Monday, November 30, 2015

November 30, 2015


You all are living the vida luxurious. Thanksgiving sounds like it was a blast. No worries, I had a c-frut, my favorite little soda thing, in celebration. I live for c-frut. It has gotten so bad that I have to limit myself to one c-frut a week because I will drink them everyday if not held accountable.

So, this week was pretty happy. We had some successes this week that we have been working for this cambio and the cambio before. We had the baptism of Hna. Cynthia! She was so happy and it was a great baptismal service. But, we got to the building in the afternoon after the mission leader got everything ready and the water was brown! Like dirty brown. It was pretty obviously not clean. My companion was so upset she was in tears, but I mostly thought it was funny. A little eight year old girl was getting baptized too that day. When her mom got there we explained what happened and she was really worried, but then she saw the water and said, ¨Eh, the river is dirtier. That´s not that dirty.´´So we went through with it and she was baptized just fine. We were really happy for Hna. Cynthia. 

We also had an investigator, this little old man with one leg named Leonzio, who had told us the whole month that he was going to attend church but never did. We were getting frustrated with him but then we showed up at church this week and who was waiting for us but lil Leonzio! It was awesome. Then, after the first hour I saw him shoot out of the building. We were trapped with people but we literally ran after him down the street. He moves fast for only having one leg! We caught him and he said he had stuff to do and had to go. We kept blocking his path and just told him no, you have to go back, they will wait, the Lord will not. He kept trying to get around us but we just kept moving to block his path and eventually we got him back in the building! We sat with him the next two classes and after the third hour we were so happy and told him congrats and he just walked out of the building and said bye! see you Tuesday! We just laughed. He is an interesting man.

This week a lot of things happened with the family of my pensionista. They are basically our family here because we spend all our meals there and spend a lot of time with them. They are passing through some really hard times right now so it was hard to see this week. One of the daughters fell off of the moto while she was driving home with her family. Here, they don´t have any protective equipment and in fact they don´t even hold on if they are on the back of a moto. She fell off the back and she was also holding their two year old son in her arms because that´s how they take them on motos. She was in the hospital and luckily is going to be ok and she kept her son from being injured, but it was really scary. Motos are super freaky because they are so unsafe and people are really careless with their safety while on them. The youth (I´m talking ten to fourteen year olds) are probably the worst because they drive so fast without helmets or anything. Add rain and you have a lot of injuries.

We ate a lot of mangoes this week. They are so good here! They are enormous with tiny little pits so you can bite into them and have a mouthful of juicy mango. It´s awesome! 

We also got to see the construction process this week because my pensionista built a kitchen! It even has a sink, even though water only runs during a couple hours of the day. It was fun though, to see. If you want to build something, they just dump a pile of concrete mix stuff in front of your house and then you get some bricks and you pile em up and build your wall like that. It was interesting to see. A little different than the reno we did but I would say they were equally excited with the result. 

It has been really hot this week as always. I think the Elders have it a little different too because they just shake hands or give a hug or two to their really close amigos. But the Hermanas have to kiss and hug every woman we meet. I have met with some sweaty faces let me tell you. Sweaty backs, sweaty faces, sweaty hands. I think I´m getting acne on my face from all the kisses. And we are all up in the faces of people whether they´re sick or healthy. It gets concerning. But I also like the hugs and kisses because it´s a little ice breaker and you show affection from the start when you meet people.

I love you all! I will talk to you so soon! Weeks are flying by, can´t believe I have almost been out for three months. 

Mucho amor!

Hermana Fitz

Curichi! A member in our ward sells them and gave us coconut curichi. It´s the best! 
It´s just milk and coco frozen like a popsicle. So yummy. They make curichi of aguaje too.


My zone! From zone conference. Punchana foreva!


Nothing like an Iquitenian sunrise. This is from 7:00 in the morning. 
Told you the clouds were beautiful!



What a lot of my meals look like. Plus a plate of rice. 
In the background, cooked banana because they say it´s not fish without banana.

Monday, November 23, 2015

November 23, 2015

Man it just seems like yesterday that you were trying to get me to do chores too. I can´t believe it´s almost been three months here. Time goes so fast.

This week is a little scrambled in my brain. I faltered on my journal writing this week so I can´t really remember what happened. But...

We had zone conference on Tuesday. It happens every other cambio and, where I am, Zona Punchana and Zona Iquitos come together for a mega meeting! They told us the night before that it was happening and it felt like a big secret or something. We were in the meeting from 8 in the morning until 4 in the afternoon. Whoo it was long one! We had training from the assistants, our zone leaders, counselors in the mission presidency, Hermana Gomez, and finally President Gomez. Then we had lunch and then every missionary had to bear their testimony. I was cooked by the end of it. It was all good stuff and it will help us be better missionaries. Lunch was at a super luxurious restaurant too so that was fun and funky. The meat was really yummy and they actually had a spicy sauce. Incredible!

We also had stake conference yesterday. I swear we are having conferences every other week. They are awesome but it really messes with attendance because every gets confused when the location and time changes. We had hardly anyone show up so that was sad. Every week is basically a build up to who will attend Sunday and then Sunday is basically a huge let down because even if you have a lot of people that attend you never have everyone, and then you are sad, and then you remember P day! The weekly grind

This week in food:
Nothing too crazy but we have been eating a lot more fruit. There are so many fruits that are regional and don´t exist elsewhere, even in other parts of Peru. We have been eating more aguaje and I´m into it. It is bitter but with some salt I like it. They all LOVE aguaje here. If I could pick a mascot for Iquitos it would be aguaje. We also had the regional grape here which is called uvilla. It is like a purple grape but enormous and you peel the skin off because it is scratchy and there is one mega seed in the middle. It is delicious and we are loving it. I am now also in love with Ecco, it´s that fake barley coffee stuff and our pensionista makes it so yummy. She pours in evaporated milk and sugar and it is so good. Oh, and we had cachanga this week. It was really good and I was thinking whoa I think I have had this before. Turns out it is sopapilla! Brought me back to the New Mexico days. They make it all over South America but each country and region has a little different way of making it. Here they make it thin and crispy and eat it with onion and lemon juice. I liked it a lot.

One of our investigators that has been receiving the discussions since May finally accepted a date this week! It was a really cool experience. We had prayed a lot about what we should do because she refused to accept a date. We decided to visit her one more time and invite her one more time and if she declined again we would stop visiting so frequently. We were scared but we went in and before we could say anything she said, I want to be baptized, I'm worried for my soul. We just cried we were so happy. Then, the NEXT DAY, she said that her mom called and wanted to be at the baptism and we would have to postpone it. How quickly the adversary works. We were really sad and told her she shouldn't postpone her baptism. We visited her again last night and she confessed to us that it wasn't her mom that was holding her back, it was her fear and she accepted the date again! So she will be baptized this week. If all goes well and she doesn't get anymore calls haha.

We ran into Brando again without his clothes on when we went to teach him and his sister a lesson. I don´t think I have ever had to ask someone to get dressed so that was pretty funny. The men here never wear shirts. Ever. At first it kind of shocked me but now it is just the everyday. Some people get embarrassed if we see them without their shirts on too, which is odd to me because they are completely comfortable walking around in public without it. I guess they recognize us as representatives of Christ. One investigator opened the door without a shirt on, saw us, yelled Hermanas!, and shut the door. We just laughed as he went to get his shirt. Living free down here.
The women are even worse. They just wear a tube top and spandex underwear basically. I have never seen so much cleavage. We were in the middle of a lesson this week with a less active and she was talking about her skin or something and wanted to show us something and just straight up flashed us! My comp and I were just in shock. The things that go on around these parts are too strange for words.

It was so hot this week! And then it was really rainy. I have to bring my umbrella with me every day even when it´s sunny in the morning because it rains every afternoon. I love it. I love it at night when we are home and it feels cozy and I almost feel cold but then I don´t and I turn the fan back on. During the hot times you just melt. The pamphlets make great fans. More like fan-phlets am I right?

This week breezed by, I am still happy. I am still healthy which is really nice. I miss Thanksgiving and I am thankful for all of you. I love you all and hope you have a great week. Tell the fam I love them!

Hermana Fitzpatrick

I will be on the lookout for my package! I´m super excited!! Love you!

No photos this week. Insanely slow internet. Sorry. Took me twenty minutes to open my first email just so you know what I´m working with


Monday, November 16, 2015

November 16, 2015

Hola hola!

Well, this week was another wild one. Sometimes there is just nothing to do but laugh because my experience here has just been so far from real life. Sometimes my comp and I seriously just laugh. Everyone is such a chambon but we just laugh it off. And the things we get involved in. Lives down here sometimes really play out like telenovelas. It´s crazy. 

It was a rainy week down here. It is starting to get bursts of really crazy heavy rain for a half hour every afternoon. This is the beginning of the rainiest time of the year so it is starting to pick up. December it apparently rains everyday pretty much straight through the month. I love the rain though. It is so calming and fresh and the people take pity on us and let us in. It always makes me want a hot chocolate and to cuddle up on our couch though haha. It was so insane, this week we were talking to some members outside of their house and we could feel the wind pick up and the sprinkles start to come down and we knew it was going to rain heavy. And then I looked down the street and I could literally see the storm coming down the street. It was the most unreal experience I have ever had. Normally you see the clouds come or whatever but I could see the wall of water coming down the street. Because when it rains it really is a wall of water. If you take even one step outside you will come out drenched. It´s utter insanity. But, this week we took advantage of it and taught lessons to people we got stranded under overhangs with. No escaping us!


-getting caught in the rain. The scariest part is the lightening. We woke up one night to the loudest lightening I have ever heard. It was actually kind of scary.

 This week I also had a work visit with the sister training leader Hna. Blackmore. It was so fun! I really love her a lot. I went to her area and got to see a little bit more of Iquitos. Her area has more of the houses on stilts. And we are actually entering the flood season so those houses will be flooded soon. I don´t really get it but they live there and their houses flood every year and they build a second floor and live up there until it dries in April and then return. But they live on a river basically for five months of every year and construct wood sidewalks through the streets like really long, janky bridges and take boats to their house. We will see, it should be coming soon.

We worked in the Panadería again this week and it was so fun. This week we helped them with their panetones. It´s basically fruit cake but it is the classic Peruvian Christmas food here. They told me that just like a meal isn´t a meal without rice - including breakfast - Christmas isn´t Christmas without panetón. They drink hot chocolate with it and it is actually really yummy. I had some paneton and hot cocoa for breakfast today actually. I´m into it.

-making alfojores in the panderia (and possibly consuming a few)

-Aguaje!! They LOVE this stuff here. This is the process of peeling the scales off. 
It's like really bitter mango. They go crazy for this stuff.

We had some really funny moments this week and we had a lot of fun. On Sunday we went to pick up an investigator for church and her little 10 year old brother answered the door, in only a speedo. My comp was shocked because she is really shy about seeing people in no clothes, like we do everyday, and we just busted out laughing. He was not even embarrased at all either. He kind of tried to hide himself with his door, but it was glass so it wasn´t doing much. Too good. He is also really fat so that added to the hilarity. We just tried to hold back laughter while he asked what we wanted. What a kid. 

I think it´s so funny the way people address other people here. We were talking to the landlady and someone came to buy bread from her and she said "si abuelita" and it was totally normal but I thought about it and she had just said "yes, little grandma, how can I help you" and it was all good. Or we went with a member and her boyfriend to the family history center and she was directing him where to go by saying "aquí gordito" which is like "here little fatty" and it was just another intimate moment in Perú. Everyone calls everyone gordito and gordita which would be incredibly offensive in the US. I think it´s just funny, especially because the member was pretty heavy and her boyfriend was stick thin. So it goes.

Man, everyone already has their christmas trees up and everything. It makes me so excited for Christmas! My first of two! I love you all and I am thinking about Thanksgiving this week. We are going to do a little dinner with the zone so that will be fun. I am so thankful for everything I have. If I have learned anything from the Peruvian people, it is gratitude. They don´t take anything for granted and they work to use everything they can get. I am so blessed in so many ways temporally, but I am blessed richly with the gospel. It covers everything. I am so grateful for the Atonement. We have been focusing on that as a zone and it has blessed my life. Everything depends on it. I am so grateful to my Savior for His sacrifice and I hope to show my gratitude by serving faithfully, dilligently, and obediently here. 

Love you!


Hermana Fitzpatrick

Monday, November 9, 2015

November 9, 2015

Well, good news, kind of. We finally figured out what has been making me sick this whole time - turns out I have a parasite! I thought I was just adjusting becasue I started to be sick around the same time that I arrived but it looks like it was just a happy coincidence that I got the parasite and arrived at the same time. I am taking some pills to kill it ( I named it Parry the Parasite) and I am feeling SO much better. And I can finally enjoy the food! Which means now I need to start actually paying attention to what I eat.

-Clinic fun. The third try on the IV. Insanity, literally smiling through the searing pain. What a riot!


This week went by so fast, every week actually goes by so fast. We had a baptism this week (whoo!) and it was really nice. We have a lot of problems getting members to support converts and go to baptisms. This week we had a youth get baptized and we planned the baptism to coincide with seminary so all the youth had to attend. It worked! There were so many people there and it was really nice because his parents were there too and could feel the support, they are still investigating because they have to get married first. Here´s hoping they let the spirit they felt there motivate them for marriage! We have a massive the seventh of December so we are working to get them there. I want to see a massive so I hope they accept, and also their salvation and stuff depends on it.


-Little Remy got baptized! The pants we had were like two thousand sizes too big for him so we took a white paper clip and fixed that problem. Encontramos soluciones constantemente!

-The whole crowd at the baptism. Oh happy day!


We had changes last week and I am in the same area with the same companion. I am getting to know the area finally and the members here. I even gave a talk on Sunday! It was really scary and I actually feel like it went awful but I did it! And with changes we had a sister stay with us for a night because she was going to Moyobomba. There are four cities in the Mission - Iquitos, where I am, Pucallpa, Tarapoto, and Moyobomba. Iquitos is the hub with four zones and everyone eventually ends up somewhere in there. Pucallpa has two zones and has a mall and there is a little bit more money down there but it is hotter. Tarapoto and Moyobomba are the jungle jungle areas with each one with one zone. Moyobomba is the place that everyone wants to go though because it is cooler and cheaper and the people are a bit more educated I guess. I don´t know but the way they described it sounds like a luxury vacation compared to Iquitos. I´m glad I´m here though. Iquitos is a crazy place to be. A lot of times I think, man if they could see what is going on right now, who would´ve ever expected this, I didn´t. I´ve learned a lot of things already. But I´m a Punchanita till I die! Iquitos forever


-Dropping our little hijita for the day off at the airport. Reminded me of my first day coming in. 
Also saw scorpions on the sidewalk as we were leaving so all good things.


Oh, remember how I told you about Mormoncito and his antics. Well, this one takes the cake. My comp wanted to borrow a ball that he had and so his mom put it in a bag for us. Mormoncito was less than thrilled. He screamed and bit my comp. Then it seemed like he calmed down a little bit. She was holding the bag and we were talking to the sister when all of a sudden we look down and see that he has his pants down peeing on my comp´s feet! It was hilarious! We could not believe it. He is now Diablito to us.

Oh, also I forgot to tell you that in Iquitos there aren´t really signs or billboards with ads and stuff. Mostly people just accept payment for their houses to be painted by companies. There are houses all over the place that are all green and painted with the Kola Real mark. I think it´s so funny. And politicians campaign that way too. That´s why my name is all over the streets - because there was a political candidate with my name. 

I love you all so much. Thank you for all that you do for me. I´m keeping on keeping on down here.

Hermana Fitzpatrick

-My district at Quistococha a couple weeks ago!