Living in Tanzania, in the village of Lagoda Lutari, we didn't have running water. We had wells. We were blessed. Many people don't even have that. But let me tell you a little more about my experience with water.
So at our school we had a well, a big hole that went down 100 feet (I'm actually really horrible about guessing depth and distances, so it could have been more.) We had to take buckets, tie a rope and a rock as a weight to it, and drop it down. Then prayed that there was enough water to even fill the bucket part of the way. Next, we stood over the well, and started pulling up the rope with alternating arms. Wasn't a piece of cake by any means. Most of the time we were lucky and got a few buckets of water that we would end up carrying (on our heads...yes, I did it) to our house. Then we would let the water sit for a while so all the dirt would settle to the bottom. This water was used strictly for cooking and cleaning...not drinking. It wasn't clean, it wasn't safe.
Drinking water was fetched at a different well...much much further away. One time, I went with a fellow teacher to go fetch some water and an hour later we arrived at the pump well. It was broken. So we journeyed another hour to a pump well that was at a hospital. At that point I vowed to never take for granted the water I had back in the states.
After a few weeks of being there, I started to get sick...(horrible diarrhea). Even the "clean drinking well water" wasn't clean enough for my American stomach. (I was even using a Steri-Pen that my dad had gotten me to kill all bacteria in the water before I drank it). So, we started boiling the original well water for drinking water, and that seemed to help.
The well we used gave water access to many of the villagers...a lot of people depended on this source...that is until it became blocked by too many lost buckets. Buckets that weren't tied on good enough would fall to their doom and eventually they piled up. I will never forget, there were two days that we had no access to water...no cleaning, no bathing...no drinking, due to this blockage of buckets. Those two days seemed to drag on forever, trying to collect enough spit in my mouth and swallow it in one big gulp did not quench the thirst. That day reconfirmed my vow to not take water for granted, to drink every last drop I was ever given and love every ounce. {We eventually sent a student down the well to retrieve all the buckets...totally and completely safe and covered by insurance...not!!!}
I remember the first time I got to a faucet, with running water! I stood in awe, truly amazed at the blessing it is. That we can turn a handle, clean water comes out...and we even have temperature options. Hmmm...do I want hot water, or cold water? Or maybe some warm water? It's simple, yet mind blowing!
I can tell you I drink differently now; I brush my teeth differently; I wash my face differently. I will never ever forget the blessing it is to be able to turn on the faucet and have clean, drinkable water flow from it. Or go to a restaurant and be given FREE, cold, clean water...I don't leave without finishing my glass, and sometimes other's now.
I wanted to share this post in honor of World Water Week...I guess it's a thing. I know it will be hard for most people to really relate to the situations that the majority of our world faces with the lack of clean water. Heck, I don't even know the extent that most live with daily. All I know is that water is the source of life...and there are way too many deaths of children and adults that could be preventable if they just had access to a clean water source.
So that's all I really have for now. I hope this kinda gets you thinking about how truly blessed you are if you drank any water or showered today...and didn't get terribly sick from it. There are many many reputable organizations that are fighting against this tragedy, please check them out...and give if you can. But, I wanted to highlight one in particular if you are at all interested in doing something about this. It's a great local guy that I know that's doing something about the water crisis that exists today.
Check it out, watch his video below...participate in Bloomsday with Team Running Water, or donate directly to the cause on his page.
Donate here:
https://secure.partnersintl.org/NetCommunity/SSLPage.aspx?pid=290&frsid=11
Partners International: Team Running Water
Team Running Water > Partners International from Partners International on Vimeo.
Hey love!!!
ReplyDeleteThis was so enlightening and such a good reminder of something I take for granted everyday. We are so blessed.
Happy Water Week to you my precious friend!!!
Love you!