Tag Archives: Peru

From Kansas to Peru with Love: Installment #2

 

Ken Lassman (occupational therapist, writer and wheelchair clinic director, and my husband) guest-blogs about his experiences working with the disabilities communities in Lima, Peru Oct. 26-Nov. 4.

 

The Pacific rim in the Americas is marked by coastal mountain ranges. While in North America, the prevailing westerlies creates a moist, even rainforest-wet coastal zone on the ocean side of the mountains, and dry desert areas to the east, the opposite occurs in South America where the prevailing easterly winds are squeezed dry of their moisture on the eastern slopes of the Andes, creating the rainforests of the Amazon river basin, leaving the area west of the mountains along the coast very, very dry. This has resulted in a series of river based cultures that have sprung up along the mountain fed streams that flow into the coastal deserts not unlike the Nile civilizations found in Egypt. The proximity of the Pacific has created a disconcerting and yet very pleasant mix of moderate temperatures and humidity, frequent overcast days, and almost no rain for Lima and other coastal cities.

There are round yellow circles found throughout the city’s streets and parking areas and I had to ask to figure out what they were for. “The S stands for Securidad, or secure areas in the event of an earthquake, people will know where to go to find each other.” While we were at CASP, the alarms sounded and lights flashed at one point, and everyone left the campus to go into the street for what I thought was a fire drill, but then someone said that we had had an earthquake. But even though a 6.7 scale earthquake had just occurred several hundred miles to the south, none of us felt it at all, and needless to say, there was no damage in Lima.

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We have been thrown into the mix of activities from the moment we arrived at CASP, and have hit the ground running. For instance, we were shown a classroom where they are teaching students to learn laundry skills. The teacher, with the able assistance of the volunteers were teaching students how to put clothes into the washers using plastic coated cardboard slides, put in the required amount of soap, pull the wet clothes out and transfer them to a clothes dryer. Then they used cardboard folding templates to fold the clothes. CASP has identified this occupation as one which has the potential for some students to earn a living, and they have obtained donated washers and dryers for the teachers to teach this as a potential livelihood. As we observed, Liliana asked us to come up with a way to create a storable work surface for folks who need to sit in chairs or wheelchairs, and the teacher asked us to come up with a better way to pull out the clothes from the washers and dryers. In short order, Steve and Mack came up with a plan that used a shelf that prevented a person in the wheelchair from getting closer to the table and converted it into a fold-out table top with legs, extending the existing shelf out enough to create room for a chair or wheelchair to fold laundry. Steve and I went with Raoul to the hardware store and we found a broomstick and a large plastic coated hook, drilled the pilot hole in the end of the shortened broomstick, screwed in the hook, and voila! A grab stick to pull out clothes and push it in if needed.

We were fortunate to be there during one of their quarterly “sibling days,” an amazing program where the family members are counseled and supported for the many issues that come up when living with a brother, sister, cousin, with disabilities. The amazing teaching staff are very well trained on the best way to interact and bring out the best in each child attending CASP due to the fact that they spend one day a week getting top notch training from experts in the field who come in from around the world to assist this place. During the Sibling Day, the siblings are first counseled on dealing with the real world issues of living with someone with disabilities, first separated from that child, and then paired back together with them. In each setting, they are given opportunities for role playing, doing shared activities asking questions, listening to and observing others facing similar issues. The results were truly wonderful to see as staff gave them invaluable feedback on how to find that balance point between doing everything or not enough, between redirecting, stopping and ignoring inappropriate behavior, how to deal with your own feelings, and more. Good food and an inflatable slide ensured that the day was not all work and no play!

From Kansas to Peru with Love: Installment #1

As mentioned earlier, Ken Lassman (occupational therapist, writer and wheelchair clinic director, and my husband) is guest-blogging about his experiences working with the disabilities communities in Lima, Peru Oct. 26-Nov. 4. Stay tuned for more!

Hotel Melodia has a very modest presence along the six-lane divided street of bustling traffic in the San Miguel section of Lima, Peru. There is a sidewalk /driveway where folks who stay here pull out of the steady stream of vehicles to take up one of the half dozen parking spots or go down the ramp to park below, getting out to have the locked gates opened by the ever present key holding gate attendant.

I’m sitting on my firm twin-sized bed in a small but efficient 10 X 12 hotel room with a wood wardrobe framed by two small windows that overlook the neighborhood of cinderblock and brick homes and businesses. Since Steve and I are on the 5th floor, we can see the tops of most of the structures, many of which tell a story: pottery containers surrounded by walls that have not yet been finished adjacent to another room where the walls are done but have colorful fabric sheets instead of a ceiling; another roof well lived in with a ceramic patio, plants and clothes drying on a line; another with the old hot water heater and plumbing strewn about, left to the side of the newer, larger roof mounted heater.

My trip here with fellow Lawrencians Dale Huffman, a certified rehab tech specialist, and Mack Price, a lifetime appliance store owner of Price Appliances and repairman extraordinaire, began with the oft feared 3rd world experience of electrical shutdowns creating interminable delays, resulting in missed connections and an extra day in limbo at a small hotel, lost luggage and a delayed flight before finally arriving in Lima. Funny thing is that these things happened in Kansas City and Atlanta, not some overseas backwater. We found ourselves in the dark after an unexplained power outage at KCI shut down the entire airport and computer systems, resulting in the resourceful Delta airline employees belatedly processing us by substituting pieces of scribbled upon paper for our computer boarding passes, and going through security that whisked us through during momentary returns of the power, getting us to Atlanta 10 minutes after the Lima flight left despite a 3 ½ hour planned layover designed to avoid this problem. After some frantic calls from the complimentary Atlanta hotel room, we left a couple hours behind schedule for Lima the next afternoon, wondering why such a delay couldn’t have happened the day before so we could have joined the fourth member of our party, Steve Bolander who came down from Michigan and departed on time the previous day? Questions with no clear answers were actually a good preparation for loosening us all up for the days ahead, no doubt.

So far, Steve and I have taken a few walks down the street , with a mix of the

Ken earlier this year in the Northwoods of Minnesota

familiar—KFC, Pizza Hut and Burger King mixed in with the local big boxes: Maestro, Ripley and Wong. The ever present Interbank and HSBC contrast with the street vendors: one selling candy and, drinks; another standing by a stack of colorful lighted whirlygigs that he slingshots into the air, catching them as they spin down to the ground, much to the delight of the children playing in the adjacent closed in park. It is spring here, warm, mostly cloudy, with some familiar flowers blooming like the oxeye daisy, and others that I must learn the names of from our hosts, Gladys and Raoul. We hope to spend some time at their small apartment as Raoul has told us about his 5 pet frogs that live in their garden, and Gladys talks about the home they have been building on the outskirts of this bustling metropolis for the past two years.

But as planned, most of our time since we arrived has been spent at CASP-Centro Ann Sullivan del Peru. It is within walking distance from the hotel, but Gladys and Raoul insist on picking us up every morning and bringing us home in the evening, requiring much traffic jostling, u-turns and honking buses, vans and motorcycles. We get dropped off at the brick wall gates which are opened by another attendant, walking up a ramp into the bustling 3 story complex that surrounds the central courtyard that is CASP.

It is hard to describe the palpable energy that permeates CASP, with its hundreds of children, energetic teachers and pervasive parent volunteers swarming through the halls and rooms on every story. The students wear clean, well taken care of uniforms, and yet each individual personality is honored as in the best of schools, belying a philosophy of nurturing each child’s potential to live with as much independence as possible. There is a waiting list for joining Liliana Mayo’s vision of what CASP has grown into, from its humble beginning to today’s ever expanding reality (see for yourself at www.annsullivanperu.org for its history and myriad projects). The mothers of the students are required to provide and excel at creating an amazingly proficient and patient support staff person for their child. Staff are selected for their intelligence, compassion and are highly skilled at what they do, with every Friday devoted to world class training from their peers and the parade of professionals that Liliana has created to help support CASP.

He Flies To Spring, I Drive In Fall: Everyday Magic, Day 430

All afternoon and evening as I drove through the brightest reds of our fall so far, I thought of Ken, flying for almost seven hours into spring. He should be landing in Lima, Peru soon, changing hemispheres, seasons, languages, proximity to the ocean (as in right next to versus 1,400 miles from), and even time to some extent.

Being close to someone who is going someplace neither of you have ever been is one way to have a window into the magic of what might come into his/her view. Add to this a restless mind and propensity for imagining things, and I’ve been picturing Ken looking out the window, wondering if he can see the ocean or just layers of clouds. Since I’m a little claustrophobic when it comes to hours sealed up in an airplane, I’m glad I have the advantage of simple imagination. But I also wonder about what he’ll find when he lands, how the air will feel, what strange and likely wonderful new world will envelop him.

I remember that when Ken and I went to Kenya 25 years ago, we arrived in the middle of the night, and were swept off by Ken’s sister and her husband to a room in a convent somewhere in Nairobi. I don’t remember anything we saw, heard or did, just a lot of motion in a very surrealistic world of night we emerged into after 18 hours of air travel. The room was simple, we were exhausted, the bed was heaven.

Then I was woken up by an explosion of sweetness, the smell of the flowers, so vivid that it swept me out of my dreams. I got up, opened the wooden doors in the single window, and the technicolor world poured in. We were in the middle of paradise, a garden with saucer-sized flowers from another planet, large green or orange birds disappearing into towers of blossom.

This is what I wish for Ken — this kind of immersion celebration into a reality more vibrant than what we imagine. Actually, whether we’re literally traveling or not, this is what I wish for all of us.

Coming Soon: Stories From Peru with Ken Lassman

Within a few days, Ken Lassman (who happens to be my husband), will be arriving in Lima, Peru, where he’ll be part of a team building and repairing wheelchairs for children and adults with disabilities, and training community members to build and repair wheelchairs into the future. Some of you read about this in Ken’s campaign — the Kansas-Peru Mobility Connection — and you can see a powerful little video on this project here.

I’ve invited Ken to be a guest blogger on this blog, sharing with you stories of immersing himself into another culture and land. Instead of working and driving through days of fall, he’ll be wandering and serving through days of spring. Ken is a wonderful writer (not that I’m biased), and the author of Wild Douglas County, among other articles and books. He especially has keen eyes for the wonders of the natural world and the magic around us in each breath. So please warmly welcome him soon when you see his posts.