Monday, May 27, 2013

Eight Weeks in Panama

Alright I have thirty minutes to write so here it goes! 

This area, like I said a week ago, is really different from Chitre. I already said that everything is sooo green, but again I`ll say it is soooooo green. It`s really beautiful! I've learned that the reason it`s soooooooooooo green here is because of how much it rains! When it rains it RAINS! We always carry around umbrellas with us just in case it rains. When we leave the house I have to keep all of my books and anything that can`t get wet in plastic ziplock bags, which I bought here. 

So before I got here there were only two sisters and two elders in the church here in this area. Now there are four sisters and two elders. Since there are three companionships here instead of two, the area had to be divided differently. Last week the bishop gave us the new divisions of the area. The other day (I think it was two days ago) Hermana Alvarez and I were tracting in what we thought was our area. All of a sudden these really really dark clouds came flying towards us super fast. We kept giving each other looks and I told her I was reallllly nervous. She was really scared too so we decided to stop. There was this house that had an overhanging roof...not really sure what to call it...so we found shelter there. It got really windy and super dark but it didn't rain or anything. Hermana Alvarez said that we would wait for fifteen minutes and then start walking if it didn't rain. Ten minutes later it started pouringggg. The rain was coming down so hard that even though we had a roof over our heads we had to hold our umbrellas to the side to keep from getting wet. While we waited for the storm to calm down I read a chapter from the Book of Mormon..in Spanish of course... to Hermana Alvarez and she helped me with the pronunciation. Every once in a while we would look up from our umbrellas and see another burst of lightning. My companion would say, "Vamos a morir" [We're going to die] every once in a while. So the rain never really stopped coming down. Finally we decided to pray to know if it was safe for us to leave our temporary shelter. After that we started walking in the rain with our umbrellas. I got soakeeddddd. Literally head to toe everything was drenched. As we were walking back towards our home I noticed little red flakes on my feet. So it turns out that the soul of my shoe is red, and it was literally being torn apart because of the rain. So I`m hoping that my shoes will last for a year and a half. A lot of people here use Crocs because they`re plastic. They dry super fast...I have a pare of Crocs but they`re not the kind that other people have here. I hope that my shoes will be okay. 

So the other missionaries want to leave and I still have fifteen minutes left. I think I`m going to make them wait for me. 

Another difference between this area and Chitre is the people. The people are more direct here. When we try to talk to people, when we`re tracting, the people will say, "Speak to me." 

Alright so I`m getting kicked off the computer by my companion. 

Sorry folks. 

Love you all, 
Hermana Koehler

Monday, May 20, 2013

Santa Librada (Week 7 in Panama)


I`m really sorry that I won`t be able to write very much this time! My computer had a malfunction and I had to get help, thankfully the man that helped me spoke English, but all the same the time kept going while he was helping me and they didn't give me any more time! Sometimes I really hate computers! I wanted to reply to some of the things that you said but I`m just going to write as much as I can so I can`t really keep looking up. 

Alrightttt so my new area is San Librada, [I'm pretty sure she means Santa Librada. It looks like it's just north of Panama City-- part of a metropolis perhaps] which is pretty much...well it is, in the city! So I`ll be able to get letters a lot faster!! At Cambios aka I think the word is "transfers" in English, I got like ten letters!! So I finally got the family letter and man it was so good to read it. I`m going to try to be able to respond to it. Rachelle if you end up reading this I got your letter!! I also got...I think five letters from Greg and one essay from Jake :D So happy to finally have received letters!!!!  I hope I spelled San Librada right...anyways. 

So my companion`s name is Hermana Alvarez, don`t know if that`s spelled right, she`s from Mexico!! We share a house with two other Hermanas and they`re both from Guatemala. 

The area is so different from Chitre. Chitre was really dry and all of the plants were like yellow, but here everything is so greeeen and it`s been raining like crazy. I've started using my umbrella...like every day! haha. 

The people here aren't as receptive and don`t really let us in very often, but the people that do really seem ready.

So yeah everything's good, my health is good....I`m tanner and learning more Spanish because there`s nobody that speaks English! Well in my zone there`s two USA peeps and the Latins speak a little bit of English butttt we don't really talk in English. 

We`re going to some place called the Causeway to go skating and ride bikes and fun stuff like that today. 

I LOVE YOU ALL!!!!!!! 

The church is true!
Hermana Hannah


Monday, May 13, 2013

Sixth Week in Panama

Last night I woke up at 2 in the morning and my throat was sooo dry. I slept with the fan in my face so that was half of the problem, but I was sooo dehydrated. So I quick grabbed one of my half frozen bottles from the fridge, filled it up the rest of the way with water, and guzzled it down. Thennn I couldn`t fall back asleep for another couple hours. 

Today was P-Day! and we went to the beach! It was absolutely gorgeous and wonderful and there were lots of little crabs everywhere and it was really fun. And I`m going to try to download some photos for you!! :D















And some from earlierrrr
My zone and my district :D
And a service project




I hope I didn`t overwhelm you too much with photos!! But I figured since we were able to talk I might as well use this email time to send more photos!!
Love, 
Hermana Hannah

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Mother's Day Skype Report

This is Hermana Koehler's mom again. We were blessed to Skype with her for one hour, thirty-nine minutes, and twelve seconds this afternoon. I had a list of questions that I referred to and she answered all of them. It was a little difficult to hear her much of the time. I took a few of pictures.



She said she kept waking up last night. a lot of dogs were barking. Otherwise she's sleeping okay.

They make their own breakfasts and lunches but they often don't have time to go shopping so they often don't eat. It's very hot outside and they have many things to do in a day. They often don't have time to shop on p-day because they do fun activities with their district instead. Tomorrow they are going to the "playa" or "beach." She bought a volleyball and they will be playing with that. Once they went to a mall for their activity and once to a river.

She will be transferred soon. She'll be leaving for Panama City on Wednesday. They will have a big meeting and she will find out where she'll be sent for this transfer.

She plays the piano almost ever Sunday in sacrament meeting. They have a pianist but the pianist travels a lot. Today Hannah was embarrassed when she played "Dear to the Heart of the Shepard" wrong and the whole congregation stopped singing. Their congregation is a branch but the building is very nice, very big, and was very full today. Their chapel is apparently the nicest one in Panama in the nicest area. The place she is living is also very new and nice, probably the nicest place she'll live while on her mission.

We asked about bugs. She said she's seen a lot of little spiders but not big ones. One day a lot of little spiders came out of her shoes when she picked them up to put them on in the morning. She just washed them off in the shower. The biggest bug she has seen is a grasshopper. She trapped it in a glass and carried it outside. She also saw a big cockroach on the bus that kept going back and forth between the isles on the bus. Her companion kept stomping her feet around to try to get the cockroach to run away from them.

We asked if she's had to use her medication. She said she's used almost a full box of peptobismal, some ibuprophen, some Tylenol, bug spray (she prefers the wipes), and some after-insect-bite medication

She hasn't had much time to write in a journal. She's very tired by nighttime. Last night she fell asleep while her fingernails that she'd just painted were drying.

They haven't been able to exercise much because her current companion has knee problems. Her goal is to get to the point before the end of her mission where she can climb a coconut tree and pick one. She says there are mango trees everywhere. People try to tell directions by where the mango trees are. She said, "That doesn't really help because there are a lot of mango trees." She loves mangoes.

Where they are living now she can drink the water, but it's not like that everywhere in the mission. Sometimes they buy Gatorade, but her favorite drink is grapefruit Fresca. She didn't realize we have Fresca here in the U.S. She has a Fresca every day. She said she misses hot water and also cold water. The water is lukewarm. Ice melts in about fifteen minutes so it's not really worth it. It's usually in the 90s and the coolest it's gotten is about 75. Sometimes she sleeps with a blanket so it gets a little cold. They have a small refrigerator with a freezer. Since there's no hot water they never have hot showers. Showers are kind of cold. They are in a drought in the city right now. Everything is really brown, but they are at the very beginning of the rainy season. It has only rained once so far. Part of the city is rationing water right now where they can only use it at certain times of the day-- in the morning.

She's been told the Panama mission is "The hardest mission in Central America." The mission doesn't extend all the way to the east of Panama because apparently there are cannibals that live in the jungle there who "like white people." We're grateful there's no chance she'll be sent to that area.

Most of the people in Panama are Catholic. She said the hardest part is people work on Sunday and don't come to church. Also, they say all religions are good. So they teach a lot about the restoration of the Church and priesthood.

She's learned how to eat meat with a spoon. That's often the only utensil they are given. Sometimes they have a fork. Sometimes a knife. She said she's also learned to eat meat with her hands.

She said she gets a lot of hugs. They kiss on both cheeks there and she has to tell them, "No puedo, son misionaros." "We can't, we're missionaries." Everyone hugs and kisses as a greeting. She said she's heard you need at least twelve hugs a day to be healthy. She said she's going to come back very healthy because she gets a lot of hugs.

I asked about crime. She said it's really peaceful where they are and not a lot of crime.

I asked her if she's seen any little miracles since she's been there. She said she's seen a lot of them. Once they went to visit a family but it was really dark and nobody answered the door. But because they were there they met another family and talked with them. They knew they were in the right place at the right time. She also said her companion told her that rather than trying to find scriptures ahead of time when they're having discussions if she'll just open the scriptures she'll discover she will be at the right place. Once her companion was talking about families and prayers. She had a scripture in mind but wasn't sure where that was. So she did what her companion suggested and just opened her scriptures while she was talking and she ended up being on the exact page for the scripture she'd been thinking of. She said they also recently met a lady who told them, "I've been waiting for you." They've taught this lady three lessons so far.

She understands almost everything people say to her. If she doesn't understand a word she'll write it in a notebook and either look it up in a dictionary or ask her companion what it means. She showed us the notebook with pages full of words.

Her mission president reminds her of her Grandpa Babcock. He is "happy, loving, and always smiling." Another way he reminds her of Grandpa is sometimes he'll say something and his wife will say, "No, it was like this dear..." and she'll help him sort out his stories. He's a short man. He has a really big "A.P" or assistant to the president. He's a big Tongan and reminds her of a security guard. He makes the mission president look small. It's clear she really likes her mission president. Her new mission president will arrive in June. So for a while she'll have two mission presidents.

Hannah seemed very happy, very peaceful, and very loved by the missionaries who came in and out of the room. A sister missionary from Sandy said, "Your daughter spoke all in Spanish today when she gave her talk. She did a good job."

What a blessing Hannah is in our lives!

Friday, May 10, 2013

Training Pictures

This is Hermana Koehler's mom writing. I noticed on her mission president's photo blog some pictures of Hermana Koehler today. If you click on the link and go to the photo blog you can click on the photos and see them bigger. Otherwise, here they are:








Monday, May 6, 2013

Fifth Week in Panama


I´m really really excited to be able to see you all and talk to everyone!! I really miss you guys, I haven´t had a huge breakdown or anything but it´s been so long since I heard from the kids and Dad...is there any way you could motivate them to send me an email? That would really make my day.

I will pray for Hanan Rose, and I fasted for Grandma and Grandpa yesterday too. Please keep me updated I really want to know how he´s doing.

I realized after just reading what you wrote about Cinco de Mayo that I haven´t really said anything about the food here!! Sooo I thought it would be like Mexican food...well it´s really not. We are given rice, chicken or beef, and these fried plantain things...not really sure how to spell that. The people here cook really well. I've never had so much rice before in my life. My diet is missing vegetables, everything else I definitely have plenty of. So Hermana Molina and I cook our own breakfast and lunch. We usually have something small for breakfast, like eggs, toast, and an apple or a mango. Then for lunch we have potatoes or sandwiches. Recently we haven´t been eating much of anything except for mangoes...I really like mangoes....understatement...I loveeee the mangoes here. They´re really good. I've learned that when mangoes aren't fully ripe yet all you have to do is add a little bit of salt and they´re amazing. What I don´t like is when the mangoes are too ripe cause then they´re kind of slimy and that´s not so good. Sometimes I like the fried banana things and sometimes I don´t. I don´t like them when they're cold and slimy and really sweet, but I do like them when they´re crunchy and hot...they taste kind of like french fries. You use canola oil, cut up the banana, fry the banana, and add a little bit of salt. I've never actually done it myself but that´s what I was told when I asked how you cook them. Maybe you can give it a try and let me know how it turns out!

Yesterday we had dinner with the family that we´re living with...we´re living in a house right behind theirs in their yard...and the mom said that I've lost weight.

That´s really crazy about Brother Johnson...I hope he´s okay! That´s really good that there are experienced health professionals that were able to help him!

That´s awesome that you were able to understand all of that Spanish! I sure hope that when I get back I´ll be able to understand too! I like to think that I´d be able to now. For the most part I can understand everything, it´s just when people talk really quiet, really fast, or with a really strong accent that I have no idea what they´re saying.
As far as gifts go, I´m not really sure what gift of the Spirit I have...any ideas? Hopefully the gift of tongues....I've been saying some really crazy things though. The problem is that I've gotten to the point where I´ll just open my mouth and the Spanish spills out. That´s bad because I´ll mess soooo many things up...for example, yesterday Hermana Molina and I visited a less active family. We taught them about prophets. I had my Ensign with me so I opened up to the page that has all of their pictures and I pointed to the pictures and said, "Ustedes son profetas,"....I´ll let you figure out what that means...you probably already know...[you are prophets] so yeah pretty bad...

Once again I wrote down something that you said: "Little children can find happiness so easily. They can be good examples of letting even little happy things cheer them up." So I've been so good about this while I've been here...finding little things that make me happy. I haven´t had a single day where I was down in the dumps. Whenever things go wrong Hermana Molina and I find ways to make it funny, to laugh at ourselves if we have to. We´re planning on having a really great amazing successful week this upcoming week. I really think it will be the best week so far.

It´s supposed to be the rainy season now but it hasn't really even rained yet. So apparently it doesn't get colder when it rains, it actually feels hotter because when the water evaporates there´s like hot steam rising up...not so much looking forward to that.

Lots of love,
Hermana Koehler

Also! I forgot to tell you I have changes! My trainer is going to become a zone leader so she needs a companion that can be a zone leader too...anddd since I´m new the president has decided to change me to a new area. I have no idea where I´ll be sent. A few sisters had an emergency change so for all I know I might be staying here...but I was told I have changes so I guess I do. I´ll let you know what happens.