Monday, November 15, 2010

Transfer to Cuenca

Hello Family,

Elder Salvioli
I’m on the move again!  I just got reassigned to Cuenca.  I am working in the Molay sector, which is where Elder Gonzalez started his mission.  My new companion is another Argentinean, Elder Salvioli. Cuenca is quite different than either Guayaquil or Machala.  It is cooler, has lots of hills, and has no stray animals in the streets.  I am excited to start working here.  They are splitting Machala into two sectors and Elder Gonzalez is going to be the new Zone Leader. 

Cuenca, Azuay, Ecuador
(Cuenca, the 3rd largest Ecuadorean city, is up in the Andean highlands, 8300 feet above sea level.  The four rivers that make up the original Spanish name of this city are part of the Amazon river watershed.  Check out the new weather gadget...quite a change in temps!)

This week was a little slower.  I got to spend some time with Elder Snow, the new elder.  He speaks Spanish really well and we hit it off.  We have a lot of the same interests in music and school.  He is going to the Y, so we will have to meet up there again. 

Sign says "Don't leave trash here"
I had an experience with the converting power of the Book of Mormon.  Elder Gonzalez and I were going to a second appointment with an investigator, but we learned that he had been evicted so we decided to just teach the new family living there.  We did not teach much, just said what we do as missionaries and left them a Book of Mormon and told them to read it and pray to know if it was true.  When we came back, we asked the father if he had read and prayed.  He said he had.  We asked how he had felt during his prayer.  He said he felt the same way as when he first met us and then again after we came back.  He said he thought that this feeling is what was missing in his life and he wanted to become a member of our church.  Then I got transferred. 

If only we could get all our investigators to read and pray.  On my first day with President Montalti, he told me that people here don’t like to read and that challenging people to read would be one of the biggest struggles with investigators.  

Zone Activity at a Mexican Restaurant Back:Elders Velasco, Salvioli, Caal, Diaz, Ferrero, Jenkins, Ruiz, Ludlam; Front: Elder Kjar, Hnas Haggard, Glanzer, Elders Robinson, Johnson, Hnas Deninson, Castillo, Elder Badger
Well, I am excited to be working in this new sector.  It will be a different kind of experience.  I still will get to drink mate every night, though, so not too much will have changed.  Look forward to talking to you all soon.  Love, Elder Ludlam

Monday, November 8, 2010

Pancho & the Stampeding Chanchos

Hello Family!

Elder Snow
How are things back home?  Things here are great.  The new elder’s name is Elder Snow.   The ward is really excited to have four missionaries in Aurora.  This last Sunday, the Bishop said that he thought the ward was doing all the work they could in the missionary effort, but since the Lord decided to send two more missionaries, they are going to try and work even harder.  They are going to call four more male ward missionaries, two more sister missionaries, and a bunch more mamitas (sisters who feed the missionaries).  Talk about doubling the missionary effort!  Most of the ward missionaries here are young men who are preparing to leave on full-time missions soon. 

One time I was on a split with a young man named Andres.  He is the only member of the church in his family, but has been trying to get his family to join for years.  As we passed by his house, he said, “Hey, you should go tell my dad that he needs to go to church today.” His family accepted the invitation and are now all taking the discussions.  The last time we taught them everyone was there except for Andres.  Because Hernan, the father, is only home a short time on the weekends, we decided we did not want to miss the opportunity.  When Andres returned home that night and learned we had taught without him, he decided he would teach the whole lesson to his family again.  We called him during the middle of his lesson to ask about doing splits again.  At the end of our conversation he said, “Oh, wait, before you go, what’s that scripture where Phillip is talking to the eunuch and the eunuch asks what is stopping him from being baptized?”  We told him we thought it was in Acts 8 and he said, “Thanks,” hung up and ran back to go preach to his family.  I think he is excited to be a missionary.

I had my first strange Ecuadorian animal experience.  When we were helping Hermana Natividad work on her house, her daughter brought out their pet cusumbu, Pancho, to show us.  It is some kind of primate from the Sierra.  We though the cusumbu was pretty cool until the family decided to bring it to church to show all the ward members.  We had to lock up poor Pancho in a classroom during Sacrament Meeting.  We forgot about him until a class of Sunbeams found an exotic primate hanging from a bookcase in their classroom.  They all ran out screaming, followed by a very angry Pancho.  It was quite hilarious watching him waddle around the church. 

I also had another interesting experience with the Natividad’s other not-so-exotic animals.  She also has a couple of pigs.  During our first lesson, the pigs kept stampeding back and forth into the kitchen.  The room we were teaching in was really long and narrow, leading to the kitchen, so the family had to sit in two rows on either side of the kitchen door.  Every time the pigs would run through, they had to run the gauntlet because the family would enjoy taking turns kicking the squealing pigs in the side as they ran past.  Elder Gonzalez told me afterwards, “I’ve had kids argue, cats whine, dogs fight, and women breastfeed during a lesson, but never chanchos!" (pigs)

We were able to teach a man who sells newspapers in Quechua (a native Ecuadorian language).  He is very intrigued by the idea of Christ coming to visit his ancestors here in America and that they too had their own sacred record of prophecies and revelation like the Bible.  He is a very avid Bible scholar.  We are going to try and get him a Book of Mormon in Quechua.  He is very excited for our next appointment on Friday.

Goodbye at Machala bus station
I am glad Ava is really enjoying piano.  It clearly is the superior instrument.  How goes the battle against the American Girl Doll menace?  How are your voice lessons Lia?  I look forward to hearing from you all soon.  I learned that it will take a week to get the “dearelder.com” letters out in the field, so I won’t get to hear from you until next Tuesday.

Remember, Big Brother is watching…

Monday, November 1, 2010

Dancing Dinoflagellates & "Giving the Machete"

Hello Family,

Elder Maughn
Well, my bonus three weeks are up.  The rest of my travel group will be arriving on Wednesday.  A new elder, Elder Maughn, just moved in today.  He will be training one of the other newbies.  They are going to split our sector in two.  There are only four neighborhoods that we are working with right now, so the new companionship will help us cover more ground.  Our house is in Aurora, but we also have investigators from Rosita Nelly, Rayito de Luz, and Vergeles.  Rosita Nelly is probably the poorest, but it is also were we have the most people interested in our message.

I was glad to get the letters from Lia and Ava.  I am sorry all the stuff you made got lost in the mail.  Perry the Pumpkin was pretty cool.  So, did the Mortensons make this our first kitty-free Halloween? (No, but they did challenge us all to dress up as Harry Potter characters) 

Lia tells me that my English is starting to go.  After about the third day in Provo, all language became one big blur.  Communication on any level, in either language became challenging.  It has all been mixed up into one big language.  Elder Gonzalez tells me that during lessons, I like to throw in English words in the middle of my sentences to tie my ideas together.  My favorite words are: although, anyway, or, if, and sometimes. 

It seems to me that Lia does not have enough to do.  (Lia is taking 6 AP classes, clogging, playing in BYSO and teaching violin) She should take up Horticulture.  Sorry, but I don’t have any good Grandpa Ivan sibling advice (Grandpa liked to preach self-improvement to his siblings in his missionary letters), but I do have some bad advice.  Lia, I want to share my secret biology study strategy.  If you sleep on your book you really do retain the information better.  Just read a passage, take a little nap, and then reread the passage again.  Once you start having dreams about dancing dinoflagellates, you can be pretty sure you will do well on the test.  And Ava, people do get into BYU with Bs, trust me.  Sorry, Lia, if that invalidates anything I just told you.

This week we got to help a family build an addition onto their house.  We helped to put up some brick walls.  They all enjoyed watching the gringo try and use a machete. Here in Ecuador, when you lay into someone, they call it “giving them the machete.”   The family came to church this Sunday and had a good experience.   I liked what you said, Mom, about your lesson.  There were a few members who did not quite see the problem with running to the store across the street in between Sacrament Meeting and Sunday School.

This week, I did a lot of splits with members from the ward.  Working without an experienced companion made me appreciate Elder Gonzalez even more.  I have so much I can learn from him.

Well, I look forward to getting your letter tomorrow.  Talk to you next week.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Banana Capital of the World!

I am in Machala!    (Click here to find out more about Machala!)     

We got sent out here on Saturday.  We are now in the Aurora sector--which is about 70 times bigger than the sector in Guayaquil.  We are living with Elder Hickens.  It is a little strange to meet an elder and say “Hi, I’m Elder Ludlam.  My mom reads your blog.”

View from Grant's
Machala apartment
Our house is in the middle of the sector, on the fourth floor, way up in the clouds.  Just about every thing that we can see from our view is in our sector.  There is a lot bigger spectrum of economic status here.  In Guayaquil, everyone was about at the same level, living in little brick houses that are all built on top of each other.  Here in Machala, however, there are a number of members of the ward that have houses like you would see in the states while at the same time there are some members living in bamboo huts down in the mud.  It’s a pretty big range.

The ward here is fantastic.  Elder Gonzalez said he has never seen anything like it.  There are one or two young men preparing to leave in a few months on their missions who have been going on exchanges with us.  They have keys to our apartment, so they like to invite themselves over.  The ward is really supportive of the missionary effort and has given us a lot of contacts.  When they learned I could play the piano, they got real excited and said, ¨Finally, someone can play our piano.¨ I believe them when say that they have not had anyone touch it in several years because I don’t think they realized it has gone way out of tune.  After I played, I think they were all a little disappointed.  When I sat down, a ward member whispered to me, “I think the piano may be broken.”

Well, I am really excited to work with this area.  The people are a lot more open here than in Guayaquil.  We inherited a ton of investigators from the previous missionaries.  They have all said they were looking for something in their life, and they felt they found it when they met the missionaries.  It is rather remarkable how prepared some people are to receive the Gospel.  I think I will get to see more of the changes it can bring to peoples lives in this sector.
Maria Magdelena, Andres, Katty, Fabian Estacio

I enjoyed living in the office house for a little while, but it is kind of difficult to have a normal mission life, living with ten or twelve other elders, trying to coordinate who is going to meet which investigator when.  I learned that Assistant to the President only means that you are exempt from all the mission rules.  I had all the big mission home experiences: the iguana park, taxiing to all the different sectors, rat bashing, and sleeping with the air conditioning, etc., but it is nice to be able to just work with Elder Gonzalez and focus on our sector.

Well, I hope to hear from you all soon!


Monday, October 18, 2010

Surprise!

Surprise Family!

I get to write to you again today.  Saturday is only the P-day for the office.  Everywhere else in the mission it is on Monday.  Well, we have not heard back from the mission president yet, so it looks like we may be staying in our same sector for the next two weeks until the whole mission does transfers.  I think I like it this way because I will be able to stay with some of the families that we started teaching when I got here. 

Back: Elder Heaps, Ucler Zambrano, Xavier, Elder Caro;
 Front: Elder Barboza, Luna
There is one family, the Zambranos, with whom we have worked with the most.  Some of the little girls are members, but the parents are not.  We have been teaching the father, Ucler, and one of the daughter’s boyfriends, Xavier.  Ucler has already stopped drinking after two lessons.  I was surprised by how willing he was to start making the changes necessary to prepare for baptism.  We got them both to come to the activity on Saturday, church on Sunday, and a baptism later that night.  I have not been able to talk to them since, but they seemed to like it.  (We have six missionaries working in our sector right now, so we share a lot of our investigators)  It was ward conference, so they had a member do a special musical number on the violin.  He came back for the baptism and to accompany us as we all sang along.  The singing was almost on key, too. 

Anyway, I think they liked the music a lot.  The activity was a lot of fun.  For the Relief Society’s (women’s organization) number, they all stuffed pillows down the back of their shirts, like they had osteoporosis, and hobbled out onto the stage with canes and crutches.  They turned the music on, and they flung their canes off and started their merengue number.  It was pretty hilarious.

P-day hike overlooking airport with Office
(Elders Johnson and Mendez, Zone Leaders)
Well, I way lucked out on my companion.  We have a lot of missionaries pass through the office, and they have all told me I really am blessed to be able to have such a good trainer.  I look forward to learning a lot from him.  He really has a special way of winning the confidence of the people we teach.  He is a very caring person.  When he first made me some mate, he dumped a quart of sugar into it to try and mask the general taste of grass.  He’s going to slowly wean me off the sugar.  He makes us some mate for every companionship study.  It’s not too bad.  He is really good with both investigators and ward members.  Most families here do Family Home Evening on different days besides Monday, so we have been able to do a few family nights with them.  One family has three sons that we take out tracting almost every day.  They have been quite helpful.  I have enjoyed stepping back and looking at the range of families in this area.  There are one or two families that have had the gospel for a few years now, and it is great to think that the families we are teaching now might be as happy and blessed as these families in a few short years.

Well, how are things back home?  Is school still going well for everyone?  There was one girl I tried to help with her math homework here.  It was pretty fun trying to figure out what all the different math words were.  We’ll talk to you all next Monday.  Next week I’ll take my camera and see if I can send you some pictures.  Love you all,
Elder Ludlam

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Ecuador at last!

Hello Fam Fam,

Goodbye to Elders Mecham and Farrell in Lima airport
Ecuador at last!  We flew in on Tuesday afternoon, to what I am told was one of the hottest days in a while.  This is good news-- to know this is as hot as it gets.  We were picked up by Elder Griswold and Elder Guerrero (so I guess if you want, you can corroborate my story with his site).  Ten minutes out of the airport, I got to see Elder Griswold proselytize our taxi driver.  I guess the taxi driver belonged to some 666 church, and he and Elder Griswold went back in forth quoting scripture.  The taxi driver started pulling out chapters and verse numbers as he explained his beliefs.  Elder Heaps and I just sat in the back seat looking like deer in the headlights. 

The first day we got to study and hang around the office because Pres. Montalti was not there.  Elder Heaps and I are the only new missionaries, and since the MTC kicked us out in the middle of a transfer, the office was not ready to deal with us.  That night we got to go out tracting with the Assistants, which was really cool.  I think they gave me a skewed perception of how easy missionary work is.  I was really surprised at how similar our practice lessons in the MTC were to how real investigators would react in a lesson.  I remember thinking during our practice lessons, “A real investigator would never say that,” but sure enough, that is exactly how they reacted-- even in my first lesson. 

My trainer, Elder Gonzalez
We have been sleeping with all the office missionaries in their air conditioned mansion. The second day, we met the President and he gave us our new companions.  I will be working with Elder Gonzalez, from Buenos Aires, Argentina.  When he learned we would be companions, he said, “Do you know what yerba mate is?  Good.  Tonight we are going to start our companionship with some mate.”  He is really good to work with and has given me many opportunities to share in the lesson.  When he isn’t talking, I know that it is my turn to go.  When we are in a lesson, I can usually tell what is going on, but when we are just having a regular conversation, I can only pick out bits and pieces. 

I have now had the chance to teach some of the investigators a few lessons.  Even in just a few days you can really see a change in them once the start making commitments to follow the commandments.  I have been really surprised how quickly they make the necessary changes in their lives.  I am already drawing close to these people, but it looks like Elder Gonzalez and I will be heading out on Monday to a new sector to finish out the transfer.  We may move downtown where Elder Guerrero is working now or we may even be sent to Loja.

When we go out tracting, there are little kids everywhere playing in the streets.  They have these little goals they set up that just turn into road blocks.  There is one little girl that likes to test my Spanish knowledge every time we go by her house.  “How do you say giraffe in English?”  What does manzana mean?”  She likes to correct our pronunciation of English words.  One time Elder Heaps asked her, “How do you say ´nariz´ in English?”  She kept on saying “No sé ,” as in I don’t know, so Elder Heaps would say, “It’s nose,” and she said “No sé, that’s how you say it,” and ran back into her room to get her English flash cards to show us she was right. 

The Solana chapel
Well, hope to hear from you all soon.  Thanks for sending that conference question game, Mom. That was fun.  I am afraid your package did not make it to the MTC in time.  Make sure that if you send anything by US postage, you ask for a green sticker.  I don’t think you need to do anything for FedEx, though.   Tonight we have a ward activity.  They call it an open house, and we are having a talent show.  The Relief Society is doing a merengue number, which I think you’d like, Mom.  It should be fun.  Well, I’ll talk to you next week.
Love, Elder Viktor

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Unrest in Ecuador, Missionaries in Lockdown for 1 day

In case you may not have heard, Ecuadorean police in Quito shut down the airport and President Correa was tear gassed.  During this period, the larger cities had a lot of rioting and looting, including Guayaquil.  Calm seems to have returned for now.  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-11455665

Hello Family, 

Hermana Boza in green sweater
I had no idea about the unrest in Ecuador.  Tomorrow I will definitely have to ask my teachers what they know.  I don’t know if we will be flying in or busing up.  Some people are planning on leaving on Tuesday.  I don’t know when they are planning on sending the rest of our district off.  We are still basically the same district as Provo, only without the Bolivians and a few Hermanas added in.  I certainly am learning a lot here every day so I wouldn’t mind staying here a little longer. 

Elder Loli, Emeritus Seventy
There is an emeritus general authority that is somehow connected to the MTC here that we get the opportunity to teach every once in a while.  He has good suggestions on how to improve our teaching and is himself a very good teacher.  He also is very good at making any missionary who is trying to teach him sweat bullets.  He stretches us quite a bit.  We get a lot more teaching opportunities here.  I am getting to the point where I can understand almost everything the latino elders are saying when we teach.  What I probably am learning the most is how to direct the discussion.  Elder Hernandez and I try to always turn the investigators questions back into a gospel discussion.  Lately we have been working on how to share a message with someone if you only have a very short amount of time.  It gets better every day.
Elders Brown and Fuentes wave goodbye
I really do love the latino companions, even if they are always a little naughty.  It is strange though because the way things are set up here, we are in different districts than our companions.  The only times that we get to be with them are during meals and when we are teaching.  And futbol, of course!  The teachers told us that we could not have any more gringo vs. latino games.  It’s a good thing, too.  They all have such great senses of humor. 

Hermano Huerta, farthest right, 4th row
Well, General Conference was definitely the biggest event of the week.  I really got a lot out of it.  I think that with the greater responsibility of being a missionary, I was able to listen to the speakers on new levels.  I really liked President Monson's talk on gratitude.  That is what I want to focus on.  I like how he said that we cannot both be prideful and grateful at the same time.  I think that is what I like about teaching so much.  Once you let the spirit guide the lesson, you can step out of the way and focus on the investigator's needs.  It is always such a wonderful experience.  Elder Hernandez and I had certain topics we were working on improving that we were listening for instruction.  Many of the talks directly responded to our questions.  It truly was an answer to our prayers. 

Elder Hernandez is really happy because they announced a temple in Tijuana, which is where he is from.  I am glad because he can appreciate this blessing even more now that he has been through the temple.  It takes a while for the “dearelders” to get here.  I did not get my first one until the end of last p-day.  You should probably just start sending them up to the Guayaquil South Mission home now.  I hope I'll be up there to get them.  Well, I’ll probably write to you one more time from down here before I’m in the field.  Hope to here from you soon.  Yes, to your question, Mom.
Elder Rojas from Bolivia

Love Elder Lumlum