Monday, September 24, 2012

Fotos!... Next week hopefully


I don't have much time. I'm sorry!! Thank you for all your emails. I loved them!! And responded to them!

Happy birthday, Dain and Malinda!!!!! Hope your day is wonderful. I hear that you're going to Les Mis and Disneyworld. I bet it's more fun being on a mission... :)

Okay, I'm jealous!

We have 3 baptisms this weekend!! One was at 11 am on Saturday, and Sister Toro came back for that. Car and Fre were baptized in the English ward with the APs. They have had missionaries for a long time, and with the miracle of Sister Druyon they are now members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. That was one of the neatest baptisms I have been to. The spirit was very strong--it was really peaceful. Maybe because I didn't plan a stitch of the baptism? ;) But I played the piano and Fre chose Book of Mormon Stories for the final song. That was different!

And An who just turned 8 was baptized at 7 pm on Saturday, and Sister Toro came back for that!! That was a wonderful baptism, too. An was so excited to be baptized. I loved being able to prepare her for that.

My new companion is Sister Marroquin. She is from Colorado Springs--the name is from El Salvador.

Sister Schow told me because I liked ironing so much, would I be willing to iron her out? To make all the wrinkles go away. :)

And I was going to send photos, but the card reader isn't working. So this is all you get this week. Sorry!

Love,

kates

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Transfer Tuesdee


Querida Familia,

"Transfer Tuesdee" is for Berkeley who taught me the dees of the week. :) I would like Berkeley's address, by the way. She went to Brazil for the summer, and I have no idea where she is living now.

Another week, another transfer! We got our new calls last night. Drum roll, please . . . I'm staying in East Sac! We're going on transfer number 5.5 in this blessed area. I hit my 6-month mark last week. Sadly, my Hermana Toro is going to Sacramento to serve in the Spanish branch. She is going to be serving with my other trainee, Sister Beale! I am a little worried about the horror stories they're going to swap about their trainer. Yikes! But I am happy for them. I think that might be the most Spanish area for sisters in the mission--and it looks like I'm never going to serve there! That's okay. East Sac has treated me really well, and I'm excited to stay with Hermana Marroquin who has been in Stockton her whole mission (3 transfers--which is how I started out).

Let's see. This week is all a blur to me. That's what happens after almost 16 months. The days and weeks and months are all just smothered together now. I feel like September just started yesterday. Time is reaaaaally flying.

This morning we went to the temple. I am spoiled here in East Sac because the temple is a hop, skip, and a jump away. The mission office is in my area. And Deseret Book is right down the street from the mission office. I am staying with Sister Schow--she can never get rid of me! The members in the new part of our area make us cheesecake and offer their services as fellowshippers and for dinner. :) We have some great investigators--and we will get them to church! 

I don't know if I've told you about the mother and son who we were teaching--I probably have. This is a miracle story. I went on an exchange one day with the ASL sisters, and we had a member lined up to go out with Sister Toro for the whole day. She is a returned missionary, so she knows the drill--how this all works! At the last minute she cancelled because she had to take care of her nieces and nephews. Sister Toro sent me a message, and I started rattling off all the people I could think of in our phone that she could call. Couldn't, couldn't, couldn't. I was thinking I would need to tell the sisters that I couldn't go out with them that day (they actually live in our area because our area is huge and covers about 10 English companionships--maybe?). I thought about Sister Druyon who is a senior missionary in the office--she served in France way back when and her first companion was Sister Brinkerhoff. Sister Druyon always wants to come out with us because she is so passionate about missionary work and really loves to be out proselyting. We were able to take her to one lesson with Rebecca, and then she treated us to Cheesecake Factory--spoiled! Well, after thinking about how long she would need to be with Sister Toro and how she needed to work in the office, I decided against asking her. But my district leader gave Sister Toro her number and Sister D went! They went to a few lessons/houses, and one of them was Car and Fre. Sister Druyon connected with Car, offered to completely redo her bathroom amongst many other things. We had been teaching them because her husband only speaks Spanish. But Sister D brought the English elders over who happen to be the APs, and one of them speaks Spanish, and after going to church and knowing a lot of people there and this and that, they're getting baptized this Saturday!! In an English ward!! haha I promise I'm not a bilingual missionary. Sister D has been a dream come true when it comes to fellowshipping and leading others to baptism. We are so happy for Car and Fre--this is exactly what they needed right now. If Sister Toro's companion hadn't cancelled on her, we wouldn't be having a baptism on Saturday morning!

But we do, and we also have a baptism Saturday evening! Ang just turned 8. For the time being neither of her parents are members, so she is a convert baptism. We are hoping to baptize her mom very soon! Our ward is having a temple trip this Saturday, and practically the whole ward will be going, so it wasn't possible to have the baptism any earlier. Somehow Sister Toro will have to figure out how to come for baptisms at 11 and 7. Not a very bad problem to have. :)

As for our other investigators, we have a really great group of people that we are teaching. We visited a former investigator who we were teaching in May and June and was going through some very difficult trials. We just visited her last week, and since then she has been able to find a job (2!) and get eye surgery so that she is not blind (she was going blind from diabetes). She was going to come to church on Sunday but ended up backing out because she was called in to work. :( And we were going to have a less active and her sisters come, but they ended up going to Oregon to visit a sick uncle. Strike two! And someone else was going to come, who didn't end up making it. So we had three strikes on Sunday morning, but the meetings at church were great and perked up my mood again. They will be coming to church soon!

The gospel is a great blessing. I am grateful to my Heavenly Father for giving me the chance to serve. Although I wish absolutely everyone I talked to would gladly accept this message, that isn't the case. I wish I could stay by people's sides all day and tell them how the gospel would bless them with this, this, and that in their everyday lives. How it brings so much peace and purpose. But even if I don't change the hearts of a whole multitude, my heart has forever been changed. Every day I think about how I will apply this in my life, with my own family, with my friends. This is all that matters. 

Something I did learn this week from a woman that we visited is that I will teach (even force) my children to play piano. :) This 75-year-old woman, Gladys, gave us two pieces of advice. That was the second piece. I thought, "Done!" She said, when they don't want to practice, you make them. They'll say no, no, no, but don't back down.

Love you all!

kates

Monday, September 10, 2012

The field is white already to harvest


Hermosa familia,

That's our mission theme for September until the rest of the year: "The field is white already to harvest." Sister Toro and I have some great investigators and were hoping to have five people to church. That didn't happen, but we have the highest hopes for those we are teaching. We are teaching a woman named T who was a referral from a woman in our ward/an English ward. She switches back and forth, but for the time being she is going to our ward because her father from Mexico is here and was just baptized in July. This member, Hermana C, is hilarious. She was making comments in Sunday school class, and I was literally crying from laughing so hard. Sister Toro said that we can't sit by her anymore because we always end up laughing too much when we're with her. :) T has been reading the Book of Mormon and LOVES it. She told us in our last lesson that she keeps reading and feels like she just can't get enough. She wants "more and more and more." Sister Toro and I were sitting there listening to her, thinking "what?!" We are so happy! Unfortunately there's a little opposition there in that they go to church as a family and her husband doesn't want to come and this and that--but it will be worked out soon. We have faith!

We were planning on having a baptism this weekend for a woman and her daughter, but things aren't looking as bright as they were before. We had a really great lesson with her and her family on Tuesday and talked about faith and the blessings we receive from keeping the commandments. They were actively participating in the lesson and understanding the scriptures we were sharing about Peter walking on water and having faith and not doubting in the power of the Lord and also in Ether 12:18 and Mosiah 2:21-22, 24. Unfortunately we have not been able to contact her, which has been really disappointing! But we have been fasting and praying and know that everything will work out okay. I mean, we taught a lesson on faith and challenged her to have faith to keep certain commandments and to be baptized--we need to exercise that kind of faith, too.

Oh, I forgot to mention last week that I went on an exchange with the sisters in Folsom who are bike sisters. They are from Samoa and Kiribati, so they don't have licenses to drive. President put them on bicycles, and they love it! And I spent the day with them on a bike, too! It was quite an experience and really fun--riding bikes with helmets and skirts and backpacks and flats. I got really bad helmet hair--islanders' hair look good with helmets! And my bones were sore for a week after. I felt so sorry for the sisters, but they have a good time and are able to talk to more people that way. We all borrowed elders' bikes.

And Sister Toro and I were driving from an appointment to the mission office this week and saw a lot of smoke in back of a house. I was thinking, are they cooking something? It was a lot of smoke. So we rolled on by and saw a man walking his dog outside of the house who was kind of checking out the smoke, too. I asked, "Is that a controlled fire?" I don't know why anyone would be burning a controlled fire in their backyard. He knocked on the woman's front door and told her and we noticed the smoke was getting worse and there were flames above the fence. The man called 911 and the Sister Toro held his dog while I took the hose and tried to hose off wildfire in someone's backyard! It was a crazy sight--two sisters in skirts fighting a fire. I told Sister Toro to call the mission office which was across the street to tell them to bring fire extinguishers--I guess they started running around the mission office/church like chickens with their heads cut off looking for fire extinguishers. The good news is now they know where they are! The fire engine came and the fire was put out and we continued on our way to the mission office. Sister Farr in the mission office got a picture of us--the new firefighters. :)

Love you all,

kates

Monday, September 3, 2012

Cooling down, Speeding up


Familia,

We had a baptism on Saturday!!! Sister Toro had her very first baptism (and we were the ones who started teaching her from the beginning, so that was a neat experience), and I had my very first English baptism--Rebecca! Her fellowshippers were all there--it was small, but I thought it was a great turnout. Very intimate! Her daughter flew in from Idaho to come to the baptism. Her husband has been less active for a very long time and her daughter was baptized just last year. Since her baptism, her dad has started coming back to church and received the Melchizedek Priesthood and her mom was baptized. Rebecca's daughter shared her testimony yesterday in sacrament meeting and it was really touching. Sister Toro and I bought Rebecca a CD so she will have pretty music to listen to and are going to make a picture frame collage thing of her baptism pictures and maybe quotes or something cute.

We are hoping to have a baptism in a few weeks for a woman named Ang whose children were baptized in January. Her daughter An turns 8 this month, so they'd like to be baptized the same day. We hadn't really thought through it that much, and the zone leaders pointed out that Angela would be a convert baptism too. Wow--miracles happen just like that! So we are hoping and praying that some things will be sorted out soon and that Ang's heart and mind will be set at ease so that she can be baptized. The whole ward probably thinks she's a member already because she's been coming to church weekly since December. So that will be exciting!!

We were working with some other investigators whose husband/father spoke Spanish. The wife/mother is white but learned Spanish from her husband--hence we were teaching her. Things just fell into place for the APs to start teaching her (one of the APs is a Spanish missionary, so he can teach the husband). We are hoping the mom and son will be baptized in two weeks as well. We are making progress in East Sac! Even though our investigators are going to English wards/counting for the elders! But we're seeing progress in our Spanish work, too. Yesterday at church was the first Sunday that we've been together since our ward split. We were small(er) but I think we had a nice turnout! The pianist didn't show up, so I played at the last minute and bore my testimony while I was there. Wow, I love this ward. I love this area. Stacy asked me how I like Sacramento and my companion and investigators. We have been finding a lot of people lately who are interested in learning more. I think I will be transferred soon, which makes me really sad. I've been here for 6 months. But I feel like I'm leaving the area in a good state (with recent baptisms and a good investigator pool) and in good hands--Sister Toro! We'll see what happens when transfer calls come in two weeks.

I am happy to be a Mormon. I want everyone to know how much I love the Book of Mormon AND the Bible. We believe the Bible to be true--the Book of Mormon is an additional witness that Jesus is the Christ, that Joseph Smith was a prophet, and that this is the Church of Jesus Christ on the earth today. I am grateful that we can read it, ponder it, and pray to our Heavenly Father to know that it is true. And through the power of the Holy Ghost we can know that it is the word of God. How lucky we are to have more, to know of the restoration, to be living in these days. There are treasures in the scriptures and in the words of the prophets. I can't wait for conference in a month.

Love you all,

kates