Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Young Single Adult Camp in Bonao!


Carolina and I never like to miss out the action! We heard there was a mission-wide YSA conference one weekend, and they said we could go! I was especially excited for the dance part of it! We loaded up in a small bus with some of our friends from the ward we attend and rode out the the western part of the country where the Church owns a gorgeous property up in the green, tropical hills that they use for youth camps as well!


"Chastity Bridge" Don't cross the line at night! ;)




What is this fruit!? Our friends told us to pick it off the tree and eat it right there! The inside was white and tasted kind of like a mix between an apple and a pear.



 



They split us all up into little wood cabins with cots to sleep on, with 8-10 girls each! the girls I met were hilarious and kept me entertained! (Even if they talk so fast in their Dominican accents that I can barely understand them.) They immediately loved me and made me feel included. We have even been keeping in touch through our "WhatsApp" chat group named after our cabin, Zacarías 2.



Swarming the ice cream man who randomly pulled up by the camp before our drive home.


Monday, March 21, 2016

Colonial Zone!




The Dominican Republic has incredible history, especially dating to the time of early colonization of Christopher Columbus. Santo Domingo was the first colony set up by the Spanish, and claims some of the oldest buildings in the "New World," including gorgeous Catholic cathedrals and forts up to more than 500 years old! Last weekend decided to hop in a "public car" down the road to the "Colonial Zone," a popular tourist area. We breezed through and found some fun souvenirs, peeked in the museum/ cathedral, and met some cool people.



















Transportation in the Dominican Republic! It's LOCO!

I just had to write about this unforgettable aspect of life in the DR so I don't forget about it... (Disclaimer: I don't take my iPhone out in public to take pictures, so most of these photos are off Google, but I thought they were a good representation.)


Public transportation is such an aggressive, alien concept here for me! Cars are always smashed up centimeters from each other with motorcycles with men, women, children and babies piled on them, weaving in between other vehicles on every side. There are carritos públicos that are like little, beat-up taxis that go the same route up and down the road carrying 7 people at a time- 2 in the front passenger seat and 4 in the back. You get used to the idea of getting up close and personal with strangers really fast if you take that route!

            There are also guaguas, or buses, that people pile into as well. Some are bigger and size and a little nicer quality, with specified stops on the side of the road where people get on and off. Other guaguas are smaller, and there the cobrador, or money-charger, hangs out of the window yelling at people anywhere on the street to get on and piling in as many passengers as possible. Certain types of these smaller buses are called boladores, or “flyers,” because the fly down the road at ridiculous speeds until they can collect another passenger or someone yells to be dropped off near their destination. Another option is the metro, or underground subway system. It’s a whole other little world down there, though it’s not nearly as complex as the ones I’ve been to in New York and Mexico City. There are only 2 metro lines in Santo Domingo that go 2 directions each, and the distance is limited, but it can come in very handy sometimes! If you get on at a busy time though, you are cramped in with people, and you’d better book it off at your stop before the doors close!

            The benefit of using one of these public transportation methods instead of a taxi when you don’t have a car is that the rate is about 100% less. For example, this evening we called a taxi to take us to a devotional at a church meetinghouse about 20 minutes away and were charged 250 Dominican pesos ($5.48 US dollars). We took a guagua back from the devotional and walked a little ways from the main road to our apartment, and spent only 25 Dominican pesos each (55 cents in US currency). The metro only costs about 60 pesos ($1.32 USD) for both ways, in comparison to about a 400 pesos ($8.78 USD) in taxi both ways for a short distance.We have to be really cautious about the modes of transportation we use to be safe, and avoid traveling at night, but we feel pretty proud of ourselves once we make it somewhere alive and feel like we’re getting the hang of it!

            Then there’s the option of getting around with the senior missionary couples, if we’re lucky! We’ve been blessed to have them offer to take us to and from church every Sunday, home from the institute building a few times, and a couple of other places! It’s pretty entertaining to witness elderly American couples maneuver the streets of Santo Domingo. We may have taken a few extra detours along the way a couple of times, but overall it’s pretty impressive to see that Dominican defensive attitude come out of these sweet missionaries on the roads! On the other hand, our trips to meetings with our local Dominican Self-Reliance Manager is like a rocket ride zipping to whichever chapel we’re going to. But he knows what he’s doing and we make it just fine.  

Gotta love the fruit vendors on the road!


Friday, March 4, 2016

Americans Among the Dominican Returned Missionaries!


Another fun opportunity we've had while working in the Self-Reliance Center in Santo Domingo has been participating in and helping a bit with the monthly seminars held for the recently returned missionaries who come from the country! Church leaders, employees, and missionaries teach important principles of continuing in faith and purpose, goal-setting and planning, and principles of self-reliance to help RM's start off their post-mission life on the right foot! We get to attend temple a temple session as well and hear from members of the Santo Domingo Temple Presidency as part of it, which is a beautiful experience. 




 They also feed the returned missionaries (last time it was KFC for dinner!) and let them stay overnight in the housing next to the temple.


It's fun to make new friends here! I am inspired by all of these faithful, hardworking returned missionaries who come back from different parts of the world with burning testimonies and promising futures.