Monday, March 31, 2014

The Beef Jerky Lesson

Dear One and All,

Well, would you believe it, spring is finally here! I know! I find it hard to believe myself. I officially stopped wearing tights the other day, which was mind blowing because like, I've been wearing about three layers of tights every day since around November, so having my legs all exposed to the world feels like a new experience. Not to mention since my legs have not received sun for so long, they are blindingly white and pale. So yes. But because it's starting to be spring, that means the Cherry Blossoms are starting to peep out their noses. I am really excited to see these, because all the Japanese people keep saying, "もうすぐ春です!" and then going on about how pretty the cherry blossoms are in the spring. So, hopefully I will get to see some soon. There are apparently some down by a small river next to our apartment that are just starting to bloom, so that is something to look forward to! I'll send pictures.

The area here in Kitarokko is really 否か which means country. It is pretty much in the middle of no-where. Oh, and it's up in the mountains too, so yes, more hills to bike up! Yah for hills! This might sound sort of strange, but I really like the smell of the air up here. It's all clean and fresh...and yes, it's hard to describe but it makes me feel really good and happy inside. There isn't much streeting to do because nobody is really out and about. So we spend most of our days out housing.

On Saturday, I was looking in the cupboard for some food, when suddenly I got one of those really weird cravings. You know the kind I mean. Like, you just have this random urge to eat some strange food, and for me on Saturday night it was beef Jerky. Don't ask me why. I just looked at the food cupboard in our apartment, and I just thought to myself, "Wow, I wish we had some beef jerky right now" but of course, there was no beef jerky to be found. In fact, beef jerky isn't something you can find in Japan. So I let that go and moved on with missionary life.

But the story doesn't stop there. The next day at church, something really crazy happened. The members leave little baskets out for people to put food in for the missionaries to take home (we usually get things like bread or pasta). But can you guess what was in that basket? Yes, it was a bag of American Beef Jerky. My mind was completely blown away! Where did the members even find that? It is pretty impossible to locate in Japan. How had they known I was just wishing I had some to eat the day before?
 
Beef Jerky in Japan!  

This experience might seem small and a bit silly, but it reinforced something to me. It re-taught me a powerful lesson. God knows us. He knows what we think, what we feel, and what we desire. He wants to help us. He wants us to be happy. He knew that I wanted some beef jerky, and arranged things so that I could have it. It was a very small thing, but I was able to remember that God is always watching out for us.

I know He loves me. I know that He knows me. I know that I am His daughter.

He loves me enough to send me Beef Jerky in Japan.

And He loves each one of us enough to send us His son, Jesus Christ.

Sister Weigl


Five Questions:

1.  How long has your companion been out and where is she from? 
She's been out for 5 transfers (six months) and is from Ohio. She went to BYU Provo for a year before her mission, so we were there around the same time. 

2.  How does your new area differ from you old area? 
Hmmmm...it's more country. It's REALLY country, actually. It's like...all rice fields. 

3.  What is your apartment like? Is it as nice as the new one you just left?
It's nice! This area was just opened for sisters about five transfers ago, so it's still pretty new and clean. 

4.  How did you get to your new area? Did you meet up half way, travel by yourself? How far from your old area? 
We met up with a whole bunch of other missionaries at this big train station called Sannomia. That's where I met up with my new companion, then we traveled back to Kitarokko, which was about an hour. 

5.  What’s the new ward like? 
About the same size as my ward in Hanayashiki. They are GREAT. 

My new companion, B-shimai is great! She makes me smile and laugh! She's also really good at Japanese! It was kind of hard to say good-bye to the ward members in Hanayashiki, but it just felt like it was the right time to leave, if that makes any sense at all. 

Monday, March 24, 2014

He Knows Your Name

Dear One and All,

Well, my time in Hanayashiki has come to an end. It's a bittersweet end, but I have hope for the future. The future is bright. Hope is such a wonderful feeling. Knowing that the future holds amazing things, amazing miracles, well, it helps you to move forward. Knowing that what is ahead is even better and grander than what is behind -- that is true hope. And what is ahead truly is grand. One day each of us will be reunited with our King and Lord, and have eternal happiness. In our times of darkness, let us keep that image of bright hope foremost in our minds.

I have seen miracles here in Hanayashiki. I have preformed miracles here in the name of the Lord. I have learned more about the Lord, Jesus Christ, here than I have ever learned in my life. I have grown. I have changed. I am not the same person I was before, and I know that was all part of God's plan. God has got it all figured out. He has a plan. He knows what I need. He knows what to do to help me grow. He knows me perfectly. In fact, He knows each one of us perfectly. That's quite a thought, huh?

Think about it. God knows you by name. He is ever calling after you. Sure, we might not ever hear His actual voice, but that doesn't mean that He isn't there. That doesn't mean that He doesn't love us. 

Church leader Elder Neal A. Maxwell said: “I testify to you that God has known you individually ... for a long, long time.  He has loved you for a long, long time. He not only knows the names of all the stars, He knows you.”

Elder Jeffrey R. Holland has told us: “No one of us is less treasured or cherished of God than another. He loves each of us – insecurities, anxieties, self-image, and all. ... He cheers on every runner, calling out that the race is against sin, not against each other.”

And finally, President Thomas S. Monson has said, “Heavenly Father loves you—each of you. That love never changes. It is not influenced by your appearance, by you possessions, or by the amount of money you have in your bank account. It is not changed by your talents. It is simply there. It is there for you when you are sad or happy, discouraged or hopeful. God’s love is there for you whether or not you feel you deserve love. It is simply always there.”

I have felt God calling my name. I have felt His love, and that love is what has brought me peace when I didn’t think that I would ever be able to find any. I know that He loves me. And I know that He loves you. It is a love that never ends.  It extends past all imagination. He loves you when you make mistakes. He loves you when you are doing what’s right. He loves you when you wake up, before you put on your make-up and you have some dried drool crusted on the side of your cheek. He loves you when you loose that basketball game. He loves you when you mess up that Chemistry test. He loves you when you are jamming out to music in your car. He loves you always. He loves you even when you don’t love yourself. In fact, I would think that he loves you especially hard then.

He is calling you by name.

How will you answer that call?

Sister Weigl


FIVE QUESTIONS:

1. Did you get any snow this week? 
No, we didn’t get any snow.  In fact, it’s slowly been warming up recently.

2. Have you seen any Cherry Blossoms yet, or is it too early?
It’s still too early; they come out in April. And since I am going to a new area, I don’t know if there will be a lot of them there.

3. Are there any special holidays in Japan for the months of April and May?
I have no idea.  Probably. I’ll let you know when they pop up.

4. Name one funny thing you or your companion did last week?
T shimia had a really runny nose, so she carried this pink towel around with her everywhere to use like a tissue.  Sooooo gross! And then sometimes she would wave it in my face, just to be funny, haha!

5. Who are the Elders serving with you in your current ward and do you see much of them through out the week?

A - Choro (he is from Australia, but he went home today)
G - Choro (he is half Japanese and from Minnesota)
R – Choro (he just came out to Japan this transfer)
We see t hem a good deal in the week.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The Race

Good Evening, Everyone!

I've been thinking about running a lot recently. My companion and I sometimes wake up early and go running, which is always great. Our apartment is right next to this beautiful river that has a trail running right along side it. Running along it as the morning sun touches the rushing waters is just wonderful - and it gives me the opportunity to think and ponder about...well, life in general.

This morning as I was running alongside this river, I remembered a poem that a Sister in my District shared with me not too long ago. It is called, "The Race," by Dr. D.H. "Dee" Groberg. In essence, the story of the poem goes like this: A little boy is running a race. He sees in his mind the glory of winning, and he is sure he can win the gold metal for his dad, who is watching out in the crowd. He is so excited to make his dad proud....but he trips and falls flat on his face. "It's okay, I can still win!" he thinks, so he gets back up again and keeps running. But once again, he falls down. In fact, this little boy falls down not once, not twice, but THREE times, all in the same race! You would think he would give up at that point, right? Nope. He keeps getting back up and eventually, he makes it over the finish line. He was in dead last.

The poet explains,
“And even though he came in last with head bowed low, unproud,
you would have thought he'd won the race, to listen to the crowd.
And to his dad, he sadly said, 'I didn't do so well.'
'To me, you won,' his father said. 'You rose each time you fell.
And now when things seem dark and bleak and difficult to face,
 the memory of that little boy helps me in my own race.
 For all of life is like that race, with ups and downs and all.
And all you have to do to win is rise each time you fall.”

I think we all get a bit too concerned with the so called "success" of our own races. Are we in first? Are we winning? We compare ourselves to the progress of those around us, and by that measure, we determine whether or not we are "winning" the race of our own lives. However, does winning the gold, coming in first, really matter as much as we all might think?

God is not so much concerned with us winning the gold. No. I believe that God is like that dad in the poem. He is so proud of us when we get up and dust ourselves off. When we keep going, despite how hard it is, or how many times we've fallen. To Him, the most important thing is that we keep running.

 I get too focused on the number of times I have "fallen" in my own race. I get caught up in how far behind I am compared to the rest of the pack. I let those things dig at my soul and weigh me down, and at those times I feel like giving up. I sometimes want to just lay down and accept my defeat. I think, as the little boy in that poem did, "I'm hopeless as a runner now, I shouldn't try to race." Haven't we all felt that way, before?

And that is EXACTLY what Satan wants, right!

We should NEVER let those thoughts keep us from getting up and winning that race! President Monson said, "Although the race of life can be challenging, we do not run alone. Family, friends, and leaders will cheer our courage, will applaud our determination as we rise from our stumblings and pursue our goal. ... Let us shed any thought of failure. ... Let us seek; let us obtain the prize prepared for us."

So, let us all remember this little boy. Let us remember how proud God is of each one  of us. Let us rise each time we fall. As the poet wrote, "And when depression and despair shout loudly in my face, another voice within me says, 'Get up and win that race!' "

Sister Weigl

FIVE QUESTIONS:

1. What is one thing your companion did this week that made you laugh?
Her shoe accidentally fell off when we were walking down the church stairs, and it fell in between the cracks of the stairs, onto this tool shed. So I had to climb up on this shed to get it back for her...hahaha

2. What is one thing you did that made your companion laugh?
Take a picture of her when she was using her mirror (she is ALWAYS checking herself in this little mirror she carries around with her).

3. What advice would you give a future missionary about being stressed about tracking?
RELY ON THE LORD. HE HAS ALL POWER. HE HAS ALL KNOWLEDGE. Why should you fear those people, when the Lord God Almighty literally has "got your back?"

4. What is your favorite Japanese food?
ALL OF IT. But I really like this thing called Inarizushi. (Note: It is named for the Shinto god InariInarizushi is also known as "brown bag sushi" because the rice is packed in seasoned aburaage, or fried tofu pouches. Because the aburaage keeps the rice held together so well, and it's usually made with just rice inside,  Inarizushi is easy to eat, even when using your hands.)

5. What do you like most about your current apartment besides the fact that it is new?
It has BEDS. I don't have to sleep on the floor anymore!


Inarizushi



Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Doing The Impossible

Dear Minnasan,

Sort of a tough week. Not necessarily because of a lack of being busy (we had lots of appointments this week) but mostly due to my own feelings. I feel like I am not moving forward as well as I should. As fast as I could. I try to remind myself what I have learned in the past, "It's about direction, not speed," but it's still difficult to see where I could be, where I am now, and the gap that lies between. But I guess that is the beauty of life, and I should not get so frustrated over it.

T Shimai and Shimai Weigl 
Does anybody feel like that sometimes? Do you sometimes get this small glimpse of what you could do, of what you could accomplish with the Lord’s help? It’s absolute great, huh? To see yourself doing the things you’ve always wanted to. Accomplishing the goals you’ve set for yourself. When you get those small, precious glimpses of the success that lies just around the corner, it’s easy to get all excited. It’s easy to want to get to work. But then, things get hard and losing the ambition that you once had becomes pretty much inevitable.

This is a story I read that really taught me a lot about this:

“No one in our Utah town knew where the Countess had come from; her carefully precise English indicated that she was not a native American. From the size of her house and staff we knew that she must be wealthy, but she never entertained and she made it clear that when she was at home she was completely inaccessible. Only when she stepped outdoors did she become at all a public figure—and then chiefly to the small fry of the town, who lived in awe of her.

The countess always carried a cane, not only for support, but as a means of chastising any youngster she thought needed disciplining. And at onetime or another most of the kids in our neighborhood seemed to display that need. By running fast and staying alert, I had managed to keep out of her reach. But one day when I was about thirteen, as I was short-cutting through her hedge, she got close enough to rap my head with her stick.

‘Ouch!’ I yelled, jumping a couple of feet. ‘Young man, I want to talk to you,’ she said. I was expecting a lecture on the evils of trespassing, but as she looked at me, half smiling, she seemed to change her mind.

‘Don’t you live in that green house with the willow trees in the next block?’

‘Yes, ma’am.’

‘Good. I’ve lost my gardener. Be at my house Thursday morning at seven, and don’t tell me you have something else to do; I’ve seen you slouching around on Thursdays.’

When the Countess gave an order, it was carried out. I didn’t dare not come on that next Thursday. I went over the whole lawn three times with a mower before she was satisfied, and then she had me down on all fours looking for weeds until my knees were as green as the grass. She finally called me up to the porch.

‘Well, young man, how much do you want for your day’s work?’

‘I don’t know. Fifty cents, maybe.’

‘Is that what you figure you’re worth?’

‘Yes’m. About that.’

‘Very well. Here’s the fifty cents you say you’re worth, and here’s the dollar and a half more that I’ve earned for you by pushing you. Now I’m going to tell you something about how you and I are going to work together. There are as many ways of mowing a lawn as there are people, and they may be worth anywhere from a penny to five dollars. Let’s say that a three-dollar job would be just what you have done today, except that you’d have to be something of a fool to spend that much time on a lawn. A five-dollar lawn is—well, it’s impossible, so we’ll forget about that. Now then, each week I’m going to pay you according to your own evaluation of your work.’

I left with my two dollars, richer than I remembered being in my whole life, and determined that I would get four dollars out of her the next week. But I failed to reach even the three dollar mark. My will began to falter the second time around her yard.

‘Two dollars again,’ eh? That kind of job puts you right on the edge of being dismissed, young man.’

‘Yes’m. But I’ll do better next week.’

And somehow I did. The last time around the lawn I was exhausted, but I found I could spur myself on. In the exhilaration of that new feeling, I had no hesitation in asking the Countess for three dollars.

Each Thursday for the next four or five weeks, I varied between a three-and a three-and-a-half dollar job. The more I became more acquainted with her lawn, places where the ground was a little high or a little low, places where it needed to be clipped short or left long on the edges to make a more satisfying curve along the garden, the more I became aware of just what a four-dollar lawn would consist of. And each week I would resolve to do just that kind of a job. But by the time I had made my three dollar or three and-a-half dollar mark I was too tired to remember even having had the ambition to go beyond that.

‘You look like a good consistent $3.50 man,’ she would say as she handed me the money.

‘I guess so’ I would say, too happy at the sight of the money to remember that I had shot for something higher.

‘Well, don’t feel too bad,’ she would comfort me. ‘After all, there are only a handful of people in the world who could do a four-dollar job.’

And her words were a comfort at first, but then, without my noticing what was happening, her comfort became an irritant that made me resolve to do that four-dollar job, even if it killed me. In the fever of my resolve, I could see myself expiring on her lawn, with the Countess leaning over me, handing me the four dollars with a tear in her eye, begging my forgiveness for having thought I couldn’t do it.

It was in the middle of such a fever, one Thursday night when I was trying to forget the day’s defeat and get some sleep, that the truth hit me so hard that I sat upright, half choking in my excitement. It was the five-dollar job I had to do, not the four-dollar one! I had to do the job that no one could do because it was impossible.

I was well acquainted with the difficulties ahead. I had the problem, for example, of doing something about the worm mounds in the lawn. The Countess might not even have noticed them yet, they were so small; but in my bare feet I knew about them and I had to do something about them. And I could go on trimming the garden edges with shears, but I knew that a five-dollar lawn demanded that I line up each edge exactly with a yardstick and then trim it precisely with the edger. And there were other problems that only I and my bare feet knew about.

I started the next Thursday by ironing out the worm mounds with a heavy roller. After two hours of that I was ready to give up for the day. Nine o’clock in the morning, and my will was already gone! It was only by accident that I discovered how to regain it. Sitting under a walnut tree for a few minutes after finishing the rolling, I fell asleep. When I woke up minutes later, the lawn looked so good and felt so good under my feet, I was anxious to get on with the job.

I followed this secret for the rest of the day, dozing for a few minutes every hour to regain my perspective and replenish my strength. Between naps, I mowed four times, two times lengthwise, two times across, until the lawn looked like a green velvet checkerboard. Then I dug around every tree, crumbling the big clods and smoothing the soil with my hands, then finished with the edger, meticulously lining up each stroke so that the effect would be perfectly symmetrical. And I carefully trimmed the grass between the flagstones of the front walk. The shears wore my fingers raw, but the walk never looked better.

Finally about eight o’clock that evening … it was all completed. I was so proud I didn’t even feel tired when I went up to her door.

‘Well, what is it today?’ she asked.

‘Five dollars,’ I said, trying for a little calm and sophistication.

‘Five dollars? You mean four dollars, don’t you? I told you that a five-dollar lawn job isn’t possible.’

‘Yes it is. I just did it.’

‘Well, young man, the first five-dollar lawn in history certainly deserves some looking around.’
We walked about the lawn together in the light of evening, and even I was quite overcome by the impossibility of what I had done.

‘Young man,’ she said, putting her hand on my shoulder, ‘What on earth made you do such a crazy, wonderful thing?’

I didn’t know why, but even if I had, I could not have explained it in the excitement of hearing that I had done it.

‘I think I know,’ she continued, ‘How you felt when this idea first came to you of caring for a lawn that I told you was impossible. It made you very happy when it first came, then a little frightened. Am I right?’

She could see she was right by the startled look on my face.

‘I know how you felt, because the same thing happens to almost everyone. They feel this sudden burst in them of wanting to do some great thing. They feel a wonderful happiness, but then it passes because they have said, ‘No, I can’t do that. It’s impossible.’ Whenever something in you says, ‘It’s impossible,’ remember to take a careful look and see if it isn’t really God asking you to grow an inch, or a foot, or a mile, that you may come to a fuller life.’ …

Since that time, some 25 years ago, when I have felt myself at an end with nothing before me, suddenly, with the appearance of that word,‘impossible,’ I have experienced the unexpected lift, the leap inside me, and known that the only possible way lay through the very middle of impossible.

Sometimes I feel like that little boy, who is stuck always doing a 3 dollar lawn job. Just stuck being my average self, unable to do any more or less than what I am doing already. But I don't want to be that kind of Gardner. I want to do the impossible. I want to get that Five Dollars. I want to look at the Lord one day and say, ‘Yes it is, I just did it.’

Just like the boy in the story, the solution to reaching the five dollar lawn, to accomplishing the impossible, has two steps. The first, having a vision. Seeing the"big picture" having a glimpse of what can be accomplished, and then holding onto that constantly, taking times, throughout our life to contemplate it, and remember our vision. Our goal.

I sometimes forget the "big picture" of my mission here in Japan - to find those ready to hear the gospel and invite them into the fold. To help them receive Eternal Life and Salvation to their souls. When I forget that, it becomes impossible to keep moving forward. I become like that boy, tired and sweaty on the lawn, ready to give up and receive his three dollars. But that's when we need to go take a rest under our own trees of life and evaluate what’s the real reason we here. The goal. The five dollars. Doing the Impossible.

When we have that vision firmly grasped, it moves us to the second step of the process: Hard work. Nothing good ever comes easy, but the outcome, the reward as it were, makes all the work and effort worth it. It is easy to get bogged down by how much we still have to do. To want to stop because of how tired we are. The sun is too hot, I still have so much to do. But let us think of the goal. Let us each work hard, and stick it out to the end. As it says in Mosiah 4:27, "And again, it is expedient that he should be diligent, that thereby he might win the prize."

Let us each be diligent.

Let us each work hard.

Let us each do the impossible, for with God, all things are possible.

Sister Weigl


We get bed frames - no more sleeping on the floor!
FIVE QUESTIONS:

1. Anything different happen with the ward, investigators, or your area this week? 
We met with a lot of previous investigators (all men), so we had to have a lot of members come with us -- since we are sisters we are not allowed to meet with a man by ourselves for obvious reasons. It's sort of weird, because I've only really taught women up till this point.

2. One funny thing that happened this week? 
Hmmmm....not exactly funny, but WE GOT BEDS FROM THE MEMBERS! YAY! Our futons were getting really moldy because we don't have tatami flooring (only wood) so in the morning the floor would always be a bit wet (sort of like dew). But they are so comfortable.

3. One sad thing that happened this week? 
Well, we had an appointment with this guy at the church, but it fell through because he said he had to go into work suddenly.

4. One thing that you learned this week from your companion? 
To try our best to become better missionaries everyday. She wants so much to serve with all her heart, might, mind, and strength.

5. One thing that you wish you had done different this week? 
Be more happy and smile more! I find myself sort of just going through the motions sometimes instead of enjoying every moment. 

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Rejoice, The Ransom Has Been Paid!

Dear Minnasan, 

It's crazy to think that it's March. It's weird to think that spring is just around the corner. All the Japanese people keep saying that Spring will be here in April and that's just a concept that is hard to wrap my head around. It's been winter for so long, I can't really remember what it's like to not have to wear three layers of tights, two long-sleeve undershirts, and then my heavy winter coat. I can't say that I am not looking forward to it though. One thing I've learned a lot about on my mission is change. Change is an exciting thing, not something to be looked at with fear or resentment. The changing of seasons always strikes us with lightness in our hearts, with excitement. Shouldn't the changing of our lives strike us with the same sort of feelings? 

Anyways, enough about the weather. Every week, the Mission President sends out a "Mission Email" to all the missionaries, just with announcements and little spiritual thoughts for us. This week, this was written. To those of you whom participated in the Young Women's program of the Church, this might sound a bit familiar: 

"We are His, we are Disciples of the Great Jehovah, who loves us and we love Him. We will stand as His witnesses at all times, and in all things, and in all places, as we strive to become his true disciples. Remembering faith, virtue, knowledge, temperance, patience, brotherly kindness, godliness, charity, humility, diligence. We believe as we come to understand and rely on His power, we will be able to find the Lord's Elect, strengthen homes and families, help them receive the ordinances of salvation, and enjoy the blessings of exaltation." 

I love that first line, "We are His, we are Disciples of the Great Jehovah..." It is true. We truly are His. We are His friends (John 15:14). We are His children (Mosiah 5:7). We are His, in every sense. He has paid the price for our mistakes. He has taken upon Him our every sin, our every experience, our every sorrow. It is through the spilling of His blood, His infinite and atoning sacrifice, that we can find peace and happiness, not only in this life, but for eternity. We are washed clean through Him. We are sanctified through Him. Our garments are washed white through the blood of the Lamb (Alma 13:11). 

He has paid the price, how great a price, I don't think I will ever to be able to understand. He, by His own choice, accepted the penalty of our mistakes. I think of it in the sense of paying a debt, as described by Jesus Christ Himself through a parable in the New Testament. 

We owe God a debt, and we don't have the money to pay Him. And because we are unable to pay, we are subject to Him, and His Justice, just as if we couldn't pay the mortgage on our house or a loan on a car. But that's where Jesus Christ steps in -- He says, "Here is the money you need," and gives it to us freely. 

And just think, He paid the sum total of not only my debt, or your debt, or your family's debt, but for the debt of every living creature. Think about if a single person had to pay bail for every person who had ever lived on this earth, or who is now living, or will live in the future. Think about how much money, in the literal sense, that would cost! Billions upon billions of dollars. If bail just cost one dollar for each person, that still would be an innumerable amount of money! And Christ paid so much more than a dollar for each of us. He paid with His own blood. 

Church leader, President Boyd K. Packer explains it like this:

"Jesus Christ, by choice, accepted the penalty in behalf of all mankind for the sum total of all wickedness and depravity, for brutality, immorality, perversion, and corruption; for addiction; for the killings and torture and terror -- for all of it that has ever been or all that ever would be enacted upon this Earth. In so choosing, He faced the awesome power of the evil one, who was not confined to flesh nor subject to mortal pain. That Was Gethsemane... 

How the atonement was wrought, we do not know. No mortal watched as evil turned away and hid in shame before the light of that pure being. All wickedness could not quench that light. When what was done was done, the ransom had been paid...men at last were free." 

The ransom has been paid. 
We have been set free. 
My brothers and sisters, I believe in Christ. 
He has ransomed me. 
From Satan's grasp, He has set me free. 

Sister Weigl