Posted by : Brady in (Elders, Physical Preparation, Sisters' Section)

What to Take on Your Mission

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What to Take on Your MissionI think one of the best things about a mission is how much freedom and flexibility you have. Everything you own fits into a suitcase—or else you give it away! When transfers come, it only takes a few minutes to fold all your white shirts (if you take time to do that…) and put everything into your suitcase. You can be completely ready to move to an entirely different city, state, or even country within minutes!

Of course we all begin the mission with two suitcases packed completely full, and by the time we go home, we usually realize everything we took that we never even used.

I think one of the funniest things I encountered was with one elder who began the mission with me. When we were about to return home, he began rummaging through his “seldom opened” suitcase, where he found quite a treasure! It was a portable hot water shower! I guess he figured you can’t live without hot water in South America, and so he went prepared!

Of course he never used the portable shower, but I suppose he had a great piece of camping equipment for after the mission!

As you grow in the mission field, “things” become less and less important. The mission is one of the only times in your life that you can actually forget about belongings, social life, and pressures from school and work, and you can entirely focus on others. Your prayers become more and more selfless, and you begin to learn things about yourself that you never knew—strengths and weaknesses. Things become so clear as you see the ways Heavenly Father needs you to grow as well as the strengths he has given you.

Along with these changes, you see that you really didn’t everything you thought was so important: the church books that aren’t part of the missionary library, the photo albums of all your high school friends, the remembrance trinkets from your girlfriend, and surprisingly enough, the portal hot water shower. These just become luggage that you have to pack around for two years.

Also remember that you will be serving with people that come from all types of circumstances. You will have companions that come from high income families as well as companions that are from lower-income families and third world countries. It is interesting to see new missionaries arrive to the mission from the Provo MTC compared to those from the Argentina or Peru MTC. I have had companions who ask what in the world I had taken with me to fill two jumbo-sized suitcases. They just had one simple suitcase that many times could probably be used as carry-on luggage.

So if I had a tip about what to take on your mission—or rather what not to take your mission—I would say to remember that this is one of the only times in your life that you can just let it go. Eliminate the distractions, and enjoy it while you can. Follow the suggestions and guidelines you receive with your mission call, and trust that you will be okay. And if your mother buys you a heated shower that you can hang on a tree, thank her graciously—because that will be pretty cool to take camping when you are called to be a boy scout leader in about three years.

Posted by : Brady in (Elders, Physical Preparation, Senior Couples, Sisters' Section, Spiritual Preparation)

Letters Home

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Letters to Your FamilyI think there is something very important to understand about time on a mission. You have an incredible ability to affect not only your own life or the lives of converts, but you will be able to affect the lives of your family perhaps just as much as anyone else.

So let me just begin by telling you that preparation days are extremely precious! It is hard enough to get everything done when you study in the morning; do laundry; go shopping; write to the family; write to friends; get together with your zone; play soccer, fubíto, or basketball; and any other activity you want to do for the week before beginning work again at 6:00. Sometimes it is easy to give a half-hearted effort to write a mediocre letter home—there just isn’t a lot of time!

One of the most important things you can know is how much your letters can change, empower, and teach your family. I remember when I began the mission, I set a personal challenge for myself to write my letters to my family as if they were journal entries. I wrote about the spiritual experiences I had and the things I had learned. I would write about the investigators, the church, my testimony, and the scriptures. They were very personal to me, and I was eager to share them with my family.

When I was just over half way through my mission, I had an incredible experience. I received a package from my sister. When I opened the letter that was on the package, I remember it was written on stationary with chocolate-chip cookies on it. I thought it was a little mean that she would use that stationary, as there is no such thing as home-baked cookies in Bolivia. However, when I opened the package, I found an entire bag of chocolate-chip cookies!!! It was about the best thing in the world!

As I began to read the letter, it became an even more special experience. My sister told me about the prior Sunday when she was in Sunday School. They were singing the opening hymn to the meeting, and she began to think about me. She said that she began to think about the missionary service I was giving, and she began to cry as she thought about how much I had grown and how much the work had come to mean for me. I never knew the effects that my letters were having, and this was the first I realized their power. My sister and I had actually developed a spiritual relationship through my letters that we had never previously had. And since coming home from my mission, we have become the best of friends.

Never underestimate the power of your letters to your family and friends. You are a chosen servant of Jesus Christ Himself, and you have a great power that is given to you. You have the power to affect lives, change people, and testify with a conviction that can be heard and felt through your words, whether written or spoken. That is the power you carry as a missionary, and it is given to bless lives. Remember to exercise this gift and never settle for mediocrity.