
If it goes away.
Her husband stands next to her. He has a job back in their village, but he hopes to be there with her as much as he can, in the small isolation room with the dingy walls. But sometimes he’ll have to go back to check on the other kids, taking the 20-minute MAF airplane ride so the trip doesn’t take hours on an island river.

And then she smiles.
She smiles. She’s been sick for four years. She’s separated from her kids. She doesn’t know if she’ll get better.
It’s been a rough week for me. I could fill this whole post with complaints—both momentary ones that (hopefully) can be fixed by my husband over the weekend and ones that go deeper, that hurt more. But it would be easy to compare my situation to Ibu Deby’s and be glad that at least I’m not dying.
But that only helps for the moment until the next thing breaks and the next kid’s sickness robs me of sleep and the next fear encroaches.
So instead I try what she did. I say thanks. Thanks for the chance to serve. Thanks for the needs that are met. Thanks for the strength to get through the ones that aren’t.
I let gratitude fill the space between the need and the reality, the longing and the lack, the turmoil and the lasting peace.
So, thanks to Ibu Deby and her smiles and her gratitude and her lesson that renews my soul. And my smile.