Dear Family and Friends,
Wow, what
a week! It was a good week, all things considered :) I am very happy to
say that I got the family package :) YEAH!!! I am loving the music,
although my companion Elder Kern is already sick of it...haha, but he is very patient! I've
pretty much already eaten all the candy you guys sent me, it was very
good!! :D I'm so very grateful for the journals, I've been trying to
catch up on a few things that I've been short on! The dog buzzer/taser
is fantastic!! Elder Osbon tries to use it on me...? :) Haha!!! All in
all, fantastic! So the weather is starting to change ... finally! It's
been quite cold these last few mornings and the temperature during the
day isn't too hot.
We
have the coolest plans for General Conference. We all bought TONS of
chocolate milk and tons of materials to bake cookies!! We're baking
homemade cookies to eat during the sessions and we are going to order
Papa John's between sessions!!! :D We are going to watch General
Conference in English as much as we can. We are trying to invite
everyone we can to go but we want them to sit with the members instead
of us. Hopefully it works out! We are teaching an inactive returned
missionary (went to Australia) and he accepted our invitation to go to
G.C. He's coming with us to the priesthood session and said he wants to
watch it in English! :) WHOOT!
Update on some people:
that lady, N. who was a reference we got turned out to live in the
Hermana's sector. I'm okay with that because the Hermana missionaries
there are AMAZINGLY good and they are also in my same district so they
keep us updated. Apparently they went by and N. was expecting my
companion and I so she was quite confused... The sisters explained that
they heard that she listened to a message from a few elders. She said
yes!! The sisters said, "From Elder Bushman." The sister missionaries
said that she was like, "Yeah, Elder Bushman" and then she let them in
on the spot and now they are teaching her. I was really happy when I
heard it!! :D The lady in the Netherlands will be there until like the
start of June so I won't see her for a while.
So
an amazing experience we had was with a guy named L. The
Sunday
before last Elder Kern and I were heading to an appointment we had when
all the sudden this guy yelled, "Hey, give me something to read." He was
sitting down on the inside of his front patio and was drinking and
smoking. We gave him a pamphlet and started talking to him. He said he
has felt really alone and with no purpose at all. I asked him, "What do
you think your purpose is here." He said straight up, "I don't know... I
feel like all I do is work." We explained a little bit of the nature of
God and who we are as His children. We said we would explain more later
and passed by the next day. He was so much happier when we passed by
and we explained lesson 1, the Restoration and helped him understand
that he can have eternal happiness if he follows Christ. He accepted a
BofM and prayed with us. We've tried to teach during the week but he was
always busy until we stopped by on
Saturday and had a good lesson with
him. We talked a bit about the Book of Mormon and the Holy Ghost and how
we can know that this message is true. He again prayed with us and
accepted our invitation to go to church. He didn't go (I assume he had
to work) but we also invited him to be baptized when he knows that this
is true and he readily said, "Yes I will." :) We truly believe that he
is a chosen investigator and a man that God has been preparing for a
while!! We're excited to see his progress.
One of the
biggest things I am learning right now is who I want to be when I get
back and what I want to do. I have a vision of myself magnifying my
calling, sharing the gospel with people at work,etc., studying the
scriptures faithfully, using my time on
Sunday wisely, etc. I really
want to go home converted from my mission, I know it is essential that I
do, and I want to make sure that I am converted to what the mission
taught me. That is the biggest lesson so far I think.
Here in Chile,
everything is pretty much double the cost of things up there in the
States. Food is EXTREMELY expensive. A one liter carton of milk is like
$1.50... Personal care products such as shampoo, soap, detergent, etc.,
is just a lot of money. I'm able to cover everything with what I have
but in general things are expensive here. Some differences between here
and the states are the fact that there are security guards in every
grocery store, we have to tip the baggers, there are TONS of drunks just
wasted in the street. Also, in the states we have to go to some sort of
grocery store to get certain items, but here, you can get most
everything you need from small little stores called "almacenes" that
people just open up from their house. There is usually one within a two
minute walk from your house. The construction of the houses is poor
because most people do things themselves. If you want the job done
right, you gotta pay big bucks to get a real workman to come in.
Anyways, those are some small differences :) Haha!
I've pretty much
decided that I'm going to study business when I get home, get a masters
with it, and a minor in Spanish. We'll see how it goes, but I'm ready! :D
Anyways, that's the letter for the week! Keep living guys and I love you all!
Elder Bushman