Tuesday, February 16, 2016

16 Febrero 2016

Happy late-Valentine's Day! 
Have I mentioned that I am the WORST at updating this blog? :) I thought so, haha!
  What is new?
Well, I've been running a TON again lately! :) Sister Peel and I got up one morning and decided to run 3 miles. We did it! And it was MARVELOUS. I wasn't even that sore the next day (MIRACLE). And so we had been running at least 2 miles every morning after that UNTIL I got sick. :( I got a nasty cold like this last transfer, too! I HATE being sick, especially in the mission field! Missions don't last forever, I gotta be out there getting stuff done! So I'm currently dying of being ill. But its whatever. Sister Smith is doing great at telling me, "Oh my gosh, get some rest before you kill yourself." So I'm getting there. Can't cure a virus, unfortunately. So I just have to wait this out. -_-
    I've been so healthy, though! I've been working out like crazy, eating super healthy (the cleanest that I have eaten my whole mission!) and then- BOOM! I'm ill. 
     What else? Oh, we're doing TONS of knocking. :) Really cool! I'm getting more comfortable with knocking in middle-class neighborhoods. We've been working with some GREAT people! Particularly a young married couple (one is Brazilian, one is "American") and they're way awesome! I love teaching them! Other than that, we're still just looking for the elect.
     I have learned SOOOOOO much about China in this last transfer! A recent convert and her son in this ward are in the United States on a temporary basis, and they're from mainland China. And we learn so much about each others' language and culture each time we have a lesson or have dinner with them! For example, (since we have lessons with both English and Chinese reading material) she looked at us when we were giving a new member lesson (#3, the Gospel of Jesus Christ) and she looked at the text in Chinese and then looked up at us and said, "I think that the word 'gospel' translates to 'voice of happiness'."  MIND BLOWN!! How cool is that?!?! :D We also told them about what the Superbowl is and why it is such a big deal in our culture.
       OH. I just learned that the Superbowl happened! Haha, we were out knocking doors one Sunday, and everyone was grilling stuff and told us, "Don't y'all know that the Superbowl is going on??" We didn't! Haha, we had no idea! :D Amazing how we work in the community everyday and simultaneously live under a rock. ;)
    Also, we just learned that David Bowie and Alan Rickman died. WOW. That wasn't expected!
Transfer calls were also last night! Sister Smith and I will be staying together in this area for another transfer. We're happy about it. :) Sister Peel is leaving. :( But she gets to go and be Sister Evans' companion! :D And Sister Rocha is also sticking around a little longer! Life is good! God is good! 
      Oh, did I mention that the STLs came down and did a shadow exchange with the Boca Rio sisters and us? No? Well, it was fun! :) Sister Andelin was with Sis Smith and I. It was a blast! We went to the ward's Valentine's Day Dinner & Dance to get some food and talk to some gators there. It was SO WEIRD to be in a party/dance setting again, even though we didn't participate. Good stuff! :)
     Well, I gotta go try to sleep off some of this grossness. Viruses suck. 
     Love you all so much! El evangelio es verdadero! Les quiero a todos!
    ~Hermana Curnow

Monday, January 25, 2016

25 Enero 2016

      Long time, no update, my apologies. This is probably how it is going to be for the remainder of my mission. :P Too much to write about, and not enough email time. I'll do a HUGE entry with stuff from my daily planners, details from what I have journal-ed, and TONS of pictures. Just remind me to do it one day. ;)
      Things in Boca Raton have been AWESOME. :) This place is a miracle factory! We're working with some really awesome folks right now, and we're seeing a lot of less-active members coming back. We've been meeting lots of awesome families, visiting members, knocking lots of doors, biking a ton, hiding when we heard the tornado sirens go off (yes, that did happen. The tornado didn't come close to us, though, thank goodness). We've meet people from just about met one person from every culture on the PLANET (Southern Florida is the BIGGEST melting pot EVER). We've also had some amazing, heart-felt moments. The Spirit has been so strong in some of our lessons, and it brings me so much joy. At the end of the day, that feeling is what makes it all worth it. Through all of the stress, trainings, studies, exchanges, heartbreaks, physical pain, worry, and just about everything on the human spectrum of emotion; the feeling of the Spirit, and the knowledge that you are helping other people coming closer to Christ is what carries you through it all. I love that feeling. It is wonderful. <3
       Also, last week we had a zone activity, a collective birthday party (Sister Smith and I got very good at seeking in hide-'n-seek, and I also learned no pinata can stop me). We went on exchanges, and I got to go to Boynton with Sister PK! It was awesome!! :) We had a blast.
      Florida weather is also way off right now. We have been experiencing mid- 40 degree Fahrenheit weather! WHAT?!?! Crazy!! We have been FREEZING!!! 
    I'm still making smoothies all the time, working out with Sister Peel in the mornings, and Sister Smith had me go to Tijuana Flats for the first time this week. It was great!! :)
That's all for now! Love y'all!
 
       

Monday, January 11, 2016

11 Enero 2016

One time in Naples, after a meal appt with one of our Bolivian members, she gave us a home-grown papaya to take home with us. We were on bikes. So I got to look like a fool and bike with a big ol' papaya in my hand the mile ride back to our car. :P Then we took it home, and I remembered vaguely how one member in my first ward made us a papaya milkshake. I decided to do the same, and it tasted pretty good! :)
Also, Sister Evans and I went with Sister Smith and Sister Rianda (the Vanderbilt sisters) to dinner at Chic-Fil-A. <3  We were eating, and a family in the booth behind us were snapchatting. The young mom and one of her kids were taking a pic, and so I ducked my head down just a little lower, made the most ridiculous face that I could muster, and photo-bombed the snapchat. She saw it 2 seconds after she took the picture, stood up, turned around, and started busting up laughing. Both booths were CRACKING UP! :) 
 Every morning I would make a smoothie with almond milk, mixed berries, spinach, yogurt, ground flax seeds and chia seeds. I got so healthy. :)
Those were some of my favorite memories in Naples from last transfer. Then I transferred.
      I was REALLY sad to hear on the transfer call that I was leaving. Granted, I had been there for a LONG time. 4 transfers (about 6 months!!). We had been eating dinner with the family of the previous bishop in the ward, and I told them that we had transfer calls that night. They told me, "Oh, yeah. You've been here for a long time!" I then realized that I was a goner. :P They're such good people, and I'm glad that I got to say good-bye to them. Didn't get to do that for the whole ward, which saddens me. I will be visiting them VERY soon, though.
   I was especially sad to be leaving Sister Evans. We've had a really good run together. Miss my hijita. Heck, I miss my whole district, back there! EVERYONE in the Naples Zone was really close. </3 We went and got some shakes at Steak n' Shake (cookie butter, YUM!!) and went tracting after I had finished packing. We knocked in this one apartment complex, and I know that I had knocked our main area at least twice by now, but we ended up on one door on the upper floor in one of these apartment buildings. And I looked around, and realized that I had knocked this exact same door before. One my last day in Naples, I knocked the exact same apartment building that I had knocked on my very first day in Naples with Sister Rammell. Strangely poetic? Idk.
     After that, we went and dropped in Adriana and Bardomiano. We had forgotten the phone (oops) and so we just hoped and prayed that they were home so that I could say goodbye to them. We were blessed, and they were there! We shared 1 Nephi 21:15-16 with them and discussed it a little bit. I then told them that I would be leaving, and expressed how sad I was that I would not be able to attend their upcoming wedding and baptism. But I let them know that I would for sure come back to Florida for their sealing in the temple! Adriana told me that they were sad that I would leave, but happy that I would go and find other people to bring the gospel to. "You will be our first missionaries." she told me. It nearly put me to tears when she said those things. She told me that if it wasn't for Sister Evans and I, they wouldn't have found the gospel and be down this path that they are on now. She then bore her testimony of the Book of Mormon to me. Bardomiano said the closing prayer as well, and expressed thanks for having me be here to meet them and asked that I have success wherever I go. It was one of THE most bittersweet moments of my mission; the other two were very similar: saying good-bye to Maida and to Celina.
     So then a wonderful member of the Vanderbilt ward came the next morning, loaded up our stuff in our truck and drove us to Plantation (she excitedly pointed out a drug bust to us on Alligator Alley. "They got him! They ripped that car apart, look at all the stuff of the ground!" she exclaimed. SO FUNNY! :) ). We then went to Plantation, loaded up all of our stuff and headed to Boca Raton. Sister Smith and I white-washed into the area, so we basically had NO idea what we were doing. The first few days were extremely confusing and exciting and frustrating. We blew one of our tires on our way to our meal appointment with the bishop (first night in the area, haha). We met with him, knocked into a CRAZY woman, met another CRAZY woman at Firestone while we got our tire changed, met our awesome Ward Mission Leader, found out that our DL is going home at the end of this transfer, and SURPRISE! He's my first district leader, Elder Ortiz! I met a Brazilian lady that I was actually able to communicate with (Portuguese and Spanish speakers can often understand each other really well, they just can't speak one another's language). I've been SUPER tired these past few days, it happens each time that I switch coasts in the mission!  We also had a fire exchange (Sister PK is my STL now, WHAT?? :D ), we had a cool Book of Mormon lesson in 3 Nephi 11 with a new investigator, had an AMAZING ward council training yesterday before church by the Stake President. And we got to know the ward members, and today after email time we'll be playing a district soccer game. Good stuff. Love y'all! Talk to you next week! La iglesia es verdadera!!! <3
         ~Hermana Curnow

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

5 Enero 2016

It's a new year, and I'm getting transferred back to the East Coast! I have no time to write, I'll update y'all next week!
      ~Hermana Curnow

Monday, December 28, 2015

Feliz new year! 2016

     It has been FOREVER since I've updated this blog, haha! I literally haven't updated this since last transfer. :P Oops. Updating this thing is kinda hard, though. It's starting to turn into a little bit of a burden, email time is so short and I really would need a full hour to write a blog post about all of the amazing things that happen in day to day life. Just trust me; there is no way to accurately describe what missionary life is like and the immense emotions and blessings that come from it. It is the literal best. :)
    So transfer calls came on November 23rd at about 10PM, and I learned that I would be staying here in Naples for another transfer, and that Sister Jones was leaving. :( She is actually serving in my first area right now, over in Miami Lakes. I try not to get too jealous of her. ;) I love Naples, but I do miss everybody in my past wards and areas.
    And then I got my "daughter" (<mission lingo for a sister missionary trainee), Sister Evans! :) She is so fun! I joke around and say that she is like my own Kate Hudson. She reminds me a ton of what I was like as a greenie. We're working hard on the 12 Week Training program, learning Spanish together, knocking lots of doors and we have tons of fun doing it. Can't complain, life is good. :)
   We had an awesome Thanksgiving dinner with some members of our ward and it was delicious. such good people and such a wonderful holiday. <3
    The sisters that lived with us (Vanderbilt), we in a trio for the first week and then Sister Garlick got emergency transferred over to Davie. It was interesting. 5 sisters and one bathroom. We worked out a system. :) Oh, Elder Allen went over to Coral Springs and his last companion is actually my mission "dad", Elder Ortiz. Sister Abad is still in the Naples zone! Now she is in the YSA as a Sister Training Leader. I joke around and tell her that I can't get rid of her, haha! Sister PK is an STL now, too! And Sister Rammell got a trainee! :) So much fun stuff happening!
  Umm... what else? I really like my current planner cover. I put a ton of dinosaur stickers in my planner. We're doing volunteer service at an assisted living center in the early afternoons. Got to go up to Estero with Sister Abad for a full-day exchange.
    MIRACLE!!! On December 8th, we were out knocking at about 6:30 PM; tired, small teaching pool, but not quite discouraged. We couldn't figure out a good spot to knock, and ended up driving in circles for a minute or two. Finally, we decided to just go ahead and knock the next street over. It was really dark, but we decided to go for it anyway. 5 doors in, a Mexican man opens the door and we introduce ourselves and ask if we could share a prayer with him. His girlfriend came to the door and eagerly invited us in. We shared the prayer with them, and then the girlfriend, Adriana started to shed a couple of tears and told us that she was going through a VERY difficult time over the past few months, especially in Colombia. But while she was there, she had a dream one night. She has always seen missionaries passing by and wondered if they would ever come to visit her. In her dream, God told her that two missionaries would visit her in a distant land. So then she moved to the United States, moved states, ended up in Florida. One day she asked God, "When will those two missionaries that you told me about come and visit me?" And He told her, "This afternoon I will send them to you." 6pm came, and Adriana was saddened because no missionaries had come and it was dark outside. But on 6:30 we knocked on the door, and she recognized who we were immediately. MIRACLES HAVE NOT CEASED, PEOPLE! I have known for a long time that God still speaks to us individually, still gives us revelation, but this experience strengthened my testimony of that so much! At this point, we have taught Adriana and Bardomiano everything, and they are READY for baptism, we're just waiting on the marriage license. I love them to death. <3
   We've been doing a good amount of volunteering at an assisted living home. We have gotten to know a good amount of the residents there fairly well, and they really are delightful people. I enjoy doing service around them. :) Carolyn (the optimistic one), Elizabeth (the Yugoslavian), Mary Ellen (the Southern Belle), Ruby (the college counselor), Jaye (the cute 105 year old woman) and Harold (a quiet, neat man) have all particularly earned a special place in my heart.
       One night, it dropped to 65 degrees Fahrenheit and Sister Evans and I were FREEZING! You had better believe that we were blasting the heater in the car! 
       I had a neat little revelation come to me through another sister as we discussed what we had learned in our personal studies lately, and the thought was this: "Learn to listen for what God wants; not what 'you' want or 'think' He wants." THAT is a struggle, haha! Talk about the natural man right there! Mosiah 3:19 is probably one of the most difficult challenges- learning to fully accept God's will over your own. And then later, I had another thought: "Sister Curnow- Look at your nametag. You have been dreaming of these amazing 18 months. You have been eagerly awaiting your mission for years. Live every moment, have no regrets, take every opportunity. Live it up while it is here!" We become so caught up in thinking about the future that we forget that we are currently in the future period that we once eagerly anticipated.  Personal revelations are so cool!
    Another miracle! Sister Rammell and I had taught this one man and his wife that had had family members that are members of the church. We went over to teach them, and he just bashed us the whole time, was not willing to listen to us. We peacefully ended the get-together and left him with a copy of the Book of Mormon and an invitation to read it and pray about it with real intent, we promised firmly that God would answer him if he sincerely wanted to know if it was true. Several months go by, and about two weeks ago he showed up to sacrament meeting out of the blue. He spoke with the bishop, and then the bishop had Sister Evans and I go inside and meet with him. The man looked at me, recognized me, and said, "I have been reading in the Book of Mormon, and I have been finding beautiful things in it. I'm working on quitting coffee, and I want to see if my wife and I could get baptized." Bishop thanked us for planting that seed. I'm just very grateful that the Lord has allowed me to see some of the fruits of past efforts. <3
    We also went to Fort Lauderdale on the 23rd for the mission-wide Christmas conference! :) It was delightful! Great to see everyone again, especially the missionaries that are going home at the end of this transfer, I have worked around many of them! And many of the skits that the various zone put on were hilarious!
     We worked on Christmas Eve and on Christmas Day. On Christmas, we made a nice big breakfast of pancakes, eggs, bacon and eggnog. <3 then we opened packages (thanks Mom, Dad, Gran & Sampa and Grandma Jo!) We got down to studies, went to volunteer and visit at the assisted living home, and then Skyped our families! Gus brought in the dogs for me to see them, and Gran brought Cosmo down! I miss that guy, he tried to climb on my shoulder through the computer screen, haha! And it was nice to just chat with them for an hour. We had a good dinner with a member of the English ward, and back to knocking doors!
      Yesterday was a great day, too. Giselle and Giallyn, my first investigators in the mission field, were baptized on Friday and received the gift of the Holy Ghost yesterday. :') I'm so happy for them and love them to pieces! Sister Jones and Sister Soza helped them get baptized, and my trainer, Sister Lightheart even got to be there! :)
    Before church yesterday, our ward council got a special training by Elder Thompson of the Seventy. It was great, I'm so glad that I got to be there! :)
    Church was very nice, and our sweet Relief Society gave us missionaries some stocking stuffers. <3 Then we had dinner with a member, met a part-member family, knocked doors, met a nice Dominican family that we're going to go visit tonight. 
       That's all, folks! Have a great new year! :)
    La iglesia es verdadera! Con amor,
     ~Hermana Curnow

Monday, December 21, 2015

Feliz Navidad! 2015

No time to blog, I'll finish the draft that I currently have and will send it next week!
Feliz Navidad!!! :) Les quiero!

Monday, November 16, 2015

I'll do a post next week!

Sorry! I'm too busy applying for college to blog! I'll send a good post soon!
Just trying to get college papers in order and trying to figure out where the Lord wants me to go: Provo, Rexburg or Hawaii. Adult life decisions are the worst!! ;P
LOVE YOU ALL TONS! The gospel is perfect and the church is true!
~Hermana Curnow