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#11
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I can't say I've ever been the Jerk in the back that preachers false doctrine. I'm just the jerk in the back, sitting quietly stirring things up a little. Ok, sometimes not so quietly.
![]() After spending years not saying boo, always agreeing with what people said, regardless if I believed it or not, then going to the opposite and disagreeing with everyone. Just because I could. Now I'm just trying to find a balance.
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Before you criticise someone, walk a mile in their shoes.....That way, when you do, you're a mile away and you have their shoes.
Last edited by Katya; 09-28-2008 at 05:01 AM. |
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#12
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I served a mission to Chile a long, long, time ago. My son served a mission in Iceland, not so long ago. A few years ago I was a ward missionary. My parents recently returned from a mission to South Africa. My youngest daughter is writing a missionary in California. (We'll have to wait and see where that goes).
I served my mission when there was still an LTM, but it was the same facility as what is now called the MTC. When the MTC was first built, it was only for missionaries learning a new language and was called the Language Training Mission. Before my time, the LTM was in another part of Provo. After I got home from my mission, I taught Spanish at the MTC for about two years. It was a great job, especially for a student.
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"It's true that we don't know what we've got until we lose it, but it's also true that we don't know what we've been missing until it arrives." Unknown |
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#13
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Oh, and my wife was recently called to teach early morning seminary. She just started this school year. There are only five kids in the class and the class is held in our dining room every morning at 6:00am. There are two seminary classes in our ward. The ward is too big, geographically, to have everyone go to the same place. My wife's class basically covers two high schools. I love having the kids come over every school morning. I get up and head to the YMCA about the time they arrive, so the house stays quiet with me gone.
I think we ought to keep this thread going, just for casual talk on whatever.
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"It's true that we don't know what we've got until we lose it, but it's also true that we don't know what we've been missing until it arrives." Unknown Last edited by Scott C.; 09-28-2008 at 07:57 AM. |
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#14
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That's a neat calling. I was recently asked to help with the young men in our stake's Spanish Branch. I'm headed off to their Sunday meetings this morning.
__________________
"It's true that we don't know what we've got until we lose it, but it's also true that we don't know what we've been missing until it arrives." Unknown |
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#15
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Quote:
![]() Better to have it happen there than in a full-time mission on the other side of the planet, probably! My mission was a real strain on my testimony at times, and during those times, I hated that I was so far away from the places and people that I knew and loved. I was thinking, "You know, if I'm going to be dropping out of the Church, why can't I do that back in beautiful, happy California?" Quote:
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That's cool about your folks just coming back from South Africa. I have some older cousins who came back from South Africa a couple of years ago or so. They taught people to play music in the Church meetings. What did your parents do? We could. I had originally imagined that any thread marked Foyer Talk could be for casual, brotherly/sisterly talk on the subject of the thread. In some ways I still think that would be better, because it would let us discuss multiple LDS-themed topics in a casual and supportive way more easily. If someone joins the forum in a year, they'll still be able to find a Foyer Talk thread on missions and join that conversation and we can get to know that aspect of them, even after we've kind of all shifted to discussing whether carrots or bananas are better additions to green jello. If it were all in one thread, then the talk about missions (or roadshows or Church basketball or whatever) would die down for us and we wouldn't really get to hear new forum members' perspectives on any topic but the most recent topic so easily. But it could potentially make for a lot of Foyer Talk threads, and that could be a downside. |
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#16
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If they are not attacking you, that means they are not worried about you. ~ Kevin Madden ~ |
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#17
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If the talk becomes one of green jello I will leave the foyer.
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#18
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My mission President is a retired professor from BYU Hawaii and I ended up working for Delta Airlines after my mission in Japan and flew to Hawaii and visited my mission President, he lived just down the road from the Polynesian Cultural Center, which is just down the road from the Hawaii temple and BYU Hawaii campus. We were there when they were celebrating their 25 year anniversary of the Polynesian Cultural Center and I saw my mission President's daughter there working and she told us to come over that night to her father's house (my mission President) and chat. It was fun. The trip only cost me 10 bucks, a rental car and hotel, since we had free flights anywhere in the U.S., while working for Deta. I went to the Tokyo South, Japan mission, although no missionaries were allowed to live in Tokyo, we still were allowed to visit the different cities in Tokyo. I lived just outside the border of Tokyo, in Kawasaki city, and we would bike into Tokyo often. I also spent time living in Yokohama and Fuji City, next to Mt. Fuji. You can actually see the apartment we stayed in in this U-tube video. The apartments you see in this U-tube picture below are the ones we stayed in. We had an awesome view of Mt. Fuji. One of these days I'll post some pictures I took from our apartment. Fast forward to 1:16 on this U-tube video and that is the apartment we stayed in for 8 months. I loved it there, nice and quiet. We would bike up Mt. Fuji often, just at the base, and I have traveled to the snow line by car, where there were some small ski areas and on the other side there are large lakes and waterfalls surrounding that area, along with dense green forests of trees until you hit the snow line. Mt.fuji from Shinkansen!!!!! ! I loved Japan and didn't want to come back to the states. The food there was awesome and the weather very nice. I never had it so good. I felt very blessed to see that part of the world. I love the people there. 新幹線 ドクターイエロー パート7 Aka-island in Okinawa (Japan) Bullet train ride (top speed 180 mph) from the southern most part of my mission (Hamamatsu), just before Fuji city, to Yokohama The Bullet Train "NOZOMI&qu ot; Part7 Hamamatsu-Shin Yokohama |