Showing posts with label pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pictures. Show all posts

Friday, July 11, 2014

Pictures and more pictures

Sister Kate has uploaded some pictures these last few weeks, but I really don't know much about them!  
So I'll just post them to get a glimpse of what's going on in her world.


These photos were taken from the Cathedral of St. Ursus in Solothurn





Sis. Kate had written about this day . . . being caught in the pouring rain.  But she's always
loved walking in the rain, so it's looking like she's holding true to herself!

Yes, we have a fairy garden at home, but here she has stumbled across gnome gardens!

NEW FRIENDS



MISSIONARY FRIENDS



So we know why Sis. Kate took THIS picture!  A climbing wall on the side of the house!
Climbing is one of her passions.


OUT AND ABOUT



Not sure where this was, but here is what it says!

"Here we:
-don't want to buy anything,
-don't want to spend anything,
-don't want to change our religion,
- are already insured,
- and our bills are paid.

All right then: GOODBYE!"


This billboard is of one of our favorite places in Switzerland ...
the village of GUARDA in the Engadine. I'm sure she was tickled
to come across this! 



Ward Activity 


World Cup Enthusiasm - "Hopp Schweiz!"


It's a beautiful road back to our Heavenly Home! 







Monday, April 14, 2014

April 14, 2014 - "It's a rock" - Solothurn, Switzerland

Hi Family!  I put some new things in Dropbox. Make sure to look for the video of the song Sister Siems wrote me for my birthday. She is the best. There will also be random videos of me trying to decide on certain harmonies with Sister Siems for the musical fireside.  Also, this week I put up the pictures from the Klettergarten outing that I left out last time. 



But now I am in Solothurn and of course I have a new companion, Sister Blohm . . . I like her. I kind of get to be bossy with her and do things my way because she is more hesitant and would rather not be so much in charge. And, as you know, I kind of  like to do things my way. Her German really isn’t so good.  But actually it turns out she's only one transfer older than me, not two. But my German isn’t so good either. And we are supposed to write an email to the ward every week and write our progress record in German and send that to the ward council and we always have to write all kinds of notes in German for random reasons like if we want to thank someone or if we go by their house and they're not there. And writing in German is hard!

I got more birthday mail! Thank you to . . .
Amy
Seth
Cambria
McKaye
Kris Fredrickson
Sister Bagby
Carl Johnson
Katy
Sister Barton
Kara
The Bieglers
Granny Franny

And thank you Mommy and Daddy for my birthday package!! It made me feel special so thank you. You don't need to feel any pressure to send any more packages because there will be no more Christmases and no more birthdays and I will need your help when I get home.  And I have to pay here again to pick the package up so it ends up just being so much money.

It was fast and testimony meeting yesterday and I bore a quick testimony! I got two because Schaffhausen had theirs the week before  conference.

This week a guy randomly called us and he talked to us in English and then we met him at the Bahnhof and had a short lesson with him and then we met up with him Sunday morning to show him the way to the church. He is a very interesting person and someone I would just love to see embrace the gospel. We brought him to church, and it turned out the elders already knew him. We think what happened is that when the elders met him they gave him our pass-a-long card and then eventually he called us. But during the time we spent with him this week I learned that he is from Afghanistan and I can’t really share a lot more about him.  But he seems to be a really good person. He only stayed for Sacrament Meeting because he had to go to work but he says he will come every week now. He keeps himself very busy and doesn't have a lot of time to be taught but he is actually the Elder's investigator. I'm just impressed with him as an Auslander for a number of reasons. He is working hard on his German and in his work. He made sure that we weren't planning on taking a bus to church because he bikes and walks wherever he can

Another thing that happened this week. So Sister Blohm and I were on our way to see a less active but we had some time to get there so we were talking to everyone and we saw these two men who seemed a little lost. So I asked them is we could help them with anything. One of them looks up from whatever they were looking at on one of their phones, sees our name tags and says, "Hey I'm a member of your church." Turns out he actually is. He is from Nigeria and has been living in Italy but came to Switzerland a month ago because there isn't much work to be found in Italy. He knew all about the gospel as he has been a member for 19 years. So we called a member family who lives nearby but only the 14-year-old boy was home. But I talked to him and he tried to explain to me over the phone how to get to his house because I thought it would be great for this new member to meet some members. Eventually he just came to find us and then showed us his house, and then we set it up so that Kevin (our new friend!) could get a ride with this family to church the next day. The best part was this family lives literally a stone's throw away from the refugee house where Kevin lives.

Mom you have asked about the acceptance of Auslanders (people from outside the country; foreigners). It varies a lot. Schaffhausen was pretty good about it but they have gotten their heart broken several times by Auslanders they fellowshipped who didn't treat them well in return. They are good to Sandra though, and they don't discriminate against her at all. They just should include her more than they do but they're sort of this little branch and some of them have a hard time really including people completely. But as this story continues you will see a problem I already had with people accepting Auslanders in this word.

Kevin didn't show up to go with the family to church, and when I called him he said he didn't make it in time (I think he slept in). Sunday after the investigator Sunday School class Brüder Pauli asked to talk to me and Sister Blohm and explained how the mother of this family had spoken to him and was very worried about the situation and didn't want to always be responsible for giving this man a ride and she thought the home where he lived was dangerous and didn't want the sisters to go there. She was totally judging the situation and didn't even tell Brüder Pauli that the Auslander is a MEMBER and maybe she just didn't really know. And we didn't go to the refugee house looking for people like I think she thought. We just happened to meet Kevin on the street because Heavenly Father wanted us to. I’m sad that she was choosing to be afraid instead of helpful.

Anyway the Kevin story will have a happy ending, I'm convinced. He was so happy to have met us and he bore his testimony to us and told us about his efforts to share the gospel and how he's trying to get to the temple. We will be meeting with him this week. But meeting Kevin on the street was a very spiritual experience for me. I know Heavenly Father was aware of him and his needs. Heavenly Father knew that Kevin was in Switzerland and had been living here for the last month feeling a little lost and alone. And I know He loves me too because he allowed me to witness this miracle.
  
Want to know a secret? I started planning in my head our return trip to Switzerland/Austria together. Okay, secret's out. I know at one point you had said you were interested in picking me up, but since that doesn't work can we come the summer after I get home? I told everyone in Schaffhausen when I had to say goodbye that I would be back. And they said, "Everyone says that." And I said, "No, I really will. Hopefully in a year and a half." So just so you know . . . Ha ha what do you think? I just want to know when we will come back. This week a missionary who served in Solothurn (twice!) and who was in my district for a while in Schaffhausen came back with her family. She is from Germany. One night someone rang our doorbell at 9:30 and Sister Blohm and I were thinking, "Uh . . . Who is that?" But it was just Sister Graf stopping by! And she was just so unbelievably happy to be back in her mission with her family. She couldn't stop laughing and smiling. She had only been home 6 weeks and then they came back to visit.

At GMK Brüder Pauli asked us how our apartments are and if we really need anything. So Sister Blohm and I mentioned that we actually have two major light fixtures that are broken. And no, they do not just need replacement lightbulbs (Of course that was the elders' first question. But no we are not that dumb!). Turns out Brüder Pauli has had some electrical training, so he wanted to come take a look right then and there. That meant the elders had to come too since he can't come alone. And I'm thinking uhhh . . . our apartment is in the worst stage of my unpacking.. So they come to our apartment and yes there is something complicated going on up there on our ceiling so Brüder Pauli will have to buy something to fix it.

Elder Kelly: "Not gonna lie Sister Lewis I expected your apartment to be way cleaner."

I was so embarressed! Our GML made fun of me too. It wasn't dirty, just messy! My stuff has not all found its rightful home yet. The good news is this apartment is already much easier to keep clean than the one in Schaffhausen.

Another quote of the week:
Sister Blohm to me: "Will you please sing with your beautiful voice and not your fake one?"

While waiting for the bus one night I found this cement thing to sit on and I said, "Sister Blohm you should come sit by me. It's comfy."

Sister Blohm:
"It's a rock! Rocks are not comfy. Rocks are hard and sharp and you use them to kill people!" By the end of that sentence she was sitting on the cement thing next to me. 

While sitting on that "rock" and waiting for the bus these two boys drove up playing loud music. And our bus stop was right next to a round-a-bout.
Me: "Watch this they're going to drive around the round-a-bout a bunch of times."
And they did and tried to get our attention when they came close to the bus stop. Then they drove away.
Sister Blohm yelling after them: "Yeah that's right you leave! I'm a MISSIONARY!"
Ah it was so funny.
Sister Blohm: "This must happen to you a lot at home because you knew exactly what they were going to do. I hope they go home now because I think they are drunk. Except they can't be drunk it's a TUESDAY!" Ha ha . . .  as if no one has ever gotten drunk on a Tuesday before . . .

Sister Blohm: "How did you get this personality?"
Me: "What personality?"
Sister Blohm: "The way you are! So happy all the time!"

Awwww that's nice, huh?

Well things are going well. You should have gotten some more stories from the forwarded emails I sent you (president's and the one to the ward).

I'm right next to the JURA! Tell Greg to send me his hikes and tell him thanks for my note!
Love you Family!!

What I wrote to President Miles today:

President Miles,


Thank you for your inspired message! I love to read what you have to say to us each week. Sister Blohm and I are doing well we are just trying to figure out how to help each of our investigators really take the next step. I seem to always make a "fantasy plan" for the people I meet about how I would like them to progress, but I know that even though these people never follow my plan for them, they have made progress nonetheless. At conference last weekend I had the privilege of watching one of the less actives we work with come to watch one of the sessions and have all the questions she had asked me earlier in the week answered better than I could have ever answered them. She was there for the Sunday Morning Session and she had questions like, "Why does God allow me to suffer so much?" and "Why must I have trials?". This week she told me about how what she heard at conference really helped bring peace to her soul. Thanks for everything!

Monday, April 7, 2014

"I just have to think of Louis Armstrong" - April 7, 2014 - from Solothurn, Switzerland

Family!  I'm here! . . . In Solothurn.  So I've decided that transfers are more accurately described as transplants. And I have totally been transplanted. Now I know how plants feel. But it's good. Guess what I see mountains every day now!! But I don't think they're very big.

Quotes of the week:

Sister Blohm telling me something and she said: "Sister . . . Lewis . . ."
Me: "You forgot my name!"
Sister Blohm: "No! Just for a minute . . . I just have to think of Louis Armstrong."

It's so funny because I've never known what it was like to have a hard name. But some people here have a hard time with it. I get compared to Levi Strauss the brand all the time too. (This may seem like quite a stretch unless you know that in German a "w" is pronounced like an American "V". )

Sister Siems: "I don't think I will ever have so much fun again in my life." Me either, Sister Siems. Me either.







My cute little Schaffhauseners were really sweet about saying goodbye to me. You may have noticed from the pics that we did get permission to go to the klettergarten with our JAE's and Steven. (I never did find any of those pictures on Dropbox).  It was too good. And just lots of great things happened. Bruder De Marzi hosted a beautiful brunch for the four of us missionaries in Schaffhausen to say goodbye and he also came to the train station. I got a blessing from him before I left too just because I was so nervous. 


When it was announced the Sunday before I left that I was transferred, there was an audible gasp and everyone turned to look at me. Manuel Bolli said to his mom (Schwester Bolli told me this later): "At least we got to celebrate her birthday with her, or I wouldn't have gotten any cake. But you can always buy a cake, but not a Sister Lewis."






The Schaffhausen Missionaries

I'm feeling just a little lost. But I think that's normal. All of the sudden I'm in a new place and have no idea who anyone is or how to get anywhere or where I am even supposed to go.

Guess what President and Sister Miles came to our fireside and Sister Miles played the flute in the "Oh How Lovely was the Morning" choir piece and they both sang in "I Am A Child of God" with all the missionaries. This is what President Miles said to me in his email:"The fireside was amazing. Thanks so much". 


This is Sister Miles! 

And HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO TARA!!! (Katie's sister-in-law)

As you will also notice from the pictures, I insisted that Sister Siems and I get pictures with the Missionsweg and Zionsweg in Zurich that the Schwamendingen Sisters had told us about. (I would love to know the origins of these street names!)


I hope you are happy with your pictures. Sister Siems and I tried to take a lot. As you can see, I need to be eating healthier . . . and guess what! This morning I discovered that we have a way nice Bosch mixer and a nice blender!! This weekend really is Christmas. First conference, and now a blender! But yeah. so send the healthy smoothie recipes my way. 

Was conference not THE BEST? (Twice a year, in April and October the LDS Church has what we call "General Conference". General Conference is four 2-hour sessions on Saturday and Sunday of Church of talks from leaders in the Church that is broadcast all over the world translated into almost 100 languages.  Lots of inspirational stuff!) Yes, it was. Family, sounds like you're all about to launch into some major study of PMG (see Elder Ballard's talk). Can't wait to hear what you learn!

So this ward has just gotten a new GML. We had our first GML meeting on Friday and I think the new GML will be great, even though he might still think my name is Sister Kelly and Elder Kelly's name is Elder Lewis. Have I ever mentioned Elder Kelly? Probably not but he is one of my best friend elders and I seem to be following him around. He left the Wien zone a transfer before I did and the Zurich zone a transfer before I did. He was my zone leader in Zurich for three transfers and he told me before he left that he hoped I would come to Solothorn after the next transfer to which I basically replied, "No thanks." But here I am! If you're thinking "Oh, you know sister missionaries and their zone leaders . . ." you can stop it right now. Elder Kelly is a baby 19-year-old Irish redhead. But he is a really good missionary.


We watched conference at our ward building. So I have gotten to meet a few members so far. This ward is big. I think it's bigger than Wien 1. I've heard we have the largest primary in Switzerland and the largest Young Womens in the stake.

Sister Blohm is from Denmark . . . She is cool. I will always be in awe of people like her who grew up in a place where hardly anyone  even knows about the church. Her German is . . . worse than mine. But I think Heavenly Father is just trying to tell me, "Sister Lewis, I need to be able to count on your German." This is my second companion with German worse than mine and so I'm just learning that I need to really work on mine. But it's very overwhelming. I miss Sister Siems . . .
 I am also emailing from the church! This church has two computers. We live only a 10-minute walk from the church and a 2-minute bus ride, but the bus only comes every 30 minutes. I don't actually live in Solothurn,  but in Bellach, which is very close.

Conference. I still can't get over it. Just a few little favorite phrases I wrote down. Some of these I'm not sure if they're my words or the speaker's. But mostly I think they're direct quotes.

"Defend with courtesy and compassion, but defend your beliefs."

"What would Jesus do does not always bring a popular response."

"Disciples are sometimes also called upon to worry, warn, and weep."

"Our greatest filter is a deep and abiding testimony." (so true!!!!).

"We are nothing without our roots and branches." (referring to our extended family)

"No matter how good your message is, it won't be received without consistent follow up." (soooooooooooo important for missionary work!).

"Families are the treasure of Heaven."

"All mankind may be saved by obedience."

I hold in my hands the happiness of more people than I can imagine.

Never neglect the most important meeting to assemble with the saints.

The last time Joseph Smith ever met with the quorum of the 12 was WHEN HE GAVE THEM THEIR ENDOWMENT. He lived just long enough to teach about redeeming the dead.

Don't wait to see the rainbow before thanking God for the rain (I could see that becoming some cute pinterest quote as soon as he said it).

Be grateful no matter what. This will bring us peace.

We have a short life, and an eternity to think back on it.

And soooooo many others. I was not planning on writing that many. Sister Blohm and I tried watching the relief society (slash primary and young womens?) session in German. Let's just say I should probably watch it again in English.

Well like always, here is another scatter-brained email. Hope you enjoyed it. I am especially grateful right now, like many of you, for the blessing of living prophets. I thought more about asking questions this time and trying to receive answers during conference and the answers were TOTALLY THERE. Life is good. God loves you.

As I have said before, some of my best stories never even get told to you in my letters  because sometimes I just don't like the ending!  For example, we met this miracle couple on the way home from conference on Saturday and invited them to come on Sunday . . . but they didn't. I was like the little boy in that story of the open house the way I kept checking for them. But, we have her phone number and maybe someday she will answer. But it was really cool to bear testimony to them of a living prophet having just come from a session of general conference.  And as I've said before, that doesn't mean it wasn't a miracle even if it doesn't end the way I would like! 

Love you all!