It is crazy to think that this is my last week as a missionary. I know that everyone says that but it hits differently when you yourself are in the situation. For the fourth of July we spent a couple of minutes in one of the church parking lots at around 9:15pm in the rain watching the fireworks go off and the reality of it all hit me really hard. The mission has been the most amazing experience of my life so far and, while I was standing there, I felt that this was the right time for me to end and to move on with the next part of my life. That realization hurt. My role as a person will be different and will push me and make me better just like the mission did. I can't imagine who I would be without going on a mission, and I hope to change even more for the better at home and at school.
Tuesday, July 6, 2021
Elder Edholm -- LAST LETTER!
Saturday, July 3, 2021
The Romantics by Leah Konen
Teen fiction. I drove to Utah and back twice in the past week or so and to prepare for these trips I downloaded about 10 audio books to listen to during the drive. I normally listen to one for about an hour and then grow tired of it and choose another one. This one held my interest and I finished listening to it after the drive was over.
It seems at first that it will be a typical teen romance novel, but there is one thing that keeps it from being cliche and predictable and that is it's narrator. It is written from the point of view of LOVE, meaning that love is an entity that influences all relationships. LOVE understands what people are thinking and feeling and what relationships will work and which ones won't. Of course the people involved don't know any of these things and often make poor choices. This story focuses on one family, specifically the 18 yr. old son, and his attempts at having good relationships with his friends, girlfriend and his family.
Recommend: Yes.
The Hundred Dressed by Eleanor Estes
Junior Fiction. This is a wonderful very short book with an enduring message. I've read it several times and decided to listen to the audio version on a drive back home this past week. It won a Newbery Honor Medal in 1944 and was inspired by a true story from the author's childhood. Wanda Petronski is a poor girl who only has one dress she wears every day to school. One day she tells the other girls she has one hundred dresses in her closet. The girls know she is lying and start to make fun of her for constantly affirming that she has one hundred dresses. Wanda is missing from school one day and the class finds out her father pulled his children out of the school and moved to another town because his family was being bullied. Two of the girls in Wanda's class feel miserable about it and attempt to make things right. A wonderful story about how we treat others.
Recommend: Yes.