Monday, March 18, 2013

Adventures can be challenging and rewarding

Not knowing where to begin this week's blog is an understatement. So, I will begin with Elder Jeffrey R. Holland's poem he used in a training film we watched this week entitled "Real Life":
                                    Come to the edge, He said.
                                    No, we will fall!
                                    Come to the edge, He said.
                                    No, we will fall!
                                    So we came to the edge,
                                    He pushed us . . . . and we flew!
That in only a few words expresses my feeling of the experience we have had this past week at the Missionary Training Center (MTC).

Being in such a place where everyone here is of one heart and mind has been truly humbling. We are surrounded by thousands of young, beautiful young people who are sacrificing two years of their lives to serve the Lord. I generally see such love, respect, excitement on their faces. But there are those who are overwhelmed by where they are and what they are doing, and I see fear and such exhaustion. I have felt all of the above also. LeRoy and I are being stretched!!


Mail is so important!
Food is equally important!
Our days begin early--up at 6 a.m. for breakfast and then in class by 8 a.m. with about 85 other Senior missionaries. Sixty-six of those are all  going to Nauvoo!! We spend our day being taught and then learning how to teach and testify of our Savior and of the Gospel we know and love. In a word, we are learning to "open our mouths" and testify of what we have always known. Role playing is an important part of that. When asked by one of our teachers how we feel about role playing, I instantly said, "I hate it!" Now I would reply, "I can see the importance of it," and mean it.


Our teachers are young BYU students who are returned missionaries. Yes, they teach us seniors to "lengthen our shuffle". I have been taught by the best this week. They love missionary work, and you know what? So do I. I have literally stepped off that edge this week. Now, whether I will be able to fly remains to be seen as we wear our missionary badges proudly and are no longer playing a role.
Our District and Bro. Lee



Brother Meyer and Sis. Thurston
The role playing involved people from Provo who volunteer to come here to the MTC where they play the role of someone who is investigating our church. LeRoy and I then approach them as if that were the real situation and we play the missionaries who teach them. One scenario involved an 84-year-old man who loved to fly his glider (true story). He still does so, but has to be helped into his plane before taking off. When he is soaring he looks up at the canopy of his glider where he has written "God loves me." He wants to believe in prayer, but doesn't really know how it is done. And his other concern is that he had been challenged by previous missionaries to read the Book of Mormon, but he had not done that because he really doesn't believe that it could possibly be true. Forty-five minutes later LeRoy and I shook this delightful gentleman's hand and felt that maybe we could teach such concepts and feel the guidance of the Holy Spirit even when play acting. It was really amazing and testimony building.

Lunchtime each day has been spent singing the songs we have been assigned to learn for our Nauvoo plays we will be participating in. Thank goodness for very musical people here with us! There is hope!

Being Senior missionaries gives us much more freedom than the young ones. Supposedly we know enough to stay out of trouble, right? So, we were able to meet our dear friends the DeWolf's for dinner and much catching up since our time together in Yakima. Without them in our lives, we would not be here.


Then we spent Saturday with our son Brent and his wife Ashley. How we enjoy them. They know we love to eat, hike, and play "Hand and Foot", so we did all that plus made two receiving blankets for the cute little toad to come. They are expecting their first child and Ashley looks adorable, although she doesn't quite see it that way. It is a blessing to look forward to a fifth grandchild.

We finish our stay here by doing some Visitor Center Training--which may not ever apply to our specific duties at Nauvoo, but it helps us learn how to approach people and how to engage them in conversation which might then lead to their wanting to know more about Nauvoo and what went on there. Ultimately, we want to invite everyone to Christ.









Friday, March 8, 2013

Off on a Great Adventure

Mission Application Picture

March 6, 2013

The wind literally blew us out of Pahrump, Nevada today. Thank goodness it was blowing north to Utah!

One of our rest stops today was at Cove Fort--this was actually the place that really got us to thinking about wanting to serve a mission at an historic church site. So as we walked to the restroom we met the senior missionary couple there and they asked us where we were headed. We were able to reply, "To the MTC for our mission to Nauvoo!" Awesome!

It was hard to leave our sweet little family--daughter Lacey, her hubby and three children. They have sheltered, fed, and generally put up with us since November. Driving off was hard--and I wish I had not looked back to see Holly watching us as we drove off.



Our two granddaughters were great fun. We loved to walk with them as they rode their bicycles or chased our shadows as we looked for bunnies and quail along the streets of Pahrump or gathered rocks in the desert for Lacey's rock garden.. Georgia Lynn is well known for her skills at finding the "prettiest rock, Grandma". I think she may be a geologist some day. Hailey Ruth has become quite the reader and you can see that she loves to read to her little brother, Weston. She is quite a helper for her Mom as she scoops him up (all 25 pounds of him) and hauls him to someone who is near. Weston Lee will be 11 months old on March 19th--he finally decided to crawl this last Sunday, whew! We miss their giggles and smiles. Tickle Monster will be back to see them in about a year and a half!!


We had many fun adventures during the warm Southwest winter months. We made several trips up to St. George to scout the area for a possible new home site after our mission. And low and behold, to make a very long story short, we ended up buying a one-half acre lot in the Rio de Sion development along the Virgin River in Virgin, Utah. We are going to build a new home which will be ready for us in September of 2014. Yahoo!


We visited Hoover Dam and marveleld at what man can do when the government gets out of the way. We went to the Grand Canyon and wished we had the wings of an eagle to soar down into the depths of that amazing canyon. We visited Ash Meadows on the edge of Death Valley with our grandchildren and Lacey. They wanted to scoop up the indigenous Pup fish and take them home for their dad's fish tank. We made a trip to the China Ranch Date Farm in Tecopa, CA, where we hiked and came away with pounds of luscious dates. Just for fun we went to Arizona to visit old friends, the O'Farrell's and the King's. We hiked, relaxed, and almost drowned in the best citrus drink called "Papa's Juice".



Marvin, Kenon, and Big Friends
Patti O'Farrell
We were able to make frequent temple trips with our old friends from Yakima, Bob and Elaine Erath. They spent their winter in Las Vegas and it was great fun to renew that friendship and spend time hiking together and exploring Red Rock Canyon and other places.

We truly loved the beautiful sunsets and deep blue skies of Pahrump with the imposing view of Mt. Charleston to the east. We will miss the place and most of all our family.

In preparation for our mission, I began sewing the dresses I would have to wear while working in the sites in Nauvoo. It did challenge me a bit, but I enjoyed the outcome. We have been assigned by our mission president to be Facilities Management Missionaries during the summer months--we get to water the beautiful flower pots in Nauvoo and take care of gardens. Doesn't that sound like fun for a Master Gardener and a willing husband? LeRoy at first thought that would get him out of "singing and dancing", but President Gilliland assured him that it would not. Ha!
We have been studying "Preach My Gospel" at nights and while traveling to Utah we were singing one of the many songs we need to learn, "Welcome to Nauvoo". LeRoy is working on his lip-sinc skills.

Monday, March 11th, we enter the MTC for in depth missionary training. We will keep you posted!