Tuesday, December 31, 2013

A Very Merry Christmas

Hi everyone!!

SO MUCH TO SAY! I'm warning you ahead of time this is might end up being a pretty long email, so skimming might be required if you don't set aside time specifically to read Hermana Tuttle's weekly novel.
Christmas Eve: A lot of eating. Between 1.50€ Kebabs with the Elders to Medioenda with the Lopes Family to dinner with Vanessa (the relief society president) we ate very well. We were worried about how we were going to fit everything in without offending anyone but everything worked out and we had a great day. Vanessa asked Hermana Durham to sing White Christmas for her mom who was in town from France. Afterwards we went home and we, along with Hermana Scoville and Hermana Liu moved all of our mattresses into the front room and we read Christmas stories until we had to go to sleep.

Christmas: We ate lunch with the Lopes family. The two daughters made us little cards and it was super sweet. I love that family so much. We went straight from there to the house of a member to eat. Luckily we were with the Elders so we didn't have to eat a lot otherwise I think I would have exploded. That night we were invited over to another member’s house to Skype with our families and eat. It was so fun to see you guys. I can't believe how different you look! I feel like time should have paused for you guys when I left. Maryann the member who is from Arizona but married a Spaniard made us chicken, stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy, and apple crisp it was delicious!

The next day: We had to get up at 4 to catch my flight to the islands. My voice was completely gone! I spent the day in Palma de Mallorca and even though I could barely talk I loved it and we say so many miracles. The area is kind of slow right now so we didn't have a single appointment planned and yet before lunch we had had 2 member presents and 2 other lessons. After lunch we contacted for a while, I think people just pitied my voice or maybe they thought it sounded cool because we ended up getting a lot of numbers but we felt that our time would be better spent passing by people. We ran home real quick to grab a menos activos sheet. 

While Hermana Ward was figuring that out I went through the Potential Investigators sheet and just called people. I came to a man named Ronaldo. He said that he would love to meet with us but that we had to promise one thing...that we wouldn't be scared when we saw him. I was surprised by that and asked what he meant, he said that he had been drinking. I made sure he knew what our purpose was, he assured us that he did so we headed out to go meet him. We sat down and he told us that he knew we were sent from God. He told us that he had been having a really hard couple of months and he had started drinking more and more to numb him. He said that he had had the worst day of his life and just kept asking how we knew to call him. We had a great lesson with him. He said he could feel a peace in his heart that he had never felt we explained to him that that was the spirit. We invited him to be baptized and he accepted a date for the 11th of January. He said that he was going to read the Book of Mormon and as we walked away he was hugging his Book of Mormon and said "I am going to sleep like this tonight." It was so powerful and perfect. We walked away with tears in our eyes. The spirit was so strong and it broke my heart to think that I might never see him again. That's the amazing thing about being a missionary. You feel an immediate love for people that you have never met before!

(P.S. in case you cared I only ended up being in the islands for 1 day instead of 3 because 4 of us got sick. I got a blessing though and now feeling super great so no worries.)

Second Miracle: So we had been a little worried about an investigator named Yuli. She comes to church every sunday, she is super prepared but she is petrified by water. The zone had set a goal that every companionship baptizes this month and we knew that goal was set by inspiration so we prayed and by an absolute miracle she accepted to be baptized this last Saturday. She was still terrified so the elders gave her a blessing Friday night and she was baptized the next day. It was a tender moment of my mission seeing someone overcome such a paralyzing fear for something she knew to be right. She is an amazing woman and she is going to be an amazing member.

And finally: This week Kofi from Ghana is getting baptized and we could not be more excited. He is so great that he is inviting his friends to come to church (he says our ward needs more Africans, he's the best).
Sorry this was forever long but this really was a week of miracles. I feel so blessed!

Con Mucho Amor,


Hermana Tuttle



Monday, December 23, 2013

Bon Nadal

Queridos familia y amigos,

Bon Nadal! (Catalán for Merry Christmas) Guess what! It's almost Christmas! Can you believe it?? Super weird!
Let's organize this weeks email into sections, shall we?

Kofi: We received a reference from Elders in Sabadell about a man from Ghana named Kofi. We visited him this last week and he is amazing! He grew up Jehova's Witness but hasn't practiced for many years yet he still loves learning more about Jesus and is very Christian. He taught him about the Book of Mormon and he accepted a baptismal date for the 4th of January. He came to church this last Sunday and since we got there a little early he helped set up chairs for priesthood. Everyone was very sweet and welcoming to him and he loved it. He's coming with us to eat dinner with a member tonight and we are going to try to keep up contact everyday. He is so great and I am SOOO excited about him.

Zone Conference: You are probably getting tired of me saying this all of the time but I love getting to hear from President and Hermana Pace. We had Zone Conference this last week and it was exactly what I needed as always. We had to get up pretty early because we had to be at the church at 8 for my leadership meeting (my sweet companion sewed buttons on my jacket while I was in the meeting, I love her. She is one of the most service oriented people I know) but it was an incredible meeting. We talked about the parable of the talents and how we are given responsibilities according to our capacity and that God gives us what we know we can handle and that the difference in our reward comes from our effort not in specific numbers. It was really powerful.There is a talk by President Holland that I love where he talks about how just like a runner should collapse at the finish line because he gave it his all, as missionaries we have to give this mission our all and not be satisfied with mediocrity. Oh and side note: Hermana Durham and I got put in charge of dessert for Zone Conference, we made 130 cookies! We also got to sing Silent Night it was fun.

Intercambio in Badalona: Because it was a combined zone conference with the Badalona zone, I went straight from our chapel to Badalona with Hermanas Boyer and Tyler. It was such a great intercambio. The area was just opened last transfer and they are working so hard and seeing miracles. We didn't have any teaching visits unfortunately but we were able to serve the members and we contacted a lot. It was a lot of fun and they could not be sweeter girls. Oh and we ate with a member. So delicious but I think I gained ten pounds just looking at the food. Salad, Empanadas, Crepes (with sweet and condensed milk, totally made me miss my dad and his fudge), and hot chocolate. So good.

Christmas Dinner: I went straight from Badalona back to the capilla the next day for our Christmas dinner. I arrived in time to help them decorate and then people started coming. The familia Lopes came and we were able to introduce Zuleide and Vando to a man from Brazil and then Maria Laura to the Young Womens. After a few minutes of running around greeting people I turned around and had the best feeling come over me as I saw Pedro and Lorena running around with other primary kids, Maria Laura and laughing with the Young Womens, Vando in deep conversation with the Brazilian member, and Zuleide chatting with a member who leaves near their house. It was truly a missionary's dream. We spent most of the night dishing up food in the kitchen as the young women served it (Maria Laura included) and then we sang a couple of christmas carols with the elders, and chatted with people. It was a great night.

Lots of service: We were able to help two people move this week. One we just happened to be passing by her house at the exact right time and she was so relieved when we offered to help (Cynthia) and the other was Croni and her family. We were able to get the Elders to come with us and they were so grateful because it was a lot of stuff! I LOVE helping people move. It's the best seeing the relief that comes over their face when you show up at their door.

Member Present Sunday: Yesterday worked out so differently than we had expected. We had a lot of members ask us to come over to do various things for them and without them even planning friends showed up who we were able to teach. It was nothing short of a miracle! We met some wonderful people and were able to get a lot of great references (most of them aren't in our area but as long as more and more people are learning about the gospel that's what's important) it was a great day.

Ice Skating: Today we got to go ice skating!!! So much fun! I have missed it a ton and even though we were on hockey skates we all had a blast. Now to get skiing approved... ;)

Bon Nadal a tots i Prospero Año Nuevo (I ran out of Catalán half way through that sentence but I'm going to email before New Years anyway so I'll figure it out)

I love you all! Happy Birthday Brad and Mallory! I hope you are having a great holiday season and thanks to everyone for their Christmas cards! It's so fun to see how everyone is doing and changing.

Hermana Tuttle

Monday, December 16, 2013

The Odd Life of Hermana Tuttle

Buenas Tardes! (...spelling???)

Well this week was filled with all sorts of things I didn't expect.

Monday: Go to Park Guell but they just bumped the price up from free to 8 euros so instead we just had fun climbing around and getting good sites of the city with the elders from ward 1 and 3. 

Tuesday: District Meeting with Subway and Pumpkin pie from mix left over from Thanksgiving (weird combo I know but we're missionaries, the natives loved it and of course the Americans had all missed it so they were super excited). We visited Betty, she is doing better but now she's stressed about finding another job. We had dinner with our Relief Society president who is from France and had quiche which was amazing and this delicious chocolate fondant(??) that was basically a very rich brownie/cake like dessert.

Wednesday: We met with Harry, a Nigerian man that we have taught twice and is really interested in learning more but lives super far away from the capilla so we are working on that issue right now. Then we ate with Carolina and her door broke so we had to unscrew the doorknob and do all sorts of handiwork (odd thing #1). Then we met the Lopes family and because Pedro just failed a math test and I love him so much I accepted Zuleide's request of rewriting him a Catalán math test to help him out a little bit. I obviously don't speak Catalán so I just copied the test and changed the numbers and now we are working on it little by little but that definitely qualified for Odd Thing #2. Later we met with Heidi, a recent convert of Hermana Durham's who hasn't been to church for over a month, she just got her thumb slammed in a door and it broke super bad (#3) so she is out of work for a little bit which is a miracle in disguise because her husband is taking care of her (helping their relationship), she is finally getting to rest, and she was able to come to church this last Sunday!!!!! MIRACLE.

...okay I don't think I can break it down by day that would take forever and be extremely boring for all of you I'm sure... let's try sorting by category

Noche de Diversion: Altragracia came to noche de diversion in the chapel and it was perfect because Betty came with her daughter and they live super close so Betty (less active) is fellowshipping Altagracia and it is helping them both a lot. Altagracia got so excited about how she could feel the spirit super strong too which was adorable. I just love her! They went home with each other which was also super cute.

Odd thing #4: We helped set up for a 25th wedding anniversary and someone said that I wrote in cursive so I got to do all of the writing. It was actually pretty fun and was a nice compliment since I have kind of had chicken scratch handwriting my entire life but it was another thing I never would have expected to do on my mission.

Odd thing #5: Some of you may have gotten this far and thought... meh none of those are really that weird here's the weirdest: We got to a metro stop early where we were meeting a member for a lesson. It was the metro stop where Juan Carlos our churro friend works so we started to talk to him. His churro machine had broken and so we asked if we could help. I expected him to say no like everyone does but he said actually yes, can you hop in. So there we were two missionaries inside of a churro stand on wheels type thing. We ended up getting it working right when our member got there. Yay us!

Still not odd enough? Okay let's try one more time because this is WAY to long already. So a woman started talking to us on the street, she wasn't really interested but we gave her our number just in case, a few days later she called and asked if we could meet with her and her friend. We were stoked but little did we know that we would be walking into a circle of 10 women and their weekly meeting as females of their church. It was a great meeting but definitely caught us off guard. The woman who contacted us gave the sermon, we listened to gospel music as she offered the prayer, we read from the bible, it was very interesting. They were all very sweet and invited us to church on Sunday, we weren't able to go because of our church. I will let you know where things go from here. 

What I learned from this week: that God works in mysterious ways. It's so easy to question why things happen when we can't see the whole picture but if we can just recognize that our lives are so closely watched over by our Father in Heaven we'll be able to see his hand in every detail of our lives.

Basically everything has been super great and I am really loving what I am doing. I can't believe how fast time is going. 9 months!!!! Weird.

Love you lots! Bon Nadal!

Hermana Tuttle


Monday, December 9, 2013

Tis' the Season

Bona Nit (ya, no clue how that is actually spelled. It's Catalán)

Wow, if my dad or brothers knew how much attention me saying that I am sick got me I would never hear the end of it! Thank you for all of your concern and well wishes. I am doing much better. My throat is still raspy but doesn't hurt so hopefully that goes away and that I didn't actually mess something up but we'll see...

This week has been great!...besides the being sick part. I have a few stories in particular to tell you:

1) Renier: Renier is part of a part member family. His mom and older brother are less actives and his mom's boyfriend who lives with them is not a member but is as sweet as they come and the cutest dad to their four year old daughter who I have mentioned before. So lately we have been helping Renier get ready for his baptism (he is 8) and this last lesson we asked Luis (the boyfriend) again why he doesn't want to get baptized and once again he brought up the marriage thing but this time as opposed to other times Croni, the mother was there, and we were able to get the white elephant out of the room by asking what's impeding them from getting married. She just said that they would in the future but not now to which Renier spoke out and said why don't you get married now? Croni then seemed surprised and asked him if that's what he wanted and he said ya. After a little bit more talking we dropped the subject for now and then asked Renier to say the opening prayer. In it he prayed that his mom could get married. So cute! We all chuckled a little. Then afterwards we talked a little more about it and how fun it would be to have a little wedding and that we would make chocolate chip cookies (that they love) and then out of no where Renier folding his arms, closed his eyes, and started praying again. In his prayer he again asked that his mom could get married. When he finished and looked at him a little confused he said "that time was for the cookies."

2) Augustine: This week we also had a very bittersweet experience. Friday night our ward had a few baptisms that we were able to sing for, we had hoped to stop by Betty and Augustine afterwards. We have been teaching them for a while, Betty is a less active member who lives with and cares for an elderly man named Augustine who is not a member. We have loved to go over and visit them and were excited to visit them again. 
Unfortunately, getting everything back in order after the baptism took a little longer than expected and we ended up not having time. We called Betty Saturday morning to ask if we could visit them then but she said it wasn't a good time and that after mediodía would be better. A few hours later while we were in the church for English class Betty called us. She was crying and said that we couldn't come over that night, when we asked why she said that Augustine had just passed away. We were both taken aback, we asked what we could do but after she assured us that she would call if there was anything we hung up and just stood there for a minute to catch our breath. It was then that I really realized how much we loved him and how grateful we were for the chance to get to teach him. As missionaries we have hard days, we have days where no one wants to talk to us, where people tell you they have changed their mind and don't want to receive the lessons anymore, where all of your visits cancel on you but I have never felt so fortunate in my life. We don't have a ton of people to teach right now (a condition we are working hard to improve) but I feel so blessed to have the people we do. My dad always told me before the mission that soon I would love people with all of my heart who I didn't even know at the time. That's such a beautiful part of missionary work. We get to feel everyday a part of the love God feels for each of his children. I feel so blessed to have taught Augustine and while I already miss him a lot, I know that he was missing a lot of people and that it was a happy reunion in heaven. As my mom says, "thank heaven for heaven." I know that the plan of salvation is true, that death is not the end and that we will see those we love again. And like I said a few weeks ago, I am so grateful for this knowledge.

3) Primary program: Sunday was the primary program. It was SOOOO cute! A few highlights: One little boy who only had one line to say, started saying it over confidently, got a little jumbled on the words and then said "Ay!" he thought for a second, put his elbow on the pulpit and rested his head on his hand (the thinking pose) talking to himself until finally someone came up and told him but it was absolutely adorable. I won't consider myself a spanish speaker until I use "ay!" as my form of exclamation. Another was a kid who kept waving to his dad and then finally half way through the program just yelled "Papa!" A few kids walked straight passed the pulpit and had to turn around a lot of them got off the pulpit and after a few steps realized they didn't say "in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen" and ran back just to say that. The last one I'll mention was when they sang "I want to be a missionary" and I looked around at all 5 of the other missionaries in the congregation who couldn't help but smile and some were even bobbing along to the music. All the boys had paper ties on and the girls had paper bows and then they all had paper name tags. It was great. Sometimes it's surreal that I am on my mission right now. Oh and they NAILED "A child's prayer" I was very proud.

Well I think that's the main points of the week, if I forgot anything in the words of Mitch Hedberg "I will write it down, or if the pen's to far away, I will convince myself that what I thought of ain't [important]"

Love you so much! Hope you’re enjoying the holidays despite the Jazz being a little rough. Can somebody do something about that by the way?

Hasta la proxima!


Hermana Tuttle

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

My Home Away From Home

Bon Dia!

Just a heads up I have been pretty sick this week (hence why the email is coming so late) so this email could go one of two ways: 1) it could be super boring in which case you can just skip to the end and then next time you see my mom I give all of you permission to still say, "she sounds like she is doing well" and/or "I loved her last email" or 2) it could be even better than normal due to the fact that I am on cold/flu medication...we'll see
Despite being several thousand miles away from home we had a great Thanksgiving and I hope you all did as well! I'm lucky to live with great cooks and so for our dinner we had chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy, stuffing, corn, rice (oh how I love Hermana Liu), pumpkin pie (I helped make), pumpkin cookies that my mom sent. All in all it was a success. And it was bring your own drinks, we were laughing about what our drinks say about us. Feel free to guess which one is mine. And the picture of the leaves is another idea my mom sent, I cut out leaves and then we all wrote things we were grateful for on them. It was super cute. 

Another highlight of this last week was the ward activity Talent Night. Every organization had to do 2 numbers. As La Obra Misional we did the opening act which was comedic sketch (yes, I know I'm not funny but the Elders made up for my lack of "talent" in that aspect and it turned out really good). The Relief Society did a Bollywood number to Jai Ho. It definitely made me miss dance and the Smiths. They did a great job! They have been practicing once a week for a long time and each of them was decked out in Indian garb, it looked great. The young men, young single adult (JAS) men, and the missionaries did a mission themed Hacka. One girl did a little dance to Tik Tok by Keisha (so weird to hear that song again). Basically the whole thing was just awesome. I love my ward!

Our relationship with the Lopes family is growing leaps and bounds. We dropped their baptismal date but now they're setting up visits with us and they really do want to learn more. They know we are serious about baptism and they want to be baptized they just don't feel ready. They are adamant about us coming over on Christmas, it's adorable. Oh speaking of adorable, we went over there the other day and Maria Laura (12 years old) came out with a paper name tag on that looked just like ours but said Hermana Lopes. It was so cute! She then told us that she wouldn't tell us her first name until we get baptized (we tease her and say we'll tell her our first names when she reads for two weeks straight, when she gets baptized, right before we get transferred, etc. It kills her but we don't want the relationship to become too casual). They could not be a cuter family. They even offered to let us use their phone to call home on Christmas, we thanked them but told them we are allowed to use skype and that way it's free. She said "okay well if you ever need to call America for free let me know, I bought a card so that I could call to Brazil and it turns out I can call everywhere in the world all the way to the third degree of hell but I can't call Brazil." It was HILARIOUS. I love Zuleide.

Concilio yesterday was great but it was hard. I'm having to say goodbye to people who have been such strong influences on my mission now and it's getting harder and harder. Ugh it scares me to think about how it's only going to get worse. 

Basically I just love what I'm doing. Being sick is the worst because for the past couple of days I have had to spend a lot of time inside and I just want to get out. I'm sorry this weeks email is so late but next week will be right on time. Hope your having happy holidays and I would just like to publicly say Happy Birthday to my two Grandmas: Tuttle (the 2nd) and Hanson (the 3rd). How blessed I am to have such great role models and even though I didn't get to know my Grandma Hanson very well, I know what a great influence she was on my mom and for that I will forever love her and be indebted to her.

Have a great week! Love you all!


Hermana Tuttle





Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Happy Thanksgiving!!

Querido familia y amigos,

This week has been super good but as I look back on things that have happened they feel like FOREVER ago. So this was more of a highlights week rather than a go by day week so highlights:

THANKSGIVING: Happy Thanksgiving this week!!!! Last Thursday an hermana told us that it was Thanksgiving so Hermana Durham and I have been super excited because when today rolled around and we realized Thanksgiving is actually this Thursday so basically I just get two Thanksgivings this year, no big deal...neither of them with Turkey but we are thinking about eating some chicken and making a pumpkin pie from some pumpkin puret I bought from an American store a couple of weeks ago. I'll keep you informed on how that goes.

FAMILIA LOPEZ: This is the family where three of the four of them (well technically five but Lorena is underage) have baptismal dates. We have really been working hard with them to build up our relationship. We came over early in the morning on Saturday to work with them on homework for an hour to try and eliminate all excuses for not coming to church on Sunday...they still didn't come to church which was hard. The issue is that they live super far away from the chapel and they have to switch to four different metros to get there and our church starts at 9 so they just don't have tons of motivation to come but hopefully as we keep teaching them and their testimonies continue to grow they will have that desire to come to church. This week we are really going to try to get them fellowshipped in. We have a Noche de Talentos (Talent night incase you couldn't tell) and they said they would come which would be great! Any ward activity is great for investigators.

TRANSFERS: Transfers are today but Hermana Durham and I are staying together as we predicted which will be great because we are really working on our place in the ward and developing our relationship with a lot of investigators and members and it would be a really hard time for a switch right now. Plus it means we will spend Christmas together! Woot Woot! We are having lots of fun but the area is still hard and moving slow. Step by step.

CATALAN: The stake is really making a press for missionaries to learn catalan so that the Spaniards here are more willing to listen to us so a woman from the third ward has offered to teach us a little Catalan every one to two weeks and it's awesome. It's a mix between Spanish and French. I can't say much, just introduce myself and set up appointments but I'm learning and I love it!

CHRISTMAS LIGHTS: This ones short but on all the streets in Barcelona there are lots of Christmas lights and it is beautiful! I love Barcelona!

NOCHE DE HOGAR: So every Thursday we have a family home evening with anyone who wants to come in the stake center and this last week we were a little worried because when the time came for it to start there was only one person there but then five minutes later a ton of people showed up including a less active who we have been working with and a part-member family we have been working with and they all loved it! I was partners with Eliana the part-members family 4 year old daughter who is the cutest little South American girl! It was such a great night.

MIRACLE: You know the saying obedience brings blessings, exact obedience brings miracles? Well lately we have been getting a little frustrated that as hard as we are working our area just doesn't seem to progressing. Other missionaries are having such great success all around us while we are having had consistently low numbers. I started thinking about the quote: If you always do what you've always down, you'll always be what you've always been. So that was our focus this last week. To push ourselves, to fill in any holes so that we would be blessed with success in this area. Hermana Durham and I really pushed ourselves to be exactly obedient: to contact more, to not cross the street when the light is red (so hard for me and my not patient personality), to speak only Spanish out of piso, to get out of piso right on time, etc. The day after we fasted we called a less active from our area book named Cynthia. She was very sweet and invited us right over, after a great lesson with her our next visit texted and canceled on us. With an extra hour now we decided to knock the building. We ended up getting phone numbers from almost every single door we knocked and several return appointments. We have been calling the people that didn't set up appointments and we are so excited about a lot of them! It was truly a miracle! 

Wow this email is super long, sorry! But just know that I'm living it up here in Spain and you should all be super jealous. I could not be more grateful for this opportunity I have to be here and for all of the support I have. Thank you, I love you, Happy Thanksgiving!!!


Hermana Tuttle

Monday, November 18, 2013

A Crazy Week

Dear faithful readers,

Okay this week was definitely one of the crazier ones and resulted in not the highest of numbers but still a super good week.

Monday, as you already know, was Specialized Training and it was very powerful then Tuesday was our preparation day which consisted of shopping, letter writing, napping, and basically just normal preparation day things then that night we visited the familia Lopez from Brazil. We helped the kids with their english homework for a little bit then we taught them the beginning of the Plan of Salvation. They are such a cute family! It's kind of an interesting dynamic, the mother wants her kids to have more religion in her life but doesn't want it for her, the father is so sweet and seems to be kind of interested but I don't think he understands everything we say but the mom doesn't want us to bring portuguese stuff for him because she says it's good for him to learn and then the three kids are so crazy, energetic, and cute but they don't really want to do something that their parents aren't into. It's a little tricky.

Wednesday we had a lot of people everyone canceled on us so it was kind of rough but as we were passing by antiguos (old investigators) in our spare time, we heard someone say Jose Smith! We didn't stop because we get people yelling random things at us all the time but they're just making fun of us and are drunk or something but then we realized we had passed the apartment number that we were looking for so we had to turn around, the guy seemed to be following us but this time we decided to say hi and give him a card he then got really excited and started talking to us in broken spanish (he's philipino) about how he's a member and he was so excited he even pulled over the sleeve of his shirt a little to show that he was still wearing his garments. He said he had been sealed in the temple but that he hadn't had contact with the church for several years. He wasn't able to come with us to church yesterday but I next week for sure.

Thursday Hermana Durham dropped me off at the airport to fly to Bilbao for an intercambio. They flight was breathtaking filled with green fields, white mountains, and the blue mediterranean. There ended up being a miscommunication about the time I would arrive so after waiting in the airport without a phone I ended up getting a little nervous but shortly after TRYING to figure out the payphone (I eventually gave up because I am too short to read the instructions) the hermanas got there and we had a great intercambio. Their area is called Las Arenas (the sands) and it is so cute. They live right by a big river with a beautiful boardwalk. One of the hermanas is one that I lived with for three transfers so that made it especially fun. Then the next morning I took a bus from Bilbao to Vitoria and got picked up by the hermanas there. The ride was very green and beautiful I would send pictures but they don't do it justice. I had been warned about how cold the north would be and so I had come prepared but I was not as prepared as I had wished for Vitoria, when I got there it was pouring rain=no worries I have an umbrella, then it got down to 5 degrees celsius=wish I had gloves, then it switched off between raining and snowing for the rest of the day=wish I had a hat and better scarf and boots. But despite how cold it was (p.s. it dropped down to 3 degrees around 6= 4 hours left of proselyting without a single cita planned) we worked really hard. I was so impressed and inspired by the hermanas I was working with and we ended up seeing miracles. We had a couple of bad citas where people tried to argue and ripped at our beliefs but through street contacting we found a group of 8 girls around the age of 18 that all gave us their numbers and addresses so the hermanas could drop off book of mormons to each of them. It was incredible. Then the next day the busses weren't running since it was a weekend so despite getting up early I wasn't able to make my flight so I stayed in Vitoria for a little while (which I didn't mind at all because it's gorgeous and the hermanas spoiled me) and then caught a 5 hour train ride home.

I kind of skimmed past the fact that I got to the north just in time to experience their first snowfall of the season due to my annoying habit of documenting the weather each week to you guys when I was in Valencia but ummm...it was awesome! It was FREEZING but it was awesome! Made me want to go skiing and drink hot chocolate and eat french onion soup with my family in Sun Valley not going to lie (but we made hot chocolate that night so that was good enough for the time being. hot chocolate is the best). As for Barcelona it is POURING (rain) but no worries mom, I bought boots today so I am happy and dry :)
Well this letter is already awfully long so I'm sorry if I don't give this last section as much credit as it deserves but basically we set four baptismal dates yesterday (1 is for the ward because it is an 8 year old). We went over to the familia Lopez´s house and we finished the plan of salvation and invited them to be baptized on the 7th of December. They agreed to put it as a goal but unfortunately the mom wasn’t there so we don’t know if she’ll be down with it or not. Lots of fasting and prayers. The 8 year old daughter is Mireia, her mother is a less active who really wants her to get baptized but the dad is not supportive (he is Catholic out of tradition but doesn´t believe in God) so lots of fasting and prayers for that situation as well. At the end of our lesson with her yesterday she wanted to say the prayer and in it she prayed that her father would let her be baptized because she really, really wants to. It was so sweet.

I hope it is appropriate for me to express my love to the Johnson´s before I close this email. I will write something longer when I have tissues nearby but I couldn´t send this without expressing my gratitude to God for getting to be friends with the Larry Johnson. I love you so much Pudsy. Forgive me for not writing more but I only wrote two lines and I´m already a mess. Your family is always in my heart and will surely be in my thoughts and prayers.

I love you all,

Hermana Tuttle


P.S. Transfers are next week. I´ll write on Tuesday

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Missionary Brain

Dear patient family and friends,

Bless my heart I forgot to send the main email again. Here's what happens: I write the main email first but I always just save it in drafts so that if I think of something else while I'm replying to email or writing to President I can just add it to the main one but then there's that awkward moment when I just leave it there. Sorry!

Anyway this week was crazy! Monday and Tuesday were super good. We had made it our goal to have 12 lessons with a member present this week (the standard of excellence for our mission) and by Tuesday night we already had 5! We were so excited! We didn't end up meeting our goal unfortunately (we did get close though) in part because I had intercambios with the sisters in Sabadell so I was gone for two days and Hermana Durham went with the Hermanas that we share a piso with to work in their area but that's okay. We have a great week planned.

One of the lessons we had last Tuesday was a pass by with a part member family (the mom and son are members but they are both not active). Part way through the lesson the son came home (who I had never met). He's a big kid who I thought could pass as 20 but is in fact 14! He had an earring in each ear and I'm going to be honest my first thought was that he was going to ignore us or scoff and walk straight to his room but he did the exact opposite. He smiled and greeted us and then pulled up a chair and participated in our lesson. At the end of the lesson before we even asked if we could come visit them again he asked if we could come over next Monday to do a noche de hogar because all of them would be home. We of course accepted and last night we went over and it went so well. I love the family and the 8 year old son is getting baptized on the 30th hopefully. Now we just need to work with the dad who is super sweet but the issue is that they aren't married. Stay tuned.
Intercambios were great! Can I just tell you how complicated travel was though? So the hermanas I live with dropped me off, I realized I didn't know what stop to get off and I didn't have a phone, on the metro I asked someone to use their phone...shot down...try to use my deductive reasoning to figure out what stop to get off...nothing, ask another girl for her phone: success (in the nick of time too because I got off like three minutes later), ended up getting to the place 40 minutes sooner than the hermanas thought, waited on the outside platform for 40 minutes at 9 at night until I decided to go out of the station and look to see if they were there, couldn't leave because I was out of the zone, the hermanas show up and ask how to help me leave, the worker said that I needed to pay 50 euros because I was out of my zone, luckily I pulled the dumb american card and it worked and we were good but it was eventful, the next day when I went to the other hermanas piso I got on the wrong train so a 5 minute ride turned into 40 minutes then the next day to get home the hermanas told Hermana Durham the wrong stop so once again super excited and nerve-racking and an hour of unneeded travel. It definitely made me appreciate phones.

But really that was just the crazy part, I really did love my intercambio. The two companionships I visited in Sabadell were wonderful and the area is gorgeous. The first hermanas I visited (one of which I lived with for three transfers in Valencia) live in this beautiful mix between Park City and stereotypical Spain. It's got lots of cute street shops and the roads are all cobblestone and while there's people there it doesn't have large apartment buildings and it's just a really friendly feel. The second hermanas I visited work in the mountains and it has a gorgeous view and we had a lesson with a member and it was the first house I have visited in Spain! It had a little yard, a little pool, 3 stories, a fence, a piano, and a fireplace! It was beautiful! Overall, ya, loved my intercambios.

On Sunday, I got asked to teach gospel doctrine class last minute about the spirit world. I was super nervous but I somehow filled up the whole time and it turned out well. It was actually a really cool experience, afterwards an investigator who has been super hard for missionaries to set up appointments with asked me if we could teach her because she said she never felt the spirit stronger than she did in that room. We are super excited to begin teaching her. Stay turned for that as well. That night there was a despedida (farewell, the do them at night here rather than in Sacrament meeting so that the parents can also speak) for two youth who reported to the MTC today. It was so cute! I'm very excited for them! It's such a surreal experience to think that I was giving my farewell talk 9 months ago! Back in February and now it's November! Crazy!

Well this letter is already super long but I just wanted to mention briefly Specialized Training that we had yesterday. It was the Barcelona and Badalona Zones which was fun because I got to see Hermana Bracken from the MTC and some friends from Valencia. It was such a great day and the spirit was so strong. We had a testimony meeting at the end and I have never seen so many missionaries in tears, it was really sweet. 
Especially when this sister missionary who has been really sick, and is staying in the mission home indefinitely until she can walk well again after being in the hospital for almost two weeks, bore her testimony. It was beautiful.

Well, os quiero like crazy y os echo de menos un montón! Que tenga una buena semana!


La Hermana Tuttle

Happy Halloween

Feliz Noviembre!

I am not going to freak out about how it's already November because I feel like I do that every time a month comes and goes but can you believe how fast the time is flying? It's preparation day again already! Crazy!

Updates from Barcelona:

We have been getting super close with the bishop and his wife, they are so sweet and are always inviting us over to eat or to do a noche de hogar (FHE) in their house.

We visited a less active member named Betty on Tuesday and it went really well. She lives with and watches over an older man named Augustine and even though he's not totally there he really liked our visit and has such a sweet testimony about God. We read a few parts of 2 Nephi 4 with him (so weird spelling Nephi instead of Nefi by the way) and he just started crying and bearing his testimony about God. It was so sweet and I think he and Betty are going to come to church this next week (she hasn't been coming because of this job but he said he would love to go too so fingers crossed!)

We had our monthly zone meeting on Wednesday where the leaders teach about what they learned in leadership council and I was assigned to teach about the obedience part of concilio and I actually got pretty nervous! In Valencia it wasn't that hard but here it's a little more intimidating when you're supposed to be teaching the ayudantes but I think it ended up going well.

Thursday of course was Halloween and it was so great! We passed by a friend of ours who owns a churro shop and we scared him and said trick-or-treat and gave us a free bag of these funyon chip type things (because the bag wasn't full enough to sell but whatever it was still super nice), we wore black (I had an orange scarf), Hermana Scoville's mom sent her pumpkin cookies which I have been craving so much so that was awesome along with kit kats and twix's dressed up like mummies for each of the four of us that share a piso, and there was primary halloween party which was about the cutest thing ever (p.s. you know that your bishop is awesome when he knows and sings every word to thriller despite not knowing english while judging the primary costumes parade, it was hilarious). Basically it was a pretty successful halloween.

We had some really good lessons with the Lopez family (an investigating family from Brazil); Heidi, Ariadne, and Carlos (a part member family, who by the way fed us hot dogs with ketchup, mustard, and mayonnaise exactly how I like them, it made me super happy);Pati and Mireia (another part member family); and Yudaili (the sweetest and happiest woman ever!) and I am really excited about them, we have appointments with all of them this week so I'll update you.

Okay but now the highlight of the week: fast sunday. I always love fast sundays but this one was especially amazing because we were doing a mission fast and as always we saw so many miracles. One of which was 6 investigators at church (which I have only gotten a few times in the 6 months I have been out), and another was when we went to pass by a few investigators who have fallen off the face of the earth, they weren't there but as we walked away a man said "Hola hermanas!" We didn't recognize him but it turns out he is a member in our ward but hasn't come to church in three years. He is amazing! We taught him a lesson and he said he'd come to church this sunday. I wish I had more time to write out all of the little tender mercies we saw but I'm running low but I will say: fast sunday miracles really do exist, I see them every single month.

It's been a great week and I absolutely love what I am doing. I hope you all have a great week. Thank you for everything and happy birthday to my brother Big Chief! Love you!

-Hermana Tuttle

New address (or you can keep sending them to the office I go there about every two weeks):
c/ provenca 501,1-1
Barcelona, 08025

España

Monday, October 28, 2013

Always Something Exciting in Barcelona!!

Hola!

Oh my goodness this is going to have to be a week of bullet pointing topics deal?

1) COOKING: don't worry...you read the word right. Yes, I am learning how to cook. I won't tell you how I cooked an over easy egg to perfection the other day because for some reason whenever I tell somebody how excited I am about that they look at me like I'm an idiot (but that doesn't take away from the fact that the yolk was perfectly intact) but I will tell you about how I have gotten pro at cooking chicken breast. As we say in Spain, poco a poco I am learning. (Before any of you think it's any fault of my mom's that I struggle at cooking anything that doesn't have a clear recipe just know she tried). Oh and I ate coconut ice cream out of an actual coconut, no big deal.

2) FIRE: On Wednesday we were eating and I heard something pop outside and when I looked out there were a couple of people stopped and taking pictures of an apartment building across the street. Then I saw some smoke, we booked it out and an apartment was on fire and it was insane. I have never seen that much red. It was heartbreaking. About ten minutes later the fire department got there and it was just chaos. We could see a man on the other side of the street, who was probably late 20s with a lot of tattoos, just crying and we could tell it was his. After the fire got under control we ran upstairs and got some of the brownies we had just made for a member whose dad just died and gave them to Victor (the man's name we found out) with a card. He was super sweet and I was so happy that we could help him smile in an incredibly hard moment for him.

3) MY CALL: Can you believe it was a year ago last Thursday that I opened my mission call? It's so crazy to think how much has changed since then. Since last October in general my life has changed for the better and I can't imagine my life now without this experience or being anywhere else in the world right now other than in the Spain Barcelona Mission. What a blessing!

4) WALKING: Little by little we are finding investigators and getting more busy but we still have to do a lot of contacting and passing by old investigators. Last Friday we walked up and down steep hills for 4 hours! It was pretty hard and we were super sore afterwards but it was a necessary evil to find out if our antiguos from prior years (all the way back to 2006) still lived in the houses on their teaching records. Plus it was kind of cool because the streets were very stereotypical spain: skinny and steep with one-three level pisos.

5) ENGLISH CLASS: For english class we learned the alphabet and numbers this week and then we played Bingo. To make it a little more fun every time someone got a bingo they had to sing "there was a farmer who had a dog..." and it was so much fun! The Spanish speakers loved it. Oh I love teaching basic english class it's a party.

6) SATURDAY: After english class there was a baptism and Hermana Durham and I sang All Creatures of Our God and King (me singing alto which I was definitely okay with because it's so fun!) then we went to a bachelorette party that the relief society threw in the church because they invited all of our female investigators (the members LOVE investigators it's so sweet). It was Snow White themed and they made the bride-to-be look exactly like her. Wig, make-up, dress, and everything. It was so fun! The investigators and I got to meet and talk with a lot of ward members and it was so fun. 

7) CONCILIO: Today we had concilio and as always it was incredible experience. It's super weird though because it was the last time I am going to see some of my friends from the mission because they are going home before the next concilio. It's just going to get weirder and weirder as the people who go home each transfer become people I am closer and closer to.
So basically Barcelona is going great. We are working hard and seeing miracles everyday. We are working with a few really great women right now named Yudaily, Esneda, Sandra, and Gladis, and a lot of less actives (two of which came to church for the first time in a long time yesterday which was so great). I'm happy and I hope all of you are too.

Thank you for all of your love and support and letters, it means the world to me!

Have a great week!
Hermana Tuttle


1)The Fire

















2) Happy Halloween! (A creepy house that we passed by, it made me feel a little Halloween-y)