By Guest Author Jennifer Burley
Before
After many, many minutes of turning around and around and shrugging and asking, “Where do we begin?”, we decided to start with the linens since they were clean and easy to identify. We designated some available plastic bins for sheets and others for towels. Pillows we put in two big stacks. We threw away one that was in such bad condition that no one would ever have wanted to put their head on it!
Fortunately, someone had begun to organize the children’s clothes. With shelves on opposite sides of the room for boys’ and for girls’ clothing, we had a starting point. Pants and shirts were in separate sections and there was a shelf for each size – small, medium and large.
Because the room had no windows, we brought in our battery-operated fans and set them at our face level. Then the fun began! It is amazing what people will donate just to get it out of their own home. We tossed out bikini bathing suits, old worn out size 3X t-shirts (I don’t think there is anyone that size in that area of Honduras!), used undergarments (clean and not-so-clean), an inflatable kid’s swimming pool raft, stained shirts and pants, some girls’ blouses and shorts that would have raised eyebrows even in the U.S.
In packing for our trip, we had used large lawn trash bags to protect our suitcase contents in case of rain. We gathered some of those bags and eventually filled three with unusable items from the clothing room.
Our team had brought 100 new pairs of crew socks so we were able to replace the old worn out ones. We put some clearly labeled bins of not frequently needed items (jackets, blankets, infant clothes) on top of the shelves and were able to store a crib mattress on top of them. It had been taking up way too much space in that small room!
Then there were the shoes – so many shoes! Boxes, bins, bags and piles of them on a shoe rack that reached to the ceiling. Our team members tied matching shoes together, sorted them by size and style and organized them on the rack. It was beautiful! Besides the full shoe rack, there was one tall, round bin full of crocs and flip-flops. Because our team was able to take a new pair of shoes for each child, these other used ones will be replacements later.
It is such a wonderful feeling to know that now the missionaries can easily find the right size clothes they need as they serve these precious children.
After
Every time I read one of your posts I think - WOW! I love the before, during, after photos. I can totally imagine Americans placing things into give-away bins that are a little too used. There may be a sense of someone FAR LESS fortunate wanting a ripped up shirt or badly stained pants. Better than nothing. And that sewing machine? Gold from God.
ReplyDelete