Since
arriving in New York, J.D. hasn’t had much chance to write something for this
blog, so he asked me to post some excerpts from his letters to us. (I've left out most of the family stuff.)
Nov.
5
I
absolutely love it in NY. I love the people, the town, the everything. I live
in an area called Dyker Heights in Brooklyn!!! I have the best view of
Manhattan and the ocean. I love it. My apartment is a very stereotypical NY
apartment. It's small, dirty, overpriced, and my favorite place. I really love
it. I'm not joking.
I
really dislike street contacting I won't lie. I don't like disturbing people
when they obviously don't want to talk or just are having a good time with
their families. My companion really is interesting when he does it because you
could spot him from a mile away that he is coming to talk to you. I've talked
to some interesting people... really interesting. I have a few awesome stories
but I'll send them in snail mail when I have time to actually write things. Now
I'm in a Chinese internet cafe so I'm just listening to Chinese pop music while
writing my letters. I do hear real music because everyone plays their music
loud here so that is really nice.
I
miss Mom's cooking haha. I am fine fending for myself but it's not nearly as
good. I have had 1 dinner appointment; it was so good! I had this Honduran dish
call popusas (spl?) and it is like my new favorite food. I love it.
I
survived the hurricane obviously. I stayed in my apartment for the storm
because I live in the highest point in NYC. 2 missionaries came and joined us
in our pad for the storm. I am disappointed [with some of the missionaries, a
few—not all]. "Oh, I'm tired." "I'm hungry."
"It's heavy." "It's wet." BLAH BLAH BLAH! It's
pathetic that a greeny like me has to kick others' butts into gear to do stuff.
A lot are just lazy and it just makes me want smack them. There are owners
of the houses who don't stop to eat. I don't either until they do. That's my
philosophy. I will get a good dinner tonight, they won't, so I can hold out and
help them get done faster. There are also some Elders that are not sensitive at
all to the loss of some of these people and will be talking about how hard this
house was destroyed or how much crap was lost or stuff like that. Are they
idiots? They will also work so incredibly slow and inefficiently. At one point
I nearly said, "You live in New York. Act like it. Suck it up, act like
representatives of Jesus Christ, and get to work." Someone was very
hesitant about picking something up so I said, "What are you doing? Are
you scared you'll break a nail?" That got him moving haha. I've often
thought about what Pap would say to some of these guys if he saw them. That'd
be good haha. But there are a lot of missionaries that are very helpful
and aren't just putsying around.
Where
I live, you couldn't really tell it was a hurricane but other places got hit
very hard. Parts of Staten Island and Far Rockaway got destroyed. It looks like
a war zone. That's not a figure of expression but a literal statement. There
are holes in the ground where houses used to be, parts of houses gone, boats
lodged into houses, cars piled up in the street filled with sea water, roads
covered in dried mud, streets that are now rivers. It is a very humbling
experience. I won’t go into too much detail because it is very sad, but in one
area we helped with they were still looking for bodies in a pool of water.
We've been doing service for the past week and will for another 2-6 months. We
will work during the day and proselyte in the night. We went out to Staten and
then got stranded there for 2 days because NY ran out of gas. We stayed in a
chapel and got blankets, food, and new clothes from the help of members. It was
very nice of them. I am so humbled. It made me think of all the things I'd have
to throw away if I picked a water line and pitched everything below it. And let
me tell you, people have a lot of stuff. So keep things clean, that's the
motto.
Nov. 13
This
week I had to talk to people on the phone in Spanish for the first time. You
know how much I hate talking on the phone anyway so this made me really scared.
I actually ended up doing really well and set appointments and talked
to a lot of people. It was pretty cool. At one point I just thought, "why
am I nervous? If I mess up, none of these people will ever recognize me or
remember this." So I changed my attitude and it was a whole lot easier. We
also talked to this Hispanic family and I told them I was part Italian. They
then said that made me Latino and one of them. I'm good with it, that's all I
care.
So
in our pad, our pilot light went off on our oven. We called our landlord and
when he came he said there was something wrong with the hose. We have to keep
our windows open so we don't get filled with gas till he can fix it and it just
snowed, so we're a tidge bit cold haha, but everything is fine and there isn't
anything to worry about. Also, the toilet clogged. We have to get the landlord
to come fix it because it won't unclog and it's been unusable for 2 days. We've
had to go to a chinese bakery and buy something just to use the bathroom haha.
Service
has been going pretty well here. Things have started calming down as more
houses are getting finished. There's still work but like I said, it's calming
down. I'm curious as to how Stone Harbor is? What's the news on that? I know NJ
coast was hit really hard. I haven't worked with Jellen yet but I have seen
some NJ Elders and saw two of my friends who are serving in Philly who came to
help us out.
That's
cool about Byron showing the CNN pic. I hadn't seen it but had heard that we
had been on CNN. Cool! Thanks. We get to Staten by car pooling or by subway/bus
depending on the day. I really love doing the service. Anyway, I've got to
go. I love you.
Nov.
19
So I
found out, Mom, that [my companion] Quist's brother saw your devotional when
you got the Maeser award and remembers it. He said he really loved it and
thought it was very good. Thought that was interesting. Plus, if he remembered
it by your name, then that means it left an impression. Small world.
Thanksgiving
we are going to a member's house and that's all I know about that. We have a
mission lunch at the mission office tomorrow. Every missionary in NY South will
be there. It will be fun... I hope :P
So
things that have happened here... I have met a lot of very interesting people.
I love people watching here. It is so very entertaining here. I have also had
an incredible amount of humbling and spiritual experiences here. Every Thursday
we teach an English class in the church for those wanting to learn Spanish to
English. I absolutely love that more than anything. I see people who wouldn't normally
talk to us and really get to know them well. OH, it's a free class for anyone,
very few members ever come and we have about 8-12 people every time. We teach
them what they want to know and then end with a spiritual thought. It's a very
good experience. We've met a lot of people there. It's amazing. I've actually
thought I might want to do this when I get back, like for St Francis or anywhere if they'd let
me. (Not with the LDS spiritual message, obviously.)
Well
I'm going to go. I'm trying to send pics but these computers are really dumb.
Nov.
26
Average
days here depend on if we are doing service. With service, we go to where ever
we are that day, then serve till 4. Come back, eat, shower, go out for
appointments. When not doing service, we do studies from 8-12, eat, go out and street
contact (or fearless as we call it), and visit people. On Thursdays we teach
English class and yeah...
I
too hate fearlessing Dad. It's useless and gives me anxiety. I was slightly
humbled because one of our new investigators who is a golden investigator was
found by fearlessing so... that kinda put me in my place...
With
service I haven't been able to do much Spanish so it's gotten a little worse
but I still use it everyday, which is good. I'll talk to the workers or the
people in the houses in Spanish if that's their language.
Oh I
forgot to tell you. So I went to mission conference. 10 min before it starts I
get asked to sing for it... that was interesting. It went ok but not as well as
I want. Does it ever?
So
happy late thanksgiving. We were supposed to go to 2 members' houses but Quist
got a concussion playing football so we stayed in our pad all day and I took
care of him. Haha that was my TG day but it was actually fun so I didn't care.
Dec.
5
first, the shift key isn't working so this will be annoying.
so
transfer meeting is tomorrow and this last week i was praying saying, 'please
transfer me' and having faith that it would happen even though i wasn't done
with the 12 week program. well the transfer call came and they told me i was
out! i was so scared, happy, nervous, excited. my comp thought that couldn't be
right and i also was sad because maybe i did want to stay... i'm so bipolar...
so i prayed and said, if i stay or go, i will have faith and know that whatever
happens is right and for the best. right when i finished we got a call from the
zl's and said that the first call was wrong and that i was staying.... i think
it's cuz i had a moment of doubt haha. oh well, i will follow what the lord
wants and i know it is for the best.
We went to a recent convert member's house in one of his old areas and I met this kid named Robert. I could tell he had just a pure soul. I could also tell the religion stuff quist brought up with his mom, he found embarrassing and frustrating. So i talked to him about normal stuff. he's going to the army on friday and all this stuff. He's an amazing kid. At the end I felt i should say "Hey, I know this religion stuff is ridiculous and cheesy sometimes, but take my advice and take your BoM with you just to have in case you need it. I'm not saying read every day, just have it in case." There was other stuff but that was the gist. I wanted to be real.
We went to a recent convert member's house in one of his old areas and I met this kid named Robert. I could tell he had just a pure soul. I could also tell the religion stuff quist brought up with his mom, he found embarrassing and frustrating. So i talked to him about normal stuff. he's going to the army on friday and all this stuff. He's an amazing kid. At the end I felt i should say "Hey, I know this religion stuff is ridiculous and cheesy sometimes, but take my advice and take your BoM with you just to have in case you need it. I'm not saying read every day, just have it in case." There was other stuff but that was the gist. I wanted to be real.
Anyway, Dad, I actually think "fearlessing" isn't
a bad name but is clever and is true. When talking to people, you really can't
have fear but just go for it. That's the truth, it doesn't mean I like to do it
though haha. Anyway the Turkey Bowl was an entire mission thing. All the
missionaries were doing it. It was a lot of fun actually and a good activity
for Thanksgiving. It was a nice time to run. Haven't run well since the MTC so
it was good.
We
had a mission conference this last week. In it we were asked, "What have
you learned from this?" I honestly couldn't think of an answer. So it was
on my mind for a while. I started thinking about all the people I've seen and
talked to. People have been angry at God and ceased to have faith, something
that I understand. The quote from the song in Les Mis came to mind, "To
love another person is to see the face of God." So I came up with
something "If that's the case, then to serve another person is to be the
hand of God." That's really what we, all volunteers and not just the Mormons,
are doing. We are being the hand of God in people's lives reminding them that
He IS there, that He DOES care, and that He will NEVER forget about any of us.
Just something that I wanted to share with you.
Dec.
10
I'm
really sad. I got a haircut from a Spanish place and THEY CUT MY WIDOW'S
PEAK!!! I feel weird. It's growing back but I still miss it and don't like how
it looks without it haha. Don't judge me. You can tell Todd I miss his
haircuts.
I
was thinking about how I don't have to decorate this Christmas. It made me
happy and sad haha. Sad that I couldn't do it, glad that I didn't have to clean
it up. :P It'll be interesting having my
first christmas away from the fam but I'll be fine.
The
12 week program is the training program they put new missionaries into for 12
weeks obviously. It's a 2 hour companionship study each day where we have a set
thing that we are supposed to study/watch/read. It's not too bad, just not my
favorite. So our days are in the morning, exercise for 30 min, get ready
(shower, eat, dress, etc) 1 hr, 1hr personal study, 2 hr companionship study, 1
hr language study. Then we go out and proselyte.
So I
think I just had a 1st transfer hump. I feel a lot better with this new
transfer than I have been feeling. I have little to none anxiety anymore and
Quist and I are getting along very well now. He actually had an asthma attack
on Fri and so we've been in our pad the past 2 days so he can recover. I
enjoyed it and got to finish the New Testament. First time and I really like
it, but my thought at the end was, "Revelations!? Seriously?" That
book is messed up yo. Like really. I started reading the Old Testament today
and... well... it's a book.
Are
you guys going to go see Les Mis when it comes out? You'll have to and then
tell me how it was!!! Or wait 2 years for me. Whichever you want. Both are
equally acceptable and I really have no preference. Seriously.
I've
had a lot of good experiences this past week. We met with a Less Active member.
His mom died a while ago but he still hasn't really worked through it. He wants
to go to church because he really likes it, but it reminds him of his mom and
that's scary to him. I got to do what I really want to do and I got to act like
a psychologist. We started getting to the depth of his fears and feelings and
it was really cool. It really gave me strength this week to see that thanks to
the Lord, we are able to help people out. It really made me happy.
Tell everyone I love them
and miss them.
Dec 26
Feels
like I just talked to you guys... oh wait... :P
The
singing in mission conference went really well. I got a lot of compliments and
got to listen to a lot of AMAZING singers/performers in this mission. That day
was all a Christmas program.
Anyway,
as you heard, my Spanish is super good haha not really. I'm not bad but I'm not
as good as I want to be. I am slowly progressing haha. It's good.
Um...
some news. [Name omitted]. Remember her? Yeah, SHE'S GETTING MARRED IN
JANUARY!!! Like the 5th!!! People can't be getting married... Also, []... yeah
he's engaged... to my friend []. Yeah... I CAN'T HANDLE THE MARRIAGES!!!! Ok
all the people there need to stop getting married and all the people here need
to start getting married. Seriously, that is a problem out here. EVERY. SINGLE.
ONE. Of my investigators needs to get married before they can get baptized. And
they really want to... ugh. When someone says they are married and are
hispanic, unless you see the certificate and you were there, don't believe it.
In Hispanic culture, you are married if you've lived together more than 3
months. The word "married" means NOTHING. Absolutely. Nothing. At.
All.
I'm
a little frustrated actually because we have this couple named []. They are
amazing. They are both 60 something. Anyway, they are my 3rd grandparents. I'm
not joking. They are. I love them! They always give me food and for Christmas
they gave us cards and money. They are investigators, not members. They are
amazing!!! I love them... so know I'm being taken care of haha.
I
gotta go but I'm writing a letter with more stuff and cool stories. Thanks!
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