I can't believe it has been over three months already. It is crazy to think about.
I really didn't have any cool adventures this week, but I did have a good week. We have about 10 investigators now, and we may have a baptism or two on the 24th of this month!! They have to go to church for all three hours, three weeks in a row before they can get baptized. They are struggling with that. A lot of members actually struggle to stay all three hours too.They just don't quite understand yet. The church is so young here, and people aren't sure what to do. If the missionaries left the area, the branch would die in a couple months. We are going to try and get home and visiting teaching going, because right now, we and the branch president are the home and visiting teachers. So lots of work in the branch. So that is a big part of what we are working on as we teach less active members and what not.We have been working really hard with the members because there is a lot of inactivity here. We had 74 people at church the first week I was here, then 64, 57, and last week we only had 56 people at church. So we are working on helping people become more active by being friends with them, and as we are doing that, people are giving us referrals. Pretty cool how it works!
The Lord is definitely taking super good care of me. I have been so blessed with good health, and it really isn't as hot as I thought it would be. I am learning and growing so much, and I am able to communicate okay. I am understanding much, much more, and pretty much everything that my companion says, I understand. I am doing a lot of different things than I was expecting, but when Dallin H. Oaks addressed us in the MTC, he said that we are supposed to establish the church! So that is what we are doing! Ha ha, I am having fun doing it, and enjoying serving :)
Thursday, July 14, 2011
Sunday, July 10, 2011
Learning Every Day
We had our p-day switched this week. The District Leader (my companion) and the Zone Leader, Elder Ballard (He lives in the house with me, and his companion is Elder Hall) left yesterday afternoon to go to Phnom Penh for some leadership training. Usually on Thursday mornings, we do weekly planning, and get ready for the next week; it's a super important couple of hours that needs to be done with your companion, so we switched our weekly planning day and our p-day. So, Elder Hall has been my companion since yesterday afternoon. We also had to take our companions to the bus stop... what a sight we were with our companions riding on the back of our bikes! Ha ha! It was pretty difficult to ride my bike with my companion sat on the little platform on the back of my bike, but there were quite a few people staring at us, and I was pretty much laughing the whole way!. Ha ha, it's great that Elder Hall is my companion because he was in the MTC with me, so you have two brand new missionaries out proselyting... we are doing pretty good! Yesterday went really well, and I can tell you that we were definitely being watched over and helped by the Spirit. I would say it is a miracle that we both understood about 90% of what was said!
So, what a week it has been! Pretty busy! Last week on Wednesday, we went and did some service, stoonging (planting rice). Ha ha, yup, I got to work in a rice field! Man, that was an adventure! Ha ha! We dressed up in our non-proselyting clothes and took our shoes off, and stepped into the flooded and super muddy rice patty. It was teeming with little crabs, frogs, spiders, and who knows what else, but it was way cool and fun! The missionary work is going wonderfully. If all goes well, by the end of August, we should have 4 baptisms. Obviously people that were being taught before I got here, but I am glad that I get to be a part of the instruction.
So, what a week it has been! Pretty busy! Last week on Wednesday, we went and did some service, stoonging (planting rice). Ha ha, yup, I got to work in a rice field! Man, that was an adventure! Ha ha! We dressed up in our non-proselyting clothes and took our shoes off, and stepped into the flooded and super muddy rice patty. It was teeming with little crabs, frogs, spiders, and who knows what else, but it was way cool and fun! The missionary work is going wonderfully. If all goes well, by the end of August, we should have 4 baptisms. Obviously people that were being taught before I got here, but I am glad that I get to be a part of the instruction.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Working Hard and Learning in Cambodia
My second week went super great! I am starting to understand people more and more now. I can kind of follow the conversations now. I had to give a talk in church on Sunday. A real talk. I think it was a good 7-10 minute talk too! I could tell when I said a word wrong because a few people would laugh. That is just the culture here, but I am learning! I haven't gotten discouraged or anything because I know that one day I will be able to speak the language as long as I try hard to learn it.
There's no down time. We wake up at 5:30, exercise, eat breakfast, get ready for the day, iron shirt or what not, start studies at 7 til 10, leave the house, come back around noon for lunch, go out again, get back at 8, plan, eat, get ready for bed and write in my journal, and off to bed!
Ha ha, we walked around the market some more today... Pig heads on the table, the whole legs, chickens that have only been plucked, and fish flopping around because they won't kill animals.
I think that there are just about as many bugs inside my house here as there are on the outside of our house in West Valley. Lol. We have killed a lot of ants.
I don't know if the demons are poisonous, and I really don't want to! ha ha! They are a little bit hairy. They are FAST. I mean fast. You cannot hit one on the first try. Sometimes we will take a lighter and the aerosol can of bug spray to them... :) They are completely disintegrated after being hit with it.
I don't believe that any house out here in Kampong Cham has an address! LOL! It makes it really hard to get to new people's houses.
Ok, this is a picture with 3 of our investigators in it. The older man in with the orange collar is Sok Jia. His son is on the far left with the silver shirt and BOM on his lap. His name is Yiang. And the boy in the yellow shirt is Hong. He is a neighbor. There are 2 families. Sok Jia has 3 sons, and 2 of them are baptized (just earlier this year), him and his other son is not. I don't know what has happened to their mom. The other family are all members.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Going to Cambodia
Oh my gosh!!! Today's the day! After almost 6 months of waiting, the time has come! And after 2 and a half months of seeing missionaries come and go, it's finally my turn to go! YAY!!! It doesn't quite seem real yet, but I am sure that it will soon! Ha ha! I am super excited to head off tonight!
I have made it safely to Cambodia, and it is just absolutely wonderful here! Our flights went really well, and I was able to sleep! The roads in Phnom Penh are like driving in Mario Kart. Literally. There are no rules, and people swerve all over the place, and people on their little scooters everywhere... ha ha! Awesome though! Not quite as hot as I thought it would be, but I guess they said that today was a cooler day. It's wonderful here, and I love it!
Love,
Elder Alex Kuhn
I have made it safely to Cambodia, and it is just absolutely wonderful here! Our flights went really well, and I was able to sleep! The roads in Phnom Penh are like driving in Mario Kart. Literally. There are no rules, and people swerve all over the place, and people on their little scooters everywhere... ha ha! Awesome though! Not quite as hot as I thought it would be, but I guess they said that today was a cooler day. It's wonderful here, and I love it!
Love,
Elder Alex Kuhn
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Tenth Week in the MTC
I GOT MY FLIGHT PLANS ON THURSDAY!!! :D :D We leave on June 14, 2011, and our flight from Salt Lake City leaves to Los Angeles. We have a layover in LA, then we fly to Hong Kong. We then have a layover in Hong Kong, when we leave for Phnom Penh, Cambodia. We should arrive in Cambodia at 10:30 am on June 16, 2011!!! I am so excited, and I can hardly wait until we get to leave in a week! I went to the temple today and it was wonderful! I am sad that I only get to go to the temple one more time in the next two years. I really will miss it. So on Friday I went with Elder Clark to his doctor appointment off campus. There was a possibility he had a hernia. It was so interesting to leave the MTC! Ha ha! I haven't been in or ridden in a car for two months, and I was wide-eyed and curious to see the "real world." I can't believe that I leave for Cambodia in a week. It just doesn't quite seem real yet... I mean I've known I've been going for 5 and a half months, but it's actually happening now!!! Yay!! I learned about the culture. I learned just how important it is not to point your foot at someone, and especially don't stand on top of a Buddha's head. Your feet are considered dirty, and your head is considered sacred (why you don't touch others' heads). When you say hello and clasp your hands together in front of your face, the height or level of your hands shows your respect to people. Typically the tops of your fingers should be about with your nose. Everybody loves food! If you didn't eat yet, they will always invite you to eat with them. But we have to tell them no because they are too poor. But the people are so giving, they will just take care of you like you are a king to them, and our teachers have made sure to tell us to remember to be humble while we are over there because they will treat us very well. I don't think I will sit on a chair for two years...they have mats that they always lay down when a guest comes over, and you sit on the mat. When you hand something to or accept something from someone, you always do it with 2 hands. If they are too far, you can reach across with one hand, but your free hand goes to the front of the shoulder of the arm that is reaching. It shows your respect and your reverence for that person and the object. You never toss or throw anything, it is disrespectful. So we will see how I do when I get there! My well-being is completely in the hands of God.
Saturday, June 4, 2011
Ninth Week in the MTC
Suasdei Everyone! I can't believe that I will be headed off to Cambodia in two weeks! It is super exciting to think about! We should be getting our travel plans on Thursday, and I am super excited about that too! I can't wait to see exactly when we leave, where our layovers are, and an approximate time that we'll get there! So on Wednesday we had our malaria instruction. Nothing really to worry about. The doctor said that we just take the doxycyline when the mission president says we need to take it, usually it will be in specific areas. The city, Phnom Penh doesn't have the problem that the rest of the country does because of all the mosquito abatement programs. We wear bug spray all the time, and try to coat our clothes in permithren, and just be obedient. That's the best we can do. If I do get it, I probably won't die. The mission president will have more of the details when we get there. Play it logically and try not to get bit is what I got out of it!
I can't believe that it has rained this much, it's really unusual! Crazy stuff! I am definitely looking forward to an outside gym tomorrow! I get to host the new missionaries again on Wednesday.
This week we are learning about the culture. I can't wait to see what new things I learn.
I hope that this week ends well for you, and that you enjoy the weekend too!
I can't believe that it has rained this much, it's really unusual! Crazy stuff! I am definitely looking forward to an outside gym tomorrow! I get to host the new missionaries again on Wednesday.
This week we are learning about the culture. I can't wait to see what new things I learn.
I hope that this week ends well for you, and that you enjoy the weekend too!
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Eighth Week in the MTC
Hello everyone!
This week has been a wonderful week, and I have been learning so much about the language and the gospel this week. My language is just coming along super! About two weeks ago I couldn't speak the language very fast; I had to pause after each word, and I stuttered a bit. I also still needed to use English words quite a bit. But over the last week, my language skills have gone way up! I can speak with quite a bit more fluency (not a ton, but I don't have to pause after each word) and I don't have to use English quite as often! I am just learning tons of words. The hardest part has been teaching the lessons. We have to focus on the needs of our investigator, and the Spirit while teaching, so we can't really focus on the language at all. When we run into a word that we don't know, we have to try and find our way around it in the lesson! Sometimes you can't find a way around it! Like this past Saturday at the T.R.C., I was teaching the Plan of Salvation with my companion, and I needed to say the next part of the plan, or the next step, or what happens next, or something like that, and I just couldn't find a way around it, so I just had to switch around a little bit, I hope that I didn't confuse my investigator too much.
Can you believe that I have been in the MTC for 55 days?? That is insane! I can't believe that time has gone by so fast. I am so excited for Cambodia! We leave in exactly three weeks from today! Hooray!
On Wednesday I had the opportunity to host! It was a wonderful experience, but sometimes it was really hard to take the missionaries away from their families, but it was awesome to be the first person they met at the MTC! It was great to see the excitement and joy they have as they enter their first "field of work" in the mission. I hosted 3 elders and 1 sister. The sister I just helped take her things to where the other sisters were waiting to help her with everything. The experience was just super rewarding, and I am glad I had the opportunity to do that! We would greet the missionaries at their cars as they pulled up, and unload their luggage for them, and watch them say their goodbyes (this was the hard part), and then take the missionaries to the door of the main building and drop them off. The missionary would go through the building and get their name tags, and a few other items. I would walk around the building with all of their luggage, and wait for them to come out with their name tag and envelope with their information on it. I would take them to their residence hall, have them grab their scriptures, Preach My Gospel, and note-taking materials, and we would be off within 5 minutes. We would then go to the bookstore to get their bag which has their learning materials in it, and I would take them to their classroom where their teacher would be waiting, and I would leave them there! Quite a quick process, that's for sure. I remember when I went through it, it was all just kind of really fast, and like wow... ha ha! After I dropped them off, I would go to pick up another missionary. It was raining quite a bit that day! The volunteer said that she had been doing this for 2 years, and it had never rained like that in 2 years. Lucky me! Ha ha! No, it wasn't bad at all, and besides, I need to get used to the rain!
This week has been a wonderful week, and I have been learning so much about the language and the gospel this week. My language is just coming along super! About two weeks ago I couldn't speak the language very fast; I had to pause after each word, and I stuttered a bit. I also still needed to use English words quite a bit. But over the last week, my language skills have gone way up! I can speak with quite a bit more fluency (not a ton, but I don't have to pause after each word) and I don't have to use English quite as often! I am just learning tons of words. The hardest part has been teaching the lessons. We have to focus on the needs of our investigator, and the Spirit while teaching, so we can't really focus on the language at all. When we run into a word that we don't know, we have to try and find our way around it in the lesson! Sometimes you can't find a way around it! Like this past Saturday at the T.R.C., I was teaching the Plan of Salvation with my companion, and I needed to say the next part of the plan, or the next step, or what happens next, or something like that, and I just couldn't find a way around it, so I just had to switch around a little bit, I hope that I didn't confuse my investigator too much.
Can you believe that I have been in the MTC for 55 days?? That is insane! I can't believe that time has gone by so fast. I am so excited for Cambodia! We leave in exactly three weeks from today! Hooray!
On Wednesday I had the opportunity to host! It was a wonderful experience, but sometimes it was really hard to take the missionaries away from their families, but it was awesome to be the first person they met at the MTC! It was great to see the excitement and joy they have as they enter their first "field of work" in the mission. I hosted 3 elders and 1 sister. The sister I just helped take her things to where the other sisters were waiting to help her with everything. The experience was just super rewarding, and I am glad I had the opportunity to do that! We would greet the missionaries at their cars as they pulled up, and unload their luggage for them, and watch them say their goodbyes (this was the hard part), and then take the missionaries to the door of the main building and drop them off. The missionary would go through the building and get their name tags, and a few other items. I would walk around the building with all of their luggage, and wait for them to come out with their name tag and envelope with their information on it. I would take them to their residence hall, have them grab their scriptures, Preach My Gospel, and note-taking materials, and we would be off within 5 minutes. We would then go to the bookstore to get their bag which has their learning materials in it, and I would take them to their classroom where their teacher would be waiting, and I would leave them there! Quite a quick process, that's for sure. I remember when I went through it, it was all just kind of really fast, and like wow... ha ha! After I dropped them off, I would go to pick up another missionary. It was raining quite a bit that day! The volunteer said that she had been doing this for 2 years, and it had never rained like that in 2 years. Lucky me! Ha ha! No, it wasn't bad at all, and besides, I need to get used to the rain!
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