Showing posts with label MTC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MTC. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Eating Well

 The cafeteria at the MTC!  A place to make new friends who are also trying their best to serve our Heavenly Father and his son Jesus Christ.  
We talked with missionaries going to places as diverse as Lubbock, Texas and Busan, Korea.  
From Australia to Norway to Ethiopia to the Philippines to Belgium.
I loved every minute.
Of the 1000 missionaries who were in the MtC with us, about 120 or so were ‘senior couples’ like us.  The rest were young 18, 19, and 20 year olds.  What would you do if you had to feed that many young people, the majority of whom are young men?
Load ‘em up with carbs!  Right?
True but they also had salad bars and rice bowels and fresh fruit and lots of healthy food to assure that nutritional choices were available.  
The choices were nutritious enough to keep us all healthy and sweet enough to keep us happy. I ate more doughnuts and desserts than I’ve eaten in the last year.  
Nothing beats a BYU mint brownie!

George and I enjoyed a Diet Coke, caffeine free almost every day. 
All this yummy food was very economical as well.. 
And it was a treat NOT  to have to cook or do dishes.  
Happy, well fed missionaries!






Saturday, March 15, 2025

Junior Missionaries

Practically everyone in the world recognizes missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. If you see  two young men in white shirts and ties walking together or two young ladies in their Sunday best also always together, you assume they are Mormon missionaries.  And many times you would be right. They are the junior missionaries and we old folks are the seniors!

One of the blessings of being a Senior Missionary at the MTC is you get to see those young people all day everyday.  We share the campus and the cafeteria with them and they are unfailingly polite, holding doors and helping in anyway they can.  I have dropped so many pieces of silverware on my way to have them washed and every single time a young Elder or Sister scoops them up for me and often takes my other dishes to the conveyer belt for me.  I just adore them.

I loved being at the MTC at the same time as a young woman from our Ward.  The 5th of 8 daughters, she is the 4th to go on a mission.  Her calling is to go to church history sites in Nauvoo, Illinois.  She will make a wonderful missionary as have her older sisters.
One morning, as we walked into breakfast, a young sister asked us if we had lived in Lake Oswego, Oregon.  She was in our ward when she was a little girl but the family had moved to Utah.  Her Mom and I were friends on Facebook and had shown her our photos and asked her to look for us, which she did.  
She said that she did remember us from the ward in Oregon. So great to give her a hug.  She is off to Germany in a few weeks.

On one of our first nights, I noticed these two sisters because one was in a wheelchair.  I struck up a conversation with them and learned that she had been injured in an accident playing volleyball at the MTC.  Her ACL was torn and she was going to have to go home for surgery.  You could see the disappointment in her eyes every time I saw her.  Her companion impressed me with how tenderly she helped her companion.  In case you didn’t know, each missionary, male or female is assigned a companion and they must be in sight of each other at all times. It is hard to navigate the busy TC Cafeteria in a wheel chair managing a plate and a drink but her companion was right there by her side. Such Christ-like love.  They had both been called to serve in Korea and had been learning Korean for several weeks.

When I saw them this week, I knew that something was different.  No longer did the sister look so sad and anxious.  I learned that she had met with the Presidency of the MTC and  together they decided that she would stay at the MTC and finish her language training and then go home, have the surgery and while she rehabbed would serve a local service mission near her parent’s home. BUT the great news that had her glowing was that as soon as her doctor gave her the go ahead, she could serve in Korea!
Talk about a change of countenance! 
She is allowed to walk a little bit.  Now we are all Facebook friends so I can follow these two on their further adventures.  New friends!

Tonight I met a sister heading to Lubbock, Texas .  She told me that her parents had moved recently back to her mother’s home town of Monticello, Utah.  That’s where my cousins live.  So I took a photo of her, sent it to my cousin and he will share the photo with them and pass along the report that their daughter is glowingly happy, surrounded by good people and anxious to go and serve in Lubbock, Texas.
The sister with the Monticello connection is in the dark shirt with no vest.  Isn’t she glowing?

I feel sad when I think of leaving here but also know that these next 18 months will be filled with opportunities to interact with more of these young, enthusiastic servants of the Lord.  I will learn a lot from them and hope I can be a surrogate grandma to some!









Mission Phase 1 - Completed

 As my Kenyan friend likes to say when something is finished, “Mission phase 1 is done and dusted”.  Our two weeks at the Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah have been memorable - a time of  spiritual growth, testimony building, and making friends, young and not so young.

Surrounded by about 1000 others who are also leaving the comforts of home to go and serve missions all over the world has been inspiring.

 Using fantastic, interactive teaching methods, our young trainers have taught us how to share our love of Jesus in simple ways that won’t be hard to do. 
Our district - Elder Pass from Washington State, heading to Montevideo, Uruguay; Elder and Sister Flower from Texas also going to Peru and our two adorable trainers - Sister Barker, who served her Misison in California, Spanish Speaking and Sister Bennett who served in France and Switzerland.  They were our 8-12 in the morning teachers.  And they made learning so fun.
In the afternoons from 1 - 4:30 Brother Kidd, who served in Oregon, and Sister Gee, who served in Brazil managed to keep us awake even during the sleepy afternoon nap time slump.

That’s what the first week was all about, then the 2nd week was specifically geared to those of us who will be working in mission offices.  There was a lot of information and I am sure I have forgotten most of it but we have been assured that there will be a lot of help available, both from Salt Lake and Lima and most importantly through the Spirit’s guidance.

Since we will have different responsibilities on the mission we were in different classes. George will be the Financial Secretary and he and I will share responsibilities as Housing Coordinators.

Here is George with his trainers and all the others who will be handling the finances in their missions.

Trainors Brother Barney and Sister Lau, Elder Pearson heading to the Philippines; Sister Dietz to Tampa, Florida, and Sister McCann to Albuquerque.
And here I am with my fellow ‘Housing Coordinators’.
Our trainer, Brother Henry, Elder Dietz going to Tampa, Sister Oakason who will live at home and serve in the Salt Lake City East Mission; Brother Stephenson who is going to Yakama, Washington; Sister Babbel going to Frankfurt, Germany; the Flowers who will be going to Lima, Peru; our trainers Brother Bish and Brother Draper, one of the mentors the church provides to help train senior missionaries.

The days were very busy and on several nights we had devotionals.  Yes, we were tired but those devotionals were highlights for me. 
I will never forget the feeling of singing “Called to Serve” with that huge group of missionaries.  I had been really looking forward to this and I got to experience it twice.  I was so tempted to record it with my phone but I resisted the urge. At the beginning of the song in the hymn book, the directions are ‘with conviction’ and boy do these mighty young people sing with conviction.

Called to serve Him, heav’nly King of glory,

Chosen e’er to witness for his name,

Far and wide we tell the Father’s story,

Far and wide his love proclaim.

 2. Called to know the richness of his blessing—

Sons and daughters, children of a King—

Glad of heart, his holy name confessing,

Praises unto him we bring.

 [Chorus]

Onward, ever onward, as we glory in his name;

Onward, ever onward, as we glory in his name;

Forward, pressing forward, as a triumph song we sing.

God our strength will be; press forward ever,

Called to serve our King

Tomorrow we leave this sacred place to start Phase 2 of our mission.
Since our visas haven’t arrived yet, we have been reassigned to the Salt Lake Headquarters Mission while we wait.  We’ll be in an apartment in downtown Salt Lake doing something around Temple Square.
They provide an overview training on everything from family history to church security.  
It will be interesting to see where we will serve…..and interesting to see how long we wait for the Visas.
Life always gives us surprises.