Monday, April 28, 2008

Last Two Days Playing in Beijing!







Hi Everyone!

I am now wedged into my United Airlines “Economy Class” seat (new name for back of the bus), and am heading home from Qianxi/Beijing, China! It was a long two weeks and we spent much of our time on buses traveling around from location to location. I am really looking forward to Internet access and the modern conveniences of home such as: no “squatty potties”; no “running water trough style potties”; no potties that don’t flush; no potties that back brown sludgy water in the bowl and lastly, my personal favorite, no potties with signs that say “Please only pee here or you will be punished.” No kidding! Clearly, the Operation Smile presence is needed in China as we screened over 200 patients and performed procedures on 191 in only four days. Under the leadership of Han Kai, our Chief Plastic Surgeon, we finished our work early and were able to pack up to prepare for our two days of rest and fun in Beijing. The bus and airplane rides from Qianxi to Guiyang and on to Beijing were uneventful (thank goodness!) The China National Acrobatic Troupe show (Peking Acrobats) was simply stunning, but the rush hour traffic and magical feats of our bus driver stole the show. The next day, we enjoyed a Western style breakfast, complete with soggy pancakes, corn flakes with half and half, something called “Alpine Mash” (yogurt with soggy shredded wheat biscuits in it?) and thankfully, no spicy eggplant. There is a story to that. Everyone in the group loved something called Qie ze (chee ay dzuh). Basically it is battered and cooked eggplant. Some was horribly spicy and others were marginally delicious. You just never knew what you were going to get – that was the fun of it! On Thursday, we boarded a tour bus with a lovely guide named Jenny. We first stopped at a pearl and jade market, where we learned about how they carve jade, the different types and how to tell good from poor quality. Then we went on to a Chinese Friendship Store (government run) to visit a cloisonne factory. We got to see how cloisonné vases are painstakingly made by hand. Although, not to my personal taste, I have a new found appreciation for the hours of hard work that go into making these works of art. I did buy a small pink cloisonné Christmas ornament with two pandas hugging on it for the girls. Next, we boarded our bus for the Great Wall of China. We climbed a moderately steep section of the wall and were asked about every three minutes to stop and have our pictures taken with someone. I even had a little kid climb on my back and give the peace sign for a picture! This was a work of architecture, blood, sweat and tragedy that is unreal and extremely difficult to explain. You know how sometimes you can go to a historical site and feel the ghosts of the people past? That was how I felt at the Wall. It was a clear, warm and lightly breezy day (perfect for climbing) and we could see for eternity in all directions. I have some marvelous photos! After the Wall, we had a few minutes of shopping time and I actually got to ride a dromedary camel! It only cost me $3.50 to sit between the two lumps of the furry, smelly beast and have my picture taken by my new friend Lauren. After my “ride” was over, the camel came up to me and I wanted to get a picture of his soft face and furry lips. It was a GREAT photo opportunity until the great beast’s tongue swept out and up under my camera right across my lips and nose. I was disgustingly French kissed by a camel!! Half a bottle of Germ-X and an entire pack of Listerine strips later, I was able to rid my face of foul smelling breath and was consoled by a team mate who tried to cheer me up by saying, “At least camels can’t lick their butts!” I am not so sure about that. This camel could really have used some Listerine too. We then drove on to enjoy a few hours at the Forbidden City and Tian An Men Square. The square is the largest in city square in the world and can hold over 1 million people. Its vastness was sobering. The Forbidden City was home to approximately 45 emperors during the Qing and Ming dynasties (I believe that is what we were told.) I do remember for a fact that the emperor had one wife and 3,000 concubines! Busy guy! Every night, a eunuch would come to the emperor with the names of the concubines so one could be chosen by the emperor to be his bedmate that evening. Concubines were aged 13 to 16. Older concubines were allowed to remain at the city for the rest of their lives, but no longer spent time in the company of the emperor. Each had their own room and there are over 9,000 rooms at the city! For safety, the emperor would sleep in a different room each night. It would take 27 years to sleep in each room! Concubines could move up in status (even to empress), by producing a son for the emperor. We got to see their rooms and I could just imagine them stepping delicately amongst the water and peony gardens in their tiny “golden lily” feet and silk slippers. Only girls from prominent families were chosen as concubines. Apparently, this was a great, but lonely honor for these women. We then shopped at the Silk Street Market, which completely wore me out. They were ruthless bargainers and it was really annoying. I am sure I got ripped off many times, so I tried not to make many purchases. Three hours later, we boarded a bus for a Peking duck (and more qie ze) dinner and then headed back to the hotel around 11:00PM! Long, but fabulous day! It was a great trip and I always learn something and see something unique and new every time I travel to the birth country of my little Lucy and Abbie. It is a truly spectacular country and it is exciting many more people with get to enjoy it’s splendor during the upcoming Olympic games, where they expect MILLIONS!! Thank you Operation Smile, for once more providing me with an incredible opportunity to help others have a smile on their face and joy in their hearts. - Always, Tracie






Greetings from Qianxi!

On Thursday, it took one plane, one bus and three cab rides by myself from Beijing to Qianxi, but I made it! I am so proud because I HAD to use Mandarin to get around and I actually did it. I don’t know how, but I did. My only goof was that I was at the wrong bus station in Guiyang, the capitol city, but someone helped get me to the right station. I bought my ticket by myself, somehow found the bus and settled into a zebra print covered seat at the back of the very full bus. Shortly after take off, my seat mates all fell asleep – on me. It was very cozy indeed. J When I pulled up to the hospital (that I didn’t even know the name of!) every clapped and cheered! To get to the hospital, I was surrounded by about 30 people trying to communicate to the cab driver where I needed to go. I finally made the international sign of stitching a cleft lip and palate and everyone started nodding and going “Ah ah ah!” The light bulb turned on and the proud cab driver knew exactly where to take the crazy American lady wandering in the bowels of Qianxi. He did not want to charge me for the ride! Of course, I just had to pay him and gave him 50 yuan. I think I made his day. Food in this area is either wickedly spicy, or bland. I am living on a high carb diet of noodles and bread. I could really use some fruit and thing I will hit a street market for an orange I can peel today. I have drank so much bottled water, that I have had to suffer and straddle the “through” with water flowing, which is our hospital restroom. Everyday, they burn deodorizer in the room that smells like pot (not that I would know what that smells like. It’s just what others have told me.) Our hotel is another story. Everyone has something funny or gross about their room to tell. My room mate Carey and I have a leaky bathtub. Every night we stand in about a half inch of slow draining water. We each bought a pair of $1.00 plastic butterfly sandals to wear. One of the doctors stepped into his fiberglass bathtub and broke the tub in half! Ha! Many people have complained of moldy walls, spiders and cockroaches. I feel very lucky to have a decent and comfortable room to go back to! Our hotel is at the base of a hill with an ancient stone temple at the top. At about 6:00AM every morning, we wake up to gongs, the national anthem and someone screaming and chanting. It is quite strange. At night, the karaoke bar livens up and the music is so loud it sound like they are in our room. Carey and I have taken to wearing our airplane ear plugs to bed! Ha! Last night, I went to sleep singing “All Out of Love” by Airsupply with a Chinese accent. Yesterday, we did surgery on 48 patients, including two burn skin grafts. This was my first experience with this procedure and it was extremely interesting. The students have done a phenomenal job with their presentations. Smoking is prevalent in China; therefore, the students have been giving “smoking information” presentations to groups of people. They allow smoking inside the hospital, so there are many, many people to present to! Internet and phone access is next to impossible in this area of China. It is mountainous and extremely rural, so bear with me! This is a large Chinese minority area and I have met Yi (dancing people), Bai (white people), Hanjiu (sweet people) and Miao (mountain people.) They are easy to identify by their unique native costuming. Apparently there are several minority groups in Guizhou. I wish I had time to go out into the rural communities and see how they live. It would be extremely fascinating! One of my favorite things are the unique baby carriers. Some are velvet and intricately embroidered. Some are cross stitched with bright patterns and others are fashioned out of bamboo and worn like a back pack. On Monday, we will go to Qianxi High School #1 in the morning to give presentations about Operation Smile and our student presentations to groups of students. I learned that all of the schools we will visit have over 2,000 students each! In the afternoon, we will visit the local Social Welfare Institute (orphanage) and educate and play with the children. I plan to purchase yogurt drinks and little snack cake for each child as our gift. While I am there, I will also meet with the Vice Director to explain what Operation Smile does and educate the staff about our new Cleft Healing Center in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province. Operation Smile – China pays for travel and surgery for the patients and family. As a matter of fact, we have held back 20 Qianxi patients and will send them to the center in Hangzhou to start getting the word out to the community. On Tuesday, we will go to Middle School and High School #2. Also each with over 2,000 students! We will go into the English classes and hear a lesson, and then we will do our presentations. Afterwards, the students are looking forward to practicing their English with us (and I will practice my Mandarin in return!) Last night, I met the English teacher and eight high school students. We talked for two hours and they wanted to give me an official Chinese name. They debated and argued about what to name me. One boy wanted to name me after a traditional Chinese poem, a girl wanted to give me a name with symbolism to Operation Smile’s work in China. They came up with Xie Mei. It has two meanings: 1) Thank you America for helping our children, and 2) Beautiful person. How cool to be given my own Chinese name by the students. I feel very honored. The children are beautiful! There was one little boy wearing a bright yellow knit suit with split bottom pants. He mother was walking him through the courtyard with a harness and I knelt down to take pictures of him. In a split second, he gave me a huge smile and then let loose a powerful stream of pee right up and on to my shoe! Thank goodness they are closed toe and have been on many missions. They had to disinfect my shoe with Germ-X. Ha Ha! I met a family yesterday. The parents are very new wave looking and are only 18 years old. The baby had her cleft lip surgery yesterday and the mother will have her lip surgery today. That is so cool! The father was amazing. The love for his little baby daughter was palpable. You could just see it and feel it throughout the ward. Many elderly grandmothers have brought the babies and they are so tiny themselves. They are beautiful and so thankful for our help. Many have tears in their eyes. The hospital of course does not compare to U.S. hospitals, but it is rather nice and the post-operative rooms have beds and are very comfortable. This is a smooth running mission. In addition to working with the students, I have been helping out with the medical records team and am planning on training on becoming part of the medical records team on future missions. I look forward to having another role I can do with Operation Smile. It is now the Azalea Festival and on Tuesday we are going to a famous mountain covered in bright azaleas. Beautiful! On Wednesday, we head back to Beijing and will enjoy some sightseeing in Beijing at the Great wall, Tiananmen Square, the Forbidden Palace and the Silk Market. Believe it or not, in all my trips all over China, I have never seen the wall! I really look forward to standing on it in my Operation Smile Team China t-shirt with our entire team of 47 people! I think this is the last trip for my Fuji S5100 camera. The battery compartment broke and I have resorted to tape and rubber bands to hold it together. Very classy! I can’t properly explain what it is really like to go on a mission. It is really hard, the conditions are difficult, but it is so amazing and fulfilling. It renews my faith in people and our world and I absolutely love it. On Sunday, I walked across the bridge to buy bottled water and other necessities (toilet paper) and ran into a street market. It was filled with minority people and I observed many things I have never seen before in China. A elderly man was smoking a twisty shaped water pipe and an old woman was fanning incense over what appeared to be tarot cards. I bought the most wonderful piece of sponge cake with orange glaze and coconut, hit a few shops then snuck my way back into the hospital. It’s a lot of fun to explore!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Greetings from Beijing!!


















I am probably the most doomed person when it comes to International flights, but after a three hour delay in Salt Lake City, a missed connection to Beijing in San Francisco, a night's stay at the San Bruno Courtyard (no thanks to United Airlines) and a re-booked flight for today (yesterday?) I have finally made it to Beijing! I have to get up at 4:45AM to get ready and catch a taxi at 5:30AM (the hotel shuttle doesn't run that early.) I have a 7:40AM flight to Guiyang, Guizhou Province, then a two hour (bus, cab, car, ummmm water buffalo?) ride to Qianxi. From there, I am waiting for my instructions as to whether I go straight to the hospital or to the hotel first. Crazy, crazy, crazy! On my flight over, I sat with eight girls from the U.S. Olympic synchronized swim team. We exchanged email information and I can't wait to watch the Beijing Olympics to cheer them on to the Gold! I ate breakfast with a really nice older couple who are touring China for the first time. The were able to get me into the United Evergreen Lounge as their special "guest." :) All in all, the flight was uneventful and I am now sitting at the Sino-Swiss Hotel. I am ready for a nap, but instead, I am going to cross the street to the market and do a little shopping for dinner. It is always fun trying to blog in China because all the icons are in Chinese characters. I have to try to remember what is what on blogger.com. Hah! Just part of the fun! :) Admittedly, I am getting really, really good at doing things on my own in China and actually getting around. My Mandarin accent is so good that people talk to me way too fast! Love it! You should see the Beijing International Airport. It is HUMONGOUS!!! The Salt Lake City Airport would fit inside the BIA at least 20 or 30 times over. Lastly, I was able to successfully courier an entire suitcase full of medical supplies for New Hope Foundation in Beijing. Robin met me at the airport to pick up the supplies. It was nice to see him again. He also informed me that one of their babies that had surgery in Singapore was due to arrive back any minute. I am glad he did not have to make two trips to the airport. All worked out well. Love you all and I miss you guys (D, K, E, G, L & A). Be good for daddy and don't torment him too bad! :) Here are a few pictures of my hotel (including the strange flush button for the toilet) and a couple of newer pictures of my silly girls.

Is it just me or does Lucy look like Yoko Ono in these pictures?! Ha ha ha!!

Love and kisses! Tracie

Monday, April 7, 2008

HAPPY 17th BIRTHDAY KYLE!!!!

To my not so little anymore, "Dylo Lemonay"
Mom remembers when you were little and Kyle Linne came out Dylo Lemonay. You will always be my Dylo.
Mom remembers how many different colors of sweatpants you owned as a little boy. Sorry I dressed you like that!
Mom remembers laying in bed with you at night snuggling with Fuzzy the Reindeer, and you, while reading books. You still sleep with Fuzzy!
Mom remembers the day you were born. How could I ever forget that you were almost born on the skywalk from the parking lot to the hospital. You were my firstborn. How was I to know I was in labor and waited too long. You were born only sixteen minutes after we checked into the hospital!
Mom has always loved what a smart young man you are and how you seem to know alot about so many topics!
Happy 17th Birthday Dylo!! I LOVE YOU!! Mom XOXOXOXOXO

WE PRAY FOR CHILDREN

WE PRAY FOR CHILDREN
Who sneak popsicles before supper
Who erase holes in math workbooks
Who never find their shoes

AND WE PRAY FOR THOSE
Who stare at photographs from behind barbed wire
Who can't bound down the street in a new pair of sneakers
Who never "count potatoes"
Who never go to the circus
Who are born places we would never be caught dead in
Who live in an x-rated world

WE PRAY FOR CHILDREN
Who bring us sticky kisses and fistfuls of dandelions
Who hug us in a hurry and forget their lunch money

AND WE PRAY FOR THOSE
Who never get dessert
Who have no safe blanket to drag behind them
Who watch their parents, watch them die
Whose pictures aren't on anybody's dresser
Whose monsters are real

WE PRAY FOR CHILDREN
Who spend all of their allowance before Tuesday
And pick at their food
Who like ghost stories
Who shove dirty clothes under the bed and never rinse the tub
Who get visits from the Tooth Fairy
Who don't like to be kissed in from of the car pool
Who squirm in church and scream into the phone
Whose tears we sometimes laugh at
And whose smiles can make us cry

AND WE PRAY FOR THOSE
Whose nightmares come in the daytime
Who will eat anything
Who often go hungry
Who have never been to the dentist or a doctor
Who aren't loved or spoiled by anybody

Thursday, April 3, 2008

My Little Rays of Sunshine!










Woke up to a beautiful Sandy City sunny morning at the base of Utah's Wasatch Mountains. Love these pictures of my sweet peas soaking in the rays!

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

"THE CRITTERS"



Okay, I no longer have little girls. Lucy insists I call her "Kitty", only she pronounces the "K" like a "T" (you figure it out.) Gracie is now a "Chipmunk" and Abbie is affectionately known as "The Critter." If I had known that I would be raising wild animals, I would have adopted a Golden Laborador from the Humane Society - at least you can take them it obedience school! Ha ha! Just kidding, of course! :) Oh, and they are quite the little nudists too!