HOLA FAMILIA.
¿Como estan? Les extraño mucho. Y ¿como
 fue su año nuevo? AND THAT'S ALL THE SPANISH I'M GOING TO DO because I 
feel like if I do any more, the Spanish speakers that are reading this 
are going to judge hard core my imperfect spanish. So.
This week was interesting! It was good, but 
just...interesting. We got humbled. We had about two days straight of 
pure contacting. "Hola, ¿como esta? Bueno, queremos presentarnos porque 
somos misioneras...de la Iglesia de Jesucristo de los santos de los 
ultimos días. ¿Usted ha hablado con misioneros antes? Oh, ¿su hija esta 
enferma/usted va a salir ahorita/tiene visitas? Esta bien. ¿Podemos 
regressar otro dia, entonces? ¿Si? ¿No? Bueno, esta bien, pasaremos, 
entonces. ¡Chow, Gracias!" Literally...no one was letting us into their 
house. We usually offer to just enter their house, sing a hymn and offer
 a prayer, which pretty much gets us invited in at least half the time. 
But these people were not havin it this week! We felt a little down for 
these two days, since we had such a rocking week last week! But we just 
kept on rollin and we ended up having some pretty good success in the 
end. But still...those days were a little rough. Go ask any missionary 
if contacting for two days is fun.
Also, ¡Feliz año nuevo! Holy cow, we're in 2014!! I 
can't believe it. It doesn't feel like I've been in the mission for 
(almost) six months. Time really flies. Hermana Kenney and I were 
talking about how these last two weeks have been the absolute fastest of
 the mission.
Speaking of New Years...the missionaries in our mission had to be in their casas before 7pm
 that night, since I guess the Chileans go a little crazy with the 
fiestas and the drinking and all that. So we had a nice little dinner 
with our new roomies (Hermana Gonzales and Hermana Villareal.) It was 
really nice! Then we planned and updated our carpeta, and got ready to 
sleep. 
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The next morning, I turned to Hermana Kenney and 
commented on how surprised I was that I hadn't heard any fiestas, loud 
shouting, chanting, music, or ANYTHING the night before. In fact, I felt
 really unusually rested. She agreed with me, that it was weird we 
hadn't heard anything. We decided between ourselves that Chileans don't 
really care about New Years Eve after all. Well, then we walked out into
 the living room to find a very frazzled Hermana Gonzales, followed my 
an extremely drowsy Hermana Villareal, both sleep deprived and seeming 
to be falling apart from exhaustion. They said they MAYBE got an hours 
sleep in the night before, due to all the HARD-CORE PARTYING that was 
going on from all sides all night (above us, below us, next to us, in 
the plaza, etc.) But Hermana Kenney and I had been dying of heat in the 
night, and we'd even slept with the window WIDE OPEN. AND IT'S A BIG 
WINDOW. LIKE, A HUGE WINDOW. LIKE IT'S SLIDING DOORS. (I guess I could 
have said sliding doors from the beginning.) The Hermanas said that 
they'd shut both their windows and covered their faces, but the noise 
was so loud. Personally, I had kicked off all the blankets I had on me 
during the night, and I really had no ear protection at all. But Hermana
 Kenney and I had slept the night away like little rocks! 
Working really REALLY hard pays off, people! You can sleep through anything, apparently! 
I've
 also had some classic moments this week with my companion. We went 
looking for an old investigator who was living with her boyfriend 
before, and when we got to her boyfriend's house, we shouted "alo!" and a
 drunk old lady shouted "¿Que quieres?!?" So we said we wanted to visit 
Flor, to which the old lady shouted, "¡No vive aqui...no más!" (This is 
really good news, since the boyfriend was the person telling Flor that 
she should drop the missionaries, so obviously, we wanted to know where 
she lived now so that we could continue teaching her!) So Hermana Kenney
 asked where she lived now, and the old lady grumbled something. (By the
 way, we can't see this lady because of this huge wooden gate.) Hermana 
Kenney asked again, and again the old drunk lady grumbled something 
again. Hermana Kenney asked one more time, and this time, clear as day, 
the old lady shouted, "NO. VIVE. AQUI. PORFIADA." ("Porfiada" is a word 
that chileans use to describe someone super annoying and super 
persistent.) Needless to say, we have no idea where Flor lives now.
My companion also grew up without any TV. I keep 
forgetting this, and quoting TV commercials. Anyway, the other day I 
told her a joke with the punchline "Silly Rabbit, Trix are for kids," 
and she just stared at me like she was still waiting for the end of the 
joke. So this began a big long discussion of catching her up with the 
popular phrases of almost everyone's childhood. Then we started a 
guessing game, where I would say the catch phrase and she had to guess 
what product it referred to. We were doing things like "it's magically 
delicious!" or "looks like cookies, tastes like 'em too, but it's a 
breakfast cereal!" or "the taste you can see!" or "cinna-man is the 
winna-man." And she was actually doing really good at guessing...then I 
got to "they're grrrrrRRREAT!" She looked a little stumped, then 
innocently guessed, "...grape-nuts?" I think I died three times from 
laughing so hard. I am such a punk.
Maria Elizabeth is getting baptized this Saturday!
 We are so excited. This has been the first person who has progressed to
 baptism in my mission, and it has been amazing to watch her life be so 
blessed, and for her to find so much joy in learning about the gospel of
 Christ and drawing nearer to our Savior. She is so enthusiastic for her
 baptism. The other day she bore a simple testimony of gratitude to us 
in a lesson, and I felt this emotion well up in my chest that is 
indescribable. I am excited to take pictures and send them to you next 
week! Please pray that everything will work out well in these next 
coming days!
The gospel is true. I know that Jesus Christ is my 
Savior and loving Older Brother. Every day I learn a little more about 
the atonement, and how he really did suffer for each and every one of 
us. He is in the details of everything in our lives. He has a hand in 
everything. There is no such thing as coincidences. I know that every 
good thing that comes to a person comes through our Father in Heaven and
 his Son, Jesus Christ. I know that I am preaching the only true gospel 
in the world. I know I'm exactly where I need to be, and although I'm 
weak, I know the Lord will help me magnify this calling..."For I know in
 whom I have trusted" (2 Nefi 4. Read it.) 
I LOVE YOU ALL SO MUCH. I REALLY DO. Oh, and a very happy 39th birthday to my Auntie Chelle! 
KEEP
 READING AND PRAYING AND WRITING ME AND ALSO GOING TO CHURCH. Because 
it's all important. Especially the reading and praying and going to 
church part.
KEEP ME UPDATED. Love yas!
Love, Hermana Thomas

 
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