February 24, 2009

What A Week - At Least It´s Over!

February 24, 2009

I too nearly cry when I think about that stellar package that has not yet gotten to me. I will start praying for it to turn up. We get mail tomorrow in Zone Conference… who knows… maybe it is already in the offices waiting for me. When I read about the wonderful things you had put in there and the surprises and jewelry… I almost did cry. I am so sad that things like that have to happen to us missionaries, or anyone. Yesterday my Zone Leader got robbed and lost his mission scriptures that he had been using for 21 months – imagine what a drag that would be. I pray it doesn´t happen to me!

About the dog trainer (high pitched sound device)… we are pretty sure they don´t exist here. But don´t fret too much about it, unless you can find one for about $20, it´s probably not worth the trouble… I´ll just send one off with my son one day to his mission and wait for his stories and live vicariously through him.

The "wordles" creations are super awesome! I´m going to want to get into that when I get back. I didn´t have time to read every word on every one of them, but I can only imagine how cool they are. I´m going to do a bunch of mission ones with words in Castellano! Cool hobby – keep it up!

I´m back to relying on melatonin to sleep – it´s been a tough transfer and we have only barely hit the half way mark of it. I´ll try to wean myself off again, but for now – it´s my salvation.

I loved the lists of 25 things – I´m working on mine, but have already surpassed 25 things. I´ve got like 32 and I can´t cut a single one. I´ll pass it on when I finish it!

I had a cool spiritual experience the other day and invented a parable that we later used to teach an investigator that is working on giving up smoking. I think it sunk in, but we´ll see. It has to do with 2 cups, one with the opening up and the other with it down. We talk about which cup is ready to receive and then we compare the cups to us and decide whether we are ready to receive what the Lord wants to give us or not. It´s pretty cool – and you can use D&C 42:8 with it. It makes me feel really cool to know that the Spirit can inspire even little old me with things like that – it would make a great Conference talk!

Mommy – did you ever find out what church songs have already been translated? Just curious… there´s not much I could do because they aren´t approved anyways, but in the last transfer meeting before I come home, me and Sister Pruner want to sing one and I´m curious if it has been translated. We want to sing “Still Believe” or “All my days.” Please let me know. Thanks a bunch!

One of the sad moments of the week was realizing that the ranch dressing packets you sent me are impossible to make because … brace yourself… sour cream doesn´t exist here! I know. It´s like a major crime. It broke my heart too. Is there any other substitute that I could mix the powder in to make ranch?

I have just about run out of the peanut butter you sent in my Christmas package. I didn´t open it until Christmas and have been rationing it like you wouldn´t believe. It´s just about gone and I don´t want it to be gone.

Last week I fell in the street because I stupidly took a step in a puddle in the gutter and my foot slipped out from under me because the puddles are lined with moss and algae. Imagine the fall and the yucky dirty feeling one would have afterward. Gross!

I had another injury this week that was actually worse. I stepped on one of those plastic drain cover things in the sidewalk and it flipped up and hit me in the shin cutting me pretty bad in the shape of a “V” about the size of half a finger in each part of the “V.” It swelled up and was bleeding and we went to a pharmacy and I broke down and cried because I couldn´t convey that I wanted hydrogen peroxide. It had already been a tough morning, I hadn´t slept well the night before, I was starving, it was 41 degrees Celsius (105 to us) that day and we hadn’t taught anybody all week long. Everything was coming crashing down and I just lost it. We bought some disinfectant and went to eat lunch in the apartment. I cleaned it up and bandaged it and after lunch spent a moment alone in the bedroom on my knees beginning a fast and pouring my broken heart out to my Father in Heaven. I told Him that I just didn´t have much more to give and I needed Him to take me in His hands and make it all better. After a while I felt better. He strengthened me. We kept working the rest of the week and it was the worst week I have ever had in Argentina – according to numbers and the quality of the work. We lost the family-- and the wife of the golden investigator threw us out once and for all forbidding us to return. The other family stood us up twice and I just couldn´t believe that it was really that necessary for us to suffer like this. We are trying so hard.

The only good part of the week was the fact that Faustino Arce got baptized! We were afraid he was going to no-show his own baptism because we hadn´t been able to get a hold of him all week long, but he not only showed up, but showed up 30 minutes earlier than we told him to come. His baptismal service was great. He was baptized! That was the tender mercy of the week, because I can promise you that if he had bailed I would have been calling the President and telling him to close this area because it´s just not ready for the gospel. I still kind of feel that way, but have chosen to keep it to myself. Well, and my companion!

Random story – you know how when you´re bored and walking in the street you pick a rock and take turns kicking it forward? We do that but with bones – like cow vertebrae. It's a lot more fun because the bones make a different sound and kick differently.

To finish off the week that just about killed me I had an ingrown toe nail! My companion actually knows how to remove them because she worked doing pedicures before the mission and she willingly performed the mini surgery on Sunday afternoon. Like the young boy Joseph Smith I did not drink anything to endure the pain, nor did she have to tie me down. And as Brian Regan proudly says (though referring to wisdom teeth tales) … “I was out proselyting that afternoon!” It hurts a little bit, but it´s all good and it will heal and be much better!

Daddy – last Sunday as we were leaving the chapel we stumbled upon the scene of the flat tire of the Relief Society President´s car-- and guess who changed it? Yep, yours truly! I did let some of the men help. haha! The First Counselor jacked the car up and removed the hubcap, but I took out all the bolts and put them back on. All the Priests and the Mission Leader and the Bishop and the Counselor in the Stake Presidency were looking on and taking pictures and truly impressed. It was super fun! I´ll send pictures when I can. But yeah… rest assured that I blew them all away!

Also – my companion looked at the picture of us in front of the font and she said that you look like Kevin Bacon. What do you think? I can see it a little bit!






















Get this… remember how I used to have full-blown panic attacks when I saw an animal in pain? You would not believe how I have changed.
The other day I witnessed a truly gruesome natural attack and didn´t even react. All of the sudden 4 dogs started to attack and try to eat and kill this little cat. It wasn't a tiny kitten, but about half the size of an adult cat. I stood there mesmerized and in complete shock but gazed on as I heard the horrific cries of this cat as it was LITERALLY in the mouths of TWO dogs that were literally biting its abdomen! I didn´t even try to break it up because – what can I do? And what if they turn and attack me? But finally the guy we were teaching pulled them apart and left the cat for dead on the side walk – it was soaked with the slobber from the mouths of the dogs and completely drained of energy. It lied there panting and I´m pretty sure that it must have died that night. The attack was vicious.
The point of that story is that anyone can become desensitized… I no longer freak out when I see things like that. The point I´m driving at is that the little things get to us. The movies and TV shows we watch. The music we listen to… it gets to us and desensitizes us until we can stare wide-eyes at something truly disturbing and not feel bothered by it. I exhort one and all to evaluate themselves and ask if they are being desensitized. Satan wins little by little, not all at once. I hope you will take that story to heart and understand the deeper meaning. We need to be so careful!
Today was temple p day – which is why I´m writing so late in the day. Sorry to make you wait. Tomorrow is zone conference. I have to tell you that things are hitting me hard. It´s not even the numbers that bug me, because I pretty much gave up trying to play that game. It´s the fact that this transfer I have felt like I am not making a difference. We teach the first lesson so infrequently that we are forgetting how to do it. Those who we had that had potential – we have lost. Those who we have that are trapped my smoking or by not being married – don´t do their part. I feel like I have let the President down, the Lord down, myself down… I feel like this area is little by little extinguishing the flame that I had. I believed that I could find, teach, and baptize here – just like any in other area, but after 8 weeks… I can say that I try to believe, but it´s a tall order when day after day you realize that the people just don´t listen and just aren´t ready… it makes you just want to cry. I have begged the Lord to lead us to those He has prepared. I have begged Him to help me find them. He is trying my faith and patience and even more so that of my companion who is even more bewildered and discouraged than I am.
I tell you this, not to add to your stress or worry, but to basically let you know the situation. I feel like I have served 9 months and that I have only become 10% of what I want to become in the mission. I feel like I have fought so long and so hard, but that I am getting beaten. I am disappointed in myself for feeling discouraged. I am mad at myself for letting the rejection get to me. I am sad that I am sad. And I am terrified that the days are slipping by and I am not getting any better, wiser, or stronger. I´m sure I´m just being my severest critic, but that doesn´t mean that I don´t feel sincerely weak. I don´t doubt for a second that the Lord hears my prayers, I just want to know how much longer it will be until He says “Ok, on the morrow I will deliver you out of bondage.¨ Mosiah 24 (I think… I don’t have my triplet on me)
Please don´t let that paragraph make you sad. In fact – rejoice that the Lord is trying me because it means that He trusts me enough to help me grow a little bit more. I will rejoice too. “Come what may and love it” is harder than it sounds. But I´m trying.
Nata – remember Bugles? I do. Remember “Hey dude” ? And Wishbone” and Jay Jay the jet plane? Give Davy McGravy a raspberry from his aunt Stacey!
Jason – I will apply your counsel should the moment come!
Daddy – I hope you won´t be mad at me for confessing a little bit of our trials. I don´t do it to worry mommy. I promise.
Mommy – I thank you for having the courage and the desire to send me things. I´m sorry that you have to suffer for the sins of others. I will try to send you pictures soon, but I too have a fear of sending my picture CDs and losing them forever. And it´s a bit of a hassle to make 2 copies of everything just in case, but it would be the wise thing to do. But, know that I love you and am praying for Bishop Peterson – I put his name on the temple roll today in Buenos Aires!
I miss you, but promise that I have a long way to go – meaning I have a lot of growing and improving to do before I come home.
Rejoice with me… because Jesus is the Christ.
Of this I am sure.
Hermana Jensen!

February 17, 2009

Called To Serve!

The Savior once said, “I am the good shepherd” (John 10:11). What is a good shepherd? A good shepherd will give his life to protect his sheep. He knows each one by name. They each know his voice and follow him and none other. If one is lost, a good shepherd will leave the flock and search endlessly for the lost sheep and bring it safely back to the fold.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Where to begin… I can never make this ebb and flow. My emails are a big jumbled mess of Q and A, but here we go again!

Mommy… the funeral procesión in your 25 things? Are you referring to when we watched the one third part leave? That must have been way sad!
(Bloggers note: by the way I wasn't referring to that. I'll try to explain. On my "25 random things about me" list I wrote- I cry when I see kind acts of service or people cooperating and showing respect; like at a funeral procession where all of the cars are following one after another in a show of love, respect and solemnity. After years of trying to understand this I think it strikes a tender chord of familiarity in me of what heaven was like... where we all cooperated, were free of worldly attitudes and concerns and gave great love and respect to each other.

Have you heard anythng about a BHS 5 year reunion? If there is one, I want it know about it! SHANKS.

I got an envelope from you! It had ranch, mac n cheese cheese YES!!!, gravy, koolaid, a card, and 4 CDs. Thanks so much. I´m a little confused because it was sent off on the second of Feb. And I swear you had already told me you sent off the package when I told you that I wanted mac n cheese cheese. So I´m confused to know if there was another one. Another reason I tend to think that it might be that way is that you didn´t include the Avon makeup remover I asked for. Maybe it just slipped your mind. Or maybe there was another envelope that hasn´t made it yet. I´m confused. But way grateful for what I got. I´m going to have mac n cheese with my comp today! Thanks for the baptism pix… I almost cried seeing them. I honestly hadn´t seen those pictures in a good 8 years, so it was a cool surprise.

On another note… I got letters by dearelder with cool 25 things about me lists and have already begun my own. I´ll send it to you when it is done and polished. I also got a letter from Jason with advice about training and am way grateful!

It´s hot here. Have you forgotten? I haven´t. About my ice cream favorites… I´m slowly branching out and trying new flavors. But what I have tried so far-- that is distinct, didn´t like that much. I´ll get back to you.
I miss my car because it represents convenience and ease. And power to be where I need to be when I want to be there.

Beware moment… I was cleaning this open wound of one of our drunk investigators and as I was doing this it dawned on me that if he has AIDS and I have a cut on my hand I could get AIDS. I didn´t have a cut. Let that be clear. And I didn´t let his blood touch me, but I still made the decisión not to help people anymore in this way. I was just trying to serve and take care of him like the Good Samaritan would, but I was more or less prompted to not do it anymore. Obedient… I will be!

Faustino… passed his interview and we are proceeding with his baptism this Saturday. Please pray for him that nothing will make it fall through. Thanks, I know you already are!

Last p – day it rained so much that the streets were completely like rivers. Water from one ditch to the other flowing and you couldn´t see the street. I get so giddy every time there´s a flood because I love my awesome rain boots! This past week I even carried my comp across the river street because the rain was so high it even hit over the top of my boots! But, they have like an elastic band at the top, so the water didn´t get it! I was just wet for this random 2 inch strip mid calf, but not higher and not lower.

Ready for a shocker… I actually want to go running in the morning… yeah, read it again! But we can´t. Because we live in "la matanza" which is supposedly like the most dangerous part of the misión because it´s richer… so there is more of an incentive to rob someone than in the ghetto field where nobody has anything of value. Bummer… can´t run… and I know that is just the type of exercise I need, but I will be able to go running if I ever get to serve in "campo" – we´ll see!

My frustration is having a really big vocabulary in my native language and a crummy one in the misión language. I'll explain:

If I ask, "What is the word for when I want to do something and you want to do something else, so we meet in the middle and do something we can both agree on?" Of course the answer I´m looking for is compromise...but the person I am asking doesn't know the word for that. Imagine that – all day long. With words like "tie" – nobody wins, nobody loses. There´s more but I´m too tired to list them all.

Mommy – I forgot to tell you that I love the French manicure painting pen you sent me. I finally let myself use it and it is so fast! Thanks so much! It makes me feel great and even happier throughout the day… as I´m sure you know. Also – the pancake recipe is super good. They don´t come out very fluffy, but I think that is because as of yet I haven´t been using baking powder… my goal is to buy some today and try again and see if it makes a difference. But either way thanks a bunch!

Nata – and everyone imagine this… you go to the carniceria to buy meat that is nice and cheap, but the ground beef has nerves in it. And not just every once in a while… like every 8th bite you´ll get a purple, shiny, chewy NERVE! Gross, gross, gross… I can´t take it much more!

Ines and her kids were going to come to church, but there were legitimate complications. They are progressing, but slowly. It is hard because in the misión you want to find everyone and help them get baptized in 3 weeks, but that seems to only work out for the Elders… every other day you here them saying "and they got baptized in 3 weeks." I´m jealous, but hey, go elders!

Mommy! The miracle of this week was when the Spirit gave me revelation and I was able to "make friends" with a 13 year old boy that left the church shortly after getting baptized- age 10. He is the only member of his immediate family… problem number one. But anyway, he usually doesn´t attend us when we come to visit him. The same thing happened this past week. I was talking to him through the open window as he played video games not responding to a word I said. But then I remembered something I had read in his teaching record… that he loves the Book of Revelations. So I started talking to the wall – basically – and told him that I´m super confused and don´t understand if the dragon is real or symbolic and asked random questions about all the prophesies and after about 3 or 5 minutes of me talking he finally said "you have to read it slowly.' I asked a follow up question and said "do you have a Bible… can you show me?" He pushed pause, hopped up, grabbed his Bible, left the house and stood with us on the front porch and LET US TEACH HIM! Well teach, in the sense that we started and ended with a prayer and talked about the gospel. He even said we could come back and ask him more questions this week! I made him my friend… I learned that trick from my Mom, and the Spirit helped me do it!

Valentines day was lame… just a regular day.

I did get the Picture of the half full chart and it blew me away!

NATA- with Jane… invite her to a FHE with you guys. You could watch the restoration DVD – 25 minutes. Or you could have a Chat about the Proclamation to the Family or you can give her a Book of Mormon and testify about why it is important. Or you could use chapter 6 in Preach My Gospel and talk about Christlike attributes – pick one and testify about it… or take the quiz! Definitely invite her to church… bring her with you, sit by her, do everything! Invite the missionaries to teach her IN YOUR HOME! Go Nata!

Wow – where does the time go? I could talk for hours and hours, but there will be plenty of time to do that in 9 months! Keep up the good work.

Be safe, be obedient, endure to the end!
I love you tons. I sent off real letters to both of the grandparents today… don´t worry and
I´ll pray for the Bishop!

I love you more than how much I would love to baptize a complete family… and that is A LOT!

Hermana Jensen!

February 11, 2009

There Is No Way I've Hit Halfway!

Hey Everybody! I am now writing on the second half of the mission and it is just more than my “little brain” (name that movie) can handle.

Unfortunately I am yet to receive the bubble envelope you sent me, but Elder Harper in the office said that things are just taking a while these days. Don´t worry, I´m sure it´ll come soon.

I´ll begin with a story that happened last transfer that I forgot to tell ya'll. One day after District Meeting my companion and I got on a colectivo to go to our lunch appointment and I put my change in the machine and as I took my ticket and went to sit down… I dropped my coin purse and ALL my change and ALL my bills fell to the floor of the bumpy, speeding colectivo. Change literally went everywhere in a 10 foot circumference circle. To my horror I knelt down and began collecting it all truly panicked that people would start robbing me like they robbed the spoons of Nicole Kidman on than movie with Tom Cruise… lol! (the name escapes me) But luckily that did not happen. A nice older man helped me and my comp gather my money and he didn´t take any. It was a huge relief because it was actually a lot of money--almost $50 pesos in bills. It was so embarrassing and everyone else just stared at us as we almost face planted it gathering it all up. It gave me motion sickness because of all the jostlings and turns and I was quite embarrassed. But, hey, good story, eh?

The happy moment of this week (that has nothing to do with missionary work… because that will follow next with another “happy moment of the week”) was when my comp and I found an ice cream store 3 blocks from our apartment that sells a forth kilo for $4,50 pesos – like a $1.35 US – we even passed the other store that sells it for $5 pesos that day and I almost bought a forth kilo again just for the heck of it… but I resisted. We have found that it is a good way to basically hydrate ourselves instead of having to drink so much water. It is definitely more calories, but it works well!

We were also attacked this week, but luckily just with water. We were standing in front of a fence talking to a lady who doesn´t want to come to church and this car drove past and the punk teenager sitting in the front sprayed us from a shotgun bottle. They drove away before we could turn around and see who it was, but you can imagine how shocked we were! It was no big deal, because we dried off in like 2 minutes, but it was pretty insulting.

I have no idea why, but all the cockroaches and beetle bugs have suddenly died – apparently a natural death - and their dead little bodies are scattered all over the side walk. I tried to come to the conclusion that someone had had their place exterminated and it affected the surrounding houses, but alas… they are everywhere throughout our entire area. I don´t know why… it´s super hot, but come on… I don´t think they all just up and said, “I can´t take this Argentine heat anymore, I´ve had it!” and died. My companion has no answer either. We are stumped.

What language do we REALLY speak? Well allow me to answer that question with the following. We pray in “tú.” We talk to dogs in “vos” We quote scriptures in “tú and vosostros.” We talk to our companion, investigators and members in “usted and ustedes.” We sing in “tú” and “vos.” We talk to ourselves in “tú.” And we train ourselves all day long NOT to think in English. It´s pretty trippy. Just thought you´d like to know-- Nata can explain all that.

This week I felt a lot like we were playing “hide and seek” with “the elect.” And not only that, but that we were “it” and they were kicking our trash. I got a little frustrated and thought about asking Heavenly Father if we could play “sardines” instead. We could hang out in the chapel and wait for everyone to come in and find us. But I don´t think that He´d let us play that game.

The miracle and incredibly way awesome moment of the week was when we passed by to visit Edgardo – a 33 year old man with a wife and 6 kids (one aged 8!) that we had taught twice before and left a Book of Mormon with his wife one day. He said he had read 3 Nephi 11, the introduction, all the testimonies and everything up until 1 Nephi 7 and get this… he remembered and recounted EVERYTHING. He had prayed about it, said that he knew it was true and asked when we have baptisms because he wants to “do that and become a Latter day Saint” WOW! We took out a date for the 7th of March and he accepted it with joy. He has to quit smoking, but promised he´d try. We made plans to pass by and walk to church with him that Sunday (2 days ago) BUT… his wife basically won't let us on their property and wouldn´t let him go. We have been trying to make friends with her since the beginning, offering to help in her home, but she is cold and doesn´t receive us at all. She hung up on me and is standing in the way of a man that wants to be baptized… and have his son baptized too! We did a special fast, my companion and I so that the Lord would soften her heart. More than 24 hours perfect… and I didn´t every drink water (don´t get mad… we need a miracle!) We are going to pass by tonight and see what the Lord has in store. This would be a complete family – just like Daddy talked about (and holy cow – a family of 8 booyah!) I want to baptize a complete family with all of my missionary heart! It is my mission dream and I´ve got just under 9 months to bring it to pass. We pray constantly for this family. I know that if it is the will of the Lord, she will listen to us, let us into her home and be converted, but if not then... maybe down the road. It breaks our hearts, we finally won playing hide and seek… and then came the opposition!

Faustino didn´t come to church on Sunday because it was his 65th birthday, but we made him brownies and delivered them with a card and a prayer rock I made him. I sang Happy Birthday to him in English, Swedish and Castellano. He was quite pleased. He needs to attend church this Sunday to reach his assistance and be baptized on the 21st, but we feel good about it. As long as he doesn´t say he won´t pay his tithing in his interview we should be good with him. He was joking with the ward mission leader and said that he thinks he will become bishop someday… it was great-- but at least it shows commitment to the church, eh?

Haedo 1 is tough. There´s no getting´around it. Sometimes when people reject us all day long I think to myself, “I don´t deserve Haedo 1-- but I know this is where I need to be because there is a lot of work work to be done in this area!

My time is gone already....Mom, yes, could you put $200 on my debit card. My leather scripture cases might be done soon and it will be time to pay up! Thanks!

Nata- I miss holding Davy so much and can´t believe how big he is now. Does he talk yet? You´ve got to teach him to say “boca” – that should be pretty easy, well at least easier than saying “Hermana Jensen” or “Argentina!”

Jason- I heard you wrote me a letter that is super awesome. That´s no surprise. Guess what… I´m planning to write a book when I get back… about the mission!

Daddy, yeah for a fun super bowl and way to go getting your food at the Mirage. You´d love the all-you-can–eats here because of the ICE CREAM! What is going on in Israel?

Chiao!

February 5, 2009

Countdown Chart Update


274 days down---274 more to go!

HUMP DAY POEM FOR STACEY
(mom's modified version)
So you have hit the HUMP,
and are half-way through
Isn't it great
How the Lord protects you.
We are proud of your work,
Of your baptisms and claps,
We’re glad you’ve worked hard,
And have worn out your maps!
Remember all you’ve learned
During these past months and days
And sail right through the end in a victorious blaze.
The Lord has blessed you to be where you are now,
And knows you won’t slack,
That you don’t even know how!
For you He’s worked miracles inside and out,
You are valiant and strong and amazingly stout.
So strengthen others in this downhill road,
And you will be a great missionary
when the story is told.
~~~~~~~~


Where does the time go...doesn't it go by in a blink! Our little Wace, Staca, Hermana Jensen has reached the half-way point of her mission! She wrote in a recent letter;

Queridos Padres,

I don't know where to begin. It seems I have told you every story I have and yet none at the same time. Some, well most require so much background explanation and/or a drawing to explain them that I cannot tell them in a letter. But here is one that I can tell you:
Your little girl has never been so close to her Savior. She begins and ends every day by falling to her knees in prayer. She gives all that she has and is determined to not only complete the mission, but to live and love it. To enjoy every minute, grow from every trial, learn from every experience and allow herself to be shaped, molded and refined. When she returns you will see her as much more than the girl she was when she left with tears in her eyes on May 7th, 2008. She is growing, changing, improving and learning. She knows what it means to suffer, to sacrifice, to work, to really pray... and to rejoice.
As for all the details--I'll fill you in when we meet again.
I'll see you in a while!
Hermana Jensen

Too all of you out there near and far, Dave and I are so grateful for each of you and for your constant love and support. And if you recently wrote Stacey THANK YOU--you know who you are and it made her week!



The Camel is the Symbol of a Seasoned Missionary

by Cheryl K. Carpenter

As you come to the half way mark of your mission, I am sending you a camel to remind you how far you have come, and where you are going. There are many similar characteristics of a great missionary and a camel. The first is the "hump." Yes, you have crossed the mark and now are over the hump of the first nine months. But remember the hump of a camel is used to store food for the long journey. Camels can go for long periods of time without food, but he must store his food in his hump. A missionary has learned from so many experiences, but a wise missionary will store the knowledge she has gained, and put it to greater use the second half of her mission. Another important symbol is what the camel does to be prepared to carry his load for his Master. A camel sometimes protests load, but then submits and patiently carries all his Master asks. As a missionary sometimes the load seems too heavy and difficult to carry, but when you drop to your knees and succumb to the Master's will, he will carefully lead you and you will be able to bear the load patiently, and do your Father in Heaven's work as he would have you do. This is why the camel's knees are heavily padded. As a missionary, your knees are calloused from the many hours of kneeling in prayer.
The camel has high set eyes that enable him to see long distances. A missionary has her eyes set on higher things, she follows the Spirit which enables her to see the Children of God, those who are seeking answers, and she teaches them the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The camel has broad, two-toed feet that keep him from sinking into the desert sand. A missionary has a broad knowledge and a firm testimony of the Gospel. This enables her to teach with boldness and stand firm in her testimony. These people do not yet have the blessings of such a sure-foot, but as they are taught with love and the Spirit you will help them gain their own testimony that will help them walk on firmer ground, one that will lead them back to their Father in Heaven.
So you see, a missionary has a lot in common with a camel. Put this camel where you can see it often. Dedicate yourself to do as the camel does. Serve your Master well and patiently over the long journey. You have traveled a long way and there is still much more ground to cover. Continue to move forward serving with love until your mission is complete and your Father in Heaven will say, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”

February 3, 2009

The Time Is Flying TOO Fast!

Feb 3, 2009

Nata and Jason – those pics of Davy standing up are SO DANG CUTE I just want to eat him and give him raspberries all day long. Does he talk yet? Nata - I do remember man-food (chili), bag soup, the limo incident and those dot candies. Do you remember my mac ´n´cheese? I also remember switching rooms on Sunday afternoons and meeting you for lunch on campus for the Tuesday Devotionals. I miss you tons and hope that when I get home your family will have moved back because I want to raise my family being close to yours. Here in Argentina people usually live in the same ward as their parents and their siblings and all, so they stay super close-knit. I´m not saying we need to live in the same ward, but the same state would sure be super! Yes, my hair is growing… I´m not going to cut it the whole mission and then just trim off the split ends (but I have practically none here!) right before I come home… I expect it will reach halfway of my shirt sleeve or thereabouts.

Guess what my word of today is “endulzar” – to sugar coat. I am not here to sugar coat the truth. My comp said I was maybe to bold with an inactive woman yesterday, but I feel quite comfortable with what I told her. I am not here to say “if you wanna come back to church someday, it´d be cool” I´m here to say “I challenge you to set a goal with a specific date for yourself and come back to church” which is what I said. One day she will thank me. My other favorite thing to say is “entretanto” which means in the interim! It´s a phrase I learned as a transcriptionist in the hospital and I just love using it in Castellano!

Mommy, sorry to report that I haven´t gotten my envelope yet, but that means that I´ll surely get it next Monday. Don’t stress… I´m sure that it is safely arriving. I received a letter from Cody Marsh and Shauna! I was so excited. I also received one through the pouch from my old companion Hermana Tavares who is from Argentina and she finally confirmed that the young girl we taught in Los Angeles was baptized! I was so happy. She promised to send me pictures, but I think I´m going to tell her to send them to you. If she does, will you scan them and send them to me in an email? This is all like months away for sure, but one day I´d like to see the pics of my first convert! (and third at the same time because Azucena and Rolando where baptized a week before her)

Daddy – who won the Superbowl ? I don´t even remember who was playing? Elder Gneiting got transferred out of my zone, so we won´t be able to talk basketball much… basically not ever again, because I doubt we´ll be in the same zone again before I go home. I know what you mean about counting and not counting the time out. I say there is no shame in knowing your time as long as you are using it… which brings me to my “wow” story for the week:
One morning the cell phone made the croaking frog sound which wakes us up at 6:28 to pray and as I heard it I thought “NO… I´m so tired, I can´t do this much more” but as I thought that to myself that very instant I remembered that I only have just over 9 months left to do this, in this way, in this mission, for the rest of my life. Sure I plan to serve a couples mission when I´m older, but it´s not the say as this mission, in this minute. I only have this day to walk these streets and when it is gone, it is gone. I jumped out of bed and fell to my knees faster than you can imagine even if you had soaked me with freezing cold water because I realized in that minute that I only have x number of days left… they are slipping through my fingers and I couldn´t wait to get on my feet and make the most of that day. It is now the feeling that I have as I commence every day… with urgency… I only have so many days left, and I´m not going to waste a single one! Talk about wow!

Confession… there are ice cream stores like every 12 blocks and it´s super hot here. We stop to buy 1-4 kilos of ice cream about twice a week. The ice cream here is great! Normally it costs 8 pesos, but last week we found one that is 5 pesos! It´s my one way of treating myself… ice cream. You´d really like it!

Questions… is anything particular going on in Israel? When we pray with people lots of them pray for the people in Israel and I´m like “what?” is the second coming here and nobody is telling us?

You all had a bunch of questions about my comp. Allow me to answer them: She is 23, her name is Karla Roy from Nicaragua. She´s tiny (I´m pretty sure I already told you that). She is a spit fire and a quiet one that has nothing to say and everything to say at the same time. We get along really well, but have had a few minutes where we had to stop and get back on the same page, but that is to be expected with the language and culture gap. Really nothing too out of the norm. She is really not much of a talker. But we have tons of hilarious memories and jokes between us. I was THRILLED to be able to serve with her another transfer here in Haedo 1 … oh yeah… FYI – in the transfer meeting yesterday we were relieved to learn that she stays here with me for 6 more weeks! Literally…I prayed for her to stay because I recognized there were more things I needed to learn from her before she goes. We teach really well together and work quite unitedly-- if I do say so myself. She has great ideas and one of her very best characteristics is that she is a good little lunch getter. When one member bails on us, she is quick to call another and another and get us lunch! I´m learning a lot from her about getting what you need (notice I didn´t say “want”) from people. She is super caring and a great example. We are learning a lot from one another. She is stubborn though… it is my job to teach her English and she doesn´t put forth much initiative because she feels embarrassed that she knows so little. So that is where a few of our moments came from. Me-- trying to tell her she´s got to step up and take advantage of the opportunity to learn. I´d just back off and say “your choice” but in every interview the President evaluates how we are helping our Latin companions with their English, so you can imagine that I feel a bit of pressure to have her progressing. But rest assured, she and I are way tight and super close. We have a bunch of shared likes and dislikes. We get along really well!

In the transfer meeting we were happy to learn that the mission had 129 converts! This transfer we have a mission goal that each and every area has at least one convert. I feel quite confident that at least one of our 4 investigators with a baptismal date will go through, so I don´t feel like we will be the weak link… luckily!

The biggest shock of the transfer meeting was seeing “Haedo 1 “ and hearing our area announced as the winners of the mission scarf – again. We were blown away because it was a really tough transfer according to our numbers. We worked super hard, but didn´t reach our new investigator goal – which up till now I had always reached. But hey, we won the scarf and that was a kind of rewarding experience because I had felt that in many ways the transfer was a bit of a flop.

New adventures and stories to keep you on your toes:

I don’t know all the details about this, but there is a weird thing that happens here. There is a company that comes around to the homes of old women who have already been through menopause and they come around collecting giant jugs that are filled with the urine of these old ladies. I have been told that they use the liquid to make anti-contraconceptives (I tried to translate it) and yeah… in return they reward the women with random household things like a few spatulas or a new Tupperware bowl. Random. But, there is nothing quite like stopping to talk to someone in their front yard and see that there is a jug of yellow liquid in their hand and they are waiting for the collector men… it´s interesting. You can trade your urine for spoons! I´m so gonna do that… NOT!

Another thing about this country… there is a huge gap in the level of aging in the elderly people here. There are 85 year olds that ride around with perfect posture on their bikes (that aren´t 10 speed… without gears or anything) like there´s nothing to it and then there are 58 year olds that can´t even come to church if you offer to pick them up in a taxi (and pay for it from your own mission fund!) It´s trippy. Another thing… so many people have like massively swollen legs and ankles… I don´t know why, but old people often have very disturbing legs and feet.
Could it have anything to do with the water?

Speaking of water, my comp and I finally were able to track down and buy a water dropper and begin purifying our tap water with Clorox… but I don´t like it because you can taste it and I´m still secretly afraid that we are somehow going to poison ourselves and die. What is worse a parasite or dying from Clorox? I´m taking a poll. Let´s have it…

As far as when it will begin to cool down—probably as March comes to a close. We have about 50 days more of this heat. It´s crazy!

My left shoe is drastically wearing down, but I don´t have any pain. Faustino said that I will have pain down the road and wants me to see an orthopedic doctor to get customize insoles. Yeah…with all my free time and extra cash. Hehe!

This may be my best adventure story of the week: we came home the other night and our awesome good Samaritan neighbor Fernando was inside the gate and as we went to open the gate he said that it wasn´t working. In fact he was trapped inside and we were trapped outside. But it was 9 o´clock and we had to get into the apartment to plan. So I gave my comp a boost and helped her scale the fence and he caught her on the other side! Talk about breaking the rules… she was in the arms of an Argentine man! I was able to jump, hoist myself and just needed to have him hold my hands as I jumped down to the other side… instead of being caught in his arms like the giant catches Buttercup at the end of the Princess Bride. It was like “the ox in the mire” we had to let ourselves be touched… heaven forbid! It was funny and we laughed about it. He was super helpful and of course a perfect gentleman. Later that night someone was able to open the door so we were able to leave the next morning in the normal way and when we returned the lock had been repaired. But yeah… imagine 2 sister missionaries in skirts scaling the fence to their own building and jumping into the arms of some man. Pretty funny!

INVESTIGATORS!
Faustino Arce accepted the date of Feb. 21st and is progressing swimmingly!
Miguel Benites also accepted this date, but it will be an uphill battle and he will get baptized per the approval of his family and in case you are wondering… they do NOT approve. So that is where we stand, but we are fighting to win. We are also trying to help some other really great people get to church and have a baptismal date. I hope and pray that this transfer will be the ‘transfer of miracles’ because the last transfer was the test of our faith… it was so hard – I just can´t convey it in words, but we survived! We are even teaching a family… we haven´t met the Dad yet, or some of the kids, but I pray with all my heart that we can bring this family to the gospel… I pray that they listen to us… we have only taught them once, but it was a great first discussion! We go back today… wish us luck!

We have another older couple who had the date to be baptized on the 28th of December, but are having more difficulties with them… if it be the will of the Lord to work miracles, it will happen, but there are a million things getting in the way… like work and a 3 month vacation to Peru. But they are super great.

My hour is gone!

I love you tons, never worry about me… we are so protected!
Have an amazing week!

Your strong and loving sister missionary!
Hermana Jensen