Who inspires you?

Life is frustrating at times. Something that really helps get through times of discouragement is having people in my life who inspire me.

Maggie and Mari Alexander inspire me. I’ve written about Mari before in Saving Lives With Images. She’s part of Safe Passage to Motherhood, a tiny non-profit that is working to save the lives of mothers and babies in Africa. In the first post I talked about how they use pictures to teach the Home Based Life Saving Skills program developed by the American College of Nurse Midwives. Over the last year I started attending their meetings, and helping out as I can. The more I have learned, the more inspired I am. This tiny group of people burn with passion, they are determined to make a difference.

Safe Passage to Motherhood is a group of Oregon-based health care providers and educators who are working to help save the lives of mothers and babies in high-risk areas of the developing world.

Seems so simple, yet as I have learned more about what they are doing, I am more in awe. In the first year, four people went over to learn about the village and what was needed, then one midwife returned the next year to begin the training program. They built connections and relationships. Instead of focusing on what the people don’t have, they started conversations about what they did, and how they can use those resources differently. So instead of focusing on the lack of ambulances to bring women to the clinic, they practiced using wheelbarrows for transport. Taught people how to do it as safely as possible when a mother is in distress.

Maggie went to Kenya last year. She trained 4 lead local trainers who trained 12 master trainers . Together they trained 28 local guides , so a total of 44 Kenyans learned how to save women and babies lives in under 2 weeks. This group has exploded into several thousand women and men – learning the key principals of how to save a life and they are continuing to teach 1,000′s more.  The numbers of women coming to the clinic for care have tripled.  They can’t keep up with the requests for teaching circles from neighboring villages.

The power of one midwife sharing what she knows about simple life saving skills.

Now they are going back to Kenya.

In July 2010, they are going back to Kenya with their sons. The trip is focused on assessing the effectiveness of the work they have done. They’ll continue to train people to identify life threatening symptoms. They plan to add prevention programs for children. They need help. It costs about $6000 each for the expenses to work in Africa for two weeks. Which isn’t very much to teach thousands of people. If you’d like to join me in supporting them, you can make a tax-deductible donation.

If you are in the Portland Oregon area, you are invited to a presentation May 23

You can meet some of the people involved in Safe Passage to Motherhood and hear more of their amazing stories at a presentation on Sunday May 23, 2010 from 3-5 PM.

Trillium Hollow Community Center
9601 NW Leahy Rd
Beaverton, OR 97229

Questions? spminformation @ yahoo.com

I hope to see you there!

Also, there will be two events in the Cleveland, Ohio area on  May 23

Sunday May 23, 11 am and 4 pm

24475 Penshurst Drive
Beachwood, OH 44122

Questions? spminformation @ yahoo.com

Who inspires you?

Are there people or organizations that get your attention? What do people do that is inspiring to you?

Restarting a neglected blog

It starts out innocently enough. Too many things to do. The thought that the blog can wait. The weeks go by. Then it becomes months. The longer the time goes, the easier it is to forget. Or ignore. Depending on the day. Just don’t look.

Victoria Brouhard ran into a similar blogging delay and offered some questions in her post,  When the Thing Becomes Too Important

So what had happened?

What rules are you trying to follow?

What are you trying to avoid?

What’s the kernel of truth in the fear?

How can you take some of the importance out of writing a post?

In the interest of actually breaking through and posting, I will answer her questions, then hit that publish button. Ready?

So what had happened?

We added an operations person to VisualsSpeak. An organized, business and detail oriented person to help strip down and rebuild the core business model. To come in and take the idea we’ve been working on and put the structure under it to support a different level of business. So now we have two artists and one business person. Two focused on big picture concepts and one how are you going to make it happen.

It’s exactly what we have needed for a long time. But it hasn’t been easy. Exhausting. Watching everything we did to the best of our ability get broken down, much of which got thrown out. Having to look deeply at entrenched behaviors that are getting in our way. Having to re-guess what might work. Change management in all its grueling finest.

What rules are you trying to follow?

That I’m supposed to offer something to my readers, something spectacular, insightful, full of wisdom. Certainly not whining about the agony of change. Or reciting the litany of things I was struggling with on a daily basis. Or admitting the vast list of really bad habits I have developed to attempt to keep my head above water.  It took all I had emotionally to get through the process, there was nothing left to allow me to take the risk of posting anything online.

What are you trying to avoid?

I discovered a limit on my ability to be transparent. A line beyond which a fragility cut off words. I wanted to paint, and couldn’t find the time. Or more truthfully, allow myself the time. The visual is the doorway to a well of emotion. I didn’t think I could process any more.

What’s the kernel of truth in the fear?

The professional is personal. No matter how much I try to manage the edges, they bleed together and affect each other. And I have limits and boundaries that keep it all in check.

How can you take some of the importance out of writing a post?

I’m declaring just posting, the act of sticking something up is enough for now. Maybe someday I’ll be profound, but in the meantime, I’m just going to start sharing as feels right. Not trying to be more than the person trying to do the right thing. Working on accepting my limitations. Trying to make a difference somehow.

Now, pressing that publish button.

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