So now,
HERE I AM, IN BALFATE, COLÓN, HONDURAS. You have no idea how many times I’ve
had to tell myself that in the past three weeks. I have to constantly remind
myself that this is real… that I’m here. This is my new home for nearly the
next year. So I have to be fully
present here. I have to embrace or at
least accept all of it, both the exhilarating and the challenging. It amazes me to think that coming to learn and
serve in Honduras has been a dream of mine for at least the past two years, and
now God has actually brought me here. I praise Him and thank you all for the
prayers and the support! I wouldn’t be working here without it. However, when
you pray for something and dream about it for so long, you build up certain
expectations about what it would be like, and as I am learning yet again,
things never go according to our perfect plans and expectations. For me,
Honduras is both what I hoped for and so completely different. It is both
wonderful and oh-so-difficult.
Let me try to break it down for you, and really for me, because I need some help processing everything that has been happening as well! That reminds me… I apologize to those of you who were hoping for an update earlier than three weeks in. I tried to write several times, but found that I didn’t know how to explain life here to others when I couldn’t wrap my head around it myself. So here we go, let’s see if I can bring you along on this journey with me now!
Let me try to break it down for you, and really for me, because I need some help processing everything that has been happening as well! That reminds me… I apologize to those of you who were hoping for an update earlier than three weeks in. I tried to write several times, but found that I didn’t know how to explain life here to others when I couldn’t wrap my head around it myself. So here we go, let’s see if I can bring you along on this journey with me now!
*If you are in a rush and don’t have time to read this book
that I wrote, then skip down to the bottom to the summary version ;)
My Job
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Dilcia, Genesis, Normita |
Helping out with the kids and
doing occupational therapy has already been both a huge blessing and a real
struggle. It’s such a treat being around kids and teens who have been through
so much horrific trauma and heartache and yet are thriving. They are charming
and way too much fun. You would never guess that had been through so much
hardship. God really is changing so many lives here! I’ll tell more specific
stories in a later blog.
![]() |
Renán |

The Food
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Eating langosta y machuca |
Let’s be honest, Honduras is
probably going to make me fat. Unfortunately people don’t eat vegetables here,
and drinking coke is a daily occurrence. So, say a little prayer for me that I
will be able to find vegetables and stay healthy! Ugh, the food is so delicious
though. Fresh baleadas, sopa de camarones, sweet tamalitos, tamarindo juice,
plátanos fritos, hot corn tortillas, exotic fruits that I won’t try to spell,
horchata, pastelitos, tres leches cake, langosta (lobster) with machuca… I
could go on for pages and pages. And I will, in a future blog ;)


Ocean and Jungle

I LIVE ON THE CARIBBEAN OCEAN. Literally, I am a half-mile from soft sandy beaches, warm salty waves, and brilliant sunsets unlike any you have never seen in your life. The beach is my happy place where I go to cool off, to relax in a hammock, to toss the kiddos around in the waves, to play soccer (it’s despicable to see how much better the Hondurans are at fútbol than I am), and to play games around bonfires. I simply walk down the dusty road, through a small strip of palm trees and jungle, and there I am.
Ah yes, and
the jungle. This is one of those things I really didn’t expect. This truly is
the jungle! When I look out my window I see tropical plants and vines, huge
trees heavy with fruit that I’ve never seen before, strange beautiful birds in a
myriad of colors, and cute annoying monkeys that chatter to wake me up at 4:00
every morning and scream to make my friend, Anna, run for her life. Then of
course there are the multitudes of mosquitos (mostly just at dusk and night),
spiders so big I don’t dare step on them, scorpions, and stupid little squishy geckos.
All in all though, this is a gorgeous place.
![]() |
Playa de Río Esteban |
![]() |
Anna and Nino walking through Lucinda |
HOT! So stinkin’ hot. Sticky
hot, dripping-sweat hot, take-three-showers-a-day hot,
please-don’t-give-me-a-hug hot. I blame the humidity. My skin never feels
completely dry here. Somehow though, the Hondurans’ skin never seems to glisten
like mine does. Their bodies seem to be more acclimated to this kind of heat,
which gives me a little hope that I too will survive.J Actually though, I am
thankful to say that I am starting to get used to it. The first week I was
here, fresh out of the Michigan snow, the heat made me so upset and uncomfortable.
Now I notice it less and less. Yet, I have to say that I still look forward to
the rainy days and the time of the day when the sun hides behind the trees.
Rainy season was just ending when I arrived, and now we are cruising into the
summer months. We will see how it goes.J
There is so much more I could write, but neither you nor I
have the time for that! So to summarize: * Things are wonderful here. Things are difficult here. My
kids are learning. I am learning. We are blessed. Thanks for your support!
Please pray for me. PRAISE GOD! Aquí estoy.