Sunday, September 30, 2012

churchy church weekend

We had a great weekend.

On Friday the Rama Bonaire had it's 22nd birthday! same age as me. we are basically twins.

In order to celebrate we had a birthday party for the Branch. There was a slide show put together of all of the baptisms that have taken place in the last 22 years. It was so cool to see all the members faces light up as each of their pictures came up on the screen. After the slide show we had cake. Not just any cake, but cake The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints/Bonaire style. Which means 5 cakes.

These cakes were all so good. so good that I probably ate the equivalent of an entire cake by myself.
Hey, I'm pregnant, so I can.

First we sang happy birthday. once in english and once in papamiento. then the oldest and the youngest members of the branch got to blow out the candles. Dira is 3 and Josepha is 76. love them both.


The next day, Saturday, was Rama Bonaire's first baptism of 2012! His name is Machtonio Christiaano and he is super cool. He actually flagged the missionaries down while they were riding their bikes and told them he wanted to change his life and asked for their help.

In Bonaire, they don't have a baptismal font, so they do their baptisms in the ocean. way awesome.

Here are some pictures of Michtonios baptism.

Brandon was the designated picture taker.


Walking to the "font"

Before

During

After

It was such a great experience. So glad that we could be part of it.

Later that night, after the baptism, was the General Relief Society Meeting Broadcast. Love here from our leaders and getting to know the new Presidency.



Here is the link to the General Relief Society Meeting Broadcast in case you missed it!


Such a great churchy church weekend! So grateful for my membership in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

muevete


We moved!! Sadly our time at the place we were housesitting- you know the one with the pool- is over. We really loved it over there-especially because of the pool- but we really like our new place too.

It's pretty small. It actually makes our apartment in Hawaii seem huge. But it's brand new and really clean. 

 Plus our landlords are awesome. I mean super awesome. Feed us all the time and give us things like a microwave and toaster oven awesome. love them already.

Here is our living room/dinning room/kitchen. No oven, but has a huge fridge. no cupboards, but we are going to put up some shelves. and of course, now we have a microwave and a toaster oven. super cool.

This is our bedroom/family room. (same room) our bed is super comfy and we have a fan AND an air conditioner. our TV is brand new too.


This is the closet we get to share. 

And this is the glass door that leads from our bedroom to the bathroom. yes that is the toilet you can see.

And this picture of the bathroom completes the virtual tour.

We are super grateful for this place and actually super lucky to find it. Never thought I would live in a place smaller than Hawaii, but it's all part of becoming Bonairian.

Monday, September 24, 2012

European Style...

Another week. 

Brandon is doing great in school. His first test in all of his classes are this coming Friday and Monday. This is getting more real! He is going to do great though. I have spent many late hours quizzing him, and he knows his stuff. Wish him luck!

I was able to find a job! I should start this week. Yay! It's at a beach bar/restaurant called Karels. Its funny how I even got it in the first place. Brandon had a school get together at Karels and when Brandon and I went up to the bar to order our sodas the manager happened to be the bar tender and when he found out I wasn't a student and I was staying on the island and not just visiting he basically hired me on the spot. I didn't think that I was allowed to work while I was here, but apparently I can because I'm not a student. Awesome. It seriously is a huge blessing.

Brandon wanted me to put up some pictures of our very European supermarket, Van Dan Tweel.



Weirdest thing. If you want a normal sized shopping cart you have to pay like 50 cents or something like that, so we use the super tiny, free shopping basket.

They ONLY have bakery bread here. Darn.

And so much GOOD cheese.

Holland...

Brandon's new addiction. But seriously he eats this whole thing in less than a week.

Yes, we buy milk in liters than comes in a carton and isn't refrigerated.

Still not sure what that means.

Or this.

Or this.

Haha. We mostly shop by pictures.

In other news...

Brandon joined the school soccer team and went to his first game on Saturday Night. They have a pretty legit league here that everyone takes pretty seriously. He did great. I mean really great. No mistakes great. and he had fun. 
He is the one in the light yellow shirt.



Funny story--I went to the stadium with Brandon before the game. I was the first non-player there and so I was sitting by myself when the team started warming up. After a few mins, these two girls show up, each with a bottle of liquor in there hands, and sit behind me and start talking about the team. Well about how they just come to see all the hot guys and that last semester they had hotter guys, and how they wish they had hot guys on the team this year, etc. and then one of them says, "Oh my gosh! Hot Married Guy is playing!" And then they kept going on about how hot he was and that they did the ring check and were so sad, blah, blah, blah. ( I was laughing to myself the whole time, because I was pretty sure they were talking about Brandon since he is really hot and as far as I knew the only married guy on the team.) So then another student shows up to watch the game and he happens to be in Brandon's class and they ask him what Hot Married Guy's name was and he said, "Oh that's Brandon." And I turned around and said, "Haha in your face! That's my husband!" Okay i didn't say "in your face", but I did say that he was my husband and those girls got SO, SO embarrassed. It was awesome.

ALSO, the most exciting news of all this week:

I bought Brandon a speedo. Yes, it is awesome. And it was only $5. How can anyone say no to that?! Everyone around here wears them anyway, and when in Bonaire... 
Plus,  he IS the hot married guy.


Chao for now.


Monday, September 17, 2012

Donkey, Med School, Donkey Beach


We ran into a wild donkey while we were walking home the other night. no bid deal. this one was kinda creepy though. It emerged from the side of the road as we walked past and just stared at us. Why are they so weird?



Brandon just finished his first full week of classes and his brain was fried by the time Friday night rolled around. He was very, very excited for the weekend. His schedule is chuck full with very little down time. 

He leaves at 7:15am and gets home about 5:30pm and then studies from 7pm to 11pm or midnight. Busy Guy! He is doing really well though. Things have started "clicking" for him and now instead of hoping the teacher doesn't call on him, he is one of the first ones to put his hand up. So proud of him.

Sometimes though, after a long day of dissecting human bodies, he comes home smelling like formaldehyde.

#gross #gag #nothankyou

I do laundry a lot.

We did celebrate checking off the first full week of Med School by going to the beach.
after studying ALL morning of course.

This is Donkey Beach. Its our new fav.   






What's Med School without a little beach time, right?


OH yeah, and I hit 19 weeks. almost halfway done. yay.



Wednesday, September 12, 2012

just something you have to get used to...?


this is a picture of a REAL LIVE TOILET MONSTER... 

only found in Bonaire....

great.


new rule. 

always check the toilet before doing your business or you might get a literal "nip in the bud"

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

A true Bonairian car

We got a car! Yay. The cars here are...interesting. To have a true Bonairian car it must be tiny, dirty, and falling apart in one way or another. Here is ours.







Bonaire has hardly any rules when it comes to cars and driving.  There is no such thing as a safety inspection. In fact, all the cars that don't pass the safely inspection in Holland are sent to Bonaire. Seat belt aren't require, or car seats. Children just sit on their parents laps. no big deal. There aren't really stop signs here either. Mostly yield signs, I guess you could say. Driving on the sidewalks is acceptable. Car horns are to be used at all times. They are for getting someones attention, road rage, saying hello, and letting people know that you are there. Car horns are even used instead of knocking or door bells when you go to someones house. Just one more thing I love about Bonaire.

Monday, September 10, 2012

BON BINI!

This is where we are.


And this is real life.



We have survived our first week living in Bonaire!! To be honest the first day was definitely a cultural shock. It first hit when we went to the grocery store and everything was in Dutch! We hoped we were buying what we thought we were... 

Bonaire is like a mix of Europe and Mexico. 
 It has a lot of European influence, but the streets and the houses look exactly like Tulum, Mexico where we spent our honeymoon. Its a good combination though I think.

It is SO hot here. But its a different kind of heat. It doesn't feel like Hawaii, or the East Coast, or the West Coast, or Utah. Its humid, but in a different way. And it is almost impossible to be anywhere without a fan or A/C on. But we are slowly getting used to it.

It is very different here than the States.

They only have one temperature of water. Luke Warm. No hot. No cold. If you want either you have to do it yourself. They do have a small water heater that you can switch on for the shower, but we don't use it. I never thought that I could survive without a hot shower, but right now a hot shower is the last thing I want.

They don't have dryers. Just clothes lines. The funny thing is, it is pretty windy here so your clothes dry faster than a dryer, but the chance of getting your clothes dirty while drying is much, much higher.

The way that they eat here is different too. Nothing is self-serve or buffet style. Even at home. We ate dinner at the Branch Presidents house and our food was brought out on our plate. Everyone gets the same amount of food and you don't get to choose what you want or not. and the only food on the table is the food on your plate. They did it the same way at the branch activity we went to last week. When it was time to eat they just handed us a plate of food. No serving. No choosing. Luckily all the food here is pretty good.

They have all sorts of wild animals that just roam around town. Donkeys, goats, pigs, iguanas, whiptail lizards, flamingos... we even saw a wild chicken. The iguanas and lizard creep me out the most.






Bonaire is a tropical desert. 

They have beach and palms trees, 



but also tons of cactus.



The ocean here is amazing. SO clear. you can see you toes when you are waste deep! just by looking down. you don't even have to put your head in the water or put goggles on! its kinda creepy though because you can also see fish swimming around your feet! They also just do free diving here. you don't need a dive master or anything and you see people just walking with there swim suits and tanks into the water from the beach! and the water is so warm. 90 degrees. Enough said.


 They love the flamingos here. You see something to do with flamingos just about everywhere you go.



This is the place we are housesitting until September 26th. Yes it has a pool. and yes we found a crab in it the other day!




The branch here is very small and in spanish/papamientu, but we absolutely love it. The members are amazing here and so are the Elders and the Senior Missionary couple. I already feel like they are family. The hermanas are so excited that I am having a baby! They are constantly giving me food for the baby. They bring it to church and give it to me between classes. It is so funny. We watched a CES fireside last night and there was refreshments and one of the hermanas made me a to go plate with of a bunch of the refreshments and told me it was for the baby. Then she said that our baby will have lots of Bonairian Aunties. I'm excited.

Right now I understand very little at church. maybe 25% of what they are saying. but on the first sunday they asked me to teach Relief Society the next Sunday in Spanish. I accepted and I'm proud to say that it went pretty well. I wrote everything down that I wanted to say, so I basically just read everything, but they understood what I was saying even though I didn't. They hardest part was not being able to really understand their comments. I'm anxious to learn more spanish.

Our church building is just a house that they rent. Here is a picture of the Elder's Quorum lesson. Its on the front porch!
Inside the glass doors is where Sacrament meeting, Sunday School, and Relief Society is. The two rooms in the house are used for the primary and the Branch Presidents office and the youth meet on the back porch. Its pretty awesome.

Well, we live in Bonaire. Baby is growing and Brandon is doing well in school. We found a car and an apartment for when we are done housesitting. I will try to remember to take more pictures and keep updating!