-weather fans. This is something which my friends in Missouri, after being shut out of the series themselves since 2006, are now learning. I’m nice enough to not rub it in, but not so nice that I don’t feel some satisfaction in their education.

I know I’m being about as subtle as a monster truck rally here, but these are tough times. There is little doubt that we are in a recession, and nobody knows how deep it will go. Some of the headlines even reference the 1930s. I can’t even estimate how many of our members are unemployed, underemployed, or uncertain they will remain employed. How deep and long is the drought? We don’t know, and the uncertainty is part of what makes the times so tough.

This is when we find out if we are faithful. Not when we have a steady income and no reason to think it’s going to be interrupted. We learn the truth about ourselves when we are afraid, when we are stretched thin, when our lives are disrupted.

Whether you are sheltering at home, laid off, or trying to navigate the new way of working, I hope you are all seeking encouragement from reading your Bible, praying, and doing church however possible. And if you or a loved one have fallen ill, then now more than ever, I hope you find comfort in those places.

And I hope you find out something very important about yourself. I hope that you learn that you are truly faithful. Faithful in seeking a relationship with your Father. Faithful in your giving. Faithful in your witness.

It’s not always easy. I know, I’m a Cubs fan. I learned that faithful means even if you have no rational hope in spring training, even when you’ve been eliminated, even when you hear the taunts from the perennial winners, you swallow hard and wear your team’s cap. Without apologies. Without excuses. You wear it with pride.

I pray you are okay, and I pray you stay okay through all of this craziness. But more than anything, I pray that no matter what comes your way, you are faithful.

Doug Inglish, RMC Planned Giving and Trust Services director. Photo by Chris Briggs on Unsplash

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