Amy Ostermayr Amy Ostermayr

When the Story Went Public

Someone asked me last night what I thought about the Washington Post article.

I realized my answer might offer some insight into the mental, emotional, and spiritual process of having your story told to the world—especially when you’ve spent two decades avoiding the spotlight.

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Amy Ostermayr Amy Ostermayr

“We’re Coming to Get You”

Last week, we had the privilege and honor of attending the birthday celebration of His Majesty King Mswati III. It was an all-day event, about an hour from home. The day was beautiful and windy, and my hair was windswept. It needed to be fixed before the event. I laughed and said to Harry, “We just need a plug!” We wandered for a bit, not knowing where to go for electricity.

Then something stirred in my heart.

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Amy Ostermayr Amy Ostermayr

Building Again — This Time for the World

Adjusting to the New Normal

Someone asked me the other day how I was doing.

I smiled—which is something I have not always been able to do during the deep period of grief over the last couple of years—and said, "Adjusting to the new normal."

We built a model that could care for 30,000 patients every month with high-quality healthcare at the lowest fully loaded cost in the region—healing, loving, saving lives, powered by compassion, innovation, and efficient, effective systems at the core.
It wasn’t just a number; it was a movement of hope, one heart—both giving and receiving—at a time.

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Amy Ostermayr Amy Ostermayr

Sakha Kabusha – Sakhela Umhlaba Wonkhe Jikelele

Kulungiselela sikhatsi lesisha lesingena kiso

Ukhona loke wangibuta emalangeni lendlulile kutsi ingabe nginjani.

Ngivele ngamoyitela, lekuyintfo lebengikadze ngiyigcinile sisengca etikhatsini letimatima kuleminyaka leyengcile, ngamphendvula ngatsi, “Sengilungiselela sikhatsi lesisha lesingena kiso.”

Sakha indlela yekusebenta lenganakekela bantfu lababalelwa ku30 000 ngenyanga, batfole lusito lwetemphilo loluhamba embili ngemanani laphansi, nawucatsanisa naletinye tindzawo kulesifundza, ngelutsandvo loluchutjwa ngeluvelo kanye nekusebentisa tindlela tebucwesha.

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Amy Ostermayr Amy Ostermayr

An Abrupt Change but Hope Remains

For 20 years, TLC has brought hope, help, and healing to the most isolated and underserved people of Eswatini. Through every challenge, we have chosen hope over despair, love over indifference, and generosity over selfishness. By God’s grace, we believe TLC will continue to walk this path of compassion no matter the challenge—for the next 20 years and beyond. 

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