Friday, August 31, 2018
Changes before we even get to the MTC!
While visiting my first bishop and his wife, Earl and Elaine Rouche, we received a phone call from our mission. They want us to stay in the MTC for historic site training. Instead of leaving the MTC on Friday, we will leave on Tuesday, Sept. 11. We knew that we might get to help out once in awhile in the site, but generally we would not be needed there. This gives me hope that we might get to work there more than we thought. I really would like to do a variety of things while in Nauvoo.
Thursday, August 30, 2018
On Our Way
On Our Way
Dee says we couldn't even have fit a golf ball in our car after we were packed. On our way to the MTC we stopped by Nauvoo hoping to leave Dee's tools and relieve our little car of it's load. The staff was so ready for us that we were able to leave our things in the very house we will be staying in. The house is up on the hill near the temple. It looks out over the town and out to the West. I anticipate viewing many beautiful beautiful sunsets from the kitchen window. We noticed lots of blue shirted workers around the town. That will be us in a very short while. We can't wait to get started.
We have left Nauvoo for a few days in order to say good-bye to our family and enter the MTC. Only 4 days to go and our mission really begins.
We've Been Called to Nauvoo
A Dream Come True
From the time we were married Dee and I had always planned to serve a couples mission. Two years ago, when Dee realized he was going to actually retire in a year, he pulled up the mission opportunity website for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. He found a posting for an air-conditioner contractor needed in Nauvoo. What could be more perfect? In our many transcontinental trips between Utah and the East Nauvoo has served as an oasis of quiet and enjoyment for our family. We'd love to live in Nauvoo for 18 months and help maintain the town for the enjoyment of others.
Dee called the number and spoke to Brother Bodily, the Facilities Manager for Nauvoo. He asked if we could come in March 2017. Unfortunately Dee wouldn't be retired quite yet. Over the next year he spoke to Brother Bodily several times. Finally in October 2017 Dee was retired. But preparing to go on a mission took several more months.
Preparing for a mission
First we had to inform Bishop Cooper, so that he could let us into the missionary application. It warned that filling out this application would take awhile. The actual application does take a little while, but can be done on a Sunday afternoon. BUT our first delay was getting a medical checkup and Hepatitis shots. If you want to serve a senior mission just go get the shots now. They take 6 months to complete. You also need a passport, which we already had, but if you don't that also takes several weeks. Finally everything was filled out and turned in. Now we waited. And waited. Sometimes mission calls don't come in two weeks.
The Call
We spent June in Utah and thought the call might come while we were there. It didn't. We were home, preparing for a family reunion in Canada at the end of July, hoping it would come before we went to Canada. It came four days before we left. We gathered the family on Google hang-out and opened the letters. We could be sent anywhere in the world. I was prepared to not go to Nauvoo. It was great relief to open the letter and read the words Illinois Nauvoo Mission. We were to report September 3. There was too much to do to get too excited. We had lots of material to read over, lists to make, and we hadn't figured out what to do with our house.
What to do with the house?
We knew we needed to downsize anyway, so in January 2018 the only thing we were sure of was to get rid of anything we no longer needed. We held several yard sales and made countless things available on Sanford Marketplace. We asked friends who had served missions what people did with their houses while they were gone. Everyone we knew turned the house over to one of their children. None of our children could help us out. So we decided to sell the house. At least that was our plan. That wasn't the Lord's plan. By July, and two price reductions, we had not even a nibble on our house. But the Lord sent us a wonderful couple who wanted to rent it. We knew they would take good care of the house, and in keeping with the tradition of this house they would use it to serve the church members. Additionally they offered for us to store our things in the bonus room and attics, saving us from having to pay storage.
The month before we left for our mission was occupied with moving everything upstairs, packing needed clothes, and finishing up our shots.
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