I volunteered in Sudan. People tell me how bad they have it here. They complain about things. They tell me how their job sucks. How hard they have it.
Sudan was hell. I can't imagine places worse. I saw infants clinging to their dead mother in the street. Diseases that disfigured. Horrible treatment of women and children.
It is not all like that, but there are little pockets of Hell through out it.
I was there trying to help with water purification. I no longer take for granted many things. I know the value of clean water, vaccinations, sanitation, human rights.
I would say that everyone should go there once so they can appreciate how great it is to not be there.
Wasn't that photo taken next to a food bank? I seem to recall that they were in line to get rations. I'm on the mobile right now and can't post the link.
Yeah. And being told by doctors that I shouldn't have picked up an infant without a Hazmat suit was eye opening.
The Doctors and Nurses barely touch anything, they swear, and I believe them, that a scrape from a railing, or a fall on the stairs can be all it takes to get an HIV infection. Like we think of tetanus they think of Hep, and HIV.
>they swear, and I believe them, that a scrape from a railing, or a fall on the stairs can be all it takes to get an HIV infection.
In fact, I assume that the doctors and nurses there are worried about cuts or scrapes not because they think that can get HIV from the scrape itself (no known cases), but because they are often exposed to infected blood over the course of their work, and having an open cut or sore could increase their chances of becoming infected with HIV, HepB/C or other blood-born diseases.
Even that type of caution is a little on the paranoid side. There have been few, if any, documented cases of HIV transmission to medical professional from patients that did not involve sharps incidents. My wife, and several close friends, worked for multiple years among people living with HIV/AIDS in W. Africa, and they know of no one who became infected with HIV via non-sexual transmission not involving infected sharps or other percutaneous medical devices (native Africans and expats alike).
Jacob told the Greens he was sure they had struggled as well. “What matters,” he said, “is your determination, your dedication, your ability to move your own challenges.”
Given his life experiences it is so cool that he refrains from judging people and it's sad that people who have endured much much less feel entitled to look down on others.
Sudan was hell. I can't imagine places worse. I saw infants clinging to their dead mother in the street. Diseases that disfigured. Horrible treatment of women and children.
It is not all like that, but there are little pockets of Hell through out it.
I was there trying to help with water purification. I no longer take for granted many things. I know the value of clean water, vaccinations, sanitation, human rights.
I would say that everyone should go there once so they can appreciate how great it is to not be there.