I'm alive! And doing
well. I've seen a lot of people I know here: Elder Burby, Ruby/Elder
Zendejas, Elder Sampson, Justin Liu, Nic Blosil, Jason Carr, Mauricio
Laguan, random people from BYU....there are probably more I just can't
remember them all right now. I feel so dumb because I wrote down
everything in my journal that I wanted to share and even though we've
been running around all day because we were stoked to get email time, I
left my journal in our residence hall. Go me.
Anyway, yeah. Life is good here. I probably eat too
much, but considering I was hardly eating at all before I came, I think
I'm just being conditioned for eating in Idaho. Hermana Devey is
probably being conditioned for eating in Nicaragua because she hardly
eats at all (well okay, she does, it's just not very much). I'm in a
trio, which people said would be hard, but I didn't understand why. Now I
get it. It's not the emotional/social part of it, it's the teaching. We
just have so many brains! Not to mention we have to go to the bathroom
50% more often than anyone else. The brains we're starting to figure out
in terms of finding our rhythm and listening to the Spirit. The only
way you can get a bunch of people on the same page about something like
teaching the Gospel is through being in tune with the Spirit. Also, I'm
the youngest and shortest hermana in my trio! Crazy, right? Hermana
Trone and Hermana Devey both graduated, Trone from Stanford and Devey
from BYU. Hermana Trone is going to Madrid, and she actually leaves for
the Spain MTC TOMORROW AT 3AM because her visa came (and I thought we
were gonna have it bad leaving the Mexico MTC at 4 or 5, Elder Cole).
Hermana Devey is going to Nicaragua Managua Norte, which is so funny
because that's the exact mission I used as an example when I was telling Mom about how mission codes work: NIC-MANN. Pretty great.
There is no such thing as language study here. I am
definitely not the most fluent person in my program, but that's okay. I
feel like I can mostly teach, and with one investigator we've gone from
pretty much a crash-and-burn to getting him to PRAY and talk to his wife
about coming to church. We were feeling pretty awesome until we
remembered we'd forgotten to invite him to be baptized. Oops. We are
learning. Also, if this weren't the MTC, I'd probably be pretty
surprised that these people actually invite us back. It's an adventure:
hard, but good.
Oh hey, can someone get into my email and add some
people to the email list? I know Andrew wants to be on it for sure, and
probably my roommates. I don't know which addresses I gave you and which
I didn't.
I loved the pictures you sent! The only problem is
that this lab doesn't have a printer/I don't know how to get them
printed, so if you could print them off and send them to me that'd be
great. I was okay during the storm the other day because A) I wasn't
wearing contacts and B) we only had to run from our classroom to the
cafeteria, which was fine. Hermana Trone LOVES storms (she's from
Portland), so she was having the best day ever during dinner. I'm glad
you guys were safe though!
THANK YOU SO MUCH for all the packages and mail! I'm
probably the most loved missionary here in Provo, and if I'm not THE
most loved, I think I'm pretty high up there. Thanks so much. My
district makes fun of me, but it's okay because I share my food with
them. :) I love my district, even though we are the only hermanas and
the elders are mostly 18. It's amazing how dumb they can be yet how much
I learn from them all the time.
I wish I could share more experiences with you, but I
am seriously running out of time and if I don't write you all back
personally I'm sorry. I'm still trying to manage my time. I love you all
so much!!!! Thank you for all your love and support.
Hasta luego!
Hermana Cole
PS.
I'll try to send pictures but apparently this email is too fat and
we're all sharing one card reader at the moment. I knew it'd be a good
thing to have. :P Oh well.