Monday, July 15, 2013

Week 2 in the Philippines - Candelaria

Welp. I made it through probably the longest week of my life! Culture shock is a VERY real thing and I experience it everyday! Either from literally stopping traffic so people can stare at me, multiple males peeing off the side of the road, or millions of dogs and cats running around and frogs all over our front yard every night (they freak me out, and I scream when they jump), and the fact that there are lizards or gecko's in EVERYONE'S house- including ours (and you know how I feel about lizards)! I am reminded that I am NOT in America anymore. 
 
Sometimes while we are walking around or riding in a tricycle to get to parts of our area, I will look around and sometimes it looks like Disneyland- as in the special effects look legit, and then I remember that it is real dirt, moss, and real crumbling brick walls. Ha it just blows my mind everyday that I am here!
 
 Last week was so hard as were the first few days here. But I am so grateful to have another American- Sis. Mckinney in our apartment. She got here 1 transfer before me, so she knows exactly what I am going through. I also got to talk to one of our Sister Training Leaders - Sister Carmicheal. She should be going home next month, but she has the opportunity to extend. It has been so good to see her and see how far she has made it on her mission! Heavenly Father continues to bless me with such amazing people and I am so grateful for it, because I really don't know if I could have done it without them. 
 
 I honestly don't remember what I wrote last week, P-days are SO busy!  I have so much to say, and I don't remember what all I was able to include. So first off, my kasama really is great. Sister Nabus knows the language so well and is able to take over the lessons and OYM's when I have brain farts. She is the cutest! But she will be leaving on the next transfer day, so I only get to be with her for a couple weeks before she goes home. I am her first American companion, so I do a lot of explaining about America and how different it is from the Philippines. Some things are hard for her to understand about America, but I think she loves to learn about it because she asks me about things all the time.
 
My bug bites have gotten SO much better!! I have pictures I want to send to you if I have time. Don't worry though if I do get to send them, because they look way better now. I have been taking my allergy pills every day to help them go away and one of the senior couples bought me some bug repellent and I use it religiously!
 
A normal day here includes waking up sweating and hot, even with the fan on full blast, a lovely bowl of instant oatmeal with chocolate milk packets (it seriously is delicious), a cold shower, personal study, companionship study, language/ 12 week training program, lunch- usually always rice or noodles (the Philippines version of top roman) and chicken with carrots and cabbage, then we head out to our lessons on a trike or we walk. We have a hard time getting many lessons because we are opening up the area and most of the people that want to be taught are male and we don't have another female with us to teach, so that has been rough. 
 
We usually go back for dinner around 5 and it is usually the same thing we had for lunch and then back out for more lessons and tracting. I hate going out at night because it still scares me, but my flashlight has saved me and we try to stay were a lot of people are so it's safe. Then when we get home we eat a snack or something and then plan, take another shower to try and cool off then go to bed. The first week I was exhausted and would totally fall asleep during planning, but my body is finally adjusting to the schedule.

We had some really good lessons this week and I want to share one. We have been teaching 3 girls ages 16-20. They are all sister in laws but are living at the same house with their husbands parents. One of them is already a member and is 17 and just had a baby last Monday!! Holy cow! It is the cutest thing ever and maybe weighs 5 lbs. It was so cute! So anyway. We have been teaching the one who is 20 because she is the only one not baptized yet. She also has a baby that is way cute too. We taught her a couple times and invited her to be baptized in the second lesson on Tuesday. She said she wanted to know more first, So we went back on Thursday and taught her lesson 3 (gospel principles). I memorized the baptismal invitation and felt prompted to ask her. I was expecting her to say no again, but she said YES!!!!! (Well it was more of a really soft "opo" because she's really shy) but I was SO happy!!! I couldn't stop smiling! We also invited her to come to church, but she wasn't able to come yesterday because of her baby. I would really love to see her get baptized though. We have been praying a lot for her to come to church so that she can be baptized, because she has to go 4 times before she can, so I am really hoping she will be able to come.
 
The work is here is amazing. The people are so kind! They all stare at me and say "pretty girl, where are you going?" and literally I am a little kid magnet here! Yesterday we were leaving an appointment and like 5 little kids came up and some of them were rubbing my arms and then as we were walking away they all came with us and one held my hand and was rubbing my arm more as we walked down their street. Ha! I think they would've come with us the rest of the day, but we told them they needed to go back home. It was really cute though.
 
On Saturday we went to an investigators house, but it is really far away and we had to walk at least 1 mile to get there. Sis. Nabus called it the wilderness. Which pretty much just means the houses are actually spread out and there were lots of fields and gardens in between them. It was super pretty though!! But as we were walking some of the little kids on the street were asking me "what's your name?" over and over, but it totally sounds like "wash your name" so I couldn't stop laughing! It was cute.
 
So that's my life. Right now I am emailing you in this slightly ghetto internet cafe, but there is a fan on so I'm not sweating too bad. I still just can't believe I'm here. It is crazy. I miss you all so much!  I really just miss being in America! 
 
This past week it really hit me how long these next 17 months will be and that was really hard, but everyday Heavenly Father reminds me I am supposed to be here, either by letting the wind blow a little while we are walking around, or hearing our neighbors blast Celine Dion or Taylor Swift while they do yard work, or seeing one of the kind members on the street.
 
 I know I am supposed to be here and I have already fallen in love with the people. They are all so kind and very humble and just so easy to love, even if I only understand like 2 words they say to me, I still love them.

I am so grateful for the wonderful support I have from home, and I really felt your prayers this week, so thank you SO much!!!
Mahal Kita!
Sister Mecham (or "Me chum" as everyone else in the Philippines says it)

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