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