We miss Mongolia |
Helping our children.
With our home being leased out until July 1, we have an opportunity to help
each of our children. We’ve tried some home improvement projects (backyard
garden, table restoration) in St. Louis for the homes of our two daughters who live here.
One family has a house they are rehabbing for sale. The yard
and backyard needed a lot a work – my job. Darlene and Tassa worked at painting
the inside of the house. It involves a lot of stress and strain on muscles we
haven’t used in a while. It felt good to be busy, especially after being so
focused on our mission.
Bonding with
grandchildren. The other part of our time is spent bonding with
grandchildren, attending their activities, and doing things with them. By the
time we make the rounds of all our visits, we hope to be reconnected with all
of them. So far so good.
Currently we are in Arkansas helping a daughter prepare for
a move in June to Pennsylvania. Less physical activity but lots of sorting and
decision-making about what or what not to move. The children are in school
until June 6 with all the snow days accumulated during the winter. (This is in Arkansas
no less). Mongolia may have been cold but we didn’t have to contend with snow.
Darlene came down with a hard case of poison ivy (no
pictures allowed) and she needed the time to recover.
My work. I went
to Montana to help a ranch family. North-eastern Montana has an emptiness and
landscape that reminded me of Mongolia.
The consultation went well. I have another one scheduled with
a farm family in the St. Louis area in mid-June. I am going to keep a small part-time
practice going where I help farm and ranch families resolve conflict in their
family and business communication.
Sharing our mission
experiences. We will speak in church at our home ward on June 8 and then
present a fireside program on our mission to Mongolia that evening at the Stake
Center. I will spend part of the next two weeks reviewing our photographs,
collecting our thoughts on what we want to share and preparing for our presentation.
We also plan on converting our blog - especially our photographs - for a book to be published. It will be primarily for the family but also for others who may be interested.
There might be two versions; one describing our mission experiences in some detail and another showing the beautiful and unique nature of Mongolia with its people, landscape and culture.
Russian church in Inner Mongolia - photo from China News Service |
Did I mention I am getting tutoring lessons on how to use my new phone from my nine year old granddaughter, Elena?
I will share an article I wrote for high school and college graduates. At some point I will convert our blog on Mongolia into something new but not yet.
Guideposts For Graduates
|
Dear Graduate,
You have finally made it. You are
about to embark upon the journey of your life. The foundation has been laid for
your success. The rest is up to you.
Here are some guideposts to help you
along the way.
- Seek and embrace truth about
yourself and the world around you.
To the best of your ability, solve the mystery of life and eternity. Be a
believer. Know that truth comes from many sources, not the least of which are
adversity, pain and loss. Find the meaning in your experience. Let your faith
be your strength in your hour of need.
- Learn from others. There is wisdom all around you. In college, seek out the
best teachers. In life, do the same. Set your ego aside. Know that you have
nothing to prove by reinventing the wheel when there are wheel-makers who are
willing to share what they know. Your greatest skill will be your ability to
listen. It is the key to many doors.
- Let reality be your teacher. Accept the world the way it is and work towards the way it
should be. Reach for the stars but keep your feet on the ground.
- If it is success you want, find a
need and fill it with quality. Then
sell it to others. Finding the need is harder than you think. Yet needs are all
around you. There is no shortcut to quality. Excellence is up to you. And even
then, all your good works will come to naught, if you don't connect with those
who need what you have to offer. There is no shortage of opportunity.
- Dream your dreams! Think big. I mean think big! You are only limited by your
imagination and vision of yourself. If you can conceive it, it is within your
power. You can judge your stature as a leader by the problems you attempt to
solve.
- Take risks. You will learn from mistakes. You will learn from failure.
Volunteer for something hard and 'grow into it. Great accomplishments have
small beginnings. Fear is your enemy, courage is your ally, love is your
comfort.
- Be a "can do" person. Find a way or make one. Failure will come before success,
and success will come before rewards. Great people are ordinary people with
extraordinary determination. Get up one more time than you've been knocked
down. Pay the price, whatever it is. You can do it.
- Work hard. Your drive and energy will carry you further than your
talent. Much, much further. Learn about what you are good at and what you
enjoy. When you find this combination, your work will flow from you with energy
and enthusiasm. Work means doing something hard but worthwhile.
- Don't be distracted. There are far too many activities, diversions and
entertainments unworthy of your time or love. The world will lull you into
complacency or entangle you in trivia.
- Give it away. The good you do will come back to you. Do more than others
expect. Be a part of someone else's success. There are others who share your
interest. Find them. Exchange ideas. Be accessible to those who want to learn
from you and build on your efforts. The power of a team is greater than one man
or woman working alone.
- Make service to others a part of
your life. It is the pathway to joy. Your
capacity to love grows once you dare loosen the chains of self. You are young.
You have been a child. The bud that you are will now open and give its
fragrance to the world.
- Share the journey. The journey of life needs to be shared to be enjoyed. A
solitary triumph is hollow compared to a shared victory. Don't be afraid of
marriage and having children. You will discover wellsprings of growth and love
in these timeless associations. All your strivings have to be balanced with the
nourishment and support of a loving family. This precious companionship
requires time, attention, creativity, energy and love. "No other success
can compensate for failure in the home."
- Seize and enjoy each day. This is a magnificent world. There is much beauty to see,
many wonders to discover. Don't so burden your soul with cares, worries and
strivings that you miss the joy of the moment.
- Be flexible. In some ways, you are unprepared for what is to come. Life
will teach you some lessons we did not or could not teach you. You will face
disappointment and discouragement. Make your darkest hour your finest hour.
- Be patient. Life never seems to be too easy. You will be pushed and
stretched into new struggles, new dreams and new adventures. There will never
be a time when you can safely say, "My work is done, my learning is
complete, my service is over."
Dear Graduate, this is your time.
Make the best of it. You have a great future to fulfill.
We loved your "dear graduate" letter - even though Elder Palmer and his sister graduated at the same time last year (she, a year early) it is that time of year and the words were very timely! Very wise and thoughtful. Sounds like you are working hard and trying to adjust to the "new" life you have at home. I know it will be hard for Elder Palmer when he comes home - he loves Mongolia, too. Have a great time going through the plethora of pictures for the fireside! We can't wait to see you in August -
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