Monday, December 28, 2009

Happy P Day


Hello everyone!

I´m writing from a cyber café here in Colima, Colima, México. Apparently, the mission here covers Nayarit, Jalisco (as far east as Guadalajara and half of the city), and Colima. Things have been plenty interesting here, but we´ll see how much time I have to write about it here.

My companion, Elder Fernandez, is pretty cool. He´s from Cuernavaca and doesn´t speak English. In fact, the only person I see who speaks English is Elder Talbot, who is in the same house as us, but I hardly see him aside from p-day (Mondays, btw) and the mornings/late evenings. So yeah, Spanish immersion programs for the win! As far as grammar principles go, there is little left to learn and a lot to get better at, as well as vocab and the biggest thing of course being able to understand others. I can follow conversations alright, but questions tend to throw me off. With time though, I´m sure I´ll get it.

No baptisms yet, but if all goes well that will change before too long. We have two investigators with baptismal dates and another investigator not far away. I can´t wait for the holiday season to be gone, actually, because I will finally be able to see how much work we can get done in a normal week. The holidays are shaking things up and of course not a very good sample of how day to day life will be. I´m excited to be here though.

We hitchhike everywhere we can, and if we really can´t get there by foot (pretty much just the chapel) we nab a taxi...they´re everywhere. I actually think the MTC should have classes on hitchhiking and j-walking. I´m comfortable with it, and actually kinda like it, but it would have been helpful nonetheless.

There´s two volcanoes visible from pretty much anywhere in Colima, one behind the other. THe big, close one is much more likely to kill us all than the other. We´ve also got a bunch of little villages in our area. It´s time consuming to get out there and it´s expensive for them to travel to church (and they live out there because they´re poor), but we´ll take a day or two and really work out there and see what we can do. If there are enough investigators or members, a branch can be organized out there. However, that´s still in the distance, and there is work to be done right here and right now.

It sounds like the music was interesting to deal with, at the least. I´ve developed a new appreciation for music as I find that less and less of the people I meet are educated in it. I´m sure the performances were great, and the music invited the spirit. That´s all it has to do to be a success, after all.

I hope everyone had a great Christmas, and I´m glad I got to talk to the family. Keep the faith, remember what´s most important (and do it), and you will find happiness beyond your imagination. I´m doing my best to hit the ground running here, and with any luck we´ll be able to make a big difference here in Mexico, where everyone is cool with talking about God. Especially since the Book of Mormon is a book written by some of their ancestors. They can really feel that.

So I´m trying to be diligent, faithful, and patient as I learn the language, area, and people, and I´m having a great time. I hope all is well at home, and that you are all able to live with the knowledge and happiness that comes from a Heavenly Father that loves us all. My job is to share that with my brothers and sisters, quite simply.

Take care,

Elder Lund

1 comment:

  1. It really is great that you post his mission letters, otherwise none of us would have any idea how he is. Thanks, Sister Lund!

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