Friday, October 8, 2010

Always an adventure

Hello,

Another fast week. Traveling back and forth makes it go fast. The good, and I guess bad part, is that when we are in either city, we pretty much just have time for meetings so we never have any down time, especially in Kaluga. We go from city to city, meeting to meeting. It's been fun but both of us are ready for transfers already. We got called last night about transfers by the way. I will be with an Elder Bressler. I met him once, the day he got to Russia was the day I was leaving Veronezh. This is going to be the beginning of his 3rd transfer. President and other missionaries only have good things to say about him so I am excited to serve with him. I gave him a call last night and he's excited to come to Kaluga and serve with me too. He says people still tell stories about me in Veronezh, so I'm not forgotten. Also last night I called the other elders in Veronezh to get a phone number. I talked with Elder Johanson and he said 3 people that day had asked how I was doing. It made me feel really good. I called him to get the phone number of Ludmilla. I asked President if I could call her and he said that would be a great idea. She immediately recognized my voice and was so happy to hear from me. She says she hasn't missed a Sunday since her baptism and is still planning on going to the temple in June! I was so happy to hear that she is still doing so well. She says she wants to go to the temple with me, I'm not sure that's possible if you guys can't come get me but I'm going to ask if there's any way to do that. Maybe I'll just have to hurry back to Russia after I get home from my mission for a week or two. I'm not sure but I'd really love to go to the temple with her.

Anyway, some other cool things happened this week. We had an open house in Kaluga on Saturday. We had about 5 or 6 people come and we got one good contact out of it. It was a 20 year old kid named Igor. He came to the open house and stayed for over an hour. Then the next day, he came to church. We talked with him for a while and he said that he's not interested in becoming a member right now but that he enjoyed the meeting and would continue to come listen on Sundays. Maybe through some time he will become more interested. Also, Sunday night, Tatyana had her baptismal interview. It was with Elder Moffat so I had to translate. She did awesome, and even bore a great testimony at the end. After she finished her testimony, she said, oh, I have one more testimony, she then told a story about how earlier that day (fast Sunday) she was walking home and found a delicious pastry laying on the sidewalk, untouched. She said she was really hungry from fasting and that the pastry was something delicious and that it was a miracle that she found it on the ground because if she had found it in the store, she wouldn't have been able to buy it because it was Sunday. So she picked it up and took it home to break the fast, ha. She said, That's a testimony too, right? I said, sure, whatever you say. She's pretty cool. Then, aftr the interview, she said "Elder Geddes, you have spent a lot of time and energy on me, I know you are only 20 and you might be using all your energy on my, but I would like to ask you to use your last bit of strength and give me the gift of the Holy Ghost after my baptism." I couldn't tell if she thought I was weak or what but I was pretty touched by her humble request. I said I would love to do that for her. Elder Erickson will be baptizing her. It will be a great experience for us both.

Well it is getting pretty chilly here. I have started wearing my scarf around. All of the coats are coming out on the market. Last week we went to look at them and it seemed like they have some sort of system worked out there on the market because there were about 500 foreigners all trying to sell me a coat. Word spreads fast when you want to buy something. I found some pretty awesome coats for about 2000 rubles, and I think I could get a little lower. That's a nice winter coat for around 60 dollars, I think that's not too bad of a deal. We'll see what I decide to do. There are just a million coats and hats calling my name! Oh, I thought of one more thing you could put in my Christmas package if you haven't already mailed it. I have ran out of good pens and am having the hardest time find good ones here that I like. If you could send me maybe 2 black zebra pens, that should last the rest of my mission.

Well it seems like that is all that has happened this past week. I'm not sure when I will get my new companion but I don't think it will be until around the 18th. Until then, I think we will be traveling back and forth still. I'm getting good at sleeping on the bus but I am still not a big fan. The roads here are awful. Anyway, thanks for everything, love you guys.

Elder Geddes

ps

I just told Rob some things that I forgot to tell you guys. Russia is a place that you just have to love. Sure there are some problems but it is what it is. The other day in our stairwell one floor down from us we found a huge syringe on the ground. There is a serious drug and alcohol problem with the youth in Russia. It's really sad. We find syringes a lot on the streets but never in my own stairwell. My companion got arrested while on splits with the AP's for tracting. Everything was fine of course but he was pretty shaken up about it. They were tracting and an old woman called the cops. Elder Erickson and Elder Nutt, the AP he was with, tried to show that there was nothing illegal they were doing. The problem was that they were both from different cities so the cops couldn't figure out what they were up to. Registration is a huge deal here in Russia and if you mess it up, you will be deported. You are allowed to be in a city for three days without being registered. It was Elder Ericksons second day so we had to leave the next day. Anyway, the cops weren't believing them so they made them get in the car and took them to the station. They were there for a while until the cops figured out they had no reason to keep them any longer. I don't know when it will be my turn to do that, but hopefully someday :) It's getting pretty cold already, our heaters haven't filled up with hot water quite yet so it's pretty cold in the mornings. All in all, every day is an adventure of some sort. Something you could see only in Russia I think, last week we saw two extremely old women trip and fall on the sidewalk. They both fell dang hard. In America, I'm sure you would be calling an ambulence and stuff, but here, people around just picked up the women, they dusted their knees off and continued on their way. It was two different days and two different women but it goes to show you that old women here are tough as nails. When you talk about Russia, people say that bears walk around on the streets, what they mean is the old women. It's funny.

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