Friday, December 30, 2011

I'll be home for Christmas...NOT only in my dreams

My first couple weeks home after my mission included so much fun and family that the time seemed to zoom past.  It was great to be back...especially in time for Christmas.
 Going to the Temple after the 18month hiatus
Seeing the Nativity display at the visitor's Center
(this one's from Chile) 
 Finding my dad's twin (the one on the left)
Enjoying the lights 
Driving cross-country to spend Christmas in Utah.  Homemade presents are the best.  For him, a license plate blanket for her, new outfits 
Skyping with Baby Brother as a WHOLE family 

Sunday, December 25, 2011

That's what Christmas means

That Christmas we learned exactly what the season is supposed to mean. We now knew how important our family was. We’d learned how much we didn’t need the toys and gifts. That year, our family grew closer than ever before. That is a Christmas that I will never forget. Just as if a photo album had been made, I can recall each and every detail of that momentous year when everything I ever knew, and ever will know about Christmas changed forever.

I was only ten when we moved to the Emerald Isle. The lush hillsides coated with permanent rustling grasses and untouched valleys. The all-seeing Sapphire sphere above, encrusted with fluffy cotton balls, encircled the beauty of this permanently medieval land of gold and fairytales. This new home was filled with moist air, open skies, and a funny sounding English. The language was quite a linebacker to tackle. Take a can of English, a knife-tip of redneck, an ounce of fairytale, a cup of sunshine, two tablespoons munchkins sucking helium, a teaspoon of Guiness beer and a large helping of redhead and you’ve got IRISH…Gaelige to be exact. Okay, so not quite, but that’s what it felt like to my untrained ears. It was all foreign and unknown to me.

The days past and the months rolled over to one another just like any other year. Before starting the rotation all over again, the year put itself on pause for December to enact its entire program. Europeans know how to do Christmas right! There’s more of a sense of family and calm in the holidays. Each piece of the season has a deep-rooted or even ancient meaning. December 23rd should have been just like any other Sunday. We go to church (or as we kids liked to think suffer through sitting still in uncomfortably annoying chairs watching old women sniffle and old men snooze) come home, eat lunch, light the advent candle, and play games.

That morning, I overheard mom and dad talking in their bedroom. This, eavesdropping game was one we enjoyed playing, especially around Christmas. Who knew if we’d hear a present mentioned, or discover the location of a hidden surprise? We were blind treasure-hunting pirates following an unseen map; the directions deciphered from between the floorboards on a rickety ship on a stormy sea. This clue, however, made absolutely no sense – something about gray, an eye, and a doctor. That’s all I got! Downtrodden and deflated, I returned to my room with no new information. After school, instead of heading home, we drove to Dublin; a place that sounded dubious only because its name started with those letters. Odd change of direction, but I just assumed it was part of the suspense that lead to the ultimate surprise. Maybe a gray puppy, I’d always had my eye on of those.

Christmas Eve found us entering a white building that rivaled the Tower of Babel in height and the language spoken therein could’ve had even the Brother of Jared asking for a translation. The doctors and nurses stared at scribbles and scratches on clipboards. My then 6-year-old brother drew better than they did, but I didn’t dare point that out, we were walking down endless hallway after another until finally we reached THE door. Once inside, my brother and I were given coloring books and reading books, and told to sit quietly in the corner. That recluse by the radiator was welcome when compared to the nurse’s face that stood sentry duty in the corner while mom and dad sat interrogation-ready across the table from the doctor. All their words made no sense until the headline of my daily news report slipped from the lips of the doctor, “surgery in the morning…not leaving tonight…stay at least a week”. The room began swirling in the lake now forming, but trapped by an invisible force in front of my pupils. The doctor’s meaning finally constructed the Lego tower in my mind. Dad was not coming home with us tonight, nor would he be home tomorrow. CHRISTMAS WAS CANCELLED!!

Over the previous week, dad discovered his vision morphing into prime seats at a gray wall paint-drying festival. The doctors decided that a detached Retina took precedence over our family. How dare they!

The whole hour long drive home my brother slept, but I gathered the salty precipitation on the shoulder of my favorite handmade dress with the ruffles and bows, now limp with dampness, trying not to let mom know I was still awake. I didn’t understand; Christmas meant receiving things, not giving them…especially not giving your dad to Dublin. They didn’t need him, I DID!

Early Christmas morning, the presents lay untouched, the tree unlit, the house frozen as though the movie was paused while the watcher went to the bathroom. We’d slept in our clothes that night, having been too upset and tired for mom to get us to sleep in our own rooms. Why was dad not coming home for Christmas? As soon as we arrived at the hospital, I had a dialog of what I was going to chew the doctors out about, but it all seemed useless when I saw my dad lying there motionless with bandages all over his head. At that point, all I could do was cry. The brave oldest child façade was as temporary as the gauze turban my dad wore. I had transformed into a scared 3 year old. I didn’t understand nor comprehend anything that was going on around me. He wasn’t coming home and I sensed he was in pain.

The next week slimed across the sidewalk like a slug on anesthesia infused antihistamine. The tree, presents, stockings, cards, and joy of Christmas was still “to be continued…” as we brought dad home. He could do nothing but lie on the couch face-down and grow scraggly facial-hair. Everyday flowed as the day before; a permanent Groundhog Day. We spent every night reading stories, listening to movies, and describing every detail of our art homework to him as he lay patiently and painfully in the same position. From that day on, we understood the true meaning of Christmas. I knew, in my limited professional and business experience, that this Christmas was my favorite of all time because the holiday had nothing to do with the gift-wrap, store windows, overplayed songs, expensive debt inducing items, or checked-off wish lists. It was all about our family, the memories, and the meaning behind the day. I learned what Christmas really needs to be about.

Monday, November 28, 2011

10\4 Good Buddy!

This week, we did A LOT, but yet at the same time it was nothing.

Mon - We traveled to Vienna to pick up Sis Funk's Visa and spent the day bumming around the Christmas Markets there.
Tues - District Meeting in Graz...nothing to report.
Fri - To Graz for a play the ward was putting on. We rode down with Sis Bein. It was really fun! (Sis Downs and Sis Alder...we even saw the Frühaufs being lovey dovey...ON STAGE)
Sat - Austausch in Vienna with the Sisters. I was with Sis Chapple and Sis Funk worked with Sis Anderson. All we did, was go by on random investigators and inactives to invite them to the Thanksgiving party that night. THEN, we went to the party. EVERYONE was there!! It was awesome to see all the members again, especially since I didn't get to say goodbye to them since I left after General Conference weekend. The program was based around the 1st Missionary Lesson...The Restoration. Each organization was given a point and they then did a song that went with it. On the way, I called MT Brittinger (Ron and Sydna's friend) and she came. Everyone was so excited to see me and even hid my coat so we couldn't leave. It broke my heart when we couldn't stay till the end because of our train, and had to sneak out in the middle.

On that train ride home, we were checked by the police on board. They came around, undercover, and asked for passports. The policeman hung on to mine and called his colleague over. She had a computer and he spouted off my passport number to her for her to do a check on me. It seemed to take forever until the computer beeped. Not that I was afraid of something coming up, we just had no idea why or what they were doing that for when we handed them our Austria Visas too. One of the people in our compartment didn't have any papers and was dragged out. When we got to the next station (2 hrs later) they were taken off the train. Something had happened in the car behind us and the ambulance was called. Apparently some guy didn't have papers and so he did something to himself (to where they did CPR and needed a defibrilator) so they would take him to the hospital and not deported. I am grateful I come from a land where we can travel as we please with legal documents easily obtained and can feel safe. It was pretty intense!! We stood on the train by the door waiting for our stop (it was in Bruck and we needed Leoben..5 min later) and could see into the car where the EMT were working on the guy on the floor. It was 9:20pm when we stopped and 10:35pm when the train finally left Bruck (we got home late). Pretty exciting stuff for boring missionary work. Sun - we'd been waiting for President to call us and explain what would happen to Sis Funk when I leave...he hadn't called so she called him. She is going back to Vienna to work with Sis Anderson and Sis Chapple for the rest of the transfer. (Yes, Sis Downs, no missionaries in Bruck for awhile). Pres might send her back here as soon as he can get some sisters. We#ll see!!

Mom, am trying to find Hippoes...the ones I sent in Sept are the only kind. Are you sure they weren't called something else.
Dad - those are MILKA chocolate, not Mikita! And check check...got some

Well, that's about it for now. No exciting questions I need answered that I can't wait to have personally answered.

Wednesday to München all by myself
Thurs on plane..don't know when

10/4...over and out

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, November 21, 2011

That's Pixie Dust...not snow

Reason for the title of my msg. It's getting SUPER cold and foggy and every morning we wake up and there is frost on the ground and it hangs around all day since we are in a valley. It's not snow I'm proud to say, but it threatens. Sis Funk always points out the frost as I'm driving and says 'Don't worry, it's only pixie dust' I love working with Sis Funk. She and I are a lot a like and it makes the work fun. We both don't stress (I still love you Sis Downs...or should I say Carli) we laugh, we cook, we enjoy life, and she throws marriage jokes at me with Bruder Schäffner (for you Sis Downs).

This week, I've just got a short email. Sis Funk and I are having a rockin' time in Bruck. My goal for the time I was still here is for her to be familiar with all the VIP of the area. That includes the Joint-teaches who actually come, the investigators, the most active members, and the inactives we visit in the Altenheims (old folk homes). So far, we are seeing such great success and having fun too. This week, we still need to head to Murau (2hrs away) and up to the Farm in the mountains and then we're all set. TOday, we are in Vienna to pick up Sis Funk'S VIsa. I'm not complaining one bit because that means we get to go to the famous Christmas Market. I'm excited. Tomorrow we're in Graz, and Saturday back in Vienna for an Austausch combined with the 4th Ward Thanksgiving party (we didn't realize that coordinated). We're are excited, but I'm getting nervous...this week is going to FLY BY!!!!

Reader's Digest of the week all gets summed up to the following true account. Saturday we went to visit the Grabmaiers in Unzmarkt. We get there and share the msg. She is an inactive member who believes anything ever written in any book. She is really cooky and funny...and interesting. Well, after the message we had time before the train so we all decided to play a game. She picks a game about Karma and Reincarnation. It was FUNNNY!!! The deal is that roll the dice and move to spaces then read a card with a task on it. Sis Funk got the best one....we had to hold hands and connect our energy together in Unity. Needless to say, Sis Funk and I were clutching each others hands trying not to laugh out loud. Sis Grabmaier was dead serious into it. I had a task of writing an 'angel letter' to someone the next day to make them have a great day. Sis Grabmaier got one to ask a fellow player to do an act of service for her. She picked me to help her go through her closets and get rid of stuff. Sis Funk and I 'cheated' a bit when she wasn't looking so the game would end faster (we scooted all the pieces forward bit by bit). At the end, we still had some time so we decided to do the cleaning 'task' then. We walked out of there with 3 bags of clothes bound for the donation bin and with a return appointment so Sis Grabmaier can complete her 'task' of serving her fellow players vegetarian food. All in all, it was a hilarious appointment.

Sis Downs - we got the address for that DVD-wanting-person....fakeout. We got excited as we drove up to the house because there were signs of children and teenagers at the house. We Klingel and a woman answers...she has no idea what we are talking about and does not recognize the number we were called from. We immediately called the number and they didn't answer. Sis Funk sent a txt asking for a confirmation of what town. They answered the txt with the city we were in....we called again....they didn'T answer. It's a dud! Jennifer and Wolfgang came to FHV and Priestertum....we didn'T even need to call them.
Pic 1 - Last week's Pday to Graz with Sis Downs. We visited Schloß Eggenberg with peacocks roaming the grounds. I felt like I was at grandpa's
Pic 2 - That'S a Police train. How do they pull people over??? Think about that now.....

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, November 14, 2011

Martini Gansl



Short and simple
This week, on Nov 11th was Martini Tag (St. Martin's day) where the kids walk around with Lanterns and sing songs. Well, we found out what the adults do on that day....eat Martini Gansl (Austrian word for Goose). Schwester Bein from the branch wanted to take us out for something nice since Sis Downs is going home (this wed). Let's just say, we ate at noon, about 9:00pm when we came home, we were STILL STUFFED!!! The next morning after study, we were still full. I have never had the 'Thanksgiving feeling' but now I can sympathize. We were stuffed! This is what the meal consisted of

1\2 roasted, honey-glazed goose
walnut and poppyseed knödel (dumplings)
cooked cinnamon red cabbage
sweet roasted chestnuts
baked apple filled with cranberries
1\2 Liter Apfelschorle (sparkling apple juice)
LARGE slice of apple pistachio\pumpkin seed cake

We also got transfer calls Friday. For the next 2 weeks, I will be serving with Sister Funk from some city in Idaho. She has been out for 5 months and will just LOVE Bruck! I met her when I came down to Bruck and she has served in a car area\tiny branch before so she knows just how to work with the people. It will be a stressful week making sure she meets all the VIPs and that they trust her.

Manuela has now offiially been a member for a year. I found her and now I'm back for the anniversary. Her birthday was yesterday...and Parviz's too.
Not much else noteworthy passierte during the week. I'm excited for the next weeks, Sis Funk and I are going to rock it down here. Today, we are spending the day in Graz, tomorrow to Klagenfurt for District meeting, and then Tues night to Vienna to pick up Sister Funk (Sis Downs leaves to München Wed morning at 6 so we have to go down the night before).

I will keep Grandma Lind in my prayers and hope she gets to go home soon....and doesn't cause the Doctors too much trouble.

Dad - what treats did you want me to bring home? I forget... Also, can we go to the Temple on the way home from the airport? I'm in for the surprise Christmas package to Chile.
Roommates - what is the name of the complex we will be living at?

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, November 7, 2011

AUtumn in AUstria is AUsome

Halloween package received!! It arrived Oct 31st on the dot, but we were in Vienna and couldn"t get it. Then, the next day was a holidaz and the Post was closed so we got it Nov 2nd. It was amaying! Thank zou so much. Sis Downs and I tasted a piece of everzthing and then had to set it aside and talk about it, because everzthing tasted so weird to us...not what we remember at all. It was a weird experience. Guess we can't live on amaying european REAL chocolate forever. Oh well! It was a good booster seat back into the real world. Sis Downs goes home next Wed. THAT is komisch enough anzwazs.

I must apologize in advance when my typing looks funnz. I've gotten so used to the european keyboard and the computer I am using is american and it's messing with mz brain. It took me about 4 min to find the ' Sis Downs had a great time listening to my struggles. NOTE the y and the z are the biggest problem because thez are switched internally on the keyboard, but the letters are printed european.

We had Dazlight Savings last Sundaz and it was glorious to have that extra hour of sleep after we"d been running\travelling around like plucked chickens for more than three weeks straight. We slept like dead people that night. The onlz problem is, now it gets blackdark at around 4>30 so we have to plan fixed appointments then because when it|s dark, NOT A SOUL will open or answer the door.

I am officially the designated driver as of mid=october. Not sure I mentioned that to you all. It's fun to drive on the Autobahn!!!! Not so much fun on the pathways they call two-way streets.

We had an Ausstellung...street display, that's the word...on Saturday and all 14 Elders came from Vienna to our little branch to help out. It was fantastic!!! The branch was completelz tickled to have so many missionaries caring about them. It was a great day and we got a few numbers and appointments. Testimony meeting yesterdaz was all about the fact that the whole citz of Bruck was probably contacted 6 or 7 times. People had even started keeping a card in their pocket to hold up as defense when yet another missionary attempted to contact them 'I got one already' thez would shriek.

I learned to play the harmonica since I came back to Bruck! It's really fun! An old man in the branch is teaching me Home on the Range. It's funny when he sings along. Mom and Dad, please locate that old harmonica we used to have in the piano bench. I intend to keep this skill up. It's fun!!!

It's weird to hear the stories about the Primarz kids at home...I FEEL SO OLD. All of those now walking and talking kids, I babysat as infants or held as newborns and toddlers. I do NOT like that one bit. Couldn't they just be in a box till I came back. Not cool!

Dad = good luck with the campainging stuff. Glad you're not running this time though. Would you ask about if I have to report to the High Council when I get home. Sis Downs and I weren't sure if we do as Sisters or if it's only a Priesthood duty. Keine Ahnung!

Taylor - remind me to slap you silly when you get home!! If you don't remember why, then please read that little tag to me in your email from last week.......

Pic 1- Our halloween costumes for Zone Pday in Vienna. We were cows, tails, cowbell, and all.
Pic 2- Austrian Fall BEAUTY
Pic 3- Vienna Missionaries in Bruck
Pic 4- The Hills are alive...and then there's us. This pic was taken the day we returned from our final long train adventure or trip. We were A-SLEEEEEPPPYYY!!!!

Alles Liebe
SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, October 31, 2011

HalloWIEN

We're having Zone Pday today. Sister Downs and I made cow costumes and baked cookies (we're having a Cookie Competition).. DAD - they are a very special flavor...ROOTBEER!! I am for sure bringing the recipe home as they are delicious!! I will send pictures next week
Oh, and my companion slammed my four fingers into the car door. No big deal!! Nothing broken, still there, just bruised, still typing with all 10, Sis Downs is groveling, no big deal! Still alive!!!
The week was CRAZY!! Klagenfurt for District Meeting, Graz for Pday, München for Sister'S COnference.
Morgan\Chelsea\Ashley - Would you please let Travor Hatch know that a Kevin Schäffner from Austria says hello. They were in the same MTC group.
Dad - Thank you for taking care of registration. Not wild about the new password...do not need red influence on blue website. Sis Downs liked the old one better.


--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, October 24, 2011

Quickie before the Outie


We're heading to Graz today for Pday!!!!!!!!!

Friday, got a letter from Stiegelmeiers and Connie Mann at Interviews with President Miles.

Saturday, I got to go back to Vienna for a baptism. Blessing (Young Nigerian woman who can'T read or write...has cute little girl). Long story short.....Baptism suppose to start at 4:30...she wasn't allowed off work....5:30pm whole ward trying to give the person driving her, directions to the church...5:45pm lost cell phone contact....6:00pm still no contact, Bishop Jovero decides just to reschedule baptism and have everyone leave....6:01pm Blessing walks in. Sis Downs and I had to leave to catch a train at 6:00pm so when I saw her walk in, I started crying knowing that we couldn'T stay or else we'd get home too late. President and Sis Miles were there and he just turned to me and said 'you know, I have the power to let you stay...want to hang around for this baptism?'....bawling at this point. I could've hugged him, BUT I settled with Sis Miles (good substitute). The baptism was BEAUTIFUL! Blessing was SOOOOOOOOOOO happy to see me. I made her a card using pictures so she could 'read'. I drew an eye, a heart, and a little sketch of her and Favor (her 2 yr old). She started crying when she read it at the top of her lungs. We got home at 10:28pm (bedtime is 10:30 so we weren't schwarz). Wonderfully spiritual day. LOVED IT

Sunday, Pres and Sis Miles came to Bruck branch for church. The branch LOVED them and it was good for President to see the branch before we leave because then he can really make the best decision as to what'S going to happen to this place in a month.

We will only be in Bruck one day this week. Here is our schedule.................Mon - Graz Pday and visitng our Graz members, Tues - Klagenfurt for District meeting...half day in Bruck, Wed, in Bruck, Thurs-Sat in München for Sister's Conference, Sunday - in Bruck, Mon - in Vienna, Tues - In Graz for District meeting. CRAZY!!!!!! The trains have become our second home.

Next Monday - ZONE PDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!! We'Re going to Vienna for a sport'S\game day. Sis Downs and I are in charge of organizing who does what for food.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, October 17, 2011

Jodeln von den Bergen (Yodels from the mountains)

Jodel-ay-he-whooo (I am determined to learn to Yodel before I come home).
I always think of the Price is Right game with the climber. That's pretty much exactly how it sounds too. We went 'wandern' with a member and she yodeled for us. It was magical!

The snow is threatening to fall. We see it in the mountains almost everyday and the thermometer announces, with a megaphone in the face, that winter is coming. It's on average about -2°C. Hopefully, it can wait till Dec 2nd.
Not too much exciting goin on in Bruck these days. (I feel like Tay when I say that, but really it's true). This week was a plateau of excitement. Nothing out of the ordinary to report. We're just chugging along with out investigators and Less-Actives. We won't be in Bruck much in the next couple of weeks. This Friday, we travel to Vienna for interviews with President. Next Tues, District Meeting is in Klagenfurt (3hr train ride), Thur - Sat we're in München for Sisters' Conference, and Next monday we're going to Graz for Pday and then to meet with the members that live there. (We have many transplanted members from the Graz ward whose calling it is to come to the Branch.)

We got to watch the Sun pm session of General Conference on Sunday. Church was shortened because of it. We had opening song and prayer, the sacrament, and then started the recording.

Mom, I got sick in Ulm (the 7 weeks bed-bound from Outer Darkness). This was my second area on my mission (after München) where I served with Sis Alder (we had a class together at BYU). This is where I sprained my ankle at the church and was emergency transferred to Salzburg.

Dad, I got your letter today and will have the stuff back to you by this evening.

We went up into the Alps to visit the Kaisers (a farm family. She is an inactive member). Saw Zuchinni the size of my arm, pumpkins the size of the car, strawberries the size of baseballs, and REAL dirt dad would covet to have in the garden. And it was all natural...no chemicals. AND....a four year old had me hold all the worms she was collecting out of the dirt we were weeding....I felt like that was my mom training for the week. IT WAS GROSS (and I'm not talking the german word for big). They gave us a zuchini to take home and since Sis Downs and I both don't like zuchini we decided to make Chocolate zuchini bread instead. We both discovered it in Vienna for leadership training and then when we asked for the recipe we found out what was in it. Not tooo shabby.
Pic 1 - The land of my ancestors....so they all say up here in the mountains
Pic 2 - Those are Zuchinni! They are the size of my leg...NO JOKE
Pic 3 - The insoles from my shoes...after my whole mission thus far. Don't worry mom, I got new ones last week.
Pic 4 - Mom, this picture is for you! Remember that picture in my scrapbook of me holding an eggplant or something from our garden in Sioux Falls. I recreated it for you...minus the hair pulled up on top of my head and the patterned pants. This time, I'm holding a mammoth zuchini.
Pic 5 - since I don't have my real flute, I choose the ones in this magical land of Austria where the gnomes and dragons abound. This is my new boyfriend by the way.

Would you send me Sue Miller's address. I was thinking about them two weeks ago and had the thought to send them a little something, but didn't. Now I know why. I'm working on heeding those thoughts more often.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, October 10, 2011

Back in Bruck

Grüßi meine Lieben -

I hope Grandma gets recovered fast or Grandpa is going to have to learn a new cuisine. I didn't know she was getting surgery. Was it planned or emergency? How is Aunt Irene doing? I had a dream the other night where I was home from my mission and Irene handed all the family history work over to me. Then the thought came 'maybe she's still alive so that I can take over her work'. Our family's history and stories have always intrigued me and I love old antiques and stuff. If that'S the reason she's still around, sorry that I'm not home sooner so she can go. I'm working on it. Lucky for me, President changed my release date up a month.

So, I'm back in Bruck and so far, things are going SOOOO well. Working with Sis Downs is so much fun and we are really getting things done. 'Git er done' as we say in the Boro. It's nice to work with an experienced missionary because you don't have to explain what you're doing every two seconds nor do damage control if things don't go according to plans (in their eyes). We just go and if something comes up, we just laugh and find something else to do. I haven't laughed so hard in a long time (since I was with Sis D). It's such a freeing feeling. I can truly be myself again. It'S great! Sunday at church was kind of weird but great at the same time. It was odd to walk in and see and remember everything from what seems like centuries ago. It was great because people were genuinely excited to see me...even people I didn't expect would be. Manuela is still going semi-strong and I got her to commit to stop smoking. Great start! On Saturday, we're going with her to Vienna for the Stake Women'S day! That will be weird too because then I go back and see familiar faces again and yet remain detached from that area. That'S the weirdest part about this transfer, coming back and reattaching after leaving it all behind so suddenly this exact time last year. The branch doesn't know Sis Downs and I are leaving in a month, but with me they should be able to figure it out since I was here a year ago. Sis Downs and I are still trying to figure out what President Miles had in mind putting the two of us here together when we both go home within 2 weeks of each other (she goes home first).

BONUS....I get to end my mission in Austrian Countryside before winter really hits!!!!
What's even odder is that we are spending about half of the transfer out of our area because of the Stake Women's Conference, Interviews with President, Mission Sisters' Conference, District Meetings (which take min 2 1\2 hrs to get there).

I found the land of my ancestors!!! (See pic 1). We had an appointment with an investigator the other day and, of course the first meeting with a new missionary is the same get-to-know-you stuff. He asked where my name came from. Denmark I said. Then he got all wide-eyed and told us about a little village 3 min away named Lind. OF COURSE we HAD to drive there and check it out. I'm convinced I'm Austrian!!!

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, October 3, 2011

Back to the Past



Sooo.......Transfer calls......

I'm going back to Bruck an der Mur (where I served this time last year...my 2nd area of my mission...was emergency transferred out) and will serve with Sister Downs. She is 6 weeks older mission-wise, from Peach Tree Georgia, we were trained by the same person, and I'm so excited to work with an experienced Sister. She goes home Nov 17th so I'm pretty sure I'll finish my mission there. I didn't get to finish a full transfer there the last time, so I guess President wants me to make up the time. We'll get a lot done. I attached a picture of us from Zone Conference so you can see who she is. I'm sad to leave Vienna and the 4th ward. They really and truly have become my family. It's the same feelings as when I left Ulm (where I served for 6 1\2 months). It's hard to leave an area where you stay for so long. When I told the Bishop (Paul Jovero), he went home and told his family...his 3 yr old son Noah cried. They're having us over for Dinner and FHE (for the 3rd week in a row). Noah even told me he loves me. Watch out Dad, you might have a son-in-law before you know it.

General Conference was great! We watched Sat AM session Sat night, and then Sunday we watched Sat PM, and Sun AM sessions. I'm excited to get the Ensign and read the sessions we missed. I love Elaine S. Dalton's talk about Dads and their Daughters. My dad is the best that's for sure. In fact, my family is the best! HANDS DOWN!!!

Not too much to report other than that, Sorry.

We Went to the Belvedere last week for Pday in our Dirndls (pic 3). Now you can see mine. Like?!? Inside the Belvedere is an art museum and awesome view of old Vienna. Neat! I even found my favorite painting I've ever seen. It's by Waldmüller and it's called 'Corpus Christi Morning'...or something like that.

Family, meet Parviz and Mani (pic 2). They are from Iran. I found Parviz after dropping something on an UBahn. He got baptized 4 weeks later. He's great! Mani is his friend who studies violin here at the Conservatory. He's been playing the violin for 12yrs...he's 18.

Ran into Ekarin the other day. He was baptized in July and then has gotten SO busy that he's not been able to do anything church-related. (Pic 4)

Happy Birthday to Mom and Molly Peters!!!

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, September 26, 2011

Double Whammy

 

 

Hallo Meine Lieben

Melissa Alder.....my birthday was in May. Thanks for thinking of me though. I laughed quite a lot when I read your emails. Sis Nelson did too.

Tsolmon and Queen are officially the newest members of the ward!!! (Pic 1) Their baptism went smoothly, the only problem being that there was a slight disputation as to who went first. Since we'd found and taught Tsolmon for awhile and she had asked us weeks ago if she could be first...long before we met Queen. Then, Queen shows up to her baptism at 4pm (it didn't start till 6;30) and asks the Ward MIssion Leader if since she came first, she could be first. We weren'T there yet and he didn't know about us promising Tsolmon and so he said yes. We arrive and he lays the bomb on us and wants us to clean the mess up when I tell him what has already been planned. It all got straightened out and I had to do the dirty-work. Queen was very sad, but I compromised and told her she could receive the Holy Ghost first. Silly little frustrating problem! It was a beautiful baptism.

We had Special Training with Pres Miles this week and they introduced a new training program for missionaries. (And we got to see our whole zone...aka the other Sisters. Pic 6 is me with Sis Fokken from Nebraska...we are like two peas in a pod. She's been out for a month). It includes every companionship receiving person DVD players to use for study to watch the Preach My Gospel DVDs, and Proselyting DVDs. There's an extensive new study plan for new greenies (including now 2hr companion study). It' intense. President wanted to talk with me a little bit about how things are going and after that discussion, I feel a load taken off my heart. He reassured my that I have been a great missionary my whole mission and have seen much success because of it. He is grateful for how I have been with Sis Chapple and all of my other extremely difficult companions. He told me that I am the only one in the mission who could've handled them the way I did and he is grateful for that. WOW!! I feel like a million bucks

In order to understand the following, you will need to watch\have watched 'Errand of Angels'. In the movie, the Sister serves in Salzburg and is teaching many awesome people. The 'actors' in those scenes are actually members from VIENNA! There's a scene where they are teaching an old couple....Br and Sr Hirschmann. And then a scene where they are teaching a man and his Chinese wife.....Br Michael Hirschmann and Sr Yungling Hirschmann. (pic 2 is of Br and Sr Hirschmann). We go to their home every Thursday for missionary lunch. They are the sweetest!
I love the Sisters in Vienna 2nd Ward!!!!!!!!!!!! They keep me alive and sane.(Pic 3 and 4)

Vienna 4th ward is the best!!!!!! (Pic 5 is me with Sophia Appiateng and her 18yr old daughter, Joycelynn...my little buddy)

Gotta go!! The Joveros invited us over for dinner and we have a bunch of stuff still to do today Love you all!

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, September 19, 2011

Queen's Bday Party and Conference

  

Dearest Family -

Before I go any further, I must stop dad before he writes his email. Sis Alder sent me an email about the BYU-U game. I am glad that I do not come home for a couple of months. Hopefully by then, dad will have forgotten to brag.

Queen'S birthday. Queen is getting baptized on Saturday and we (all 4 Sisters) decided that we'D throw a little party for her. She and I made a deal that if she'd teach me how to make something African, I'd teach her American. She chose Saturday to make American food. I made pizza crust and we all topped it. Sis Nelson and Sis Weed made rootbeer (sparkling water, root beer extract found in the apt, and LOTS of sugar). Sis Nelson made banana bread with a lemon glaze. We all met at the church and topped the pizza and watched 'Errand of Angels'. Queen wants to serve a mission so that was the movie she chose to watch. It was even better for me because I have served in EVERY area that the character serves in the movie. AND we saw a couple of the most memorable members here in Vienna also playing investigators in the movie. We stopped and rewound the movie a coupld of times. Really great!

Stake Conference was great. We sang a version of 'Näher Mein Heiland Zu Dir' (Nearer Dear Savior to THee) and Joseph SMith'S First Prayer as the Prelude music right before the conference began. I even got to see the Bruck an der Mur members....and Manuela. That was a blast from the past! It was great to see her because for a time she fell away (into anti-mormon crazy Martina). Now she's back! She saw me as Sis Nelson and I were greating people and practically jumped on me. She was so excited! When we were all inside, she came up to me and said that she'd saved a seat for me, right beside her. That did my heart good to have a person I found and baptized almost a year ago remembers me.

Also, SIS ALDER - - Manuela is going to have a baby in June-ish. That in and of itself is an odd story. Remind me to tell you sometime!

I got grandma's card she sent from PA

Not too much else to report. Still chugging along. I finished the Old Testament on Saturday and am now determined to finish the New Testament before November. My orginial goal was for Dec 1st, but I read to gosh darned fast that I'Ve had to recalculate my goal a hundred times. Now, at 5 pgs a day I'll finish before Dec. That's a piece a cake! Next, bring on Jesus the Christ for round 4. Sorry, I just reread this paragraph and I sound like a missionary...weird!!

Pic 1 - Me and Sister Nelson. Tay, she is 6´6! She is an English major who loves movie musicals and to cook. We are like two peas in a pod. AND she reminds me that I am not the tallest Sister in the mission anymore.
Pic 2 - Yoga class crew. Front row: Tsolmon and her kids (daughter Delga 10, son Ulzii 8), Sis Weed (Idaho), Queen (Nigeria). Back row: Tessy Okoro (member from Nigera), Sis Chapple (Colorado), Sis Nelson (Salt Lake)
Pic 3 - HeinzPeter (Manuela'S boyfriend who loves America and speaking English), Me, Sister Nelson, and Manuela (She doesn't wear a wig anymore) at Stake Conference.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, September 12, 2011

Hey all and all

Fam and co -

Not sure what's going on out here, but the weather can't decide between Summer and Fall. It gets chilly and windy one day, then blue skies and heat. MAKE UP YOUR MIND....I need to know whether or not to unpack the winter gear.

Queen (23, Nigeria) is so excited and ready for her baptism. We've taught her everything and she just devours it all. We can't copme up with lessons fast enough to keep up with her. Sept 24th can't come fast enough for her.

Tsolmon (40, Mongolia) is just as ready and prepared as Queen (and they're both being baptized the same day) but with a little less outward showyness (if that makes sense). She's more withdrawn and calm about it and she often gets a humble glow about her. We work on getting her family more and more involved, but for now, things are good. Since that first FHE we did, they have it every week and everyone likes it.

Blessing (25, Nigeria). She is new to our pack of cards and is so sweet. She has a 2 yr old daughter, Favor, who is my little shadow. We've only met with them once and invited them to church. When they showed up at the meeting place, Favor came running at me, arms open from all the way down the hall. She is adorable.

We attended a Nigerian birthday party. THEY know how to party! Sis Chapple is teaching a Yoga class every Friday. We had our first one this week and it was well attended. Great missionary tool...and it gives us an excuse to wear pants for an hour. My back still causes problems so I can't participate, but I love watching and listening to the weird music.

Sorry this is short, but that'S all I have time for. Stake conferecne is this Sat, Sun. I'm still in the choir and I have to play piano.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, September 5, 2011

Labor day Pday

Hallo meine Lieben-

Mom...in answer to your question about where the church is not. Working in the international ward, I get to see first hand where the church cannot or does not have ties. Iran (Persian-speaking world), China cannot have proselyting missionaries, and Turkey. Those are the only ones I can think of now. Go on to LDS.org and check around and it'll tell you. Even mormon.org is good for that kind of info.

Missionary materials we give out are available in 166 languages
340 missions
There are 152 temples throughout the world either in operation, under construction, or announced.
Countries with Family History Centers 127
Countries Receiving Humanitarian Aid Since 1985 is 178

Vienna looks like it wants to have a least a little Autumn as the weather is predicted to cool down. My favorite time of year is FINALLY here.

We have a new baptismal date set for October. Her name is Justyna and she'S form Poland. We met her while visiting the Panophur family (from Iran, only he speaks German, no English). THeir oldest son was there with his girlfriend. We had received a referral for a Polish-speaking person a couple of weeks ago, but had been unable to actually make contact. It'S hard when they only give an address and no phone-number. Vienna is NOT a small city so we don'T often get to travel all over it all the time. Anyway, I felt like I needed to keep the Polish BoM in my backpack and now I know why. JUSTYNA needed it. She was thrilled with the lesson we gave and even came to church. She is really great!

Tsolmon (Mongolia) continues to do well and will most definitely be ready for her baptism on Sept 24.

Queen (Nigeria) came to a baptism on Saturday. She went up front with the kids so she could see into the font better. After the ordinance, she slipped her shoes off and started heading for the font. I had to stop her and while laughing she said that she wanted to be baptized now. That's when we set a date with her, but she'll probably be one of those ready before the date, which is okay by me. NO need to 'procrastinate the day of your repentance'.

Ron and Sydna - Sophie Appiateng'S son Michael (age 20) was baptized on Sunday.

We had Zone Conference on Friday. It was the longest one I have ever been to (instead of being the short and sweet 9am-1pm like Pres Condie always did). We had an AMAZING conference from 9am-4.30pm. It was awesome. Sis Downs and I did a musical number. She sang (she studies Opera at BYU) and of course, I played. Then at the very end was testimony meeting. Not everyone gets to bear their testimony at these, just the new missionaries and anyone going home before the n ext one. As they announced who'd be going when, I wasn't among the list. Phew, I thought. Not old yet. Then, as Pres and Sis Miles took their seats down in the congregation instead of staying on the stand, Pres whispered to me that I would be testimonying too. oh man! We got to ask any question we wanted at one point and my hand shot up....we had a sisters conference last year for 3 days where all the sisters were together for special training. I asked if we were going to have one. Pres said it is already planned. YES!!!!!!!

Also, has anyone else seen the LDS.org website for the Sister Missionary dress standards? It blows my mind! So stylish and awesome. Wish I'd had THOSE choices a year ago. Oh well, in 3 months I'll be wearing whatever I want anyways. I feel that I'm stylish enough for my needs. As shown in the attached picture. My 'model pose' as snapped by Sister Nelson. And the 'twin shot' with Sis Weed (being trained by Sis Nelson. No we did not plan to wear the same thing).

We got to go see an Opera at the Rathaus this week. It was film version from the 70s of Zauberflöte by Strauss. Really awesome and it was free!!! Yeah for summer Movie festivals of really good stuff.

Have a great week!

Gma, Gpa, Pat, Lydia, and Paul - PLease make sure lots of fun is had, and pictures are taken. I am rather disappointed your visit couldn'T wait a month or three. Miss you all and hope you have an awesome time.

Tay - I got your letter mailed on July 25th. Only took a month to reach me this time. Next time, try writing in pen instead of marker...your handwriting is hard enough to read already.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, August 29, 2011

I look like Job

 



Pic 1 - Me at the Melk Abbey
Pic 2 - This is my 7mo old shadow, Bella Jovero



Okay, so an update...Soooooooooooooooo, this week the 'bites' on my legs didn't do anything but multiply so the mission nurse (and Sister Miles) told me to go to a Dr. ASAP. Well, it's summer in Austria and of the 33 Drs I called, every single one was on Urlaub (vacation) till end of September. That, and 20 others did't have open appointments till October. Frustrated and worried, I just kept calling and finally got one that doesn't take appointments so off I went. Turns out, they aren't bites at all....just a form of boils. Hence the title of my email. Job in the Old Testament had boils! About two weeks ago, I decided i wanted to read through the Bible from cover to cover since I had just finished the triple for the fifth time on my mission. I reached Job just as the 'bites' appeared. That's one way to make the scripturse come alive and apply to me. I was prescribed a white cream powder and Penicillin among other low-key infection pills. As of today, they are going away. It looks like by Saturday I will be wearing short skirts again. I had plenty of children point out the white 'polka-dots' at church on sunday. They are the only ones on that level to see them so I didn't let it bother me.

Speaking of funky weather. It got up to 41°C most of the week. THAT IS HOT!!!!!!!!!!! LUkcily, it cooled down to 28 for the ward picnic on Saturday, which was a perfect activity.

We had FHE with Parviz at the Joveros (he's the Bishop). We taught about the Priesthood since the Bishop is very set on Parviz receiving the Priesthood ASAP. It was wonderful and I even got to play in a kiddy-pool up to my knees. That was sooooooooo refreshing!!! Parviz even got a calling yesterday - Chorister. Note - - Parviz is a professional conductor and composer, so this calling is perfect.

Sister Nelson and I have been asked to sing in an octet for Stake Conference on the 17th. Our ward is in charge of the music for the Sunday session and the person in charge pulled me aside and asked if I'd sing a solo (he always seems to manage sitting in front of me or beside me at church). I told him I'd rather not, but I'd love to sing in a small group. He roped SIster Nelson and she dragged me. It'll be great! (Ron and Sydna - we won't be having Stake Conference in the VIC anymore, now it's in Bad Vöslau)

Ivanna is back from her vacation to Bulgaria to pick up her 7month old daughter Natalie (who's been living in Serbia with Ivanna's parents since she was born). She and Brother McCann came to the picnic on Saturday. They are slowly making progress. NOw we just got to get themn to wake up for church. They still have the Pub open Saturdays till 2am Sunday so getting enough sleep without sleeping in is tricky. Next year, the schedule will change and our ward will meet at 2 so the chances are better for next year, but that's no excuse for this year.

Tsolmon (from Mongolia) is progressing beautifully. She asked us to do FHE tonight so we have that on the docket. She REALLY wants to have the Holy Ghost. That, and for her children and husband to join too. Her husband is a practicing Buddhist and the kids think it's weird (since they don'tr really have a religion and the whole thing is out of their comfort-zone). Tsolmon wants to do it even without them because she knows that they will follow her lead once they really see. I'm in charge of the lesson and activity. Bring on Tree of Life. As I ws planning, I rmeembered the FHE folders mom made for us in Germany and all the Tree of LIfe activities we did. The drawing with closed eyes, acting it out, etc. Thanks mom!!

T.God (short for Thank God...yes, that's his name) introduced us to his friend Queen and she is going to be baptized on Sept 24th (the same day as Tsolmon).
Is everyone\everything alright? Someone in the ward told me about the earthquake and hurricane because they knew that'S where I'm from. Please let me know what happened.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, August 22, 2011

Howdy doodie




Pic 1 - Sis Chapple, Br Keith Morgan, Parviz, Me.
Pic 2 - our District
Pic 3 - my legs with mosquito bites that don't itch, they just cause searing pain. Those bites are the size of a ping pong ball and are as swollen high as computer key if not bigger

You know you've gained the trust and love of members and investigators when your companion calls to talk to them (or answers the phone) and they ask to talk to you. (Either that, or they know I can speak the AFrican or Filipino English and can understand them). I love the ward here and the city gets (hotter) more beautiful everyday as long as I don't look inside myself.

One thing I am tired of hearing is the following 'You should be training'. It's odd that so many people think I should train a new missionary. Technically, I already am. Since Sis Chapple came, I've had to not only train a new missionary, but raise a child (walking, talking, eating, and all). It is exhausting, but I have learned that I cannot just pour everything I know and am into this person because I will come out with no strength for myself. If I can't keep floating, then how can I teach someone else to swim.

Well, that same scenario came up this week. There is a new Sister coming in and everyone in the zone (plus Sis Dietz) told me that I will be her trainer. So Sunday morning, President Miles calls and Sis Nelson says 'Here ya go Trainer'. Well, after saying hello and giving him the update on my back, I hand the phone to her. SHE is training the new Sister. 'Told ya so' I say as she hangs up. We both got a good laugh out of it. She leaves today to pick her up. They will be ,living in our apt (thank goodness), but will be working in the German ward. No more permanent Joint-teach. BUmmer!

It's amazing how much more I understand myself since I came on my mission. Before, I knew how to handle stress, disappointments, hard times, and frustrations. Enter mission, and all things just get blown to smitherines and I have to start again. Then, it's funny how much I am really just building on what I ha before...just better.

It's official...I am being eaten alive. Tues night I noticed that I had gotten some mosquito bites so I put anti-itch on them before bed to avoid any subconscious scratching. Wed I wake up and they are bright red and swollen. Oh well, guess my sheets are stiff and scratchy. Wed night, mosquito bites are puffy and have pus bubbles in the middle....unpack long skirts and use bug spray more faithfully. Thurs night, new ones bringing the total to 9. Fri day, still there, but add excessive pain upon any contact....wearing long skirts is a blessing. Sunday morning, PAIN. I call Mission nurse (brand new thing for our mission. We used to call Sis COndie). Today, I will be going to Apotheke (pharmacy) and getting SOMETHING....ANYTHING. Please keep in your prayers for those nasty buggers to leave me alone.

Homework for Mom and Dad since they keep mentioning how boring their emails...and lives...are. Read the following parable and tell me what you learn from it and I will share what I learned from it. John 10:1-11

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Sticking for the summer...Sweet!

Servus!

Transfer calls came and we got one....We'r both staying. Another Sister is joining us so we will be a dritt (triplet). It'll be nice because then we have a permanent Joint-teach and can teach all of the men we keep getting. Sweet!

Don't have very long today. There was a holiday (Catholic = National holiday here) so we couldn't email. We spent the day with MT (the friend Ron and Sydna Pope got me to contact). We went to a Benedictine Monastary and actually got in free because we were 'nuns' according to everyone who works there. Sweet! It was beautiful!

Guess who I ran into all the way out here in Vienna Austria?!?!? Matt Chandler from BYU. We were walking to the center and I turned to the side and saw a guy who looked familiar. I walked up to him and there he was. Its odd but every time I'm in Europe, Matt follows me. Sweet!

Parviz's baptism was beautiful!

Awesome spiritual appointments that i'll have to talk about later.

Sis C lost our phone after I asked her to start taking some responsibility and helping out. Let's just say...the phone took a bus ride without us. LUkcily ther was an extra around in the Zone leaders' hands

Don't have time for pictures so I'll send 'em all next week

Mom and Dad - official release date is now December 1st.

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, August 8, 2011

Still in Vienna...still raining

Schöne Grüße aus Wien -

Sister Alder showed up this week. President called to say that she would be with us for a whole week. Boy, was I excited. It has been nice to have someone else here so I don't have to shoulder this whole area...and a brand new member\missionary\non-german speaker\companion all by myself. It has been so nice to have SIs Alder here to help. I am SO grateful she is here. She has been traveling around the mission as an assistant to all the Sisters. She stays somewhere and works then moves on. She will be going down to Bruck an der Mur on Thurs for her last week as a missionary. Yes, that's right, she goes home next week. That is so weird that we served together this time last year and weren't even thinking about home stuff, now it's here and things are crazy.

President called to ask about how Vienna (and I) are doing. I asked him about release date being Dec 29th. He asked if I was planning on going back to school in the winter and whe nI said yes he told me he'd work on getting me home in the November transfer. Meaning...I may be home by THanksgiving. I will keep you posted on that as soon as I hear more.

Parviz is getting baptized on Saturday and he is soooooooooo excited. We watched the Restoration DVD with him and he cried. It is his favorite movie now, he says. He even picked the songs for his baptism from it and wants everyone we meet with, or he sees, to watch it. (Yes, I AM playing the piano...again. Seems that everyone in the stake knows I play piano and so I play for everything now. I'm not even that good, but apparently no one plays.)

I am also teaching the Institute center bi-weekly German class. It is a joy to teach, but so stressful to find the time to prepare the lessons as we have absolutely NO free time. (We taught 35 lessons this week). The class has grown since I started teaching. It went from 2 students (Sister Brosnahan from the institute couple, and Sis Chapple) to a total of 12 students. We had to move into the bigger classroom. Hopefully, there will be a way to split the class if it keeps growing because there are always new people coming and we don't have enough time to get to everybody.

We have 3 new investigators from Romania - two of them speak English, one does not (but he is more ready than the others). The first, Adryan (ENglish and some german), is 20 and was found by the Elders. We taught him, and then the next time, he brought his brother in law, Ciprian (no English or German). The next time, Ciprian brought his wife Carmen (speaks English). They came to church yesterday and will be baptized on Sept 3.
Saw a jar of Nutella wearing Lederhosen, thought of Keri!

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, August 1, 2011

Where did summer go?




Okay, so it's the 1st of August and I wear a coat and scarf daily...NOT COOL!
This week I got to go back to Bruck an der Mur...it'S been a whole year since I served there. I went because we were on an Austausch (24 hr Exchange) with Sister Downs. She and I are mission 'Sisters' meaning that we were trained by the same person. It was so nice to serve with her and really made me appreciate working with experienced Sisters...it makes things go A LOT faster and easier because you just 'know the flow'. Got to teach someone that I found while still there and see a couple of the members as they came on Joint-teaches. Manuela is coming back into activity. Remember the extreme Anti Martina and how we were teaching Manuela and Anton (the reason I had to be transferred out)? Apparently, Martina got them back into her clutches and Manuela requested her name to be removed from the records. She started coming back, though Anton is still gone, and luckily the request to have her name removed never made it to Salt Lake so she may not need to be baptized again. It was kind of weird to go back even for the 24hrs. Things physically were the same, but I felt so funky being there again.

Sis Downs and I were talking up a storm on the 2hr train to and from Bruck and we realized that in 2 weeks we are the oldest Sisters in the mission. Then, we counted how many Sisters are going home in 2 weeks...8!!!!! There are also 6 coming in. We then speculated (grandpa and grandma would be so proud) about who would train. There are 7 possibilities. Sis Downs is convinced it'll be me, but I think it'll be her. We'll see. Everyone else is a definite, just not the last one. There's a can of Almdudler (like Gingerale) and a Candybar on the line so we'll see.

President Miles came for Leadership Training (usually just Zone- and District- Leaders, but Sisters are always asked to come as well). It was really great. Right after the training I left for Bruck with Sis Downs, and President ended up going to a couple of appointments with Sis Chapple and 24hr companion. He even came to our ward on Sunday. He is really a WONDERFUL person and very open and personable with everyone. I really feel that he cares about each and every individual. I'm pretty sure I'm staying in the international ward and it would really be silly to train someone in an ENGLISH speaking ward.

Parviz is still progressing in leaps and bounds. The ward is just swallowing him up and are really great with him. He just has the kind of personality that he says doesn'T really like to be around all kinds of other people so he usually just hangs aorund us on SUnday and in the Institute Center. We're working on getting members to come to all appointments. Last Monday, we spent the day with him wandering around the sights in Vienna and then he took us to a Persian restaurant for dinner. THe food was...interesting. We got to see the Mozart gardens and go up to a lookout tower and have ice cream in a rotating cafe up top. SCARY!!!

No exciting stories to tell. SOrry!

Sister Covey is now officially home from her mission. She and her family were at the church on SUnday (we go to all 3 hours of the German ward now). Her dad, Stephen M.R. Covey gave a fireside about trust from his book 'The Speed of Trust'. It was really a great seminar and President Miles told us to come since all of the YSA are out of town for the week for a Temple trip. Dad, you would find his book really interesting.

PIc 1 - Mozart garden
Pic 2 - that is way high up...beeellliiieeeevvveee me
Pic 3 - Me and Sister Downs (my mission older Sister...Sis Dietz is our little sister)

--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Monday, July 25, 2011

No weird title needed

Hallo -

It'S so funny to read the emails mom and dad send to me since they tell both sides of all the stories. It's great to hear the progress on the house...even when it'S the silly comments about each other and what you do. It's also interesting to see what you focus on in your letters. With dad, it's a quick update on lots of people...with mom, it's an indepth study of a couple of them. Thank you both for your letters. It makes the week go by so much quicker. I usually take a picture of your email on my camera and then read them throughout the week as I'm lying in bed or taking a break to eat.

I got to meet MT Brittinger this week!!!! (She's Ron and Sydna's friend from the UN). We went on a tour of the UN and then she took us for 'Coffee and Cake'. Dad - don'T worry I will take you on a tour there when you come. You would LOVE it. It is amazing and I want to see it again. THEN, she says she'll be right back and shows up with a huge paper grocery bag full of American goodies...for me!! Peanut Butter, Hershey Kisses, Taco Seasoning, Cheddar Cheese, etc. It was quite a surprise and I really didn't expect that. BUT I really appreciated it. She is a WONDERFUL person and I can'T wait to get to know her better soon. She wants to take us out of the city for Pday to see some of the sights. We've got a date planned for mid-August. I can't wait. While she and I were talking, we found out that we have yet another connection.....she used to live near Bruck an der Mur...AND, I've actually been to her old house. Weird!!!!

Tay - you WOULD walk in doggie do with new shoes. Sister COvey has a keychain of a sneaker and everytime I see it, I think of your obsession with shoes. AND, I found out that I have the biggest feet in the ward. Not exactly sure how they figured that, but someone checked on it...not cool!! That's what happens when the whole ward is 4' petite Philipino or African with super short toes. It made for a good laugh. Also, Sophie Appiateng told me that I could be Sydna's daughter. (I spoke in church on Sunday and everyone told me I was just like her). Janette (Sophie's sister) came in when I taught Gospel Principles and afterwards, she told me she'll come every week if I teach.

Mom, would you tell me the story of how your grandparents found the church and such. Where exactly were they from? The bishop's wife is from Wales and I told her that's where my family came from....then she asked where and I couldn't answer. Please, tell me more. Also, please go ahead and throw out some of my stuff. Just let me know what you're contemplating tossing. Sis Covey and Sis Olsen go home on Wednesday and so I was keeping Sis Covey company while she was packing. I can't wait to get rid of stuff I've got here that I WILL NOT be wearing or using ever again.

I knew Annabelle Fike really well! I was her YCL at Girl's Camp a couple of times and her older sister (Lauren) is my age (and we were really close at Camp and beyond). Annie was getting married when I left so that'S good to get an update on her. Lauren had a baby my freshman year of college or so. Great girls form the Lewisberry ward.

No one came to church...literally. Saturday was the wedding reception for Tracy and Tibor Ryssmann and it went from 2pm-midnight. It was quite a party and no one came to church the next day. We had a max 30 people in Sacrament meeting and even less by the time we got to RS.....max 10 in RS. It was kind of like Sundays at home during the summer when everyone goes to the beach. We made an appearance at the reception for 30 min. We got there at 4 (remember the reception started at 2) and the couple hadn't even arrived yet. They were sitting out in their car. Then, they had a big elaborate procession, Nigeria style as their entrance. It was like no reception I have EVER seen. It was pure Nigeria and I loved it!!!!! They even had the President and Amabassador of Nigeria there. Big deal!
Parviz (musician from Iran) is progressing so well! He feels so happy and says he sees a good difference. We meet with him everyday and I teach him German and the gospel. It's a great combination with him. He's SO strong. We have many new investigators (shocking...not) and a lot of people are meetin gwith us every day. It definitely keeps us hopping!

We have special training with Presdient on friday so I'll ask about release date.

Love you all and miss you loads. Tay - stay doggie do free...for awhile.
--
Alles Liebe SISTER CHOCOLATE

Pic 1 - Me and MT just before the tour.
Pic 2 - Me in front of the flags at the UN
Pic 3 - Parviz loves meeting with us.
Pic 4 - Bishop Sunday Talabi (former bishop) at the reception. Picture his outfit times 100 and that was the reception.

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