Monday, March 23, 2020

Homeward Bound




This will probably be our last blog for this mission.  Sadly we are being sent home along with most other senior missionaries in the world.  We have mixed feelings. Unfortunately, the things we looked forward to doing when we get home are things we can't do now--spending time with family and friends, going to favorite restaurants, movies, shopping malls, etc..  For the first 14 days we are not supposed to leave the house for any reason and probably won't for a while after that.
 
Things are changing faster than we can keep up with them.  Wednesday we got a call saying we needed to stay in our apartments and to not go near the young missionaries.  The office secretary called and said we were given the option of going home.  Later in the day President Godoy called and said going home was mandatory.  Then we got a call asking us to drive an elder to Reno and to pick up another elder in Elko on our way back.  So much for staying away from the young missionaries..

Our Zone Leader, Elder Fitzsimmons (from Maine), was just called to be an Assistant to the President.  We are happy for him but will miss him.  We have served with him since we got here last summer.   
Elder Williams and Elder Fitzsimmons
 We feel sorry for the young missionaries as they are all confined to their apartments for at least 30 days.  At least we have TV and internet!


Sunday Meeting at Stake President's House
Last Sunday we were invited to the Stake President’s house for “church”.  The elders were there as well (this was when we could still be around them).  There was a sweet spirit there and we appreciate everything President Fullmer has done for us.  There was young, newly baptized family there also.  The father was able to pass the sacrament for his first time.  It was a special experience for all of us. After church we went to our Bishop's house for lunch.  He is a former marine and you can tell.  We love him.






Home Church

Yesterday, Marc and I had our own church meeting.  Marc blessed the sacrament.  I don’t remember when I have felt the spirit so strongly before as I partook of the sacrament.  Our Stake Conference had been scheduled for that Sunday so our stake presidency recorded their talks on Facebook and we were able to watch those. 


We feel like we have accomplished much but finished little.  We were making progress with many people who we taught.  We have grown to love them and wish we could stay and see the fruits of our labors.  We have made many friends and leave with heavy hearts. Marc sent a final report to the bishops saying that Ministering Brothers and Sisters can do anything we have done.  We hope that they will follow up.






Marc was asked to do a  baptism interview
at this ranch about 56 miles from Ely.

Gilbert Ranch.  Members own it and let the Stake
have activities there like Girl's Camp.
More Gilbert Ranch

From the little town of Ruth.  Dump Truck on the Top
dumping debris from mine.
We were fascinated at this dump truck bed (?) that was
just sitting on the side of the road.


Giant Tonka Truck Part



















From one of our short drives.
Abandoned House in the Middle of Nowhere

Loneliest Road


Sunday, February 9, 2020

Life in Smalltown America


We have not posted very much on our mission to Nevada mostly because we don’t seem to do much besides visiting people and teaching the gospel.  We know these are very important things, but they are very hard to write about without revealing personal information.  (At least, that’s our excuse and we are sticking to it!)


We do find it hard to believe that our mission will conclude in less than four months!  We have even talked to the couple that will replace us.  The Meyers received their mission call a couple of weeks ago and they called us right away to ask a million questions.  We weren’t sure when we talked to them that they would be replacing us in Ely, but we have found out since that they will be.  They are 60 y/o, from Gilbert AZ, he was an electrical engineer and they seem like really nice people!  They will arrive in Nevada in mid-April, so we will overlap for a few weeks.  That will make living arrangements interesting, but we know it will all work out somehow…


One of the fun things about Ely is all the unique lifestyles we come across and get to learn about!  Lots of miners, lots of prison workers, and one of the people we are working with and getting to know is a government trapper.  He’s on retainer with the state, plus he gets to sell the pelts.  He told us the current market is $100-$1000 per pelt, with large bobcats being on the upper end.  The picture shows some of his pelts being prepped on the back porch, and he said he has about 70 others so far.  It’s fascinating to talk to someone who knows so much about something we (and probably most people) know so little about!  He’s on the road 4 or 5 days a week setting and checking traps, while his wife works for the school district in special education.  They also have a son and two grandkids living with them, so it’s a busy place (and difficult to find a good teaching situation…).  He’s the nicest guy in the world, and has been less-active for years, even while serving actively in scouting for years.  


Another ‘fun’ thing about Ely is working with people’s schedules.  For example, mine workers at the big mine work 4 12-hour shifts, then 5 days off, then switch to nights for 5 12s, then 4 days off, then switch shifts and start over again.  Even the office workers work non-standard shifts, like the geologist we are working with works 9 straight 10-hour shifts, then 6 days off, then repeat!  Prison workers also mostly work 12-hour shifts. It makes it hard to have what we consider normal lives, although it’s normal for them.  We assume the strange work schedules are a prime reason the activity rate in the stake is only 30%.  


Another interesting thing about Ely is that so many people are connected in some way.  Ely isn’t a suburb, but its own unique town three hours away from any other larger cities in any direction.  Here’s a good example that just happened to us yesterday:  We went to the car wash to wash off the mud and grime from our trip to Elko (see below).  There was a line of ten vehicles (one car wash in town, nice sunny day), so we waited in line for an hour (only one wash station) with the stereo playing. When we got to 2nd in line our car wouldn’t start – battery dead!  (I knew the battery would need to be replaced soon, as it was 5+ years old.)  Two guys in vehicles behind us got out and helped me push our car out of the way, and one said, “Wait here. I’ll be right back with some jumper cables!”  He drove off, leaving the line after waiting nearly as long as us, went to the sheriff’s office a few blocks away and came back with jumper cables and gave us a jump.  (He told us he was a member of the church and recognized our name tags when I got out of the car.)  What a nice guy!!  
So we dropped by the one auto parts store just after closing time, and they opened up and sold me a battery, then we went home to replace the battery.  While I started working on the battery, Diane called the trapper guy’s wife to tell her we wouldn’t be able to stop by later as planned.  She said, “I know!  The guy who helped you was my son-in-law, and he already called me to tell me the story!”  We were amazed, but that’s not all.  I needed a wrench, so I went over to the elder’s quorum president a few blocks from home to borrow one.  While he was getting the wrench, I told the story to his adult kids, and one young woman said, “Oh, Chris Brewer (the guy who helped) is my brother-in-law.”  One other thing—the sheriff who loaned the jumper cables is the son of a man we’ve been working with.  Pretty amazing!  Quoting Diane’s Facebook post, “We will go to church today with a dirty car, but with warm hearts!”


We got a new assignment to check elders’ and sisters’ apartments in Elko (3 hrs away), so we went there Thursday and Friday this week.  It was fun to meet elders and sisters that we don’t know and see where they live!  We gave them several days warning, and they did a pretty good job of cleaning.  Missionaries are good people!  When we finished, we were in Spring Creek, about 15 miles south of Elko.  We filled up the tank there, then told the GPS to “Go Home”, assuming it would take us back the same way, but you know how assumptions go…  It showed two routes within 10 minutes trip time of each other, so we chose one, only to find that it took us on nearly an hour of dirt (now mud, due to recent snow) roads on another route through the mountains.  It was spectacular scenery, but thank goodness for all-wheel drive and new tires!!  (I thought I did a pretty good job of hiding my concern about getting stuck from Diane, but she may have seen through it…)  We were never so thankful (well, maybe one time in Idaho) to see a paved road again!  Hence the waiting in line the next day for a car wash…




'Snow Moon" just rising last night


We do love our mission!  Life goes on, and we find ourselves getting tired a little sooner than we used to, but we feel so darn useful when we are helping people become closer to Christ.  That is the purpose of our mission, and we love it even during the challenges!

Monday, January 27, 2020

Breakin' Rocks in the Hot Sun

Old Church in Ruth, NV

We are heading into our 3rd week in our new ward and time is flying. Our teaching pool is growing. There are still days when we only have a few hours of work but we are seeing more and more days when we are running all day.  We like those busy days.  Time goes faster and we feel useful. A bad day is when we knock on doors all day and don’t talk to anyone.  The really good days are when people are excited to see us and let us in.  Those days may not outnumber the bad days but they definitely outweigh them and make our work seem worthwhile.

We just met with a family in Ruth yesterday.  They are converts but have gotten out of the habit of coming.  We asked them how they found the church and they told us a really great story.  They were on their way to the courthouse about 10 years ago to sign divorce papers when they met the missionaries on the street. They stopped to talk and the family told them where they were going.  The elders suggested that they meet with them first.  The rest is history.  They ended up being baptized and stayed together. 

It was a good sign that they gathered the whole family together (they have 2 kids and a gecko) when we came in.  They have agreed to meet with us regularly and we are looking forward to working with them.  We love them already.

Other good news:  We invited one of the women we visit from 2nd ward to attend church on Sunday.  She didn’t sound like she would come but the Bishop told us later that she had actually come.  Yay!  We love those small successes.

We took a short-cut to a lesson and met
these guys.  They weren't interested
in hearing our message.
They took their half of the road out of the middle.
People here don't throw anything away and we see lots
of old equipment used as lawn ornaments.  
One of our challenges is that Ely, being a small town, everyone knows everyone else and many have been offended by someone (or in some cases, by almost everyone).  It amazes us that people will stop attending church because of something someone else did or said.  (I may have asked one older gentleman why he was punishing himself for something someone else did.)

Our single adult discussion group is growing slowly and we are working to make it self-sustaining by making sure it is a discussion and not a class.  The refreshments may help to get people there.  I keep hinting that maybe someone else may want to bring refreshments but no takers yet.  I’m keeping a stockpile of cookies in the freezer.

It’s interesting how the Spirit shows us the needs of the area we are in.  In Reno we tried to get a similar discussion group off the ground but it just didn’t take off and we ended up forming a Senior Mission Prep Class.  We came here thinking we could start a Senior Mission Prep class like the one we had in Reno.  That didn’t seem to fit this area so we dropped the idea.  We soon saw the need for something single adults.  People have told us that they have been looking for a single adult group for a long time.  The Lord knows the need more than we do and we just have to be willing to listen to the Spirit.

View from Garnet Hill
Our p-days are sure different here than in Reno or in New York.  In New York we didn’t have enough p-days for all the things we wanted to do.  In Reno there was always Lake Tahoe.  Here there is not a whole lot to do in the winter so we do a lot of relaxing.  Today, however, we checked an item off my bucket list. We bought a rock hammer and drove out 10 miles to Garnet Hill.  It was 3 miles off the main road and was snowy and muddy.  Lots of fun and adventure.  We didn’t find any garnets but had a great view of the mine and had the opportunity to help a grandma, her daughter and teenage grandson whose pickup was stuck in the snow.  Four of us pushed while grandma tried to back up.  We had a little fright at first when she gunned it in drive.  But we lived to tell the tale and got them unstuck.  Marc & I were feeling pretty buff since we had worked out this morning (haha).


Garnet Hunting
Garnet Hill

View from Garnet Hill

Garnet Hill
More Garnet Hill.  Love the Outdoors.


From Garnet Hill
Giant Diesel Engine in Someone's Yard.


Lots of people have these old mining carts in their yards.

Just up the road from us.

En Route to Zone Conference in Elko.  Lots of mountains here.


Saw these guys in a yard while we were knocking on the door.



Monday, January 6, 2020

It's Nevada, not Nevaada!



Sorry, but I can only think of two things to write about!  Once I start maybe other things will come out…  Last night we held our first Stake Single Adult Come Follow Me discussion meeting.  It was fun and successful, though small.  We had 6 people and us, which was between our best hopes and worst fears.  The good news is that three of the six were unexpected.  One was a nonmember friend of one of the sisters we’ve been working with, so that changed the discussion quite a bit!  Lots more explaining than you would normally do.  Anyway, it was a great discussion of the introductory pages of the Book of Mormon—pages that I often skip, so I learned a lot!!  We’ll try to grow the group as we meet new people, and as the participants get the word out.  We hope to get to the point where the discussion leadership can be shared, so it will continue after we leave in June.


Our time in the Ely 2nd ward is drawing to a close, and we will be assigned to the Ely 1st ward for the next 12 weeks. As we expected, 12 weeks is way too short to help most people change their lives, but it is long enough to find some people who seem receptive and start a relationship with them.  We have told the Ely 2rd ward council that we will keep working with 7 individuals and families (the ones we feel like we have a connection with), and turn the remainder of the 22 families originally assigned back to their ministering brothers and sisters. As I’ve mentioned before, we feel strongly that MB’s and MS’s could do anything we are doing, if they were willing to put in the time.  (I’ll try to be better at that when I get home!)  We met with the bishop of our new ward last week and asked him for a list of 20 or so to start with, and for the various ward lists we need to work effectively.  He’s an interesting man—ex-law enforcement, ex-military, and a current gun shop owner!  Says he does a lot of work with small police forces and their automatic weapons.  (I couldn’t tell if he was carrying when we met with him. Probably.)
Town of Ruth


This morning we went for a drive to the town of Ruth, about 10 miles from Ely.  It’s a small mining town near the largest mine in the county.  In fact, the town was owned by the mining company, who originally built the houses for their miners, and one of the mine workers told us that they recently covered up some of the old buildings in town because the huge dirt piles needed more space!  The pictures below show some of the town and the dirt piles that almost envelop it.  According to what I understand, the dirt in the huge open-pit mines are scooped up, put in huge trucks (Our friend said his front end loader bucket holds 50 tons! That’s the weight of 10 full-size pickups! According to Seri…), then the dirt is hauled to the mill in 100-ton trucks, crushed and processed, then hauled to the huge piles.  Another friend told us that the huge trucks have a diesel motor to run a generator, and that each wheel is powered by its own large electric motor.  We’d love to go on a tour, but we are told we have to wait until family day.  We hope it happens before June!
Driving to Ruth on a beautiful Winter day

Town of Ruth, with encroaching dirt pile


Making a new dirt pile





Everything is going on mostly as usual on our mission.  We are looking forward to getting a new crop of people to work with, and we are hoping that Diane’s lungs will allow us to serve until June.  She gets really out of breath from any exertion.  As she mentioned in the last blog, the lung doctor said the tests didn’t show anything unusual in her lungs, and assumed the problem is from the combination of asthma, 6500 ft
elevation, and different allergens.  This week we bought a humidifier, and we are keeping the bedroom at a higher humidity, which seems to help at least temporarily.  As anyone who knows Diane knows, she has a few health challenges, but she keeps keeping on, and does everything she can.  She is a choice daughter of God!   If I had to deal with ½ of what she deals with, I’d be in bed in the fetal position all the time.  We do love our mission!  The opportunity to help people grow and change their lives is wonderful and humbling!!  We know God loves his children, both us and all those around us!

Homeward Bound

This will probably be our last blog for this mission.   Sadly we are being sent home along with most other senior missionaries i...