Middays with Joy
|#compassion#compassion-international#joy#hope-happens#sponsorship#ecuador#compassion-2018The 5 Things You Take for Granted that Would Change Someone's Life
Posted 7 years ago - Jan 29, 2018
From: CJ & JoyCan you imagine not being able to take your child to the doctor when they get sick or not even having bandaids to help them when they get hurt?
That is the reality for most of the mothers that I met while in Ecuador. Brittany is a sponsored child through Compassion International, but when she was just a little girl she fell and hit her head cutting it open. Her parents did not have anything to clean the wound with or to keep it from getting infected. They said all they had was some hand lotion to put on her infected cut. The mother teared up just telling us about the incident even though it was years ago. So many parents do the best they can for their children and yet still cannot provide for their needs.
Brittany is now suffering from severe headaches and is losing vision in one eye. Her parents suspect it is because of that awful fall and the infection. They took her to a doctor but when an MRI was suggest at $380, they knew getting it was impossible. A good month of total income for the family is $180. Knowing they could never afford the MRI the family returned home sad and worried.
The beauty in this story is that because Brittany is a part of the Compassion project and now has a sponsor, the family can finally get the medical help they need to figure out what is wrong with Brittany. We even talked to the project director right after their visit to get them help and she is going to get Brittany the medical help she needs. But I kept thinking, what if she wasn't a part of Compassion? What would they do?
They would have no options.
No options for medicine.
No options for tests.
No options for help.
It made me think of 5 options we take for granted that would absolutely change someone's life in poverty.
- Clean Water: Brittany's mother showed us where she gets water from the city but if they drink it they will get sick. She has to boil the water every day so her family has something to drink. Sadly, they are the lucky ones in her village that they even have easy access to water. Other families walk blocks to get this unclean water and still must find a way to boil it first before drinking it. But with Compassion things are different. Compassion projects have water filters so the water there is safe for the children to drink when they visit every week.