Are you all anxiously awaiting another update?? Well, wait no more. Things are going splendidly here. I am quite pleased. I will admit- I was very, very close to giving up on the Rotary House and passing it off as someone else's job. But I suppose if that is my line of thinking I should just go home now. And as blessings would have it, I had not even finished my renovations on the house when I got word that a new doctor has committed to come to Maseno and needed a place to live in a few weeks. He'll be arriving the day I leave. So as of now, the house has a patched and reprinted roof, a new ceiling inside, the floors are patched and smooth, and the locks are all changed. The house is stocked with sheets, blankets, nets, dishes, pots, buckets, and a water filtration system. The new housekeeper, Truphosa, has been trained on how to manage the house and how to prepare food for visitors. She has committed to work for me for the next year. I've changed the structure of the house slightly to give her more autonomy and business potential, since she will be independently managing the food, sort of like a mini restaurant. She'll make more money and I think it will lower the overall cost for visitors. I don't want to speak too soon, but this could be a win-win situation.

And let me wish you all a very Happy Easter! I spent yesterday morning rounding on the wards as usual. For my medically trained readers, I have a very interesting case of likely elephantiasis right now. I am reading up on treatments (and causes) for it tonight. Something I've certainly never seem before.
I spent the rest of the day at the Phoebe House, which is a home for women and children who have been abandoned or forced out of their homes because of their HIV status. I am in the process of teaching them how to sew washable, reusable maxi-pads (pictured above). An interesting endeavor-I agree, but before you wrinkle your nose at the thought, let me tell you the reason.
Many girls in rural areas like this do not have money or access to maxi-pads. They usually have to miss a week of school each month, or used unsanitary methods, like rags or newspaper. Now that the schoolboys are aware of this issue, some have started to offer the girls pads in exchange for sex. And the girls are accepting. Very sad. There has been a lot of interest in the project at home, and we have had over 100 pads donated that were sewn by groups based in the US. Fantastic. But like any other sustainable project here, it also has to be locally made. So begins my maxi-pad crusade.
The pads are being sewn on machines that run on a foot pump so electricity is not needed. Easy to use, easy to fix. Jacyline is one of the women who lives at Phoebe House with her 2 sons, and she will be heading up the project. We hope to sell them individually in the local market, and also to groups from the US who want to travel to schools to educate the girls and distribute the pads.

As always, I had a wonderful afternoon at the Phoebe House. My littlest darlings, Naomi and Arnold, are getting quite big. If you look back on my older posts Arnold is the chipmunk-cheek baby with ugali all over his face. When I first met Arnold over 2 years ago he was a patient at Maseno hospital. He was very suspicious of me initially and every time I walked in the ward he would shoot me a glare that could frost over the sun. Thankfully this time he warmed up much more quickly, as he felt the need to be constantly touching my hair, swinging on my arms, or patting my cheeks. At one point I was showing the kids pictures of my family-they were all very interested in seeing "Mama Jescah" ( my mom). Arnold could not see very well so he wiggled under my legs from behind the chair, crawled up over my knees and settled himself in my lap for a better view. When his mom told him he needed to let the other kids see too, without taking his eyes off the camera, he reached up and patted my cheek and said, "Hapana, wewe na wangu", meaning, " no, you are mine ". Oh. My. Goodness. He had me at the cheek pat.

I am currently in Nairobi for the night to pick up my students at 3 am tomorrow, and then we head off to Nakuru for the week. I knew I jynxed myself by saying how great easy coach was last time. While I am thankful, as always, for arriving anywhere in Kenya in one piece, I did spend the last 8 hours being thrown about the back of the bus. It isn't often in the US you actually feel yourself going airborne from your seat. My teeth may be still rattling a little :). No matter what the ticket lady says, there is a huge differnce in the amount of josling from the front to the back of the bus. That's a little pearl I am going to tuck away for next time. We stopped halfway through for a bathroom break and I considered making a generous offer to one of the front seaters to switch with me, but I was traveling with my friend Job and I couldn't abandon him to the back of the bus alone.
I'm going to go have some dinner now that you all know I am safe and sound in Nairobi.
Xoxo,
Jessie