Thursday, October 07, 2010

Bumped and Bruised

Most often I blog to present the needs at Freedom Home.  Through the stories of our girls in the home, I ask you to pray.

Today I will tell my story. 

I don't often ask for prayer for myself.  I know many pray for me anyway.  I'm so grateful for those prayers.

Yesterday morning I had a meeting in the center of the city with a young Moldovan friend.  I left that meeting to go to another.  Usually I have a car to drive, but yesterday I did not.  I went into the city with public transportation.  There are buses, which I never take because they don't come out to where we live, and there are large vans which are easy to catch anywhere in the city.  The vans allow about 12 people to sit and the rest stand, holding on to rails. 

My trip into the city proved uneventful.  The calm driver didn't honk at anyone.  He didn't speed around anyone.   And I arrived late at my appointment.  That is how it goes in Moldova.

Leaving that restaurant, I caught another mini-bus to head to a lunch meeting.  Two blocks later I thought, "this is the angriest driver I have ever seen."   He honked continuously, stopped and yelled at a driver in a car, and yelled at every person who got into the van for one thing or another. 

And then as we raced to a major intersection, I stood holding on about half-way back and watched a man step into the street and in front of the van.  THUD.  The impact was hard and fast.   I could see the man knew he was going to be hit, but that is the last I saw because the impact threw me.  Somehow, I know by God's grace, I spun around, landing on my backside and another person landed on top of me.  I thought I would go through the windshield.  Instead I sat nicely in front of the dashboard.   My first thought when the person got off of me was, "Wow, nothing hurts.  I wasn't hurt. Wow.  I'm not hurt."  I saw the door handle on my left, opened to door, and I got out to walk away.  

I won't describe the stupidity of what the driver was doing to try to revive the man lying on the street.  As I collected myself, I knew that the man lay dying and there was nothing anyone could do. 

I walked the mile to my next appointment.

When I arrived at lunch I felt soreness on the left side of my face.  When lunch was over, I felt soreness on the right side of my body.

The rest of the day I felt a mixture of emotions and wanted to cry for what I'd gone through, for the senseless loss of that man's life, for all the people in Moldova that have never had the chance to hear that Jesus is the hope for their life.   The emotions were tumbling about within me.

I do write this today partly to process all that happened.

I do not write this to ask for your sympathy.

Daily we deal with dangerous situations like this.   We usually don't even know how God has protected our lives.  Yesterday I knew that God's hand was upon me. 

Each day my daughters take this form of public transportation to go school
Our team, our Freedom Home staff, everyone we know take public transportation.
And it isn't always safe.

So as you pray for Moldova, and the work we are doing, please pray for our safety, for the safety our daughters, our team, our staff.

Pray for the young man's family who lost his life yesterday.
Pray for driver who I'm sure today is in jail for manslaughter. 
Pray for a healing in my body and emotions from this experience.

I'm sore today.  I don't know why I experienced this, but I know that God was with me.  He keeps me each day.

Blessings to you. 

2 comments:

rarejule said...

Hugs & prayers...

Jodi said...

Nancy I am praying Psalm 140:6 for you and your family today!!! God is your shield and has protected you and will continue to do so!! Thanks for sharing your unbelievable story-we are so sheltered and so unaware of how scary life can be!!