Sing like from Charlie Brown!
JK anyway it has not felt like Christmas. Like at all. It's been so warm and green and idk not Christmas like. But I will say Christmas is cool here. Christmas Eve is apparently the time to celebrate here. For dinner we had traditional tamales and potato salad with fruit in it. It was interesting but really good. Then I stayed up until Midnight with all the Latinas until the fireworks went off. I have never in all my life seen so many fireworks. It was insane! Really loud and really pretty.
My Norte sisters left me last week for their missions and I thought it would be lonely but to be honest with you I'm having even more fun with my Latinas! They're all super close and are super inclusive. If I have no idea what's going on they're sure to stop and have someone translate for me so I can be included. And not only that, but just hanging around with them and sitting with them during meals my conversational Spanish has improved loads! It truly is amazing. I love my Hermanas and I'm sad I only get to go to the mission field with only a couple of them. Most of them are going off to different countries.
My actual Christmas was super chill. We had a more American traditional Christmas dinner with Ham and potatoes and all that. And the Temple pres. and his wife brought over tons of cookies. That made me happy inside. No doubt about it. And may I just say I really love the old ladies here. That sounds truly horrible but the mission pres's wife, the nurse, and the emotional health lady are so kind and supportive to me. They gave me a stocking and little presents and just are such sweet people. Really I think this Christmas has just helped me to love people. Everyone. Hopefully I can keep that feeling for the entire time I'm on my mission. But we'll see.
Sunday was really stressful but good at the same time. I've been given the calling of music director in my rama here at the CCM. So that means picking out all the songs and figuring out who's playing the piano and conducting for every single song that is sung on Sunday. So I did that. I taught a relief society lesson, I gave a talk (in Spanish, it was ok), I played piano in one of the meetings, sung a musical number with my district, and I taught a 10 min lesson in Sunday school. And as much as it was a lot it was really amazing. Before I left I got a blessing from mi papa that said don't hide your talents. And I'm definitely not doing that even though at times I really want to. So I want to encourage you. No invite. Cause that's what missionaries do. To not hide your talents and just go forward with confidence in all that you're asked to do.
Oh and a fun fact. It's a good thing I've been kind of improving my voice by singing to my sibs every night because I've been forced into more singing here than anywhere else in my entire life. I was asked to sing Alto in a choir performance for a bunch of Guatemalan dignitaries, sung a christmas song in Quechi which is a dialect here that sounds freaking weird and is hard to speak (the native Spanish speakers here have to spend 9 weeks here at the CCM to learn it.), and I had my musical number with my gang of boys, and (last night was really cool) I sung with all the american's out of the Children's song book. But being the only girl I had to sing soooooo loud.
Anyway I love you people! Don't hide your talents whatever they may be! I hope you had a fantabulous Christmas! Till next time!