Friday, October 23, 2015

Tiwi

Oct 19, 2015

Dear Family,

This week was long. It was probably the longest week of my mission, so here we go. 

Monday was P-Day. Nothing special happened.

Tuesday was a normal day.

Wednesday... Wednesday is where things get interesting. That's when we drove up to Louisville to get the Tiwi's installed. The meeting was long. We had to be there at 9:30am and we didn't leave until about 5pm. The Tiwi representative from Salt Lake was probably the most serious guy I've ever met. He said everything with a straight face. Some of the missionaries were asking really stupid questions about speeding and he just kept rolling his eyes. Pres. Brough and Elders Money & Bennett gave good trainings on member-missionary work. After the meeting we went to Mellow Mushroom. After hearing about that place for the last 6 months I finally got to eat there. Boy was it over-hyped! I have no idea what the other missionaries see in that place. It was okay. It did not agree with my stomach at all. After Mellow I went on exchange to Glasgow with Elder Gough. We rode with the Sulphur Well Elders.

Thursday was the exchange day with Elder Gough in Glasgow. We biked all over the place. This was actually a positive bike experience because Glasgow is much flatter than Corydon. I also found Peach Nehi's there.

Friday was a normal day

Saturday Elder Jensen went up to New Albany for a baptism. Elder Larson from Columbia, KY came up and we were on exchange for most of Saturday. It was a fun day. One of the Campbellsville branch presidency's daughters got baptized. That was fun to watch.

Sunday we ate at the Jensons. They have a really, really nice house. Bro Jenson talked a lot about his mission and how much it meant to him. He said he wouldn't be where he is now without his mission.

Well, that was basically this week. It was long. Wednesday didn't help. Miss R's baptism is going to have to be pushed back. Her mom is still apprehensive about it. We're not sure why.

I'll often call upon my JCW's skills and cook myself a delicious deli sammich. Breakfast is soda. Yesterday was my first meal appointment with the Jenson family. Their "weekend home" is down here. They live up in Lexington KY during the week. 

It's getting pretty cold down here. Remember the humid winters? Well I'm about to experience my first one. I'm going to need a lot of thermals. Service varies. There are some weeks where there's none, weeks where there's a little, and weeks where there's a lot. I've done everything from mowing lawns to shoveling donkey crap out of a barn.

Have a nice week!

-Elder Ben


Treasure from Glasgow

*yay* I'm so happy

This card allows us to log into our new friend, Tiwi.

Here's the close up of the Tiwi.

See that little black and white box? That's the Tiwi.
A lot of missionaries suck at driving. They view the mission cars as toys.
The church buys brand new cars for us. I'm driving around in a 2015 Chevy Cruse right now.
They did this to 25 test missions over a period of two months. In those two months
they had over 375,000 violations and about 370 of them were approaching 100mph.
Crestwood and Louisville Zones

Let me tell you what this is. The church installed these at a conference in Louisville on Wednesday.
They monitor our seat belts though the car's computer. They monitor the car's speed through the GPS.
And they monitor any "aggressive" driving (turning fast, RPM violations, breaking too hard, etc.)
through the accelerometer. It talks to you. It sounds exactly like Hal 3000.
If you speed, it'll tell you to slow down. If you don't slow down, it'll tell Pres Brough.
If you don't have your seat belt on, it'll tell you to put it on. If you don't comply, it'll tell Pres Brough.
If you're aggressive with the car, it'll automatically email Pres Brough.
The card I showed you has an RFID chip in it. We have to log into these things in order to drive the cars now.
So when you violate anything, there's a name, time, location, and description of the violation
that Pres Brough will get to see.



Monday, October 12, 2015

Photos

October 12, 2015

Dear Family,


Campbellsville is more urban than Corydon which is more rural. The people here are nicer than Corydon. Campbellsville is better at saying no. I haven't gotten to know the members all to well yet. The Campbellsville branch is split up into two missionary areas. There's the Campbellsville part and the Columbia part. Most of the active members live in Columbia's area. We have all the older less actives in our area. 

Elder Jensen is a great guy! We have very similar personalities. That makes everything easier. Elder Jensen has been out for 18 months. I came out when he hit his year mark. He's from Morgan, Utah. He's a huge gamer. He was in the Sulpher Well video. He's the taller one with glasses. I spit like half of the stuff out. I drank the other half. It tasted exactly like rotten eggs. Sister Webb looked like she was about to lose it. 

Chapter 6 in PMG is probably my favorite chapter in the whole book. Something Elder Zwick said when he was here, which is repeated in Chapter 6, was "Who you become is more important that anything you do."

Sorry about your friend. We really do need to stop with all the funerals. 2015 has been hard. 2016 should be a little better though. As I've said before when things get hard, blessings are on the way. I expect 2017 to be amazing though. I come home that year.

This week was better than last week as far a productivity goes. We only have 1 person who's agreed to baptism here and that's Little Miss R. She's a 9 year old little girl who's the daughter of a less active. She's pretty hyper but her retention is excellent. She's got the 5 steps of the gospel down and the 5 things we're not suppose to partake of from the Word of Wisdom. It's cool to see someone that young just suck up the gospel the way she does. We gave her a children's Book of Mormon and she's had her mom read it to her every night.

We had a cool experience on Saturday. We went through half of our "formers" list and got several names that seemed promising. We went to the house of one of the names, Mr J, and when we knocked, he opened and told us he was just praying about what church he should go to the next day. He told us our presence answered his question. Neither Elder Jensen or I know why the former missionaries dropped him. He asked us to start lessons up again. We had a good discussion about the Sacrament. He's unhappy with his current churches. They apparently don't do the sacrament very often. Sadly he didn't make it to church on Sunday. But we're hopeful that we'll be able to teach him.

Elder Jensen and I had to give the training in District Meeting on Thursday. We trained on chapter 2 of PMG. It went really well. We were trying to teach the district the importance of preparing for lessons. We opened up with a demonstration of what a lesson is like when the missionaries aren't prepared. I was trying to teach the Restoration to an investigator but Elder Jensen was trying to teach the Law of Chastity at the same time. Law of Chastity role-plays always get missionaries busting up laughing because of how awkward they are. Apparently Sister Webb recorded it. I could not keep a straight face. I would say my part like a normal missionary would but I would start laughing as soon as Elder Jensen would talk about the Law of Chastity. The actual training part was well received. The district liked it.

The longer I serve the more and more I'm convinced this is Christ's church. It's too perfect. It all works too well for it to be false. I've known the church was true my whole life but the mission has significantly built upon that early testimony. I'm so happy for this time I've had to serve. I'm also happy that I have a lot longer to go.

I forgot to mention that we did a lot of service for a couple of our investigators who've been investigating for a long time. We had to split and move logs around. They had a log splitter but there were some pieces I had to take a maul to. I felt right at home hacking away at logs again.

Take care. Thanks for being an example and for all that you do :) Have a nice day.

-Elder (You Better Not Get a Dog) Cox 


This is the inside of Emery's. The guy behind the bar is Jason. He's the Emery's guy.
He served all of the ice cream to me during my time in Corydon.

That's Elder Shelley on the other side of Emery's. It has a lot of candy.

Jason gave me a free Peach Nehi. I bought 2 and he threw the third one in.

This is a drawing of Emery's. It looks exactly like that in person.
Corydon blues... Me and a Nehi on the last day in Corydon.

Look at this lovely purple hoodie I got at Butt Drugs. :)

 I forgot to mention this: I was rear ended last week on my last day in Corydon.
I'm fine. No one's hurt. Everyone was a bit shaken but nothing bad happened.

Our back bumper.

This is how we fixed the bumper.
Elder Shelley and the new guy will have to deal with the body shop again.
I think it's funny that happened on my last day.

The Buttiglieri's had us over that night and the Coke's were perfectly themed for what happened earlier that day.

This is how it was the first 3 days in Campbellsville. Rain.
It never stopped. It rained for 3 days straight. No breaks at all.

These are our desks in the apartment.

It's a little cold here.

This is Elder Jensen.

"Ski" is a local soda.

There's a store called Mitchell's here. It's basically a mini Men's Wearhouse.
The lady who runs it loves missionaries. She sells really nice ties. I love that shade of purple.
I was surprised I was drawn to that pink one as well. That's my first pink tie.

This is what our fridge looks like:
We've got a few Cokes, a couple cans of Ski, and 4 packs of Mtn. Dew Game Fuel.
Game Fuel comes out at this time of year in time for the major gaming releases.
They don't call it "Game Fuel" for nothing. Elder Jensen LOVES Game Fuel.

Sulpher Well, KY

This stuff was nasty.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Campbellsville, KY

Oct 5, 2015

Dear Family,


Yup, transferred to Campbellsville. There are a lot of Elder Jensens in the mission. I actually met my companion for the first time in Corydon a few months ago. He and his companion came up for a P-Day in Corydon because they both served in Corydon last year. It's cool to have a companion who previously served in Corydon. 


Well, my first week here it rained for 4 days straight without any sort of break. We had General Conference, and we had to take a sick day because I got a cold and Elder Jensen got some stomach thing. With all those combined, we didn't get a whole lot done this week.

The transfer meeting was interesting. Elder Jensen said its most likely the stress of moving to a new area that cause me to get sick. Campbellsville itself is a nice area. It's more urbanized than Corydon. There is unfortunately, only 1 Emery's in existence and that's in Corydon. :(((((((((

I watched General Conference at the church. I stayed there all day for both days. Food was provided by a couple members between sessions. Conference was completely awesome! I took 25.5 pages of notes in my little study journal. I'm summarizing the notes and am going to send them to you to have. I'm hand-writing them. I've been working on improving my hand-writing for the last 6 months. I've come a long way. It's still not at the level I want it at, but it's a lot better than when I left. I wanted to improve my hand writing after I saw Elder Lynch's. He has nice hand-writing. My new companion, Elder Jensen, has even nicer hand-writing. I was a little sad to see President Monson struggling like that during his talk. But I was happy to see he pushed through. I don't think he's going to live a whole lot longer. There have been a lot of deaths this year. Deaths in the family, deaths on the mission (a recent convert in Corydon, Ms G's daughter, died about a month in my time there), and deaths in church leadership. But we can all take comfort from the fact that death is only a step in God's plan.

I've learned a lot about the love of God for others in my time here. As was said in conference, God looks at who we can become. When you realize that everyone has the potential to become like Heavenly Father or Jesus Christ, you start to treat everyone like royalty almost. Think of it. Think of who Heavenly Father is and all the love He has for us. Everyone has potential to become just that. A perfect being with infinite love. Isn't that cool?
Want some more good videos? I don't know if you know about this, but the church recently made 12 videos for the 12 Step addiction recovery program the church has. Each video is about 5 or so minutes long and each one is someone's personal story with an individual step. You can get them on addictionrecovery.lds.org. Watch all 12 of them in one sitting. That should only take an hour. I would also suggest you read through the addiction recovery program itself. That can be found in the Gospel Library app under the Family section.
It's hard to think I've been doing missionary work for 6 months now. This last conference was my 2nd conference on the mission. I'm half way done with conferences. I've learned so much. I celebrated the 6 month mark on Thursday by burning a tie. I recorded it! 

I got a lot of great pictures from my last days in Corydon and my first days in Campbellsville. I thank God for my family. You've all been so good to me. You've taught me a lot. Keep being awesome!

-Elder Ben

Look at this awesome picture of Mt. Timp I found. It's now my iPad background.



For District Meetings we meet in Sulphur Well KY, or "Sulphur Heck" as
Elder Jensen puts it. It's missionary tradition for new members of the
district to be "baptized" into the district by drinking out of the
well. It was nasty. I'm never doing it again.