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Bloooooddd…… I’ll get it!!

January 11th, 2010 | 3 Comments | Posted in General News, Thoughts, Travels, culture, japan

Emily and I went to give blood today! Emily had never given blood before and I hadn’t in Japan either. It was pretty daunting to go through all of the questions on the computer screen checking if I was ok to give. There were lists of diseases that, had I had them in the past 6 months, would have meant I couldn’t give. Then lists that if I had at all would mean I couldn’t. These were pretty hard to understand, but made easier by the fact I haven’t had any diseases in a long time… Maybe since chicken pox as a kid!
Then came some lifestyle questions, questions about going to the dentists (which I did on Saturday, but the lady said it was fine as he just poked about and said everything was fine), questions about tatoos and piercings, and then the clincher…
It wanted to know if I had ever lived overseas. Of course I have, so I clicked 「はい」 (yes) and chose Europe from the list that followed.
The next question took me a little by surprise, althought I had been forewarned that I probably wouldn’t be able to give blood.
Had I stayed for more than one night in the UK between 1980 and 1996?
Well yes, of course I have. 「はい」 again.
Then the system asked me a bunch more questions and the lady printed out a sheet, before pointing to a massive poster on the wall saying that people who had stayed for more than one night in the UK between 1980 and 1996 you can’t give blood… I hadn’t noticed the poster, it really was massive, but in my defence there were loads of massive posters and it takes ages for me to try and read them! The reason given is the old favourite BSE, I hadn’t even thought about that whole episode since the foot and mouth outbreak made us remember it. But just in case I am a mad cow (ok, it’s really CJD in people…) they don’t want my blood.

So Emily gave blood on her own, and went all woozy in the middle of it. I think she has a bit of a blood phobia, she broke out into a sweat at the sight of it and took a little while to recover. We had planned she wouldn’t look at them doing it and maybe that would be ok, but the distraction she found was the next bed over which, of course, had someone lying in it giving blood! So that didn’t help so much! But all credit to Emily, she continued and gave her quotia!

Afterwards the lady at the desk kindly informed me that soon they will be revising the limit on people who have been to the UK so that those who have been for upto 30 days will be able to give blood, I explained that I had spent 14 of the 16 forbidden years living there.  Interestingly it is specifically the UK, if I had been born and raised 75 miles south on the same island, i.e. in the Republic of Ireland, I’d be certified BSE-free for giving blood in Japan!
I guess I will just have to keep my blood all to myself!

P.S.  Extra bonus points to anyone who can tell me where the post title comes from! :-)

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Victories for all!

March 24th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in General News, Thoughts, japan

Ok, maybe not victory for all…  However victory for Ireland in their Six Nations Grandslam triumph!

Victory for Japan also.  The sumo has also been on TV here, but the big sport has with out question been baseball.  It is truely the national sport and that hasn’t come to the fore more than in the World Baseball Classic.  When I was last in Japan they beat Cuba in the finals to become the first proper world baseball champions, then today (though technically on Monday in LA) they pipped Korea to the post in an extremely tight match to claim victory for the second time running…  It has been such a big deal that people have been sneaking out of the office to go to the electronics store and watch the tvs, sneaking their tv-toting mobile phones under their desks and even watching it while driving along the highway on their GPS screens.  My teacher spent the class this morning explaining some of the Japanese baseball terms and being nervous to find out whether Japan managed to pull it off.

And so it has been a lot of fun for me on both counts, Ireland’s long awaited 6 nations victory and Japan’s oh-so-close world baseball classic defence.

Then last night I went to play some football myself and enjoyed a (rare) night without loss, the teams I was on drew time and time again, then pulled a win out later in the evening, so I left with that feeling of victory and success.

That is the feeling we long for as Christians, we have tasted it over and over as we have hit those “mountain top” experiences.  Feeling by proxy Christ’s glory as he stands in victory over sin and our fallenness.

Yet so often that feeling is taken away.  Talking about football with my Japanese teacher earlier we talked about how the taste of defeat and failure can be so very bitter, particularly when used to coming out on top, and today Korea are left licking their wounds after almost taking the baseball trophy home for themselves.  All of the other 6-Nations teams have gone home empty handed, not even the solace of a triple crown for their often outstanding performances.

Likewise as Christians we often feel overwhelmed by our own struggles with sin, or not seeing progress in our own walk or the work we are trying to do (a common problem for missionaries in Japan).  Feeling defeated or ready to give up.  Sometimes it is even worse as there is no often option to retreat and to back down.  The fight feels unending and unwinnable.

But there is hope for us who believe.  Christ won’t just bring us victory, but has already brought victory…

When the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: “Death is swallowed up in victory.” ….. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
(1 Cor 15:54 & 57, ESV)

 

We can feel like Japan did today, or Ireland on Saturday, or me when my squiffy shot rebounded off Sam and went in to secure victory last night…

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