Saturday, January 28, 2012
Judy and Ed take us to the airport
in Kalispell. Though we are several hours early, Judy doesn't want to
leave us until the plane takes off. She's had experience with Delta
(Doesn't Ever Leave the Airport). I don't really want them to leave
either, but it's one more milestone down. We've said our goodbyes,
handed over our home to the full time missionaries (eek!), and now
we've made it to the airport.
When we land in SLC, Johnny's
longtime friend picks us up and takes us to his home in Orem. He and
his wife take us to a wonderful Chinese dinner at P.F. Chang's. I
could live on lettuce wraps! The next morning we go to church with
them and then they invite us to a special fireside later that will be
given for temple workers at the Oequirrh Mountain temple. Elder
Kristoferson will be speaking. We accept the invitiation.
The minute we walk into the chapel a
good friend from Kalispell sees us and runs to greet us. What a
wonderful surprise! We haven't seen Debi Myers for years. She just
happens to work at the temple. Elder Kristoferson gives a wonderful
talk (of course) on staying clean. We go up to meet him and shake
hands. What a burden is on these General Authorities! Each person who
wants to meet him is greeted kindly and sincerely. He gives of
himself liberally to all who wait.
Monday morning our good friends
Barry and Vira take us to the Provo MTC and drop us off, leaving us
in the kind and helpful hands of four missionaries who take our
luggage and show us to our room. Unfortunately, the room is occupied:
luggage and personal items are scattered inside. I cringe when I see
the size of the room. We have four large suitcases and two carry
on's. Once we get the luggage inside there will not be enough room to
walk around the bed!
The missionaries are kind and
patient. They promise not to desert us and they split up, some
staying with the luggage and some guiding us back to the beginning.
We are given another key to another room. This one is on the third
floor and is much larger. Unfortunately, it is also currently
occupied and we return again to get another one. We get another key,
go to another room, and guess what? It is occupied also. The fourth
room we try is a winner. It is one of the big rooms, much like a very
nice hotel room. It is right across from both the fitness room and
the ice machine. Jackpot!
We have no time to unpack before we
attend our first meeting and divide into groups of four couples.
There are 30 or 35 senior couples in our group. Six of them, including us, are
going to the Philippines. We attend meetings until the evening
meal, which is served in a cafeteria much like the one at BYU. This
one, however, is filled with wall to wall missionaries. We are in
very good company. Once dinner is over, we get to go to our rooms and
unpack. Our schedule looks very full for the week!
The next day we start Preach My
Gospel classes and training. Our teachers are young returned
missionaries. They're excellent teachers and very fun. Tuesday night
we attend a special fireside celebrating the 50th
anniversary of the Provo MTC. Elder Holland gives an opening talk and
Elder Nelson gives the keynote talk detailing the history of the
Missionary training program. Several other general authorities are
also in attendance. There are close to 2,000 missionaries in the room
and the spirit is very strong.
The next night, during our 'free'
time after dinner we start Tagalog tutoring with the tutor we worked
with on Skype before we left. Brian is a wonderful teacher. There's
one other couple in the class with us and the time flies by. Brian
makes a comment that really strikes me. He said that if we made it a
goal and were determined to become fluent in Tagalog, we would. So I
made the commitment. It's a little hard, though. We literally do not
have time to study it at all when we are not in our 2 hour tutoring
sessions at night. We go from one class to another, hit the cafeteria
3 times a day, and sleep like the dead at night. I wake up early
every morning and walk the treadmill for 25 minutes most every am.
The week passes quickly, but it
seems like we've been here forever. We go to our departure fireside
the Sunday before we leave. There are 400 missionaries going out this
week. Many of them are going to Mexico, many to the Philippines, and
the rest are going virtually to every corner of the earth. One senior
couple is going to Thailand to a rural area for member support. Our
friend's daughter went there on her mission and we heard stories of
spiders literally as big as dinner plates. We do not pass these
stories on. Others are going to Russia, the West Indies, various
states in the US, Korea, East Africa, Indonesia, and Figi, to name
some.
Monday we are back at it. This week
is specific training for our calling as nurse specialist and nurse
specialist assistant. I couldn't for the life of me figure out what
Johnny would be doing, but we go to SLC at the church office
buildings and we find out. I discover that he is very well suited to
medical work. I'd forgotten he'd started med school before he went
into the army. We get some specific information about our calls.
The Preach My Gospel training is
going well, but I am very worried about my rusty nursing skills. The
first day is mostly medical people talking about the history of the
medical program in the mission field and the various problems they've
have had getting it going. I don't feel the spirit at all in the
meetings and I wonder what we're really doing. Is the Lord working
with us? How in the world am I going to measure up to this? Everyone
around us is hugely qualified in medicine: life-long professionals
dedicated to their careers and to church service. They are inventors
and movers and shakers.
We are in the church office building
and members are working all around us, managing the affairs of the
kingdom, but many do not seem very happy. I expected to find much
more joy in the service of the Lord. We rush back to Provo just in
time to grab a quick dinner before going to our Tagalog tutoring.
Tuesday we're back in Provo for
nurse's training, thank heavens! We've found we've been seriously
over-scheduled for this week. We will have to skip the training on
Thursday altogether because we're flying out Thursday afternoon. We
will miss our last Tagalog tutoring also: there's no other time to
finish packing! The nurse training is very good. The doctor who
presented a lot of it is also the Patriarch for his stake and is a
very spiritual man. He keeps the medical work and the gospel
integrated and I am very inspired again. We will be supporting our
young missionaries from the other side of the world who are leaving
their homes to go preach the gospel (for the most part) to their
native peoples. They come from assorted backgrounds with various
challenges and hardships. I feel deeply honored to be called to serve
them. We get very specific training on the issues we will probably
face and the resources we have to deal with them. I find myself
feeling confident that the Lord will bless us and we will be able to
fulfill the assignments and responsibilities He has called us to. No
tutoring tonight because Tuesday is fireside. We are so exhausted
that we go to our room instead. We do our laundry and pack all the
things we won't be using before we leave and fall into bed again.
Wednesday it's back to SLC for more
training. It is very interesting. We do mental health issues. I'm
surprised how prevalent mental health problems are with the young
missionaries. People who are prone to perfectionism can have a lot of
trouble. Don't know why that would surprise me: it's true for most
people. We go up for an hour long presentation in the Welfare
Department on the various projects they have going around the world.
One of the couples in our group is going to east Africa on a welfare
mission. That's ALL of east Africa-they'll be traveling quite a bit
in some very...different places. We now see what they will be doing
and what kinds of conditions they will be living in. The Philippines
MTC looks like a very cushy mission call!!!
Wednesday evening we're too tired to
do anything but sleep. We spend several hours in the morning packing,
weighing, and re-packing our luggage, making sure each bag is less
than 49.8 pounds (the scale is in the exercise room). Almost before
we know it, it's time to meet our driver down at the travel office.
We take our carry on luggage and go down, then Johnny recruits a few
missionaries to follow him back up and bring the rest of the bags
down for us.
I stand in the hallway waiting for them to return,
missionaries flowing past me like a never ending river and I realized
I feel like crying. I keep my expression neutral but tears are trickling down
my face. I refuse to draw attention to them by wiping them away.
Several young missionaries that we've talked with over the last 10
days come to talk to me, excited and
happy for us finally getting to leave for our mission. I feel like an idiot because I can't keep my eyes from
leaking. I tell them I'm happy to be going as I brush tears off my
face. They understand completely. Finally we're in the van and off to
the airport. Johnny sits up front and chats with the driver the whole
way and I sit in the back and let the tears fall.
By the time we get there, I'm
feeling much better. I feel very self-conscious of the black badge on
my clothing and feel a serious responsibility to act as the Lord
would want me to. I also wonder if it will draw the ire of
anti-Mormons. I square my shoulders and follow Johnny into the
airport. The porter helping us is a returned missionary and is very
friendly. When we get to the counter they weigh our very carefully
packed bags and each one comes in at over 52 pounds! I think Delta
has a scam going. They say, “don't worry, as long as they're within
2 pounds we don't bother with it”. But as he finishes our check-in
the agent tells us that because we're not flying internationally with
Delta, we only get 88 pounds each total instead of the 100 pounds we
were told. So we have to pay extra anyway and we might as well not
have left Johnny's extra pair of shoes, three pairs of brand new
slacks, my purse, our shampoo and all the other stuff that weighed
too much after we packed all the paperwork we'd accumulated in classes. Er.
We finally take off from SLC. It's a
small plane. We're headed to San Francisco and I'm not looking
forward to the 14.5 hour flight across the ocean at all. First, we
have a 6 hour layover in San Francisco, which is a good, a great!
thing because Johnny's son, Scot is going to meet us at the airport
with his pregnant wife and two kids and go to dinner with us! We're
really looking forward to seeing them, but I'm a little worried I'll
be a zombie after the last couple months.
I still feel very
vulnerable and fearful that I won't be able to fill my own shoes on
this mission. Johnny and I aren't even in seats next to each other on the flight,
but a nice woman offers up her seat so we can sit together. I sleep
most of the way and feel disoriented and insecure when we land in San Francisco.
While waiting in the jetway for Johnny to pick up his carry-on a young blond woman passes me in the crowd going by. She looks
me in the eye, squeezes my arm gently, and says earnestly, “Goodbye.”
In that one word I sense all that she doesn't say as she moves on
with the crowd. My heart swells and I know Heavenly Father cares. I am so grateful for
the gospel that makes us all family, even if we don't know on
another. I'm grateful for this unknown sister's support and the support of all our
friends and family at home in Eureka and in other places. It takes a
village to send out missionaries! Thank you all so very much for
loving us, and praying for us, and supporting us in so many ways. We
love you dearly and will miss you.