Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Week 35

Hello Everyone, Feliz Noviembre!
So, I finally went to the Doctor to see what’s wrong with my stomach…again! He tells me I contracted amoebic dysentery :P sometime recently and they say it’s from the water but everything I eat will make it worse. Especially grease, beans and everything they eat here!  The Doctor gave me some meds to kill the amoebas and another med to keep them from coming back but I think I will have this until I go home next year.  He checked my weight and I am back to the same as I was when I left home but I tried on my jeans and they are loose. I feel so full and bloated all the time though and I live in the bathroom.  It’s hard living on water and I am afraid to eat any fruit and vegetable because it isn’t clean, I don’t think! This is gross :P!  I’ve felt better these past couple days but it hits very fast and hard all the time and it’s impossible to go by the Doctor’s orders and not eat anything but fruit and water when the Hermanas want to feed us all the time. We can’t say no--my Dr. said I need to force the issue with the Hermanas but it is hard. Sister Madsen, the MP wife said I am doing well if I say “no” about taking food and if the Hermanas feel offended that we should explain and blame our “sensitive American digestion”!  She is in charge of the health stuff and I trust this Doctor. He is Latino but studied for years in the States. This disease is so common here though, dozens of missionaries have had parasites and bugs, food from the street, flies everywhere, the bad water, washing fruit and veg is nothing here and we have to trust the water being clean when we clean them ourselves. I am happy though :) the life of a Central/South American missionary! I am on a diet of bread and water for the next 3 weeks. Yay me! Below the pictures are of me and Hermana Valdivia. She goes home next week!
She is such a sweetheart. She lives in Tijuana and has served her mission well. I will miss her when we have transfers next Monday.
We don’t have a church building here in Santa Maria because we are a branch. We rent out these 2 rooms in this building for church. It is called our “Prayer House”. It has a kitchen and in these photos we are making mole and tamales for Halloween and Dia de los Muertos, “Day of the Dead”.  It was so cool but weird to see how they memorialize the day: a lot of people drinking in the street but all the culture was there—fireworks at noon, Orange Mums flowers EVERYWHERE, “Bread of the Dead” to feed their loved ones, skulls and lots of chocolate and altars and photos of their dead paraded around the streets. (I hope Annekke took photos of this…she never sent any though!). Pan de Muerto looks like an Irish Hot cross bun and tastes sweet. They eat it at the graves of their family. 
 I LOVE how busy it is here in Santa Maria in the Huatulco. It really is beautiful and busy. We walk and walk from city to city all day. It’s awesome! So sad, our investigator, Mary, didn’t have her baptism like we though this week. She drank coffee three days before her interview! :P  But she is getting baptized this Saturday.
Until next week, Have a great one!







Love, Hermana Annekke Walker!

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