Marcie thought I should write a little about our spiritual experiences. So... I'm in the branch presidency of the Island I branch -- (Hong Kong is the island.) Our branch is Filipino sisters except for a couple of missionaries, the branch presidency, and displaced males who wander in once in a while. They have all the great things and strange things of the rest of the female world. They're very organized and spiritually lit. They also get their feelings hurt. They're happy and talk a lot. They also are aware of how long each sister has been in her current calling, etc.
One of my favorites is Sister Maritess. She stands at 4'6" if she stretches. She's our missionary committee coordinator. She's divided up the branch missionaries (10 of them) into five companionships and color-coded them (pink, orange, green -- you get the idea.) She has them go "finding" on Sunday morning before Church so they can drag the investigators to the building. She requires weekly reports and has them report orally in the weekly correlation meeting. Today she said that a few weeks ago she was feeling bad because all the other companionships had an investigator. (She has no companion.) They were at the World Wide House over in Central where all the Filipinos hang out. So she left with the full-time elders and went to Blackman Square. Just after arriving a young Filipino woman came walking down the path towards her. She gave a big smile (given her size, it's the only thing big she can manage) and said, "Hi, where are you going?" (That starts "Magadang Umaga..." I don't know the rest.) The young lady said that she was going to Church. Maritess said, "Why don't you come with me and we'll both go to Church?" She did. Her baptism date is set for the 27th of March.
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My goal is to start writing every week - it won't be very long (as this is not very long) but it will be more current. I'm including an apt picture -- not a great pic but you can see what our place is like. The picture of the couch (a short couch) with the dragon above it and a view into the bedroom (where the bed occupies the entire room) - -- anyway the picture above is of about 60% of our apartment. We have about 450 square feet and about 50 oblong feet. We average about 150 sq. ft. per air conditioner and that little unit by the couch is a "moist-air-sucker" -- de-humidifier. On a dry day we get about two gallons every six hours. Don't ask about wet days -- . The blue glow out the bedroom window is the Hong Kong street glaring at us. If New York is "the City that Never Sleeps", Hong Kong is the city that "Never Stops Growling." The tram wheels aren't articulated so they scrape against the tracks as they go around the corners. All night. Every night. Each and every night. " Blaring, city living is one of the things I lay on the altar of sacrifice because this is alien in terms of noise, congestion, air-quality, untoward smells (open grate sewers ), bumpy stone streets and the like."
Marcie: We've had a burgeoning battle with a mold population that must have been proliferating long before we were born. Each night when we retired for the night, I'd remark to Dad that it smelled like we were sleeping in a cave, that I could detect the moulder of decaying leaves/dirt, something detectable but not defineable. For the past four weekends, aside from baking our whole wheat bread (from our Mainland China whole wheat flour which is probably loaded with cadmium, and other metals from the belching manufacturing furnaces of the Mainland), doing our wash, cleaning our bathroom et. al., we have been in constant "scrub mode."
Dad researched the best combatant cleaner for mold and found that it's vinegar; we loaded our shopping cart with litres and litres of the stuff and have been spraying every inch, including ceilings, behind our moving closet, and just about everywhere. We have then scrubbed each area inch by inch to remove any spores. After weeks of this, I remarked one night that I could still detect it. Dad thought I was crazy (rightly so) and so I did some investigation on my own and found a huge mold colony on the back of our night stand and another (after lying down on the bedroom floor and squinching under the bed like a car mechanic) on the underside of our box springs, including the wood support struts.. Needless to say, I'm a good sport but draw the line on sleeping on a bed of ancient mold spores.
The thinking is that our apt. was uninhabited for months before we arrived, and w/o the humidifier on full bore day/night, it's impossible to win against it. I applied for a mercy grant of another bed and it was approved after the "Materials Management Dep't." found another used, but mold-free box springs. It's been installed and it's the first good night's sleep we've had since arriving. It was a pretty funky scene and reminiscent of "How many Poles does it take to screw in a lightbulb", when six Chinese "helpers" arrived at the apt. ready to set up the bed and de-install the moldy box springs. There's only room for one person in the bedroom at a time so they all congregated in the door jamb talking (the tonality of the Cantonese language makes it sound like they are really MAD..angry) away like a gaggle of hens, opinions flying everywhere, shaking their screwdrivers for emphasis, and a singular man put the bed together, by himself, grunted and groaned over every turn of the screw, against the back drop of the din of his helpers trying like crazy to insert themselves into the experience.
I had a good laugh after they left because they brought all the crud in on their shoes from the Wan Chai streets, added nothing to the installation except their cultural color/charm and left like they had ALL just crossed the plains, demonstrating as they left, the pangs and sounds of much exertion. It was a hoot. As I write, I think I can say that we have finally vanquished the critters.
At the behest of Pres. Perkins and the Asia Area Media Committee, we have just completed a Newletter which we've named the "In-Site". Michelle Wright, our half-day gift from God serving here as an aid to the public-affairs department, and Steve did the layout in Microsoft Publisher. It turned out pretty well and will serve as monthly assistance to all the country media committees. We included a great quote from President Hunter: "The role of technology in this work has been accelerated by the Lord himself, who has had a guiding hand in its development and will continue to do so. However, we stand only on the threshold of what we can do with these tools. I feel that our most enthusiastic projections capture only a tiny glimpse of how these tools can help us -- and of the eternal consequences of these efforts." Great quote. I consistently have the feeling that the only way we can reach the billions of Asian people is through inspired, interesting, websites, blogs, posts, tweets, facebook stuff. etc. etc. Many people won't listen to the missionaries -- they don't even know who they are, but they're happy to click around on a website or read a blog. (As you are doing right now...)
Dad and I wrote an article stating the purpose of the monthly newsletter which, in part, affirmed our dedication to three means of helping the Gospel spread digitally:
1." To Inspire: as disciples of Christ and members of the media committee, we are dedicated to proclaiming the essence and effects of committed Gospel living both to members and those not of our faith. We believe that the Kingdom can and must also be built digitally, and that the qualiaty and reach of our work is a statement of our devotion. 2. To Inform (we listed lots of plans for training for website people and Liahona editors). 3. Support: a couple of paragraphs concluding w/ our stated commitment to give mutual aid--we have the resources of our media community as well as those of the Lord to complete our labors."It has been challenging to put it together, getting articles written and publishing it but I am most pleased with Dad's name for it as a website and Liahona support newsletter:"In-Site". Just so ya' know.
We send our love and reaffirm our testimony of the restored Gospel, the reality of the Holy Son of God, even Jesus Christ and our Father's desire to save His beloved children, no matter their location on this troubled planet. Elder and Sister Alley aka mom, dad, marcie & steve
Laughed out loud and cried a little at your description of taking apart the box springs...I can't help but compare our Asian experiences with yours. Darron and I quickly learned that a large part of the Asian culture is the idea that everyone must have a job, along with a corresponding uniform. Even if that job entails wearing a white helmet and gloves and waving your arms to alert people to the other three gentlemen sweeping the street--along with the required, "Sumimasen!" (Excuse me! Excuse our mess!) A bit like Walmart greeters--completely superfluous, but after you've been greeted, you actually do feel better.
ReplyDeleteP.S. Post a copy of your "In-Site." I'd love to see it.
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