My normal has been very different than it was last year. A closet, American food and AC just begin the list of things that I once considered normal, but no longer are these days. So, for fun, here is a list of completely normal things that I experience on a regular basis:

 

-Having 3 different currencies in my wallet and not knowing which one will actually buy my snacks. Haha

– Finding at least 3 bugs in the shower every day (usually spiders)

– Sometimes deciding not to kill said bugs and just showering in their company

– Paying 4xs a regular taxi fare because you’re American

 

– Forgetting the correct exchange rate 

– Ants biting you/cockroaches crawling on you while in your bed

 

– Sweating all the time

 

-Being a minority

– Frequently running out of water (no showers, flushing toilet, laundry, etc) 

 

– Electricity shutting off randomly, sometimes for multiple hours or days at a time

 

-Toilets without toilet seats 

– Washing laundry in a buckets

– Hang drying clothes

 

– Having to use Google translate to order anything 

– Choosing between the same 5 outfits each day (makes it much easier, haha)

– Wearing the same outfit 3 days in a row to cut down on laundry

 

– Mosquito bites ALL of the time 

– Checking and being checked for lice every evening

 

– Coating hair in olive oil every day to keep said lice away

 

– Sleeping with a plastic sack on my head to suffocate lice 

– Going into public with olive oil in hair still

– Sharing the bathroom with at least 5 other people, but normally 20 other people

 

-Leading worship

– Sleeping on the floor

 

 

-Buying meat from people selling it on the side of the road (and having no idea how long it’s been there) 

– Ads on my phone in every language except English 

– Responding to the native languages’ word for “white person.”

– Being offered all kinds of interesting foods ranging from shark meat, to a chicken head, to a caterpillar to tiny freeze dried fish and everything in between

– Having to manually flush the toilet (by pouring water into it)

– Having to pay to use a public restroom 

 

– No toilet paper in the restrooms

– Cold showers

– Using a bucket to shower

 

– Using a hose attached to a bathroom wall to shower

– Wearing the same pair of shoes every single day

– Getting in a car without actually knowing where we’re going

 

– Preaching

– Being asked to preach the day of

– Preaching with a translator

– Preaching with a translator who knows very little English

– Eating the same food every single day and sometimes multiple times a day

– Having scheduled time to hang out with the people you live with

– Being intentional about giving feedback to the people you live with

 

– Having to be driven to/picked up from everywhere

– Never knowing what the next day holds- what you will be doing/where you will be going

 

-Never being alone

 

 

– Strangers asking to take pictures with you (or just taking them of you as you walk by)

– Sitting in teachings/services/meetings in a different language (with no translator)

– Having to eat far more food than you want, so as not to appear rude

 

– Being offered food while you’re still eating food

– Being offered food right after you finish eating food

– Being surrounded by people who encourage you to become more like Jesus 

 

Though some of these things can get frustrating, I really believe I’m going to miss them one day (though maybe not too soon). This has been an incredible year with many opportunities I may never have again. I am thankful for the time I’ve had here, for the people that have helped me to grow and for the things I have learned about the world and our Lord.

See y’all in just two weeks, friends!