We are well into the third week of our month-long teaching adventure. My colleagues Jim Skouge and Margo Wray arrived on Saturday. Jim plans to make a movie or two, and Margo came to help me, especially with the clinical portion of the course. Today we had home visits- I went to see two new children (new this summer, I saw them both last summer). Thomson is now almost two years old. He has severe cerebral palsy. We had a nice visit to his house and his sisters and cousins sang us a few songs. Then we visited Last- a seven year old boy with spastic diplegia and visual impairment. He is able to talk and communicate pretty well, especially about airplanes, trucks, and other moving vehicles that he loves. His mother told us that Last has the flu. We either bravely or stupidly ignored his flu symptoms and mostly talked with his mother. I tried to bring out information that the team might not have gotten yet through my questions. Then I couldn’t help myself and I tested Last to see what his skills are in standing and what his range of motion was in his legs. If I get the flu it’s my fault!!
Margo went with the team to see Enson, an eight-year old boy with spastic diplegia- a form of cerebral palsy where the legs are more involved than the arms. He is able to walk using crutches. We had heard from our students that his crutches were broken, so I asked Margo to bring some when she came. She gave Enson the new crutches and he was thrilled. She brought back his old crutches and plans to give lectures demonstrating the high needs of the children out here. His old crutches are axillary crutches and are completely broken. He was using them anyway, leaning far over because they were so short.
It was a long day- we had to give a make up practical exam to the three students who went to Pohnpei for the conference last week after we got back from home visits. Of course, we had to teach them the material that they missed before we could test them on it! Growl.
We’ve planned a “make it” day for Saturday. Since the children we’re seeing all need some sort of positioning equipment, we decided that we’ll take one day and try to make it all! We’ve gotten the help of a seamstress from the Land Grant office, and hopefully the vocational education/woodworking folks at the college will come in and help us too. I have a meeting with them tomorrow to try to set that up.
Our trip to the lagoon islands later this week almost got cancelled. Apparently the two ladies from the finance office both went to a conference on Guam and didn’t designate anyone to cover for them, so no gas could be bought until they return. It’s pretty hard to take a boat to the islands with no gas. Fortunately Ansina came by and she was able to straighten the situation out. We’ll see.
We exchanged our green "Piik" car for a bigger and more sturdy white SUV. We haven't named it yet. If fits all of us and our gear better, and handles the potholes much better. The potholes are so deep that one has to practically stop the car before easing down into it. Then we just pray that the chassis doesn't bottom out on the cliff edge.
Jojo tells us that the U.S. government (through the Compact funds) is paying over 25 million dollars for a new 4 mile road on Weno. It's not that they don't need it, but 25 million could sure buy a lot of crutches.