Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Sister Mikayla: "Its amazing what can happen"

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mikayla
Date: Mon, Aug 26, 2013 at 10:45 AM

well- this week was interesting... we were sickly and had to go home and sleep some days so our brains didn't explode because that wouldn't be very efficient for missionary work. Also sister Baker's esophagus is eroding so we had to go to the doctors for that. Gary Zellers thought it had something to do with her sleeping folded in half (yea weird right? haha) She is still alive though, they just had to shove a camera down her throat to figure out what is going on, but she is getting better so its all good.  Poor sister Pearson had to be our mother and she's only been out for 2 weeks now so I'm sure it wasn't super fun for her, but good experience right?

Also sacrament meeting was a little crazy. First off, when I grabbed the hymnbook from the wooden holder the whole holder broke off of the wall and hit the ground and it wasn't all the quiet. Our whole row started giggling in their arms while trying to sing the hymn. When everyone finally stopped giggling this little 6 year old boy came walking down the isle with his pants and everything around his ankles. That's not something you see every Sunday.

Any way, on a more spiritual note,Tony Collins got baptized this week which was awesome! I think he is going to be a strong member for life, he is super golden! We also had some awesome experiences with talking to people on the streets. We haven't really done that in the past because Meeker is half the size of Middleton and not a lot of people are wandering about, but we decided to have some faith and try it. So we parked our car and just started walking around and a crazy thing happened, everyone and their dog decided to come out of their house and walk around town. Pretty awesome. So we are supposed to avoid going up to people and asking to share a message, instead they want us to strike up a conversation with them and then talk about the gospel. So we talked to some girls sitting on the side walk, a lady on her porch, and a group of rough looking guys who I think were trying to blow the bass in their speakers out. We invited them to church  and they didn't seem super enthusiastic, but ya never know! Anyway it was about time for us to head in and then sister Pearson saw this really tall guy with dr dre's on practicing basketball by himself in the quarts. She is a really good athlete and plays ever sport so I think her radar was going off.  He was pretty far and looked occupied so we hesitated and started walking back to our car. Then sister Pearson turned around and said "hey I've got an idea!" And yelled through the fence "hey you! Come here!" He strutted over to the fence and took his dre's off and was like "wha?" then she was like "I'll play you at horse, if you loose you get to come to church." The guy shook his head and said "whoa I don't go to church" so sister Pearson walked into the court and said, well you better not loose then. She took the basketball and started making all the shots he was loosing and shaking his head for the first part. In the end it was tight and he beat her, but I think it was a good experience anyway because all his friends came over to watch and we got to talk to them a little about the gospel! Its amazing what  can happen when you turn your time over to the lord!
...
 Love you bunches!

Mikayla

Monday, August 26, 2013

Untapped Potential

After having a fresh taste of the "yellow" sunshine, we've all been missing "the George" these past few days. Abe has been beating on Fred more than usual and yesterday the little girls were complaining that now they had no one "to throw [them] around". They were pleading for Fred to swing them all over the yard (which he finally did) and I think he was silently pleading for Jordan to come home again to get him off the physical exertion hook. =) I can just smile at it all because no one is begging me for anything to fill the Jordan hole because "fun" doesn't register in my vocabulary. =)

My Mom and Dad came over Friday evening and spent the night because they had a temple shift that day and my Mom had a hearing aid appointment Saturday morning. It was nice to be able to visit with them in our home. While they were here, my Dad was looking out our sliding door and apparently commenting on the plants in our garden. They are big, but nothing compared to the behemoth window climbers inside his mountain home. I was in the other room and didn't hear much of the conversation  but I did hear Fred mention that nothing was growing...and then share an absurd watering method that I was apparently using. I was dumbfounded... almost. =) It's humorous the things we sometimes assume or get confused.  ("We're going to Disneyland?"). =)  I picked a dozen cucumbers and 5 yellow squash, just the past few days, out of that "barren" garden (which we ALL ate at dinner and for snacks) and the green tomatoes are so heavily laden that the plants are weighted down over their garden boxes. I guess that goes to show who is really taking care of the garden! =) I sent my Dad (and my husband) out to take a look for themselves, so even my darling man, who is ever busy providing financially for our family, and so is, unfortunately, a little detached from the gardening, can both be eye witnesses that the garden is bulging with produce, the grapes are hanging in abundant clusters, the peaches are swelling and even the strawberries are preparing to put on another crop =) Harvest time is upon us!

Fred and I were able to go to the temple on Saturday. In our city they are using a new film for instruction and I was so awed by how much I took away from that experience to ponder. Of course the words were still, verbatim, what I have been listening to for the last 23 years but the lessons learned were so much more penetrating, just like it often is when reading the same words, over and over, in the scriptures, and then at a crucial point in our lives it will suddenly become profound or take on a completely different meaning. Because I am drawn to security and consistency, change in anything "routine" in my life puts me on "high alert" and I become more observant, but my experience was an important reminder to me how much can be communicated by any "teacher", in any capacity, with voice inflection or subtle body language, to make meaning so incredibly more poignant and even sometimes completely altered. Like any lesson in our church, or in life, we can sit in our chair and just listen or we can actually hear and ponder and learn--it's up to us, but sometimes change is the catalyst that jogs us out of our methodical mentality and helps us see things with fresh perspective. It is also an important concept to remember in reverse--that our inflections, our body language can impact others so profoundly. because they have a language all their own. It was an enlighteningeye-opening, spiritual experience and Fred and I, both, find ourselves thinking on it still. Such insights are available to each of us at any time, and in any place, because there is so much that the Spirit can teach us, inside a temple or out in the world, about our purpose here, about ourselves, about others if we just have "eyes to see and ears to hear".

I sometimes read articles from the Deseret News online. A brief insert, this month, popped up just mentioning that the church had "updated"  the temple instruction video and that it was being used in select areas. I found it after the fact, so I didn't pay much attention, but what did catch my eye was the long list of comments attached to the article, many by those not of our faith, wanting to know what all the "secretiveness" was about--some "demanding" that the instruction be made public, sure that we were "hiding" something. I guess in this day and age of information overload, people think that everyone has the right to all "knowledge". I guess in a sense we all do, but ironically, there is really very little that we learn in the temple that isn't already "available" to the entire world through the scriptures. There are no secrets, just sacredness, but without being adequately spiritually prepared it would feel to the world akin to what I would feel being thrown into a complex analysis mathematics course (and most math is a snoring and simultaneously overwhelming experience to me). =) There are no secrets in academic courses, but there are mandatory prerequisites  and pure curiosity can not replace that preparatory learning. I barely made it through the most basic math class available, during my college years, and I loathed every moment of it. I had a kind brother-in-law who tried to tutor me, unsuccessfully because I was uninterested and thought the information had no useful application in my life.  I couldn't grasp the concepts because they seemed ridiculous, unimportant and inapplicable. To this day, I still make light of anything remotely connected to anything "higher" than basic math.  That attitude is intellectually damning, I realize, and surely must be frustrating, even offensive to a mathematician because they can see the vast, untapped potential, which I cannot see because I don't understand and am honestly not highly motivated to understand. Those attitudes are exactly why temple instruction is kept sacred, and from the world. There is, however, a stark difference. Because I have not adequately prepared myself, one second in an advanced math class would  instantly make me aware that I was in over my head and completely lost. Whereas, one hour into spiritual instruction inside a temple and "the world", unprepared, would be bored with what they would regard as remedial information--useless and uninteresting. Yet the potential for learning, wisdom and application is just as advanced--much more so, because it is all encompassing...and yes, I know, that includes mathematics.  Just another of my random thoughts.

Speaking of random, I ran across a funny commercial (Mikayla's suggestion) and a beautifully insightful blog post (Jay Hill's suggestion) this week, if anyone is in the mood for humor or grace.

Quote of the week:(taken from a fantastic talk that Lori suggested I read)
"Our Identity and Our Destiny"
"When Adam and Eve were cast out of the Garden of Eden, they traded their innocence, meaning a lack of knowledge of good and evil, for the prospect of perfection—that was the deal. Innocence and perfection are not the same." --Tad R. Callister
(I so need to remember this--Sometimes I think the time I spend "sheltering" myself and my family gets off balance with the time I spend helping us progress.)


My lovely little ladies--working on a Faith in God goal on Sunday.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Dear Family (including Katie)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mikayla Bloomquist
Date: Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 11:54 AM

Hello!

I bet you are all having a blast! Look we are basically all back together again! Yay! Everyone give Jordan and Katie a huge bear hug for me before you read this. Love you All! Abe sent me a picture today and It freaked me out because he looks so old! And Sophie and Lily are getting braces and Eden is going to be a senior! Wow!

Wow it really feels like its been at least 3 weeks since I last emailed you all because so much has changed! So, the training situation is a little different than they said, so I am follow up training sister Baker, and then me and sister Baker are training sister Pearson- let me say that again in mission lingo- I'm helping my red headed step child raise my granddaughter hahaha. My mission genealogy is pretty fun. My mom was raised by her step mom who's original mother died last transfer. Sister Gampe is my step-grandmother and she has only been out 7ish months and she already has a great-great grandchild.

But besides all that fun stuff this week has been amazing, sister Pearson and Sister Baker are so much fun and we have laughed so much this week, we've been doing a lot of work, and its just been an amazing time! It is possible to love people without liking them, but its more fun when you love and like your companions =). I feel like we've all been friends for a long time!

So we have a new friend living in our apartment, his name is Vern. He is the mushroom growing in our bathroom. I took a picture, but I left my camera cord at home, but it has grown in this weird shape and it kinda looks like an ear growing on the bathroom floor. We thought it was funny so we let it grow for a while, but I think sister baker will throw up if we leave it there much longer, so we will have to have a funeral for him later today. Also a spider fell out of my hair while I was blow drying it this morning... fun times. I guess they just all love me and want to be my friend and I can't blame them. Haha just kidding.

Well mother-- I love your mint and manure analogy! Even in the mission bubble you can encounter those.

Sister Betts is in Denver now, I think she jinxed herself because she said she wanted to go anywhere but there. haha, never say that, you are just asking for trouble.

Tony Collins is getting baptized this week, I don't remember how much we've told you about him (haha, I just realized I wrote "we" in that sentence, but I decided to leave it because its funny and I do that all the time now because as a missionary you are with your companion every second of your life. Anyway, he is awesome and has worked so hard to come to this point in his life and we are super excited for him!

Good news- I haven't felt like I needed alone time at all this week. This is a new experience. weird. Maybe I'm building introvert challises? It may catch up to me, but that's what pdays are for right?
Sister Pearson always quotes this commercial its super funny, you guys should look it up. Its some commercial about getting your communication right... maybe type "Hello this is the German coast guard" in google and see if it comes up.

So we've had a lot of funny experiences while we were tracting this week. We knocked on this guys door this week and I started to say Hello and he was like "oooh no- I'm a preacher. I know who you are and where you come from, so you girls just go along your merry little way." and he then shewed us away with his hands. What do you say in that situation? like "?Oh ya? Well who am I and where do I come from?" No we just said "alright thanks have a nice day!" I think there's an art to handling those awkward situations which I have not learned yet, but soon! I guess the key to most relationships is having real love and praying for the person and usually things work out even if a lot of days are awkward =).

I love you all and would love pictures of your everyday adventures this week! I don't know if you got my letter in time before you left Jordan- if not it is floating around somewhere in NJ!

We had a talk yesterday that was fun to listen to =). Random quote: "we was pickin' up hay up river and them bails was heavy." I may talk funny when I come home, sorry.

All ya'll be havin' a dern dandy week.
Bear and lion hun'in season is commin' so ya'll better gech yer tags... Thems are mean little buggers.

love ya'll
Kayla

This is our Tripanionship!!
Sister Pearson, Sister Baker and me (just in case you didn't recognize me)

Farewell Summer

Jordan came home...for 68 1/2 hours! Then Katie, his girlfriend, took him away again. =( It was 3 days of sister shrieking, brother pummeling, mother hugging, father talking, music playing mayhem and I LOVED IT!!! I was so sad to see him drive away again, but he will be back next week and then he gets to stay for 2 weeks before heading back to school. He has given me a run for my mother money... occasionally he still does, =) but I ADORE THAT BOY! When Mikayla wrote her letter this week and we gathered around the computer to read it, we were finally all together again...in spirit. So sweet.

Speaking of money, =) I took Lily and Sophie in for a routine orthodontic consultation, just to see if they would eventually need braces (so I could "brace" myself =)) I was really hoping for him to just give me the thumbs up that everything was perfect--just once, but no good. They both have inherited my bad jaw alignment in mirror image of one another (one has their lower right jaw off and one has their lower left jaw off. Quirky twin thing, huh! So, another major "investment" I get to gear up for in the near future. Wowsers! This double deal really is going to be double trouble and this is just the beginning. They'll both be in college, possibly missions together. And even receptions could be relatively close. This is going to get financially tricky! Good thing Dave Ramsey's got my back. =) I wish we had become "good friends" much sooner. =) That's alright, we've been trying to listen to prophets and make wise financial decisions all of our marriage, and even though we weren't quite as sure of the process as we are now, someone much more dependable has always had our backs so I know that "it will all work out". 

School started, for my children, on Tuesday and Wednesday and I'm still trying to get accustomed to the idea. I can't believe it's here already, but the weather has suddenly changed,  it seems in order to force me to mentally acclimate. We made the traditional supply and clothes shopping trips, attended open houses, changed our sleeping schedules (though more gradually than usual because of the excitement of having Jordan and Katie here) and started packing nightly lunches, but it all still seems surreal and I'm never really ready. It's been a beauty summer and the weather is still lovely, despite the rain and precursory signs of Autumn. I guess that is a blessing--it will help me make the transition from full to empty house as I can still be outdoors working and listening to children's voices waft over from the elementary school playground. 

These past weeks I have been driving around more than my normal hermitish habits, because of school shopping and preparing the fridge for Jordan's return. =) It is the beginning of harvest time so I have been basking in the farm smells coming from the fields; fresh cut alfalfa, newly ripened corn, and the intoxicating effusion of mint. On a particular trip through the country, I had been breathing it all in deeply, when I turned the corner and suddenly the freshness of mint mixed with the putridness of manure fertilizer. I was surprised by how decidedly worse the smell was combined than just lone fertilizer on it's own. I would have thought that the mint would help to cover up the sewage, but mint has this tantalizing perfume that enticing you to breath deeply, and even after I was aware that the stench was accompanying it, my senses seemed confused and didn't shut off automatically but just kept taking it in, and the full force of the olfactory offense was intense. I am highly scent sensitive. Smells can make or break an encounter. On other trips, where the only thing I could smell was fertilized fields, my nose could  immediately detect the intrusive smell and instantly and instinctively prompt me to hold my breath, or breath shallowly until I was in the aromatic "clear".  I have noticed that Satan uses this similar technique in life. Instead of just unleashing full blown evil on well meaning people, he is ingenious with his mixing.  He gets us breathing deeply, initially, of something that rings true and is satisfying, before letting the filth loose. And when he does, it's more difficult to convince ourselves to hold our breaths because we keep thinking that surely the  sweet will outweigh the noxious. But it never does. In the end it just magnifies the offenses because we are caught off guard, then confused and duped into breathing deeply of things we would have never intentionally inhaled had they been more unambiguous. I'll have to be on high alert for Mint and Manure traps--I think I am more susceptible to that kind

Quotes of the week:
"The Lord works from the inside out. The world works from the outside in. The world would take people out of the slums. Christ takes the slums out of the people, and then they take themselves out of the slums. The world would mold men by changing their environment. Christ changes men, who then change their environment. The world would shape human behavior, but Christ can change human nature." –Ezra Taft Benson

"One of the greatest indicators of righteous character is the capacity to recognize and appropriately respond to other people who are experiencing the very challenge or adversity that is most immediately and forcefully pressing upon us." ---David A. Bednar

With Katie--ready to head to the airport to pick-up Jordan--
We've all missed him these last 3 months!
His airplane is here
Waiting in the airport--SOOO Excited!
WE SEE HIM!
Hugs...

...And Kisses
F.H.E. with Jordan--NEVER a dull moment...
And down she goes--Katie in the wrong place, at the wrong time.
A little different night-time routine
First day of school
Wearing all black--Mourning the end of Summer break
Surprise!!! A different view.
 
  
One of our friends just got married while her brother was on his mission. With a little help from a Mitt Romney cardboard figure and some sweet printshop skills she made sure he was at the reception in spirit. It was cute...so are my girls!

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Sister Mikayla: Crazy transfer week!

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mikayla Bloomquist
Date: Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 12:33 PM

Well its here! And I can't think of a week where I have felt the spectrum of emotions so strongly all at the same time!

So last Monday I think I told you, but the APs called and asked if we had room for another missionary in our apartment and we said we did but they couldn't tell us anything so we were just wondering what was going to happen. Well I'm getting 2 chillin's tomorrow! I'm excited and nervous. I get to train 2 sisters at the same time, one has been out 6 weeks and the other is right out of the MTC. There are just so many sister missionaries coming out that they can't keep up with opening new areas and having enough trainers so some people get to double up =). So sister Betts is getting transferred out, but she doesn't know where yet, I guess they tell her on Tuesday morning! Missionary work is all about planning for the unexpected! Yay!

On Friday we had exchanges with the Spanish Rifle Hermanas again. This time sister Betts went to rifle and the new sister who replaced Hermana encarnacion (sister Stoeltzing) came to Meeker. She is such an amazing sister and she is so spiritual in this extra happy way!

On Saturday morning Sister Betts and Hermana Tew came back to Meeker for Alexis's baptism. It was such a wonderful experience!

On Sunday Alexis came to church to be confirmed and her mom was with her! We were so so excited for her and so glad that her mom actually came to church! Bishop asked me and sister Betts to play "When I am Baptized" in sacrament meeting and I had to play the guitar so I was nervous for that and the person who was supposed to bring the guitar wasn't there when church started, and everyone was saying goodbye to sister Betts and all the emotions were just crazy, but it was amazing because as church started all of these families who we are teaching who are less active started coming in and we were so happy to see all of the people there and all of the anxious sad emotions were kind of overwhelmed in joy for all the happiness!

So on to the next adventure! And It looks like it will be that way for all of us! Dad that will be an exciting calling good luck with all of it! School will start soon and then back to the routine! It goes so fast and slow doesn't it? I don't think time really exists, it's all a conspiracy!

I hope the granddaughter party was awesome! Its such a fun tradition for the granddaughters (and I hope grandma, if she isn't too stressed =)!)

Tell Jordan and Katie that I love them both when they get back home!

Love you all soo much!

Kayla

P.S. I was eating a hamburger at a members house the other day and it smelled sort of funny and I looked down and the meat was bright red and I felt a little weezy afterward haha- I just put it down and pretended I was full =). [Mom] I thought you would appreciate my sacrifices haha



Sis. Betts doing crazy things in a skirt (as usual)
The Hobbes family (Dylan is in front)
The Gardner's last day before moving
Exchanges w/ Hermana Stoeltzing
Me, Sis. Betts, Alexis, Herm. Tew, Herm. Stoeltzing
Alexis's baptism

Monday, August 12, 2013

Today and Tomorrow

This past week was QUIET!!! Eden, Lily and Sophie were gone Mon-Thu to the ranch for the Granddaughter Retreat, Fred was at work during the days and Abe and I just kinda bumped around like balls on a billiard table--still...still...rolling...ricochet...still...still. We both like quiet time (don't everyone gasp in shock and amazement all at once), and did enjoy the peace, but we missed our girls. It's good to have everyone home again, filling up the house with the buzz of activity and closeness. I know my girls enjoyed their time, though they all seemed happy to get home and out of the chaos (much of which I am sure they were accessories to), but I'm not so sure about my Mom.=s My sister-in-law, who lives close and is witness to much more than any of us, said my Mom was amazing and enjoyed the time together, but from my vantage point (only at retreat's end) she looked worn thin and incredibly ready to be done. I can't imagine 19 girls running through my house without a strictly structured agenda and chore list accountability (too much exposure to girls camp). "Not much fun for little harpo", I understand, but much less stress for the hostess, which is why I rarely am one. =) I'm not naive, I'm sure my daughters were party to some of the "aha" moments that have been trickling down and were probably high on the list of those who could have been more disciplined and helpful. I love the idea and potential of the tradition that Mom was so brave and kind to start, but for sanity's sake, it seems that something has to change so it's not so stressful on the front or back end.  If the age were raised to 14, half of the girls attendance (mine included) would be put on hold for a few 'waiting' years,  but my Mom might end up with a manageable, bonding experience, instead of mayhem. Of course I would bet it's the older girls, mine leading the crowd, who are staying up all hours of the night, so maybe she'd prefer just to keep the younger half, who aren't so wiley yet, but then no work gets done. Suggesting that anything change doesn't make me a popular voice with the other families (many of who probably have better behaved children because they are coming from better behaved mothers), but I can imagine that if something isn't tweaked, the tradition will quickly die a grievous death, if it hasn't already.  How close am I on this one my Mother dear? 

The upcoming week is my family's final hurrah, before school starts the next week. I'm thinking the
activities will have to include last minute finishes for school clothes and supply shopping and transitioning into a better sleep schedule, which doesn't seem so "hurrah-ish", but it's one of those "in the end" kind of joys. Jordan comes home next Monday and leaves with Katie that Thursday, for a week, before returning back home for two. Then Tessia, Mikayla's best friend and a dear family friend, gets married and Jordan is back off to school. Not much wants to stand still here, except sometimes me. I guess I'm outvoted. =)

Fred was called into the Elders Quorum presidency today. He seems excited about serving in that capacity again, especially with our president, who is such a nut, but has a rock of a testimony. He still hasn't been officially released as a ward missionary and was doing double duty this week, but I don't think he minds that either. I'm not sure how excited I am. That means we will have to start being good little boys and girls and support the activities, which are almost always sport related. What? Do they think we are all young and athletic? When I started whining to Fred about it, his answer was a quote from a member of our stake presidency. "This is not a church of what can I get out of it--it is a church of what can I contribute." Oh sure, bring that up! =) I guess that means I need to be more anxiously engaged in attending my weeknight R.S. meetings too. Ah, nuts! And I was so enjoying my lulling passivity.


We attended a reception this weekend. It was decorated very elegantly, all white lights and gauzy draping and pale pink roses, but neither the bride or groom seemed very enthusiastic. I don't know their personalities very well, so I wouldn't know how they were really feeling, but their behavior was a little different then I'm used to seeing from newlyweds. Maybe it was just a long day, but they seemed more bored than excited. My little girls told me they succumbed to the shoving cake into each others mouth tradition, while we were there. I'm glad I didn't see because that is probably my BIGGEST reception pet peeve--I just can't imagine that mentality on a wedding day, but we're all so different. I will have to remember to remind my children about my expectations of refinement and respect for their day and their spouse so no one has to line up for mother beatings on their wedding night! =) Oh the irony! (How about that mentality?) =)

So, another difficult week for Fred and I, as we learned that a friend, whom we both admired and served with in the past, was arrested, has admitted to some charges, and is now facing possible life in prison, if convicted. Another poor family suffering because of the clutches of the adversary. How do we ensure that we will stay strong and on the path of discipleship? It has me thinking on the "small and simple things" each and every day--the threads that can turn into either flaxen cords or woven tapestries. Fred and I were still mourning the loss today when he said something that I thought was so important. He was talking about how we all struggle and fall short and how helpless if feels when someone chooses pain and then he said, "I guess it doesn't really matter what he's done in the past, all that matters at this point, is what he needs to do now." I guess that's true for all of us. One of my absolutely favorite quotes is from the book Middlemarch, by George Elliot. "It is never too late to be what you might have been." I guess that is the full essence of the atonement. Whether facing an earthly jury or just wrestling with our own tendencies towards the natural man, we all require that saving gift in our lives. Without it we each face a devastating spiritual prison sentence. With it, we each have hope for exaltation, no matter what our past sins or weaknesses, if we can just keep the faith and endure, day by day, being obedient, line upon line. Sometimes that all seems so vast and overwhelming, but I love what Elder Bednar has said, "If today you are a little bit better than you were yesterday, then that's enough. And, if tomorrow you are a little bit better than you were today, then that's enough." That seems achievable, so I guess we each just keep working on today and tomorrow.

Quote of the Week:
"The hell to be endured hereafter, of which theology tells, is no worse than the hell we make for ourselves in this world by habitually fashioning our characters in the wrong way. Could the young but realize how soon they will become mere walking bundles of habits, they would give more heed to their conduct while in the plastic state. We are spinning our fates, good or evil, and never to be undone. Every smallest stroke of virtue or of vice leaves its never so little scar. The drunken Rip Van Winkle, in Jefferson's play, excuses himself for every fresh dereliction by saying, "I won't count this time!" Well! He may not count it, and a kind Heaven may not count it; but it is being counted none the less. Down among his nerve-cells and fibers the molecules are counting it, registering and storing it up to be used against him when the next temptation comes. Nothing we ever do is, in strict scientific literalness, wiped out. Of course this has its good side as well as its bad one. As we become permanent drunkards by so many separate drinks, so we become saints in the moral, and authorities and experts in the practical and scientific spheres, by so many separate acts and hours of work. Let no youth have any anxiety about the upshot of his education, whatever the line of it may be. If he keeps faithfully busy each hour of the working-day, he may safely leave the final result to itself. He can with perfect certainty count on waking up some fine morning, to find himself one of the competent ones of his generation, in whatever pursuit he may have singled out" (Ernest L. Wilkinson--from the talk "Flaxen Threads"--by Carlos E. Assay)

Monday, August 5, 2013

Sister Mikayla: I'm Exhausted

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mikayla
Date: Mon, Aug 5, 2013 at 11:47 AM

Hey Fam! I'm Exhausted! This week was crazy! ALEXIS IS GETTING BAPTIZED!!!! YAYAYYY! We are soo excited and its taken a long time to get to this point but she is finally there and we are super excited!

We are also teaching a guy named Tony who is getting baptized on the 24th and another girl who wants to take the lessons so that she can get baptized. We also taught two other investigators this week who accepted the invitation to be baptized but they both moved this week =(.

We are also super excited for transfers because the APs just called and asked us if we had room for another missionary in our house, they aren't allowed to tell us if a new missionary is actually coming until Friday but we are suspecting that we might be in a Trio for a while- sister Betts said she thinks she is getting transferred and that I'm going to have twins (two people to train at the same time) but I think I would pass out and die... but I guess whatever happens happens for a reason so we will just see! We are getting two new sisters in our district who are Spanish speaking this transfer and they may add a set of Spanish speaking sisters to Meeker!

The investigator that we found sleeping on the couch last week ended up moving back to Cali =( but we had some interesting lessons with him before he left! I actually think they were really good and I think when he gets back to Cali he will keep going to church, but we will keep in contact w/ him. Anyway- his family is Hispanic(you know how Hispanic culture is about food)  and one day while we were teaching him his mom brought out this big pizza and asked us if we wanted some, we were about to leave to go to our dinner appointment so we said we were fine but his mom kept telling us to have some and then Tim looked at us and said, "What would Jesus say... 'NOOO!?' " We didn't really know what to do but we made the member who was with us eat pizza and we drank the juice she offered us. Later in the lesson he told sister Betts that she was really cool and she could be the next "bishopette" and looked at me and said, "your pretty good too". Haha- I guess I just have to take those kind of compliments for what they are worth.

We have been so busy teaching Alexis and getting ready for her baptism that I can't remember half of what happened this week, but I think her being baptized is really going to help her mom progress more in the gospel!

Mom, you were talking about how numbers in missionary work are not the important thing. In the scriptures its say Christ sheep are "numbered", but not counted and that's the way I like to look at it, we are numbering his sheep, each person is a number that represents a soul of eternal worth!

Your guyses camping trip sounds like fun! I remember family camping trips to McCall and they are some of my best family memories from childhood! I loved the pictures! Good work on sawing that log Eden, I think that's how I look when I'm trying to crawl to bed at the end of the day . I miss eating fish but its hard to cook with so little time- there was one day this week where we had so many appointments that we were trying to figure out how to get them all and we were running late so Sister Betts suggested skipping dinner then we both had a good laugh and decided we would both die if we didn't stop and grab something so we did. But it looks like a beautiful spot to camp at and you all look like you had fun!

Another funny story that I just remembered. So there is this family in our ward that is super cute the Mom is this cute tiny lady who is always very put together and her 2 kids Ryan(4) and Cameron (6) always look perfect and are very reverent and don't really make any noise in sacrament meeting. Anyway so yesterday was fast Sunday and Ryan jumped up and ran up to the front and got the microphone. He stood there and smiled really big and then started talking about how he loved his family... and his friends... and playing games... and toys... and fun things... as he kept talking his Mom stood up and quickly began walking up to the podium and Ryan pointed at him mom and Shouted "No Mom! I don't need help! Go Sit Down! Go sit down!" She sat down in the front bench and looked a little tense. He kept talking and she stood up and started up the stairs so he quickly said "in the name of Jesus Christ amen". It was really cute but you could hear lots of  muffled giggling and heads stuffed in their arms from the congregation members. =)  

Anyway I hope you all have a great week!
Love ya all a Billion!
Kayla

P.S. I still haven't heard anything about you guys trying frog eye salad!!!

The worlds most narley canker sore
Sister Betts getting caught kissing a deer

SLOW and Steady, Steady and SLOW

The entirety of this past week, our family has been either planning for, recovering from or actually participating in, the experience of camping. It was our family vacation this year out of desire by my family, and out of default for me, but it ended up being an enjoyable experience for all of us--as most vacations are, once you start the journey. I'm afraid I'm an extreme planner so until lists are made and modified and then checked twice, even the idea of a trip can be overwhelming to me--camping most of all because the planning and preparation are so much more intensified--but that preliminary effort, stressful as it always is, makes it possible for me to relax once there, so I guess it all balances out...or not.

For years, my cousins have encouraged us to try out their favorite camping spot. Of course it would have been so much fun to try it out with them, but since we haven't been family camping in years, by design--mine--that experience never materialized while they lived here, and this year we even tried to plan a vacation together initially, even though we are farther apart, but our calendars were a little tricky and then the summer zoomed by and we unfortunately dropped the ball and let that opportunity slide out of site, so our little family finally snatched up the last calendar date we had open and went on our own, for the first time, up to Baumgartner Campground. It's a 3-1/2 hour drive, but it was worth the trip. It was beautiful and forested, had paved bike paths, a gorgeous clear river and a natural hot springs piped into a concrete pool area. We couldn't find a bike trailer to rent so my sister let us borrow their large four wheeler trailer and since it was so big we didn't have to pack light and even took up our hammock. Because of all of the clear swimming water in the camp, we never felt dirty and we had 4 days with nothing to do but be together. No phones. No computers. No radios. No distractions. That part was heaven. Of course there were still the uncomfortable nights of fitful sleep, the continuous bug bites, no matter how much spray we had on, and the relative disorganization of living in tents, but even that couldn't overshadow the peace of no clocks, no noise, no mirrors. Everyone had the chance to spend their time in ways that were most enjoyable to them--reading, fishing, swimming, hiking, napping, soaking--and everything was in such close proximity that we could even be alone...together, which is my favorite kind of alone! =) Only Lily and Sophie weren't completely content as they wanted to do everything and at all times and they had to wait for chaperons which couldn't always keep up with their wishes and energy, but between the lot of us, even they were content for the majority of the time. I did miss my Jordan and Mikayla even more in that unhurried environment, but I guess that's just par for the course if you have children to love. We'll have to go back a few more times, when my kids are all home, and with my cousins who guided us in the first place. After all the more family, the more fun the fireside. My Mom's never been a camping fan either, but an extended family reunion there would be a blast for the kids.

Now after two days of what feels like endless laundry, unpacking and home upkeep, we will get up at the crack of dawn tomorrow to pack again and send all of the girls off to a Granddaughter Retreat for another 4 days. We are all a little tired of being away from home, but, even so my girls are excited and anxious to be with their grandparents and cousins. Abe, Fred and I aren't excited to have them gone, but we will make the most of our "only child" days and try to enjoy the tranquility that we will all be pretending isn't filled with missing. I anticipate some motherly sacrifices (Star Wars or Dr. Who will surely come up) and some son sacrifices (school clothes shopping may enter the picture) but we'll all get through it and then have one last hurrah as a family before school starts again, as Jordan comes home and Katie (his girlfriend) comes to visit. It's been a good summer-- gorgeously warm and long enough to let all of the goodness sink in and relax us, but I will always miss it's farewell. No matter how old I get as a mother, I can't imagine that school will ever start without me feeling a little pang of heartache, knowing that my children or grandchildren will be away more often, but I do remember the excitement and anticipation of school starting as a child, so  I ride that wave each Fall and it usually sees me through the initial transition until I can begrudgingly acclimate again. Change is good for me. I never like it, so it usually has to be thrust upon me, but it forces me to keep expanding my mind and facing my future. Of the March sisters, I have a tendency to relate more with Beth than I do with Jo in her outlook on change, but I have Jo's stubbornness and dreams, not yet Beth's goodness and contentment--a paradox--but surely I still have "miles to go before I sleep" so I'll just keep putting one foot in front of the other. "Slow and steady, steady and slow, that's the way we always go".

Fred returned my sister's trailer on Saturday and had letters to different extended family members from Mikayla that he was delivering and came home with an armful of rhubarb from another sister's garden that he told her he was going to make a pie from. To his credit he did wash and chop the rhubarb, in very nice pieces I might add =) but I made the pie with some of our raspberries (because they make everything better) and it was divine. THANKS LIZ! Fred says her garden is primo. Ours is a little...a lot...sparse this year, so fresh produce is a lovely gift. I have a rhubarb plant but I have waited all summer for it to "ripen" and not one single touch of red has every appeared, so I finally did some research and found that rhubarb comes in all kinds of varieties (some of which are completely green) so I guess it has been ripe all along. WHO KNEW! It's not quite the same presentation without the deep, lovely red so I'll have to try some and use food coloring. Can't wait to try another deep dish country pie. =)

Quote of the week:
"...Understanding just who we are and what it is that we are to prove during our probation is important both to our success and to the joy that we will experience along the way...
...I believe that there is a great underlying truth in Christ's injunction to love others as ourselves—the reality is that you must love yourself in order to be able to be filled with love toward others. We can and must love ourselves for who we are even if we are not completely satisfied with what we are or where we are at the present. We can be loving and kind and even merciful with ourselves even while being fully and deeply committed to the knowledge that we can and must do better...
...I have found that a key to finding joy in daily living is to know this: If you are engaged in the daily struggle to overcome—fully engaged—if you are trying with everything you have, you are winning! And with the Lord's help you will prevail..." (Douglas F. Prawitt)

Hiking...in style
Lake fun in the clear, emerald (ice cold!) water
Relaxing in the crystal clear (105 degree) hot water...NICE!
Enjoying the rain...
...and the sun (a well used hammock...by all of us).
Farm kid trials
hard work, but she succeeded
...as did both of them...and Abe
Fireside--the best part of camping
Good food--the second best part of camping
The kids kind of camp food
My kind of camp food

Fred's kind of camp food