At any given time we have up to 40 nationalities serving onboard. And they are not all nurses and doctors.
Let's take a walk from deck one up to deck eight (and a half).
Deck One: Engine Rooms:
Down in this noisy and hot environment we have engineers and engine hands working around the clock to keep everything running.
Deck Two: Cabins, Boutique, "Gym," Storage. While there are a few cabins on this deck (cabin not being a wooden chalet in the forest, but just your home onboard a ship), deck two is mainly storage. This is where we keep shampoo, conditioner, shirts, dish cloths, Pringles, flour, coffee beans, dried apples, and all the food we need to feed 400 crew, 200 day workers, and 60-100 patients and caregivers daily. This is a LOT of food. We receive canned, dried and packaged food via shipping containers from Holland and from the U.S. In addition to this, every two or three days we acquire new fresh produce from our Chandler, a local connection that brings truckloads of onions, bananas, tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuce, watermelon and pineapple. It is weighed and paid for and we have a whole department dedicated to Procuring (getting) these goods, putting them where they belong on the ship, and getting them to the Galley (the kitchen) at the right time for the right meal.
The chandler's team bring it up the gangway, to be weighed on Deck 5, and then brought to Deck 6 (Galley) or elsewhere for storage.
Deck Three: Cabins & Hospital
If you don't work on deck three, you can actually be unaware that we are a hospital. There aren't announcements taking place that herald each patient entering the ship. Surgeons rotate through, staying anywhere from 10 days to several months, and bringing with them their area of expertise. We will have a season of orthopedic patients who spend several weeks on the ward in their casts as their newly straightened legs have a chance to heal and new bone growth to occur, a season of plastics patients, a season of VVF patients, and MaxFax and General patients combined in all throughout our time. Eye patients come - several in a day for a surgery that lasts just minutes, and they leave the same afternoon- escorted off the ship by a family member and a nurse or day worker, wearing a protecitve eye patch in place of a cataract. Potential patients come onboard to be evaluated by surgeons, receive CT scans, Xrays, and blood work. Simultaneously, other patients are getting dressing changes, being rounded on with their surgeons, and being discharged to home or to the Hope Center where they will await their next outpatient appointment.
The Infant Feeding Specialist is training moms and dads on the best way to plump up their babies so they'll be fit for surgery. The Supply Manager is restocking and ordering bedpans, syringes, sutures, adult diapers, and iv tubing that must be shipped from overseas, weeks or months in advance. The Bio-med technician is fixing an anesthesia machine, and waiting on parts for the CT scanner, as he is paged about another machine that needs immediate attention. The plumber has also been called to the forward office where the ice maker line has sprung a leak and now the carpet is drenched and the fiberboard cabinet is in need of repair or replacement.
The Mercy Ministries coordinator is busy preparing her magical Mary Poppins bag full of all the goodies and supplies necessary for the next team to head out to a school, orphanage, hospital or day care center to entertain, craft with and love on the people there.
Decisions are being made in a management meeting about which surgeries will be offered in the next field service, and what changes need to be made this spring to meet the patients' needs and the crews' needs in the best way. This might involve a conference call to Switzerland (International Mercy Ships' Headquarters) and Texas (International Operations Center of Mercy Ships).
In between this hustle and bustle, you have about 120 nurses living - six to a room - some of whom have worked from 10:00pm to 7:00am, and are now trying to sleep while life continues at the speed of chaos around them.
The printer is jammed, the patient scheduled for admission today isn't here (or has malaria) and we need to find another patient from the waitlist to fill the slot tomorrow. The laundry and hospital housekeeping is working around the clock to keep the sheets and gowns and rags and floors and walls clean from the fluids of a hospital: I won't elaborate - you can envision this enough.
Ibrahim (patient) checking the heart rate of a nurse |
some physical therapy taking place for an orthopedic patient in the hallway, with the help of a translator |
the OR sterilizing department working on keeping the instruments ready for use |
a baby in the Infant Feeding program |
surgery in action |
Deck Four: Sleeping Quarters
Rather an uneventful floor - here live singles, couples, and couples with babies. No offices on this deck. No patients (or even unaccompanied children) allowed so during the day it's quite calm. During the evenings it resembles a college dorm floor at times.
Deck Five: Main level - the town square. Here is where you enter the ship. Here are the main offices for several of our departments (Stewards, Managing Director, Transportation, Human Resources, Finance, Hospitality, Sales, Operations Director, Purser, and Communications). Here is where you would find our dining room, our cafe area, our library, ship shop, post office, bank, hair salon, office supplies. This sort of the "main floor."
not all guests are greeted by the captain, nor do all guests look like this! But, we all come through this door. This was a special Partners' Reception. |
communications office getting a good cleaning from our crew services team |
ship shop goodies being restocked |
main cafe/Starbucks area - this is a gathering after our Thursday night meeting |
International Lounge |
midships/cafe area |
school! |
sometimes people even work OUTSIDE deck six, like this deck worker, who is painting the exterior of our home. |
The bridge is on deck seven, where the Captain navigates when we are on the move, and visits are allowed (with prior permission). Deck seven also has some outdoor areas where the doors open and you can be enveloped by the warm, moist air of Africa (and escape the chilly air conditioning of decks two-seven). This is where the Academy kids can play, and also the patients come to be reaffirmed that we are still in Guinea - the sea is still right outside, and the sun still does shine.
Deck Eight: Work & Play: For those with children on the ship, deck eight represents play time- put on your rollerblades, get out your scooter, or sit your bootie on a Big Wheel and use some energy. Maybe you'll walk laps with a friend while your kids blow off some steam their own way. There is also a wooden play structure with jungle gym, slide, and monkey bars.
The work side of deck eight is just as crucial for all of our well beings as the crane loads and offloads containers of goods, dumpsters of trash, and when preparing to arrive or depart a port, even Land Rovers.
a side view of decks seven and eight |
Deck Eight & Half: Play for the crew: Up the step metal steps in the middle of deck eight you find a little hiatus, a generous and much appreciated gift from from the Mercy Ships Swiss Office: a swimming pool. It's not huge, but it does the trick of providing a little oasis where you can escape from deck ____ (you fill in the blank with what applies to you) and regroup. Sometimes it's a rowdy area with kids (and dads) cannonballing, yet moments later it could transform into the Land of Nod with volunteers strewn about on lounge chairs like limp noodles, lulled to sleep by the tunes streaming through their earbuds.
during the week we host a few swim lessons too |
And in the midst of all this craziness there are lives being changed:
- Someone seeing themselves in a mirror for the first time in years without only seeing shame and despair.
- God stretching a person to do what he didn't believe himself possible generous beyond what he thought he could give, forgive what she hadn't been able to, or see what had been veiled before.
- Friendships being made across cultures, languages, and backgrounds.
- Physical transformations that restore hope, love, and even faith.
This is our crazy yet beautiful home.
What a wonderful tour!!! Thank You
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