November 14, 2007 – November 21, 2007
Our electricity bill
ending in November, and our previous month’s bill for comparison. Something
obviously went wrong with our meter. We had to take time out of our week to
find our landlady and ask her what to do about it. She was nice enough to take
care of it for us.
Once the
novelty of doing new things in a new place wore off, I started to notice that
being a missionary wasn’t always the most fun. There were several times during
my first month in Mexico when I felt like I wanted to go home. It was never
enough to get me to think seriously about quitting; even back then I knew I
would appreciate the experience of having completed a mission; I just wished I could have
all the memories and character-building without doing the work necessary to
make them happen. There were a few times when I didn't enjoy
dealing with a lot of the things that come with throwing yourself into a totally
new culture.
For example, our
meal schedule took some getting used to. Members of the ward would sign up to
give us lunch each day at 2:00, which is the largest meal of the day. We were
on our own for the rest, which usually meant we didn’t eat much else at all. Occasionally
we’d get a snack or something, but I don’t think Elder Guerra and I ever went
grocery shopping, weird as that sounds. I remember feeling really hungry in the
mornings and at night. But the people we met with offered us food all the time.
My first day in the field, we ended up eating three separate lunches. I thought
I was going to throw up. So my first month in the field, I was starving for
about half of each day and overstuffed for the other half.
I didn’t like
the food at first, either. Even though I’d liked “Mexican” food in the states,
the flavors and spices they used in Mexico were unfamiliar and unappealing to
me at the time. The members served us a lot of chicken, probably because it was
cheaper than other meats. Sometimes it would be grilled, breaded, or served
with a thick sauce over it. One example of the latter is mole, which is a dense, heavily-spiced sauce that’s often served
over meat and rice. I had tried mole
once before coming to Mexico, and I didn’t like it. I didn’t much like it when
I got there, either. It was such a heavy bundle of flavors that I got full only
halfway through my plate. And when I finally finished it all, they piled on a
second serving! But I ate it. I had to eat everything they gave me; they were
feeding us at their own expense, and doing so was probably a financial
sacrifice for many of them. Plus I wanted the members and investigators to like
me. I could tell they liked Elder Guerra, and I hoped that I could build
rapport with them by not being one of those
gringo missionaries that’s uncomfortable with everything that all the members
joked about.
Even still,
there were some foods I had some serious trouble with. I hate fresh bananas. I
hate them now, I hated them before my mission, and I hated them during my
mission, too. But bananas grow in Veracruz, and unlike other fruits, they’re
harvested all year round, so there’s never any shortage of supply. Plátanos con crema (bananas with cream)
was the most common dessert I was served in Xalapa. I’d finally make it through
a meal, stuffed to the brim full of unfamiliar food, think I was at the end,
and then get served with a bowl full of my nemesis, plátanos con crema. I still ate it, most of the time, but there
were a couple of times that I would ask Elder Guerra to finish mine off for me
if the family serving us stepped out of the room for a minute.
I also
encountered a new nemesis during my first month: mojarra frita (fried tilapia), complete with scales, fins, and
head, gazing dopily at me on my plate. I’d never eaten anything that so closely
resembled what it looked like while it was alive, so it was pretty unnerving
for me. To make matters worse, Elder Guerra leaned over to tell me to be
careful not to accidentally swallow the spines inside the fish that easily get
caught inside the meat. This was too much. As I watched Elder Guerra pull back
the scales and start tearing little bits of fish flesh with his tortilla, I
couldn’t imagine even getting any closer to the creature on my plate in front
of me, let alone open it up and put its pieces in my mouth. I threw in the
towel. I felt bad, but I couldn’t get myself to eat more than a couple of
bites. The woman serving us seemed a little put off, too. Afterward I was angry
with myself for being that gringo
after all. The happy ending is that after more time in Mexico I learned to
crave mole and mojarra and a million other dishes (still no love for raw bananas,
however). But at the beginning of my mission the food was a burden for me.
My journal
entry for a different day in November says, “Well, today was weird. The only
good thing was the food.” It was breaded pork; it tasted familiar and had a
nice flavor. Elder Guerra again leaned over to ask me if I was sure that I
could eat pork, which he said was “heavy.” The family chimed in, saying I could
eat something else if I couldn’t handle it. I told them of course I could; I
liked it. So I enjoyed the meal and counted it as the high note to an otherwise
not-great day.
Too bad I was
wrong about the pork. My journal entry for the following day is only three
lines long but makes very clear that I’d gotten food poisoning. Worst of all
was how stupid I felt from having told everyone how I’d be fine and how it
wouldn’t hurt me. Whoops. Welcome to Mexico.
Having no food
at home made things even worse. Actually, there was a little bit, but it was
all pretty old and probably not worth eating. Trying some old piece of food you
find in a Mexican missionary’s fridge is a way bigger gamble than eating breaded
pork. So mostly I’d been snacking on some mandarins that we had (at least with
them you could tell whether they’d gone bad or not). But I wasn’t eating much
else, and neither was Elder Guerra. We were pretty much on a one-meal-per-day
schedule then, so when a member offered us a lunch that I didn’t like, it made
life even harder. Of course, these were largely self-inflicted wounds resulting
from my own culture shock.
My second
Sunday in Mexico, Elder Guerra told me it was my turn to teach the Sunday school
class since he did it the previous week. I didn’t have time to prepare
anything, and having never done anything like it before, I stumbled badly
enough that Elder Guerra decided to jump back in and help me after all. I was
embarrassed but glad he did. I was also really tired that day because some of
our neighbors had decided to sing and play mariachi music right outside our
window from twelve to two in the morning. To this day, I still don’t know what
they were celebrating (none of the holidays line up with the date), but I was
really frustrated.
All these
little problems added up for me. I can’t speak for Elder Guerra, but I can only
assume I wasn’t too pleasant to work with during this time. I got easily
frustrated with myself and my situation, and I probably took it out on Elder
Guerra more often than not. If I had just learned to laugh at myself and not
take things so life-and-death seriously, I probably would have been a lot
happier and maybe even had more success as a missionary. Unfortunately, it took
me much longer to learn those lessons.
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