Thursday, December 20, 2007

CHRISTMAS TIME



Hello dear MFL students and teachers. Last time I updated this blog I told you about Jackie. Well, the latest news for her hasn't been very good. She spent another 7 days in the hospital and is still unable to walk without her crutches. The doctor is saying she may need a new knee put in. Ouch! We are praying that doesn't turn out to be true.


There, you are probably worried about exams and such and I guess very serious. Here in America, it's the happiest time of our year--it's Christmas time, the holiday that we celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ, God's only son. About 2000 years ago an angel came to Mary and told her that she would have a son and He would be the Son of God and that she would become pregnant by a miracle of the Holy Spirit. Exactly as the angel said, this miracle took place and Mary did indeed give birth to Jesus Christ.

He lived a perfect and sinless life--something none of us or anyone else has ever done. This was predicted thousands of years before that He would be born and live a perfect life because He would later give His life in payment for the sins of the world, for all of us who failed. He was a perfect sacrifice.

After His death, he rose from the dead and made a way for us to not have to die eternally but to live in heaven with Him after our death. The Bible says that
everyone has sinned and the penalty for sin is death. That's why scientists and doctors will never be able to keep us from dying--we have all sinned. But Jesus lived a sinless life and He gave His life for us so that we could live forever with Him. When He rose from the dead, He reached down to those in the graves and gave them eternal life, raising them up too.

Today, all people have the choice about living or dying. We can choose Jesus Christ and live forever. Or, we can ignore Him and die without the hope of living in heaven after we die, eternally separated from God. Scary thought. If you want more information, go see Aj Charles or Aj Jin Ling. And of course you can go to Baan athii taan and see Aj Michael. Whatever you choose, make sure you have researched and made a decision based on what you have learned and sought--not just because I told you or your parents told you. Think for yourself!

I really hope all of you do well on your exams. I have so much enjoyed receiving your emails and hearing about what you are doing. Remember, your very handsome and intelligent teacher misses you and loves you and wants to know what's up in your lives. During your break, write and tell me what you are doing. I do care.

Bob and Jackie





email me at bobandjackie@gmail.com

Saturday, November 17, 2007

What's Up?

Hey Thai guys....

Here's why you've not been getting answers to emails from me. Sorry but my life is crazy because of Jackie's illness. You can read about it below. It's the version I sent to our Farang friends but it'll be good English practice for you too! Enjoy.






Jackie Robinson

So, how do you go from a healthy, young, vibrant and beautiful girl like Jackie to the one, still beautiful of course, in a hospital? It's easy--go get an MRI on your knee. This Blog is the story of trying to put together for all of you who have read bits and pieces from my emails what happened to Jackie and continues to this moment. Might take a while but here's where we are at right now. I'm giving you a very edited version. So many crazy things have happened it would be cruel to you to make you read through it all. Most of what I'm leaving out is about mess ups.




Jackie had a knee operation in Thailand October '06. Her knee was still hurting so we went to the doctor here in St. Augustine to have it checked out. He did. He said he needed an MRI with dye injected to give better contrast. Sure, you are a doctor so you should know what's best. (He didn't tell us about the down side of using dye.)

At 4:00 AM the next morning, Jackie was in tremendous pain, throwing up and crying because her knee was giant size. We called the doctor's office when they opened for a prescription for pain pills and the nurse told Jackie since she had migraine medicine to use that. Guess what? It doesn't work on knees. A few hours later we called again and promised we'd put away the migraine medicine if they'd just prescribe pain pills. They did. That was a Tuesday. On Thursday the pain was too intense again so we went in (took 3 phone calls and a refusal to not be sent to a voice mailbox to get permission to come in) and the knee was drained of a clear, yellowish fluid. 25 cc of the gunk. Her knee still hurt but the assistant (Doctor wasn't in) said it would be fine and to go home and rest. Great words, but not true. Friday the knee was again as big as ever so Jackie called (I had gone to work) and was sent to a voice mailbox and she left a message to please call her. They never did and Jackie wasn't in a state of mind to deal with it. I called Saturday on the emergency line and they told me to come in and they'd look at it. They did. They then drained out about the same amount only this time the fluid was bloody. He told her she could go and Jackie said it still hurt. This time we had the doctor so he reexamined her knee and found another load of fluid and drained that one too. It was also bloody. With nothing else to do, we went on home. I told you this was long. How about a photo break: Here's Jackie dancing after she got off crutches in Thailand last January.



We went home, parked Jackie back in the bed (she couldn't walk without crutches and then the pain was so great she only walked to go to the bathroom) and began waiting for healing. By the way, many of you have been praying for Jackie and have sent us emails and I simply haven't answered them because it's too crazy right now. We will get to them eventually (maybe!). Her knee never quit hurting; the swelling never went down and the knee was hot to the touch. She had gone to physical therapy once and the therapist asked her what she was doing there with so much swelling? Her response, which is her standard one, "I'm the patient. I'm just doing what I was told to do." We kept waiting and waiting for something to change, but it didn't. On Friday Leah, our daughter, called a doctor friend and told him what was going on and he told her to get Jackie to the emergency room--immediately. I had called our doctor but he wasn't in so his nurse talked to us and said he would come in at 2:00 in the afternoon and see what was going on. When I told her what our other doctor said to do, she said she'd call us back. When she did, we were told to get on up to the emergency room and find out what was going on. We spent 11 hours in the emergency room but only 2 of those in a chair. They finally got Jackie into a bed and a doctor came by, took fluid out of the knee and said it looked like infection and he'd send the gunk to the lab. She went into the hospital Friday night at 11:00 PM or so. The next day our doctor called me and said he wanted to do surgery on her around noon to find out what was going on. We said OK to that and on Saturday at 1:00 she went in for a 45-minute procedure that took 90 minutes. When they got into her knee they found all sorts of stuff going on, the most distressing was inflammation. After the surgery, we again were hoping that now things would get better. A very fun doctor, Dr. Igor, came in to the room and he is a specialist about infectious diseases. He hung out with us for about 30 minutes and when all was said and done, he thought that the infection that was found was not from Jackie but maybe from a lab worker. That sounded good to us. Look, that cute little teenager is Jackie on her horse, Jenny.



With this good news, we were encouraged. Sunday Dr. Igor came by and said things were growing from her samples that didn't look good, but maybe it wasn't a problem and only contamination. Monday evening, Dr. Igor came by again and said we could go home. Yea! Tuesday our doctor called and dropped a bomb on us. He told us Jackie had a serious infection and needed to go to the hospital and get a "pic line" put in. Look it up on the Internet for details, but it's a permanent port for pouring antibiotics in. That turned into an incredible hassle because the doctor told her where to go so being a good patient, off we went. It was to be a 1-hour procedure and Jackie was there 7. Fortunately, Leah was with her and was able to sort out all the problems that happened because of our doctor not sending the paper work in, ordering the drugs, etc. etc. etc. When she came home, she was in such pain she could only lay in bed and cry. I can't believe how strong she is. I would have killed myself by now.

The infection? This is the best part. It came from either the doctor's office or the surgery at the hospital and it is a nasty little guy that will eat your heart out if the antibiotics don't kill it. That's just what a heart patient needs to hear (Jackie has heart disease).

So what do we think about all of this and the doctor? Well, we like him. We know he's given it a good try to fix her up and he's not out to get us.

Today is Friday and she's had 2 antibiotic treatments and has 26 to go--they are daily doses that take about 90 minutes. It's a challenge to get her to the hospital for the treatments but we have friends who have been amazing in helping us keep up. My job will allow me to make adjustments to my schedule if I need to take her.

Jackie hasn't worked for 3 weeks and I missed at least one week so this is not good. The most amazing part is, God has provided for us somehow to stay ahead.

What will we do next? Wait. The knee is still swollen, Jackie is still in lots of pain and it's still hot to the touch. Jackie had a temperature last night of 101. Dr. Igor's nurse called today to check on her and seemed a bit concerned about the temp reading. Our doctor said it was normal since she was getting antibiotics. We can't seem to get the 2 doctors on the same page.

The big question: Will you sue? We've been counseled by people we respect and trust that we should. We've been counseled by people who we don't respect that we should sue. The consensus is, sue! I don't want to. What I would love to see is for our doctor to accept the responsibility that we came to his office basically healthy. Prior to that appointment with him, we'd been on a bike ride. Now, 3 weeks later, Jackie has a life threatening infection (pretty remote, though) and a knee that is no better than when she started and far worse with no end in sight. If he'd just say, "Hey guys, I'm sorry. I'll pick up this bill," I'd be thrilled and forget about what all has gone down. I don't need a gozillion dollars--I want and need my wife to be better and not to have to pay for someone else's possible mistakes. However, whenever we go to his office, he bills us. Yesterday at the hospital, we paid. Something doesn't seem right but maybe I don't understand the medical "practice."

What would we like for you to do? Pray. We know that God loves us and that in ALL things we are to give thanks. We are even giving thanks in this, though it's through clenched teeth at times. What comes our way, has come by Father first and He knows our needs and strengths and how much we can endure. He is compassionate above all else and merciful beyond comprehension. Whew, that was quite a story, wasn't it? In closing, let me just again say "THANKS" to all of you who have written. Do they bless us? SURE DO! Today we received this email from Tahn, one of our Thai girls:

Dear Daddy,

I believe that Jesus heals mommy. I praise him in advance for that. And I expect to hear good news from you soon.



She even sent us the rose! What a blessing to have friends as far away as Thailand and as near as Saint Augustine praying for us. Because of that, I can say with confidence, "Your will be done." Whatever that may be, we give thanks and end with another thanks to all of you.

Bob and Jackie

Monday, October 15, 2007

Break Time!

Hello from Florida...

This is the best time of year for being a student at MFL. It's cool outside and you don't have any classes. Maybe you are even at home with your family! Guess what? Your teachers are thinking the same thing. We (teachers) were always happy when exams were over, graded and we could relax.

BUT, that's soon over and you'll be starting all over again. You 4th year guys are off to Bangkok and beyond and some even to America. Wow, are you stressing out? Don't worry--I never had a 4th year student die at their internship. Some wanted to die when they had to take the exit exam, but you needn't worry about that--yet.

For you under classmen, perhaps you looked at your grades and decided that you need to play less computer games and study more. If you are going to attend school, you might as well graduate with a 3.5 grade average, don't you think? Think of it this way: In a few years you will graduate with a 3.5 (or better) grade average or with a 2.0 (maybe less). Those with the high average will get the better jobs. Those with the lower scores--maybe not so good. Either way, you have to go to school every day so you might as well get good scores instead of poor ones.

Us? We are fine. We're still in Florida and still working and I'm still going to the beach in my off time to go surfing. It would be so much fun to have you along with me. Don't you think it would be fun to learn how to surf from your old teacher?

HERE'S ZACK, OUR OLDEST GRANDSON, NUMBER 11
Our grandsons are just finishing up their American football seasons and they had lots of good times.
We went to some games and it was fun for us too.



Another exciting event for us was the baptism of our daughter and 2 of our grandsons. Here's their photo. Leah, their mom and our daughter, is on the left with Elijah, the youngest next to her and Jake next to him. Jake is also a football player. It really made us happy to see our daughter and grandkids following after God.



Jackie and I had some fun last weekend. A bunch of our friends invited us to join them on a motorcycle ride to a restaurant about 100 KM from our house. We have a small Honda and they all had Harley Davidson super bikes.




We had a difficult time going fast enough but we made it to the restaurant and had a great meal. It reminded me of Thailand except no one spoke Thai; the food wasn't spicy; it didn't rain on us; we drove on the right side of the road and no one ran through red lights. Hmm, maybe it wasn't like Thailand! 55.


JACKIE TOOK THE PHOTOS.


I enjoy going to the beach in the early morning to watch the sun come up, to pray and to find shells. Here's one of those mornings. I pray for ALL of you every day and miss you lots. I pray this coming semester will be one of the best you ever have--until the next one and I'll pray it'll be even better. Write. Send photos. I love hearing and SEEING you. With love...

Bob and Jackie

SEPTEMBER IN FLORIDA

Hello dear MFL students. I thought I'd take a few minutes to share with you some of the photos I've taken the last few weeks. We are getting near the end of summer over here. We don't have a rainy season like you do, though it does rain a few times a week. For us, it's just hot from May until the end of September. I'll be glad when it begins to cool off a little bit.


Here's our son's band doing a concert at a church. My son is the drummer.
Concert1

Here's my kids and grandkids and of course my wife, Jackie. I sure wish I had you guys here with us!
RobinsonsAll


Jackie and I were walking by the water and happened to see this dolphin jumping around. I couldn't believe I got a photo of him in the air. Cool, eh?
dolphin



I like to go for bike rides on the beach early in the morning. I walked for a little and then looked back and noticed the only footsteps around were my own. It's nice to be in a place where you can be by yourself, sit down and just talk with God about your life.

footsteps


I wasn't totally alone. I had all these birds around chirping at me.
DSCF2168
I'm still waiting for you guys to start sending me some photos or maybe even start your own ENGLISH blog. I miss you all so much and would love "seeing" you again even if it's just pictures. You guys were awesome students and friends and made my time at MFL a very wonderful memory.

As part of your speaking assignment for this month, I would like for each of you to go by and see Aj Charles and give him a message from me. You should say to him, "Yo, Aj Charles you crusty dude, what's up with your ugly self." I promise, he won't be upset with you. He will laugh and laugh and laugh. He's feeling lonely--go and make him smile!

Finally dear friends, do well on your finals. For some of you, this is the end of MFL and the beginning of the next phase of your lives--you will have to get jobs! Ugh. For the next few weeks, turn off the computer games; put MSN chat on a timer so you don't spend too much time on it and study a lot and get yourselves some A's! Wouldn't that be nice. Know this, your old teacher misses you and prays for you everyday. It's my desire that you would all get to know the love of God as I have come to know it. God is awesome--love HIM! Talk to you later.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

MISSING MFL

Hello Dear Students and Friends of MFL?



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Wow, it?s been a long time since I?ve seen you
guys and I want you to know that I miss you all. How sad to not be there seeing you do
translation classes and homework. You
must be having so much fun. I pray for
all of you often that God blesses you a lot and keeps you safe and in good
health.

Jackie and I are now living in Saint Augustine, Florida,
and enjoying our kids and grandkids that we hadn?t seen or spent any time with
for a long time. Our weekends are spent
at the ocean (I only live 10 minutes from the beach by walking or 5 minutes if I
ride my bike. It has been great fun paddling my surfboard
out and riding waves again.

I would love to hear from you all and to know what?s going
on at school and in your lives. I might
even ?check grammar? if you e-mail something to me.



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Here?s a few photos from around here. Do take care of yourselves and get to class
on time! With much love and good
memories of you all, your handsome and intelligent teacher and friend.



Bob

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