Showing posts with label Zone Leader. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zone Leader. Show all posts

Monday, February 3, 2014

Miracles have not ceased! (Moroni 7:36-37)

Family,
 
I just don't even know how you start an email recounting a week like the past week! I guess like this: "Jed! Congratulations on being baptized! That is so exciting! Good for you! I wish that I could have been there to see it, but you absolutely made the right decision. We can't even begin to understand how big of a deal baptism is, but you'll be blessed for your whole life. Here's what the Savior has got to tell you about it:
 
21 And [since Jed] will hear my voice [he] shall be my sheep; and him shall ye receive into the church, and him will I also receive.
22 For behold, this is my church; whosoever is baptized shall be baptized unto repentance. And whomsoever ye receive shall believe in my name; and [Jed] will I freely forgive.
23 For it is I that taketh upon me the sins of the world; for it is I that hath created them; and it is I that granteth unto [Jed] that believeth unto the end a place at my right hand.
24 For behold, in my name [is Jed now] called; and [because he knows me, Jed] shall come forth, and shall have a place eternally at my right hand.
(Mosiah 26)
Secondly, Toni got baptized this week! It was such a miracle. We set the date on Friday, and she got baptized 2 days later. We were talking on Thursday about how Elder Baker and Elder Lindemann (another missionary who has served in Vernon previously) were going to be in the Vernon area for exchanges, and so they'd be at church this Sunday. And we thought, why doesn't Toni just get baptized this weekend? Everything would just be perfect! Toni has been taught since sometime in August, and I've been working with her ever since coming to Vernon 4 or 5 months ago. And we've probably planned in her baptismal service 5 or 6 times in the previous months. And she was SO READY to be baptized. But she travels a lot, was sick a lot, and had different obstacles to her baptism, so it had just never happened. She was going to be out of town this weekend, but she ended up not going on her trip so we went in to go and teach her with the goal of setting a baptismal date.  We started by talking about how she's gotten answers to her prayers, how she knows the Book of Mormon is true, how she's gotten her connection with God back, and how she knows that she needs to be baptized. And then we invited her to be baptized on Sunday and the spirit was so strong. It was amazing. At first she was kind of incredulous, but then she started to think about it, and just said "I guess I don't have any reason not to be baptized. Yeah. I'll be baptized. What do I need to do?"  It was amazing. We just pulled together a baptismal service, there were a few more bumps in the road (it almost got delayed for another month so that her friend in Alberta could be there, etc) We just kept going, and the result was one of the most powerful baptismal services that I've ever attended. Since Elder Baker was around, he was able to baptize her. When she came up out of the water, she just said "wow". 
And... now it's transfer calls later today, and I am very sincerely hoping that I don't get transferred, because I want to be able to confirm Toni next week, on top of all the other miracle people that we're teaching here in Vernon. But... we'll see!
In between church and the baptismal service, Elder Baker and I had the chance to go on a brief exchange for a few hours. It was awesome. We had an appointment with one of our investigator's future daughter-in-law, (complicated situation) who's future husband is a less active member who just loves the church and is working on coming back. Anyways, she's now pregnant, which has forced her to stay away from partying and the rest of her previous lifestyle, and so she's been able to get some perspective and she's totally ready to be taught. There are just so many miracles. But anyways, it was just great to work with Elder Baker again. We're just two peas in a pod. So that was miracle #2.
Lastly, we've just been seeing so many miracles with the people that we are teaching! Vicki, who I've previously mentioned, is just getting closer and closer to quitting smoking. She's been facing a lot of social pressures from people at the church she previously attended, and is just staying strong. She's meeting with us consistently and just doing great. At one point, she was on the streets of Vancouver (which is why a member family raise her kids) and she has just turned her life around and is just doing great. The Krugers are doing great, too. Sister Kruger now has a job, and so that family has some sort of income. They just need to quit smoking, too! Tobacco. It's just the worst. Canada has horror-movie status warning pictures and messages on the boxes of their cigarettes, and they're taxing the daylights out of them, but people here are still just smoking machines sometimes. It's the worst. You can definitely see that following the guidance of prophets is the right thing to do. Tis better far to avoid all those issues.
Elder Fitzner and I have a deal going that if he can eat 7 McTanks (which is what we call when you put McDonald's entire dollar menu ($1.40 here...) chicken sandwich in between the patties of their dollar menu double cheeseburger) then I have to pay for all of them. BC missionaries don't have the same weight loss concerns as in Korea. We still eat seaweed, but usually it's in the form of all you can eat sushi, and the rolls are deep fried.
Well, sure love you all! Thanks for all of the support. Hope that it's just a great week for one and all.
Elder Blotter
Elder Lindemann, Elder Baker, Toni, Elder Fitzner and Elder Blotter

Monday, December 30, 2013

Shout out from Vernon!

Family,

What a beautiful week it's been and what a great blessing it was to hear all of your lovely voices. Just from the pictures I can tell that there was a pretty good haul at the Blotter home! I have no idea why Santa gave Jed anything with 2 wheels and a motor, but it looks like it will be a lot of fun. Christmas week was great! We had the chance to do some finding in a time that people had (relatively) softer hearts and more time to listen, and we had the chance to work with all of our awesome investigators here in Vernon. It's weird that you only get 2 Christmases as a missionary!

The work in Vernon is going extremely well. We've been realizing how blessed we have been after we've looked at our area boundaries. It's a really blessed place to be. Our area is actually a pretty tiny thing in the world right now (We found out that Vernon has 35,000 people, 70,000 if you include outlying areas, of the which we have none in our area except a little town called Oyama, and there really isn't anything in Oyama) and there are currently 4 sets of missionaries in Vernon. We live more up in the foothills of the little valley we live in, and when you look out the window of our apartment, absolutely none of the buildings in view are in our area, it's just the stuff kind of tucked away in a corner. But, we have a lot of people to teach, and a lot of people just so close to baptism.

Yesterday, for example, we were pretty much living with the Kruger family. Not really, actually, but we've been working with them for a few weeks now, and they are just doing so great. Sister Kruger was excommunicated when she was younger, and Brother Kruger isn't a member. They have 3 kids, and they're all awesome little goobers. Anyways, they've been working on quitting smoking, and they committed to quit smoking on January 1st, but Sister Kruger decided that their quit date was going to be yesterday instead, and so we dropped by a few times to share scriptures and interrupt almost-smoking breaks. The Kruger family is great. Over the course of us being there, either one of their kids will have a diaper/pull-up failure on the furniture next to us, or their crazy dog will jump on us and turn us into dog fur carpets or something along those lines, but they're pretty much our favorite family to go and visit.

And the rest of our teaching pool are doing well, too! Toni is still out of town for the Christmas season. She's down in Victoria. But she's going to be baptized. Sooonnnn. April is doing well, but was also out of town. We did see some Christmas miracles though! Everybody's favorite thing to say on the day after Christmas was that they were in the middle of eating dinner, regardless of what time it was. So we started asking if we could come in and eat with them. And you know what? We had some takers. We ended up having some pretty cool lessons and finding some neat people to teach. Also, we got our fair share of turkey. 2 birds with one stone.

Okay... Mother... here is an Elder Fitzner stories. I asked him how he would describe himself in one sentence and he said "beachwalker, songwriter, poet". In Weekly Planning this week, I opened a 100g bag of chocolate covered almonds and put them on our desks. Elder Fitzner proceed to dump the entire thing in his mouth. And... they couldn't fit in his mouth. But he still tried. They apparently lodged in his throat and he started to choke, and I am laughing and don't know what's going on. He stands up, walks to the middle of the room, and pukes. Ha ha... But seriously, he's a good missionary and we've seen a lot of miracles.

Well, the church is true! The Atonement of Jesus Christ is real. Being a missionary is more on the front lines and we get to see it's influence help people change every day. There's no better way to spend your time than as a missionary. It's amazing. Thanks so much for all of your support! Talk to you next week!

Elder Blotter

Monday, December 23, 2013

Merry Christmas!

Family,

Merry Christmas! What an exciting time of the year. Actually, it just feels extremely weird that it's already Christmas. I can't believe that I'll be chatting all of you on the 25th. It's strange that it's already been a year since I was being dragged around with my jaw on the floor trying to adjust to Vancouver after being in Burns Lake for 6 months! One of the good things about being in Vernon as opposed to Vancouver is that this year, it's a "white" Christmas. Christmas just doesn't jive with moss and grass and flowers and lots of rain. (Plus, it's a balmy +3 degrees outside, so we get the best of both worlds in the Okanagan. It really isn't that much colder here than Cache Valley)

The past week has been a great one. Since Elder Baker was gone, and Elder Fitzner didn't arrive until Friday. And with transfers and Christmas calls and the monthly meeting with the Stake President, and a bunch of not-that-exciting administrative stuff, combined with working with the teaching pools of two different areas, it was just a really busy week. And when you're a missionary, being as busy as possible is a good thing. Because I was the only zone leader left holding up the fort, there were a whole bunch of decisions that were made kind of... one sided. For example, they put some sister missionaries in our ward (Our area was super small. And now is super smaller. They probably just put in another set here instead of a place with more wiggle room because the work is going well in the Vernon 1st Ward. But still! 4 sets of missionaries in Vernon! The work is hastening!) It kind of felt like cheating to pick which areas to keep in our area and which parts to give to the new sister missionaries, but we gave them a good chunk of Vernon and the promised land of Armstrong, so they should be all right.

Among other things, we had the biggest polygamy throwdown since Wilford Woodruff and Warren Jeff's great-great-grandpa. We've been working for a few weeks with April, our polygamist investigator, and we finally just had to lay out everything about polygamy and how she would need to find out if Thomas S. Monson was a prophet of God and commit to leave that lifestyle behind if she wanted to be baptized. It went very well, and her concern now is mostly that she doesn't want to get divorced if her husband wants to stay on the path that he's currently traveling down. Just in talking with April, it's helped me realize that we're very blessed to have a prophet on the earth today to give us guidance from our loving Heavenly Father. What a confusing world it would be if we were left to try and pick and choose and guess at what our purpose in life was meant to be. We have a path directly back to our Heavenly Father laid out for us, and we've been given the agency to choose to follow it for ourselves and see the blessings that follow in our lives. I can't think of better Christmas presents! 

Toni, the eternal investigator who we just love to death, is totally going to get baptized when she gets back from Christmas break. We've been working with her ever since I came to Vernon. It's almost been like a funnel with her. We've slowly been working through her concerns, and she's just made so many awesome changes in her life.

Family, I want each of you to know how grateful each one of you! Thanks for all the support that you've given me over the past months. And I'm grateful for this beautiful Christmas season when we can reflect on the Savior and ultimate gift that he's given each of us. I hope that you all have the merriest of Merry Christmases!

Well, talk to you soon! I'm going to try to send off that Christmas package home sometime today. The Canada Post probably takes 6 months off for the Holiday season, so I might not be able to send it until next preparation day. But... Merry Christmas!

Elder Blotter



Sunday, December 22, 2013

Feliz Navidad

Elder Blotter, of Vancouver Fame,

Well it sounds like things are happening in Vernon BC.  Which is a good thing.  The sad thing about those good companions, like Elder Baker, is that it is like poof and they are gone.  The difficult ones, like Elder Holtby, put a new meaning to the word time and all eternity.  It is the difficult ones though, that teach you the most and give you the  most life skills.  Hopefully your new arrival will be a great Elder, with an eye single to the Glory of God.  

I have been a little surprised at how much success you seem to be having.  It is a great thing.
We had a great Christmas program today.  One for the ages.  As you know, Chris Corcoran gathered up the testimonies from the missionaries in the ward, and had their Mom's read them.  Yours was a great one, and it was a good experience.  Your mother was a bit of a wreck, but she powered through.  She was crying before she even got up to read the  testimony.  It was a fun thing to do.  I hope you had a great ward program up in good old Vernon.  I never was homesick at Christmas time, due in a large part to the opposite seasons.  It was just weird in Argentina where they celebrate Christmas in the heat of the summer, with fireworks and drunken debauchery.  

When Landon's mom got up I thought, Holy Cow, Landon will be home in just over a month!!  I am quite proud of Landon.  I did not know if he would make it, and he had a tough start with a jerk of a companion who made fun of him and belittled him.  But make it he has, and it will set his life on a great trajectory.  David Nielson is also doing well.  His dad says he is a distict leader and likely keeping at least most of the mission rules.

As for us, we are all doing well.  The Beav opens tomorrow and the fam is headed up.  I have to work, but that is okay.  Someone needs to fund the expedition, and I have learned that funding things is my primary role in life.  Griffin Dubanowich is visiting this week.  He will be attending USU next fall, so that will be fun.  He is a good kid.  Those Dubanowich boys love Utah.  My theory is that deep down it may have something to do with the abundance of lovely, wholesome, LDS girls of European descent.  Like your sister. 

Well, I am off to sleep, because the office has been really rough these days, but I am grateful to be busy and have a lot of work.  Looking forward to Christmas and a little authorized chit chat with out favorite missionary.

Dad. 

Monday, December 16, 2013

We're just devastated up in Vernon.

Family!
 
Elder Baker is getting transferred! Isn't that the worst?! We only had 2 short transfers together, and he's gone. Transfer calls come on Monday, but his came on Saturday because I'm 99.9% sure that he is going to be an Assistant. (We should have just been less obedient so that he could stick around... just kidding. But still. :)) Right now, I'm sitting an emailing with a missionary from the Vernon 2nd Ward, and our next companions will come later on Friday. So that's the transfer news. We were just not happy about that at all. And we probably have 1,000,000 cookies in our apartment because everybody that we visited for Elder Baker to say goodbye to seemed to have a plate of cookies on hand. And crazy! It's Christmas time again already. And we're just going to keep findingteachingbaptizing. Mission life. It's the best.
 
For me and Elder Baker's last supper, we went to a sushi place that we've driven past a million times on the way to our apartment, but never eaten at because it has a sign that says "No swimsuits allowed. Thanks, management." Because of that... we've always figured that... eating there might be a mistake. But then, we decided that we would just have to, just because we always drive by it. Long story short, the waitress didn't speak English very well, and she mistook our order for a much larger one that would have cost about $50. Even with BC prices, that's a lot of sushi. Over the course of negotiating what amount we would pay (they ended up only charging us $30) the waitress noticed our name tags, and she has a friend in Japan that is a member. We were able to talk to her about the gospel as well! We'll hopefully start teaching her soon. We're sushi'd out, but it was worth it.
 
This week was a good week, but a busy one. We were on exchanges in different places for most of the week. Our first exchange was in Kamloops, and the second was in Salmon Arm, and in both of those exchanges I served with missionaries that I had previously worked with either in Vancouver or Kitimat. It's fun to see how missionaries grow and change and improve over time. Elder Baker says that I look totally different than I do in the pictures from before I was leaving, (It's probably just because my face is... slightly more... round. Ha ha) but it's interesting to reflect on the changes that I have made over the past 18 months. And fortunately there's still plenty of time to grow. I'm really excited for the next 6 months!
 
This week, we also had an awesome zone meeting. We talked about Jacob and Esau in Genesis 25 and not selling your mission "birthrights" for the "natural man". Meetings like that are kind of intense, because you go into them thinking, "Hm. Our whole zone is here, and expecting 2 hours of spiritual feasting and enlightened guidance... what are we talking about again?" But... it works out, and you usually don't even have time to talk about everything that you planned to talk about. I don't know if that equals "spiritual feasting and enlightened guidance", but our zone is awesome, and they put up with us.
 
This week we were very blessed. It was P-day, then we were out of our area for exchanges and zone meeting until Wednesday evening, then Thursday is Weekly Planning day, and we left after the planning session for an exchange until the ward Christmas party on Friday evening. And then Elder Baker to pack and everything, so we really just weren't in our area a lot.  But the Lord knew that we were doing everything that we could for the week, so we were still very blessed in our efforts. On Wednesday, we had to schedule a lot of lessons so that we could still be helping our investigators progress, but when we did have time to go out and find, the first person that came to the door was interested, and his roommate was a foster child who was raised in an LDS home and really loved it there, and so we're teaching that family. When we went to an appointment on Friday, the investigator had to cancel, but as we were walking back to our car, we talked to this lady who was walking somewhere with her daughter, and invited her to the ward Christmas party, and we ended up teaching her, too. Missionary work really isn't "our" work, we are just very blessed with miracles every day that help the work move forward.
 
Well, the church is true! Merry Christmas, everyone! And happy birthday, Mother Dearest! I have a Christmas package that I am going to send down with a bunch of Canadian candy and other miscellaneous stuff. I haven't been able to send it because I was temporarily separated from my wallet, but I fortunately had a joyful reunion with it and so I have the funds to send it home now. It won't make it by Christmas, but... It's the thought that counts! Love you all!
 
Elder Blotter

Monday, December 9, 2013

The Spirit of God....is Burnin' in Vernon.

Family,

Well, just like that it's been another week. Man, it's weird how quickly time goes by. It's been a great week! Time is certainly not going slowly. There were a lot of spiritual outpourings this week. We were down in Richmond for mission council earlier this week, and it was an amazing experience. For the year 2014, the mission set a goal for 2014 convert baptisms, which is probably 5 times the number of baptisms that we'll have this year. The work is hastening! The faith of the missionaries in the council was just awesome. In the Canada Vancouver mission, we've started to find more new investigators in a one year period than there are members in the province.

This weekend, Kelly got baptized! (Toni's is now for December 15th) It was a beautiful baptismal service. Kelly really was a miracle. The highlight of the service was her testimony at the end. She stood up and bore a brief testimony of the Book of Mormon and the spiritual power that she can find in the pages, and then she talked about how her entire life she has been searching for the truth, and has explored tons of different churches, but "3 weeks ago the missionaries knocked on my door, came back the next day, and I've known that I have found the truth ever since". She's such an awesome convert. It really has been a blessing to have taught her.

Okay. I wish I had all the time in the world to write down all of the crazy spiritual experiences that we have every week. One of them... so, President Tilleman promised us that if we do everything that we can every day, we will be able to find at least one new investigator every day. One day we went all day without finding anyone in between our teaching appointments, and we just kept on thinking of that promise and we were questioning if we had done "everything" that we could have that day. We ended up finding our new investigator that day at 8:56 as I was backing up Elder Baker (fun missionary safety rule) so we could pull out of our parking spot and drive to the apartment for the evening. This guy walked by the vehicle, and so I stopped him, and Elder Baker got out of the vehicle and we ended up teaching him a lesson right on the spot there.

Last night, we had our FLDS investigator to the Christmas Devotional. She loved it. It's amazing to realize that we have a living prophet on the earth today, who can give us messages directly from Heavenly Father. What a blessing that would be for the whole world, if they would just listen to the message that we share. It's made me reflect on the blessings that the gospel brings to those who actually apply it in their lives. Every day we're on the streets and getting glimpses into people's homes. And guess what? People need the gospel! In conference, Elder Ballard committed the whole church to "reach out to just one" with love as a gift to the Saviour. I hope that everybody remembers to do so! It won't go unnoticed by those watching from Heaven.

Well, Merry Christmas, everybody! Happy birthday next week, Mother! I guess next P-day will be the 16th so there will be another email then, but still! Sorry, this email might be short! We have a baptismal interview that we have to conduct that we need to get to! Love you all lots!

Elder Blotter

PS- 
One of the pictures is us and Kelly. 
In the other one, Steven Rasmussen (who is doing great over in Ontario and still going strong since his baptism,) is in between me and Elder Baker. Drunk Tim (still a work in progress) is on the end.



Monday, October 28, 2013

The Church is true in Vernon

Family,

Well, it's been another great week in Vernon! It's weird when I start writing emails now, I don't even really know what to write about because I've forgotten what happened last week and what happened this week because everything kind of blurs together. I have to pull out my planner and remember what week was this week. But, it's been great! There have been a lot of miracles over the past week! And it's beautiful here in the fall. It's finally back to the season where we can rake people's leaves for service and things like that, and it's not brutally cold yet. Fall is a great time to be a missionary.

Our teaching pool is doing great. Steven has stayed completely clean from alcohol and smoking. It blows me away how well he has done. He would smoke a ton and then drink 9 cans of beer every night-- he knew that not because he was capable of counting, but because there would always be 6 cans left in a case when he sobered up the next day. He's completely clean now, and he's going to be baptized on the 3rd. He rents out a room of a house, along with one other tenant, and we found out that the lady that he rents from is a former investigator, who is actually very promising and has committed to come to his baptism. The other tenant, Tim, is another alcoholic who we've seen sober probably one time. He always barges into the room that we're teaching Steven in and talks about how he's looking for his cat, which has always been bad interruptions, but Steven told us that he told him that he always tries to come in to the lessons because he wants to learn because he's seen the influence that it has had on Steven. So, we tried to let him stay at the lesson we had with Steven yesterday, but he was drunk. So he would ask a really sincere question with tears in his eyes, and then we would answer it... and then he'd stand up and start acting like a dinosaur. So we committed him to be sober for our lesson today. Alcohol is so gross. We'll see how that goes. But still, lots of miracles coming from that one building.

We're teaching a lot of other interesting people, too.  We had a few people come to church with us. We got one of our investigators, Sean, to leave his "Nerd Cave"/basement where he does nothing but play video games to come to church. Sometimes you're tempted to stop teaching people because "they're not going to keep commitments, I mean come on, he just kept talking about why he believes in Norse gods last time," but they surprise you. Regardless of what somebody's background is, the gospel "is for them". He had to go in the foyer in the middle of Sacrament meeting because he can't handle crowds, but he still put in the effort to come.

Other than that, it's just been a busy week of finding and teaching. We see miracles every day. It really is crazy how at the end of the day you can look back and just see how everything kind of fit together to make it a great day. Like, we were flipping through some potentials, and kept on calling one named Ashley and finally were able to meet with the family, and it turned out that she was the spouse of Gary, a former investigator who didn't get baptized because she didn't want him to. But now she's kind of had a change of heart, and we were just able to contact them at just the right time to start teaching them. Another time we got sidetracked talking to one guy for too long, but we decided to knock just one more door before leaving the complex, and found this awesome lady, Tracy, who had an LDS grandma and was really excited that we weren't Jehovah's Witnesses. She kept on telling us "you really knocked on the right door here". Enough of those experiences just add up and at the end of your week it's just really amazing to see all the stuff that happened.

Oh yeah! For like the first time in my life I had to go to a doctor other than Dr. Blotter for a day-to-day kind of thing. A member gave us a canned ham, and I was trying to open it, but the opening mechanism on the can broke, and I was trying to pull it open with my hand, and it totally sliced my fingers open. It was my first experience with Canadian health care too. I... survived.

Well, life is great. At night by our beds Elder Baker and I are always like "Are we here already?" And Elder Baker is great. Um. Well mother, if you need more facebook stalking ammo, his name is Brad Baker, he's from Raymond Alberta. He says to look up "bradbaker121" and watch the Backstreet Boys videos on youtube. He says he says he's the "handsome one".

Well, it was great to write all of ya. I'll send some more pictures of Vernon. Hopefully you all have a great week! ...Mosiah 28:3!

Elder Blotter


Monday, October 21, 2013

Life's Great in the Okanagan

Family!

Well hi. Hope it's been a good week! It definitely has up in these parts. It's full fall up here, and it's starting to get pretty chilly. I still feel blessed to be able to have dodged the rainy season in the lower mainland, though. It feels a lot more like Utah around here. In fact, Vernon actually does look a lot like the Bear Lake valley, actually. Mountains and lakes. Most of Vernon is like a big maze because it's mostly not a grid, and it's built mostly on the sides of mountains in a valley. For our workout in the morning, we just run up and down this massive set of stairs that just goes up and down a hill that connects 2 streets. Vernon is a beautiful place, though. A fall wonderland.

 From the pictures that you sent home. It looks like the family is doing well! I could see the video that dad sent of Ness and Jacey's duet. Good work, Jacey Lou! You're going to be a piano star. (You too, Ness. You too.)

Anyways! The work in Vernon has been going great. I love being a missionary. Every day here feels kind of like an adventure. I wish I had the time to just share all of the miracles that we have every day! I'll just talk about how last night went, for an example. President Tilleman promised the mission that every companionship could have a baptism in October if we all did everything that we could, and we've had a few baptismal dates for October, but for unfortunate reasons, a lot of them have had to be rolled back into November, and so we've been struggling to get out investigators into the waters of baptism this October. Over the past few weeks, we've had awesome lessons with Steven (the investigator who knew and believed the Plan of Salvation before we taught it). A few nights ago, he threw us his cigarettes and committed to never smoke again, but he's still been struggling with drinking. Last night, showed us his bedroom, which was just filled with empty cans of beer, just cases and cases worth. So, right then and there, we started cleaning his room with him. It was like being able to physically watch the atonement work. We totally smelled like booze, but after we went into the kitchen and just prayed with him that he would be able to completely stop and be able to be baptized by the end of October. All of this made us really late for our next appointment, and the member that we rode to the lesson with had to leave the appointment early, and so we get out of the lesson smelling like alcohol and carrying a half empty container of coffee, the last of his supply, and realize that we have no way of getting to our next appointment. So we just start running to our next appointment, climbing over fences and things, handing off this bag of coffee stuff as we go. We get to the appointment, and the investigator, Toni, that we were meeting with, was just sitting there having some bonding time with the bishop and his wife, and she had actually been reading and praying, and was doing great. Man. You just go home happy. 

Ha ha. After the gospel principles lesson on tithing this Sunday, he heard that tithing funds support missionary work, and so he wanted to just directly give us his tithing money. People like him are the people that you're looking for.

In any case, the work is going great here in Vernon. We're finding lots of people to teach. I'm really beginning to have a greater appreciation of the relationship between faith and success in missionary work. With faith, you can find somebody new to teach every hour that you spend finding. Elder Baker is really good at looking past the humdrum of missionary work and doing everything that you can when talking to every single person, and so it's been cool to learn that from him. And working with all of the missionaries in the zone has been great. We get to hold phone conferences with district leaders to talk about how we can help the zone grow, and we get to go on exchanges with struggling missionaries. We're going to be going down to Kamloops after preparation day today to work with a set of missionaries down there.

Well, love you all! Sorry that I don't have more time to write! The church is true. If there's time, we're going to grab our cameras and send home a few pictures.

Elder Blotter
Elder Blotter and Elder Baker in the car....

Maybe a little chocolate pudding?

Monday, October 14, 2013

Happy (Canadian) Thanksgiving!

Family,

Oh man. What a great week it's been. I love Vernon. We just went to this "Bee World" place that had honeybee nests or whatever you call them in between sheets of glass that connected to the outside world by little pipes, and they had a table where you could try like 20 different honeys made from different plant sources from like orange bloom to buckwheat. Then we went to this famous Davison's orchard, to get some apples and apple cider. And then, because we decided that we're only going to be in the Oke once in the fall, we paid some exorbitant amount for an apple pie. But we're excited for it. Once you leave the lower mainland, BC has a lot of farmland, and we're right in the middle of it, but it's beautiful country. It's Thanksgiving today, too! The first of probably two thanksgivings, because any excuse to eat Turkey, people will take, so we'll have an American Thanksgiving too.

The work over the past week has been great. We were on exchanges with other missionaries for the first half of the week. We were in Clearwater, a little BC town that recently reopened to missionaries. It felt a whole lot like Burns Lake, and there was a brand new missionary serving there. It brought me back to the good old days. I love the fall. It's weird, but I think it is my favorite time of the year. We also did some work in Kamloops with some other missionaries, and had a Zone Conference. It was a busy week, but it was great, and we had the chance to find some new investigators. We were able to set a baptismal date with one of the "eternal investigators" there. Miracles have not ceased.

Oh, and Mom, At the zone conference, President Tilleman told me that there was a recent convert in Prince George who has non-member family. He's preparing to serve a mission, and his family is just absolutely livid that they could only talk to him twice a year for 2 years, and so President Tilleman went to personally meet the family himself. He says that they were getting more and more heated, but he told them the story about how we had permission to meet together, and chose not to, and that was one of the things that finally called them down. President Tilleman thinks that that's why the situation happened. So, Mother, there you go. There was a reason, and it helped a young guy in Prince George.

Well, the work in Vernon is going great. We've been reflecting on a lot of different ways that we can "hasten the work", and after hearing a story about it, we decided that we were going to start running from house to house to talk to more people. The first time we committed to do it, we got out of our car and started running to a lesson across a parking lot. There was a man slowly making his way across the parking lot with a walker, and so we jogged over and started talking to him. Long story short, he's this delightful old man named David who is going to be baptized later in November. His brain runs a few seconds slow, and so we'll teach about something like priesthood authority being restored, and a few seconds later his face just lights up with this huge, sincere smile. We have a few more baptismal dates for the end of October, and then a few for early November, and so we have been really blessed here in Vernon. People really are just placed in our path. We were "ministering" on a street the other day, and we knocked on the door of somebody who was having a birthday party. Someone came out and started talking to us, and enough people were curious that at one point we just had 7 people on the porch listening to us.

Well, it's been a bit of a learning curve over the past week. We get humbled all the time by the things that we forget to do or the stuff we don't handle... ideally. But we're learning a lot.

Well, love ya, family! Talk to you next week.

Elder Blotter

PS- Mom, you are the only person including the whole Vernon ward that has actually asked us who is in our teaching pool. Way to follow the prophet. The names of our baptismal dates are Rose, Toni, Steven, David, and Vicki. If you could pray for them, that would be great.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Report from Vernon

Well, hello, family! 

Oh goodness. The last week has been one of the most awesome weeks of my mission. It has been super busy, and time has just been disappearing it's gone by so fast. I love Vernon! It is a little bit different than the Hong Couver area, that's for sure. I haven't seen mostly grass-covered mountains since... the MTC, but up here it pretty much just feels like a colder and a little less dry version of Utah. And I love the people here. This is great. Since last emailing, there's been a lot of spiritual feasting. Wasn't conference awesome? There were a lot of great talks. A lot of revelation received. Transfer meeting and mission council were both awesome, and I feel like I have learned a lot about the principle of faith. When you have faith, you really can do everything.

My new companion, Elder Baker, is awesome. Totally awesome. He's from a little town in Alberta. (Mother, if you're planning on facebook stalking, his first name is Brad) We have just seen a lot of miracles over the past few days. So, our mission has reached a point over the past 3 months where we've had about 40 of our brothers and sisters join the church. Awesome. 3 years ago it was like... 12. This month, the goal is for every companionship to baptize (and then an extra 20 or so. Ha ha) and to reach a goal of 145 baptisms. Which is awesome, but it's going to take a lot of faith, work and miracles. I don't have a tremendous amount of time to write, so I am just going to type really fast because I have a lot that I wish I could write. 

So, after setting that goal in mission council, we were super excited. So, after mission council, we're staying with the zone leaders in Surrey, and we have a few hours to go out and work before the day is over. So the elders drop us off someplace completely random, and one of the Surrey elders, Elder Kennedy, who is a 6' 10'' full-ride-to-BYU-in-basketball-or-football-he-still-needs-to-pick kind of guy. He's been out for just 6 months or so and is a zone leader (President Tilleman doesn't really do "traditional" leadership assignments. We got Spanish speaking sisters for the first time, and there aren't any spanish-speaking sisters to train them. So... they're just training each other. They're in Canada, so they won't starve, but... good luck teaching lessons and speaking at church and stuff.) Anyways, he leans out the car window as they are driving away and just says "I promise you in the name of Jesus Christ that if you do all that you can this evening you will find 5 new investigators and set 1 baptismal date". So, we just went at it. 6th door that we knock on, a voice yells "Come in!" So we do, walk up a set of stairs, and find these two guys sitting there watching TV. Initially, they kind of want us to just leave, but we just sort of sit down and start talking with them, and in the end we set 2 baptismal dates with them. Boom. We walk outside, there's a guy walking home. We teach him the first lesson on the street. Boom. We realize that it's dark rainy, and we don't have a phone, so we walk back where they dropped us off, and they are nowhere to be found. We get a Serbian man to call them, and we leave a voicemail telling them to come back, and just hope for the best. We then start talking to this 17 year old black guy who met missionaries before, and read the Book of Mormon for 4 days straight after meeting them, and then didn't know what to do so just kept moving on with his life. Suddenly, the Surrey elders, who had gone home to do something lame like weekly plan came back to pick us up, and we set a baptismal date with him and taught him on the street. Then, we drive back to the street that the Surrey elders were on, and we both just start knocking on doors. And the Surrey elders found someone. 5 new investigators, and 4 baptismal dates. Miracles.

Anyways, we travel back to Vernon, and ever since then, we've just still been seeing miracles. It's been great. We don't tract. We just teach people that aren't investigators yet. And if you have enough faith, people will listen to you. Man. It's so good. We have a plan to baptize weekly, starting this weekend. But we'll see. It just seems like the Lord is placing people in our path. We taught a member's neighbor yesterday because the member just did their part of asking their sick neighbor if they would like a blessing. (That is so easy to do. Member missionary work is not hard to do.) We taught someone who was weeding outside of an apartment complex where we were going to contact an investigator who didn't have a phone. We stopped somebody who was jogging last night and he was a receptive less active guy. Heavenly Father is so good! There are so many miracles everywhere! We're teaching this guy named Steven who in a lesson, when asked what the meaning of life was, said "You guys might think this is weird... but I think we lived with God as spirits before we came here, and we're here to get bodies or something." Ha ha. Really. God is so good.

But, there have been some interesting challenges as well. I thought that calling for the results for the week would just include writing down numbers. But sometimes district leaders report that nobody in their district found a new investigator, or that they had areas that didn't teach any lessons, etc. You have to discern if it was a rough week and they need to be built up, or if they were lazy and need a bit of chastening, and you have to help them see what they need to do to help their districts improve. In the end, how somebody serves a mission is entirely up to them, and, because the Priesthood only works on principles of persuasion and meekness and love and righteousness and all those other good things in D&C 121, you can't really tell anybody what to do, and the only way somebody is going to listen to you is if they feel your love for them and they respect you. And there's challenges like for one of our investigators to get baptized by his date, he's going to have to quit cold turkey on smoking, and for him to do that, it's going to take a ton of following up. But we're out of our area for the first part of the week to go on exchanges with a two different areas that are struggling. And there's a zone conference this week, and we have to give a training on planning to two zones and President Tilleman. Whew. Pressure's on. But it will be good.

Oh man. I typed fast. I successfully got it all done. Another miracle! Well. Love you all. Hope you have a good week!

Elder Blotter

PS- I usually forget to add this. My address here is 4015 15th Ave, Vernon, BC V1T 8H1.