Thursday, January 31, 2013

missionary diaries

i talked recently--was it last week? time moves too quickly--about the research i am doing this semester, reading the journals of missionaries who served in england during the victorian period, 1837-1901. the reading hasn't always been the most interesting; it seems that, out in the nottingham conference, there wasn't much to upset the mission routine. but, there are some things i've noticed.

i read the journals of elder albert jones, who served in london in the 1880s. he was cool because he included artifacts in his journal, including the passenger manifest of the ship he sailed to britain on, flowers from his grandfather's garden, and the program from the funeral of the lord mayor of london. and he was actively writing articles for the millennial star and the papers in london to address the "mormon question." several of the elders come from england originally, so their journals also contain genealogies and stories of their ancestors. 

each missionary writes about their experiences talking with people. sometimes the conversations go well, sometimes they don't go so well. they talk about their investigators and their converts and eating with them. sundays are full of meetings, just like for missionaries today.

homesickness is a pretty big thing, too. for most of the elders i'm reading about, they had to leave their wives (sometimes, literally, multiple wives) and children in order to serve, and their missions were often about two years long, still. some of the men wax poetic about their wives and their virtues; elder jones regrets not being able to give his children their christmas presents.

as i've said, i've been writing a missionary for two years, and it has struck me how similar his letters are to these journals from almost 150 years ago. it's amazing that this work is still going forward largely through faithful young men (though that missionary demographic is continually changing :))

this is visiting teaching week (haha), so here's a quote from president uchtdorf on missionary work.
The Lord … entrusts a testimony of the truth to those who will share it with others. Even more, the Lord expects the members of His Church to ‘open [their mouths] at all times, declaring [His] gospel with the sound of rejoicing’. … Sometimes a single phrase of testimony can set events in motion that affect someone’s life for eternity.
 

two years

remember how, basically every week for two years, i've written an email, full of office quotes and random facts about my week and thoughts about the gospel, and sent it off to an elder in mexico?

well, in about 18 days, that elder will be back on american soil. i keep forgetting that, soon, i'll be able to talk to him on the phone and text him and eventually see him again. has it been two years already? i can't wait!

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

today is the day!

last night at fhe, we were talking about things we are grateful for, things we are looking forward to this week, and things that we are worried about. i said that there really wasn't much i was looking forward to, since this is supposed to be a pretty normal week. that reminded travis, my conversation partner, of something that i thought was really cool.

he said that, over the break, his mom had made them all (i'm assuming this was for some kind of lesson?) take out their phones, choose a random day in each month, and set an event saying "today is the day!" then, when the alarm went off to signify that today, in fact, was the day, they were supposed to do something out of the ordinary to make that day special. i asked him what he had done when he got the reminder, and he said "i went to vegas." "the day" had fallen on the thursday before the long weekend, so he and his brother had just decided to go to vegas, because today was the day. isn't that awesome?

i think i'm going to do that. it's easy for the days and weeks to just roll along without anything particularly extraordinary happening, and this seems like a cool and fun and easy way to bring some spice into your life. when today is the day, you've got to make it count.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

need and want

“to crave and to have are as like as a thing and its shadow. for when does a berry break upon the tongue as sweetly as when one longs to taste it, and when is the taste refracted into so many hues and savors of ripeness and earth, and when do our senses know any thing so utterly as when we lack it? and here again is a foreshadowing -- the world will be made whole. for to wish for a hand on one's hair is all but to feel it. so whatever we may lose, very craving gives it back to us again.”
marilynne robinson, housekeeping


 i don't consider myself a super needy person. i've always been fine with eating lunch alone or going to the movies by myself or just hanging out at home on a friday night. maybe this is partly a result of circumstance, but it's never bothered me all that much. i'm mostly okay on my own. but sometimes, i just want to be needed, you know?
 
“having someone wonder where you are when you don't come home at night is a very old human need. ”
margaret mead

this isn't meant to invite pity; i've just been thinking about the ideas of need and want lately. i feel like showing someone you need and/or want them in your life is part of being a good friend or potentially more than a friend. if that need is eventually fulfilled, does that mean that the relationship is over? it seems to me that if you don't need or want (i think of these two terms as kind of interchangeable, but i'm still trying to decide if they are significantly different.) a person anymore, something either needs to change or to end. 

i struggle with this, because it usually seems to me that time and experience and subsequent investment in a friendship (or whatever) would just create need/want that has some kind of enduring power. but i guess that's not the case? and i'm all about moving with the cheese, so it's something i need to just deal with. but that doesn't mean that it doesn't hurt when you realize you are not needed or wanted anymore.

eponine deals with this same feeling: "without me, his world will go on turning."
i feel you, eponine.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

a quick word


the first key to writing is to WRITE, 
not to THINK.

finding forrester

unwearyingness

i was reading in helaman yesterday, and one thing that struck me was that nephi, the prophet of the time, is praised and blessed for his "unwearyingness." as a twentysomething college student, i feel like i am in a constant state of fatigue, physically, mentally, emotionally, whatever. it's easy to get tired of the same routine or of the woes and frustrations of dating or of everything not falling together exactly as i think it should. but this isn't the way i should be approaching my life. yeah, you get tired sometimes. but this unwearyingness is really the model i should look to in every aspect--gospel living, social life, school endeavors, important goals.

just a thought :)

Saturday, January 19, 2013

thoughts

i keep trying to start posts about stuff that's going on, but none of them are fully formed, which i guess means i should just write something to get them out. so, without further ado, thoughts.

--i've been researching this week (and will be for the rest of the semester), reading some mormon missionary diaries of elders who served in england during the 1800s. it's pretty cool, partly because it seems like missionary life back then is a lot the same as it is now, though, to be fair, i haven't served a mission. but these elders talk about the people they talk to, the meals they eat, the travel and weather conditions. it is interesting to see how the church has changed and grown, too.

--the beginning of literature seminars, especially seminars that have some kind of focus on british literature, always make me homesick for london. this might turn into a real post; we'll see. but it's weird to think that my time in london was pre-blog, so none of it has been documented online. i did pull out my study abroad journal this week, so i'll be taking a little bit of time to read that in the next little while.

--today was the joseph smith memorial building wedding show. we go every year; it's awesome. one of these years one of us will actually be engaged. that would make it even better! then, i've been watching the bachelor, and trust that dumb show to make you feel sentimental. sometimes things are dumb.

--our bishopric is being released tomorrow. at least we found out last week; it was enough of a bombshell with advanced notice. i have loved these men and their amazing wives, and i will be sad to see them go. i've learned a lot and grown a lot under the leadership of these men. it will definitely be an adjustment, but it will be good. change is good.

that's what i've got for now. cheers to the long weekend!