Author Note
My name is Bryan Trent and I'm this site's owner and admin. I served in the Chile Osorno Mission from 1993-1995 and love telling missionary stories. So, I decided to make a blog to share them before they are forgotten, and to allow other former missionaries to do the same. This blog site is completely FREE for use as a resource and to share your stories as long as you are not publishing content for profit. Easily share posts and content on social networking websites like Facebook and Twitter, or send content via email. Please visit the "Policies" tab before posting, and the FAQ tab if you have any questions. Refrain from negative or distasteful comments and foul language please.
Scared and alone in Chile
Shortly after arriving in the Chile Osorno mission and spending my first night in the mission home I was told I would be traveling by bus to a remote mountain town called Curacautin. The assistants to the mission president drove me and several other new missionaries to the Osorno bus station where they bought me a ticket and ushered me aboard the bus. I had a small wad of Chilean cash in my pocket, but I was completely unfamiliar with the currency and had no idea how much money I was holding.
About 30 minutes into the bus ride, just as we were getting out of the city, a bus attendant walked down the isle and collected bus fair from the passengers, swapping money for bus tickets. As he walked down the isle he would ask people where they were going, and then he would tell them the appropriate fair for traveling that distance. As he grew closer to where I was sitting, it dawned on me that I couldn’t remember the name of the town I was supposed to go to. After all, Curacautin wasn’t a name I was familiar with. In fact, the bus didn’t go to Curacautin at all, but to another larger city where I was expected to transfer to another bus (a detail I had failed to pick up during my conversation with the assistants).
When the attendant finally arrived at my seat he asked me what my destination was. At least that’s what I assume he asked, because after only 1 day in Chile my Spanish was very weak. I shook my head and said in a weak voice, “yo no se” (I don’t know). To that he responded with something along the lines of, “you must be going somewhere”. When nothing else came to mind I told him, “voy al fin” (I’m going to the end, or the last stop). The attendant told me the fair amount, but since I didn’t yet comprehend Chilean currency I simply held out my wad of cash. He took some bills, gave me some change and a ticket and then walked to the next passenger.
Hours later, as lunch came around and I was getting very hungry, I began to get very nervous. We passed town after town and I had no idea where I would end up. That bus could have been going to Antofogasta for all I knew! Finally, over 8 hours into the bus ride, we drove into a rather large city and pulled into a bus garage. As they threw my bags off the roof the attendant walked back to my seat and told me to get off, we were at the end of the line. I grabbed my suitcase and bag, saw no other missionaries around and started walking.
I was absolutely terrified! I was thousands of miles from home, in a nameless foreign city and I could barely ask where the bathroom was in Spanish. With my head hung low and hunger in my belly after not having eaten all day, I walked down the street in a miscellaneous direction and said a humble prayer. Shortly after I finished my prayer I faintly heard somebody yell, Elder! I turned around and at the end of the block I saw two missionaries running towards me from where the bus station had been. By some stroke of luck (or a blessing from on high) I had mistakenly traveled to the right town. The missionaries were two zone leaders from the city of Temuco, and they were very apologetic for being a few minutes late to pick me up. The bus attendant apparently had told them which way I had gone walking.
They fed me, introduced me to my new companion, and sent me on my way (via another bus) towards the town of Curacautin.
This was a heck of an introduction for me to a new country, and an experience I will never forget.
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