Monday, June 13, 2011

Last time to see President and Sister Baldwin‏

Yep... our mission president and his wife are leaving us in 2 weeks!! The new mission president´s last name is Brough. They´re from Utah and bringing a fourteen year old daughter. Lots of changes are in store, I´m guessing.

Heat rash - gone.

I ate my first gringa the other day!

I saw Hermana Wetzel on Tuesday, after a LOT of stress trying to find her.

I´m going to La Mariposa on Wednesday!!! Life as a hermana is awesome. Since here on the coast we´re not surrounded by other hermanas, we have to travel a lot to have divisions (splits), so I´m going on divisions to La Mariposa!

It makes me a tad bit sad to think about all of the letters that I haven´t received and all the people that think I am ignoring them or something. I´ve had at least two people tell me that they have sent letters that I have never received. Uh oh.

Life is great here on the coast of Guatemala. We actually have it really nice, because it seems to rain in every other place around us, except La Gomera. It is nice when it rains though, because it cools down a bit. I may or may not have skin cancer later in life.

We had interviews with President Baldwin and they went great.

Hna Angel and I learned a lot this week about accepting the Lord´s will and trusting in Him despite everything else that is happening. We received some seriously heart-breaking news this week. I really have not cried that much at all in the mish, but that really broke us down. Heavenly Father loves us so much. This life is HARD. I have seen sooooo much pain since I´ve been on the mission. So much. Yet, there is a plan. A perfect, hopeful plan. We can someday rest from this heart-breaking, painful, sad life and be happy for forever, if we just do our part. Heavenly Father will always come through, but we have our agency to accept or reject His mercy and the Atonement of His Son.

I know this life is happy, too. I´ve experienced overwhelming, pure joy on the mish. We have to enjoy those times. We have to let those times dwell in us. We can´t concentrate on the sadness and pain of it all. Those times pass. Our pain can be swallowed up in the love of Christ.

Ughh... it´s so simple, but we make it so hard.

But hey... this life has a purpose and we can´t waste a moment or lose sight of that purpose... we´re not just here to pass the time!

Love,
Hermana Marin

Monday, June 6, 2011

Mission ailments‏......

Hola...

As I type, it´s raining and thundering outside. It´s going to be a fun day :)

Ok... so this good health streak is starting to catch up with me. Nah... my health is still great, I just have heat rash all over my back. But it´s OKAY! And, I may be losing a lot more hair than normal. Haha.. really, all is well. Just tiny issues.

Favor: I may or may not be making this up, but I think that a Church leader once promised that if someone who can´t read makes the efforts to read the Book of Mormon that they will learn more quickly how to read. Could someone find that for me please? Sorry if I´m just making it up.

It´s a problem that is VERY normal here in the coast of Guatemala. From what I have seen, and a wild guess, I would probably say half of the people here can read. It´s very sad. There are so many things here that need changing. The health system, educational system, traffic laws, littering laws, etc...

The other day, I had a dream that it was time to leave the mission and I only knew the amount of Spanish that I know now!!! Ugh... it was actually a nightmare.

Hna Angel and I try to speak in English in the house, because she wants to learn, and she actually knows a bit, but it´s been funny realizing that it´s EASIER to speak in Spanish than in English. Go figure.

I have to throw it out there that Connie and Ciera Soptich (and lots of other people, I´m sure) would love sleeping here in La Gomera at night. When it rains, it cools down a lot, but more importantly: the majority of the houses have tin roofs. Tin roofs + rain.

We´re going to Antigua, again, tomorrow as a zone. I get to see Hna Wetzel!!! Who knows when I´ll see her again after this. She goes home in September :(

This week we are going to start two classes: an english class and a "learn how to read" class. We´re pretty pumped and think it could do some good.

We had some pretty cool experiences with some people that were definitely placed in our path. I love seeing that it really has nothing to do with us as missionaries, we really are just the instruments.

Okay... we´re going to go get wet now ;)

Love,
Hermana Marin

PS To All....Keep the pictures coming in emails!

Monday, May 30, 2011

Giant Iguanas‏

Hola hola...

Life continues happily here in the coast of Guatemala. Life is different and awesome. I know I have to soak up these experiences, adventures, and funny little quarks.

I definitely won´t go into all the little details that make this place so different from life in Oak Harbor, but here are a few of the reasons why I will be so sad to leave Guatemala someday...
-We wake up every morning to roosters crowing, TucTuc´s honking, firecrackers blasting, and giant iguanas racing across our tin roof.
-Our shower is made up of a straight-up pipe coming out of the wall (always cold water, don´t worry) and a tied-to-the-walls shower curtain.
-We go outside to wash our hands in the pila or use the "shower."
-Everyone owns a moto, which may or may not be making me want one...

When I first got into the mission field, Hermana Wetzel told me that I needed to just be ready and realize that these 16 months in the field are more like a 16-month camping trip, they way we live at least. Well, she just gets proven more and more right as time goes on and it is hilarious and awesome.

Now for the great things about the mission in general (more spiritual...)...
-We start every lesson with a hymn. Once we start singing, usually all of the little kids that had been playing in another room or area, stop everything they were doing, walk over to where we are, and just stare and listen for the whole hymn. It is incredible.
-We, in the States, don´t know what poor is. I didn´t know what poor was in La Mariposa (even though they are poor compared to people in the U.S., too). I´m sure that despite all that I´ve seen, I still don´t even know what poor is.

-I´ve witnessed pure humility, compassion, and charity. Quick story: I can´t even describe the house of one of our investigator families, family Merida. Even if I try it won´t do an ounce of justice, but here goes... they live with one or two other families. Each family has a room about the size of a normal bedroom. Everything (walls, roof, etc) is tin. The floor, inside and out, is all dirt. All this family has is a bed, a table, and a few bancos (benches, but not really benches as we know them) to sit on, and a few other basics. The rest is a fairly large open area. There are pilas and clothes lines to do their laundry. Anyhow, they were invited to eat with a member family, family Rosales, from the branch, and we were invited also. The Rosales family live in a typical La Gomera house: pretty nice compared to what the Merida´s have. At one point, Hna Merida came up to me and Hna Angel and said, "Oh Hermanas, how sad, they don´t have a place to go in their home if they want to be outside." The Rosales only have a tiny "patio" to be able to hang their clothes, and Hna Merida felt bad for them. That moment hit me hard. The people here are amazing. Hna Merida is one of the most humble, incredible people I have ever met. I´ve got lots of changing to do.

That´s all for now :)

Love,
Hermana Marin

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Where to begin...‏



Yaayyy!! Anny!!! That will be way too tempting to go and see her. Mean.

Okay...

Again... DON´T WORRY. It´s just that they may or may not have finally kicked me out of La Mariposa and sent me to the hottest area in the mission and the toughest area of the hermanas. IT´S OKAY!!! Haha...

There are not enough time or words, but here goes.. I´m in La Gomera (Santa Lucia). We technically have two areas- La Gomera and Sipacate. We live in La Gomera (which is a huge area), but also proselyte in Sipacate, which is a little more than 30 minutes away in bus and that area is pretty big, too. We are over 2 branches. The attendance of La Gomera is around 50 and Sipicate is around 20-ish (even though yesterday they had an attendance of 8 people...). You don´t even need to know all the details. Just know that we have a lot of work to do. All of the people in La Gomera and especially in Sipacate don´t have the greatest idea or impression of missionaries, so we´re going to fix that. We have lots of goals and hopes.

I really could not have been sent to a more opposite area than La Mariposa.

I´m with Hermana Angel. She is incredible. She has about a year in the mish, is from Santa Ana, El Salvador, is 22, has the best attitude, and is cute. I´ve already learned a ton from her and know that it will just keep coming and coming. We think she´ll have changes either this change or the next (June 29 or mid-August), but we are hoping for August... or longer if possible. There´s just too much to do before she leaves! Of course, we never know changes for sure, but we are guessing that I will be here a while, again, 4 or 5 changes.

I have actually been to La Gomera once. I think it was in January or something. I came here for one day on divisions with other sisters, but that one day did no justice. Also, I have been with Hna Angel on divisions one day in La Mariposa.

La Gomera has the reputation in the mission as being the area for those who need/are receiving punishment. Also, everyone says this little tale, "Here´s heaven, the Earth, Hell, and below that is La Gomera" Haha... The first few days were hot, hot, hot and I was loving it. But the first rain was on Saturday night and it makes it lots cooler. Let me just tell you about this rain for a sec... it pours. Like Louisiana pours, but it stays consistent like Washington stays consistent... all day.. or at least for a few hours straight.

Leaving La Mariposa... Hermana Wetzel said it perfectly... "It´s probably a good thing no one tells us how hard it is to get your heart ripped out so many times on the mish by everybody - but it´s all worth it because of Alma 28:8" There could not be a more perfect scripture. Leaving La Mariposa killed, like Hna Wetzel leaving me killed. I just love that area and the people there too much.

But believe me, life is amazing. Last week was pretty painful and heartbreaking, but I´m moving on and I love it here. We have a lot of work to do and changes to make, but it´s exciting. I fell in love with the area within the first 30 minutes.

My prayers are with you all and I´m hoping all is well ;)

Con mucho amor,
Hermana Marin

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

DON´T WORRY ;)‏

Oh... what a week... and it´s still coming. There is just not a boring day on the mish.

We got robbed. DON´T WORRY! Everything is just fine. Someone stole our keys, but we are pretty positive that we know who it was, we got the locks changed, and they only took a few things. All is well. They took our cameras, hair straighteners, my (really, Mike Lemme´s - SORRY MIKE!) ipod, and a couple earrings of Hna Rizo. Luckily, that morning I had taken my memory card out of my camera and put it somewhere else, but Hna Rizo´s memory card is gone. That is sad, sad, sad. The whole 17 months of her mish were on there. I can tell it hurts her pretty bad, but we´re okay, calm, and happy. I´ll tell the story in full detail someday.. it´s a good one. But really... all is well!

We had an incredible visit with the Obregon last night. I just love, love, love them. We put a goal date for their baptism last night, so we´ll see :) They are just intensely incredible. I will definitely be coming back to Guatemala when they get sealed in the temple... if anyone would like to come with me.

We had divisions again. I went to El Esfuerzo in Escuintly. And it was amazingly hot! And amazing.

We find out about changes tonight. I don´t want to leave La Mariposa, but am ready for whatever and know it will be the right thing! Divisions really helped, because it reminded me that I will love wherever I am and whoever I am with and the people and everything... within minutes.

I hope everyone is happy and well. Sorry this is short!

Love,
Hermana Marin

Monday, May 9, 2011

7 or 49 more days?‏

Well,

We find out about changes next monday. They are the 18th. So, I may just have 7 more days in La Mariposa, or 49... we just have to wait and see.

I have to wait another week to find out where Anny is going! Ugh...

It was great to talk to everyone yesterday!

2 of the most humble, amazing women got baptized yesterday.

We have been without a phone since Wednesday, because it just completely died.

I get to see Hermana Wetzel tomorrow.

Gave my second talk in Sacrament yesterday (the first was when I had 2 weeks in the field).

A woman in the ward is trying to set me up with her son who gets back from his mission 2 months before me.

I love my recent converts.

Life is fantastic.

Thanks for the pictures Sara, President, Mom... ! Keep ém coming.

Ciera... I love you and you all will be in my prayers.

Love,
Hermana Marin

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Week of May 2, 2011 (Pictures are posted on last weeks post)

Okay...

Another week in the wonderful Mariposa!!

We had our first for real rain - 2 times this past week, but they both only lasted about an hour.

Awesome scripture - · Nephi 5:13

We had amazingly incredible lessons this week, but I don´t have time to write about them, So.... until next week :)

Love,
Hermana Marin