I can't even believe it!
First, a little about the trip: I
was sitting next to someone on a window seat on the plane to London, so I was
excited for a really long, really squishy trip, but then the flight attendant
came and asked me if I would like a seat with more leg room, which I gladly
accepted. So I had leg room and I talked to a lady from London for a lot of the
time and spent the rest of the time sleeping. I was disappointed I didn't sit next to a
Norwegian on the plane, but I am here now and I get to talk to a lot of them
every day, so I suppose that isn't so big of a deal. I love London, and we saw all the major
landmarks there like the Eye of London from the plane so that was cool. Our
plane was delayed in Dallas, so when we landed, there were people there that
rushed us through customs and we cut to the front of all the lines and we
barely made it onto our connecting flight to Oslo before the gates closed. I
think we got a lot of nasty glares, but we were all just glad we made it. After
a really long day of travel and rushing through the London airport to barely
make our flight to Oslo, it was such a relief to finally make it to the mission
home and sit down....for maybe two seconds. After that it was off to dinner with
the mission president then sleep and then off to our areas, and after that all
I remember is a blur of events.
I am still wondering if perhaps I am dreaming this all and I
will wake up in my warm bed in Utah. Everything
is all so new; the language, the people, the city and the culture. I am serving
in Oslo, Norway! Yes it is true, I am now living in the most expensive city in
the world. How lucky is that? There are
so many stores and subways and trains and people. I can see the king’s palace
from my apartment, and I live in a beautiful city full of rich history and
culture. My comments about the city:
fast is a good word to describe it, everyone dresses really well, and everyone
should have the opportunity to eat Kebob (a really great restaurant) at least
once before they die.
Meals aren't that different here, we ate twice with members
so far and they served pasta and chicken, so that was normal, but some very
Norwegian things I have eaten so far include a piece of bread with jam and
cheese on it for breakfast, a hot dog served on a crepe-looking tortilla thing
with potato salad and this amazing sweet mustard on it (which tastes soo good
by the way) and a sandwich with butter and raw salmon, which I think dad would
like. But other than that, it is pretty normal, I just eat cereal sometimes for
breakfast and other ordinary things.
We wake up at 6:30 and prepare til 8:00, then we have
studies till 12:00 and lunch til 1:00, then we go out and begin to work. That
could be street contacting or knocking doors or having appointments. This week,
we took a ferry across the fjord and went knocking (they call it bonking here)
to an area and it was really cool. The houses looked like what you picture when
you think Norwegian and there were weeds growing on the roofs and you could see
the fjord from the houses, and it was all very Norwegian. We didn't have any
success, but it was cool. Oslo is a very cool city, and I am grateful to be
able to learn Bokmål here before I go to other cities and have to learn
different dialects.
Laundry takes longer over here, but we have a washer and dryer
in our apartment, so that is very convenient. We are lucky to be able to
have a dryer, because I don't think that any other missionary apartments
have one. There is a grocery store right by our apartment where we buy our food
and it is kind of expensive, but that is to be expected here, and they give us
enough money to get by. Elder Gunther is
up in Narvik, which is a little city in the north, and I haven't been able to
hear how he is doing yet.
My companion's name is Elder Badger and he is from
Salt Lake. He is a zone leader, a district leader, and my trainer, so that is
really weird. It is hard not to get frustrated sometimes because we end up
going on splits a lot so he can do things with the other zone leader and I get
put with another greenie, so it feels like I might as well not have a trainer a
lot of the time. The other greenie can't speak Norsk very well, so I end up
doing a lot of the things, which is hard, but I suppose that it helps me to
learn faster. People here compliment me
on my Norsk a lot, so that makes me feel good, and I am learning more each day. We talk to everyone on the streets about the
gospel and not many people actually care to listen. But there are a few. They
are out there. So we will continue to work until we find the people the Lord
has prepared for us to find. I taught one investigator so far and we have another appointment with him later, but when I got here my companion didn't have any investigators, so we have just been focusing on finding this week, specifically street contacting and some knocking on doors. It was really hard at first because it was tough to want to stop people on the street if I knew I wasn't going to be able to understand what they are saying, but it is getting easier now, and we are finding a lot of potential investigators, so that is good.
I gave a talk in church this Sunday. It was my first week,
what were they thinking? But everyone could understand me I think, so that is
all that really matters, right? I talked about member missionary work because
we are really trying to get the members more involved in the work here. One thing I have realized is the truth of the
statement that President Hinckley once made. To paraphrase, here it is: Anyone
who has truly studied the process of missionary work in the church today will
know that there is a better way than merely contacting and knocking on doors.
That way is through the members of the church. And it is true. Here I am in
Norway. I don't have any friends and I can barely speak the language, and I am
trying to find the people that will hear the gospel. I can find a few people on
my own, but it is not as effective as it could be. I have a testimony that
missionary work will come alive when the members and the missionaries can work
together to spread the good news. Members have many friends and, better yet,
can judge who will receive the gospel and in exactly what way they will receive
it. We need the members of the church to help us accomplish this great work we
have been called to do. The Lord has said: and if ye have desires to serve thy
God, then ye are called to the work. So let us all work together and pray to
the Lord for the courage to share the good word with those that we know. It can
be a scary thing, but it need not be. We are simply sharing something with them
that has the power to literally change their life, and will bring them so much
joy. People's salvation is hanging in the balance of this work, and I do not
ever want to have to say that perhaps if I had tried a little harder, someone
could have been brought into the fold. I love this work and I love all of you.
Gud vær med dere til vi ses igjen!