Sunday, December 23, 2018

MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!!

MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE!!
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Wow, as the year has wound down, it's felt like everything has been counting down to the end of my mission. Life still feels more or less the same though, so it's really hard to believe that I'm actually leaving, and this is my last email. Since I'm not going to get another chance to share with you all as a missionary, I want to share with you the testimony I've gained on my mission.

As a missionary, I've learned to trust in God's miracles. When I first came out, I had a rather dumb mindset towards missionary work. I decided I already had faith, so I didn't need to see miracles, and I was just fine with working hard and toughing it out if that's what God wanted me to do. I guess I was trying to brace myself for disappointment or something. I've since learned that that was a really dumb way to go about things. Missions are going to be hard no matter what, but what I didn't know then was that when Heavenly Father's involved, even hard and disappointing times can still be joyful. What's more, if we have faith, we have His promise that we will see miracles (See 2 Nephi 27:23). I can say without a doubt that serving a mission has been the hardest thing I have ever done. It's a constant battle to measure up and be the kind of missionary the Lord wants you to be. It's often discouraging. But in the midst of all that, I've seen miracles. I've lain awake at night unable to fall asleep because I am marveling at the perfection of Heavenly Father's plan for us. I've watched people's eyes light up as the gospel fills a part of them they didn't know was empty. I've stood in awe as Heavenly Father has revealed a solution to a problem we didn't think could be overcome. I've knelt in prayer and felt a love so strong I didn't want to stop praying, even long after all my words had been used up. 

Before I came on a mission, I had to choose a scripture to be put on my missionary plaque. I chose Doctrine and Covenants 123:17:   
"Therefore, dearly beloved brethren, let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power; and then may we stand still, with the utmost assurance, to see the salvation of God, and for his arm to be revealed."

When I came out, I had hope that this scripture was true. I clung to it as assurance that I would see the salvation of God on my mission. Now, it has been proven to me. I know without a doubt that God is aware of us, and we can trust Him in everything.

I'm so grateful I've been able to share this mission experience with all of you. Thank you for your love and support! See you in the new year!

Love,
Sister Sofi Hull

Pics: 
1. Our ward had a Christmas party, and it was amazing! There was so. much. food. 
2. We had Zone conference this week, and 4 of my companions were there! It was so much fun to be surrounded by people I love so much.
3. We made oreo truffles for the ward Christmas party. A lot of the Taiwanese people thought they were way too sweet, but I thought they were delicious!
4. There is a corgi who lives in our apartment building, and he is our best friend. His name is Hanji, which means sweet potato in Taiwanese. 

Sunday, December 16, 2018

The Second to Last Email You'll Ever Get From Me as a Missionary

Hi Everyone!

Friday I hit a very important milestone: I have officially been on a mission for 18 months. That day we had several hours without any appointments, so we felt like we should bike out to this little town on the edge of our area nestled up against the mountains. The hour bike ride was beautiful, through rice fields and little forest-y areas. Of course, we had to stop and take a picture.

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When we got to the little town, we ate dinner and then we only had about 20 minutes to contact before we had to head back to make it back to an appointment in Xinying. We were really excited, because we felt like we had really been prompted to come to this town. Our first contact was amazingly awkward. Our second contact was too busy playing Pokemon Go to talk to us for very long. We didn't find anyone else to talk to before it was time to head back. We were both kind of disappointed because we'd biked a really long way, and nothing had really come of it. We made better time coming back than we thought we would, so we had a few minutes before we had to go to our appointment. We decided to stop real quick at a little park and stretch because we were super sore from riding 18 miles. As we waited across the street from the park for the light to turn green, a man on a bicycle rode past us, stopped, and asked 'how can I get in touch with you?' We stopped and talked to him, and he said he is really interested in coming and understanding our church. We gave him our contact information and invited him to the Ward Christmas party, then headed off to our appointment. We realized that if we had not been coming back into Xinying, there is no way we would have been on that side of that particular intersection. We got sent on an 18 mile bike trip to find someone 2 minutes away from our house. But it was a really cool miracle! 

So I need to brag for a second, this week I figured out how to tie a tie all by myself. I'm not sure if I did it right, but it looks like a tie, and the skinny part slides up and down like it's supposed to, so I'm pretty proud of myself.

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I don't know if you remember when I told you all about our guacamole making party a week or two ago. He had been meeting with the missionaries for a while, but he kind of stopped right before we got there, and he thought Sisters were awkward. But then after a lot of prayers on our part, he suddenly asked us to teach him to make guacamole. This week we called him, and he said he could meet with us. We set up a time, and his wife, who is a recent convert to our church was also there. We shared about the blessings of eternal families, and how big and amazing those are, and we explained that we really love his family, and would like to help them be sealed. We asked if he would be willing to start meeting again and keep learning, and he said yes! Then his whole family came to Stake Conference yesterday, which was awesome! It's been so cool to see how Heavenly Father has been working to give us opportunities to keep working with him. We're super excited to help him come closer to Christ and receive of His blessings. 

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As I mentioned earlier, we had Stake Conference this Sunday. Our ward took a bus up together because it's pretty far away. We even had two people we are teaching come! We met in a rented auditorium because our stake doesn't have a stake center. There were some really good talks. Our mission President gave an awesome talk completely in Chinese about the circumstances that prepared their family to come to Taiwan. His wife also gave a really sweet talk and bore her testimony in Chinese. They haven't been here very long, but she already speaks pretty well, which is amazing. The gift of tongues is real! We also got to hear from the temple president and his wife, who used to live in our ward. They are some of the most Christlike people I have met, and it was wonderful to hear them talk powerfully about the blessings of the temple. The blessings of the temple are so real!

After we got back, we went to a park called Swan Lake to contact. While there, we talked to a ton of people, and also got to admire this beautiful black swan:

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Next week will be the last week I send out a group email as a missionary. Thank you all so much for supporting me through the last year and a half. Serving a mission in Taiwan has been an amazing experience, and I'm so glad I got to share some of the highlights with you!

Have a great week!
Sister Hull

Sunday, December 9, 2018

My new fantasy is to become Sleeping Beauty

Without the prince or anything, I just want an excuse to sleep for a few years. 

Hi Everyone!
Wow, this week has been absolutely insane. But like, a good kind of insane with lots of miracles and spiritual insights. 

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(good morning)

This week we saw a really cool miracle. We're friends with this recent convert to our church, Pan Jiemei. She has the cutest family ever, and we love going to visit her and reading scriptures with her. Her husband, Xu Dixiong, used to be taking the missionary lessons from the elders. When we switched the elders out though, he stopped meeting because he thought meeting with Sisters was awkward. We had almost given up, but we still felt like we needed to help him because we love Pan Jiemei and want to help her family. We were at our wits end though about how we could connect with him (the elders connected by playing basketball with him every week). It had gotten to the point where we were considering taking up basketball in the hopes that at the very least he'd be touched that we were willing to make the effort, but we weren't really sure if that would work. I was pretty stressed, and praying a lot for a way we could help Xu Dixiong.

Then, the other day we were at a ward activity. There was food, and Pan Jiemei had brought guacamole. I mentioned to her that when our family made Mexican food at home, it was always my job to make the guac. A few days later she came up to us all excited. She said she'd told her husband I knew how to make guac, and he wanted me to come and teach them how! So we had a Mexican food night, and Sister DeJarnatt and I taught their family how to make homemade tortillas and guacamole. It was exactly what we needed to be able to connect with him. We had a lot of fun cooking together, and it was so much better than our feeble attempts to play basketball would have been!

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This week we had a mission tour, where a general leader in our church met with our entire mission in two big meetings. We were in the meeting with the bottom half of the mission- almost 100 missionaries. The visiting leader, Elder Homer, was awesome. He shared a ton of really great insights and helped us get super excited  for missionary work.

At one point in his trainings, he shared the story of Nephi, a man in the Book of Mormon who is commanded by God to build a boat. Nephi has never built a boat in his life before. On top of that, he and his family have been living in the wilderness for a few years, so he doesn't even have any tools to build a boat with. And he's not just building a fishing boat, The Lord tells him to build a boat that will carry him and his entire family and all their stuff across an ocean. When Nephi's brothers hear that he wants to build a boat, they just laugh, because they know he can't do it. But Nephi's response is different. He thinks about it, then prays and tells God, "If I'm going to build a boat, I need tools. Where can I go to find metal to make tools?" After finding metal, he learns to make tools, and slowly, step by step, the Lord teaches him how to build a boat.

Elder Homer connected the story of Nephi building a boat to us doing missionary work. When we came on a mission, none of us knew how to do missionary work. On top of that, we were in a completely new country with a new culture and language. And we weren't just trying to get people to come to church, the Lord told us to help people completely change their lives and help them embark on a journey that will lead them back to their heavenly home. When people in Taiwan hear that we're trying to teach a bunch of Buddhists about Jesus, a lot of them laugh, because they know no one here will want to change their culture. But that's not the point. If we follow Nephi's example, it doesn't matter what we don't know. We just have to ask Heavenly Father for help and be willing to try. He will guide us, and step by step we will start to see miracles. The things that we do will not be what experts in advertising, psychology, or sales would recommend, because they're not the people we're looking to for help. The Lord will guide us and show us His way for sharing the gospel, and it might seem a little weird at first, but in the end we will find miracles. 
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The mission tour was in Gaoxiong, an hour or two trip by train and subway from where we live. We had to get to the meeting early, so we went down the night before and stayed with the sisters who lived in Gaoxiong. It was super fun to see them, and the mission tour was amazing, but by the time we made it home over 24 hours later, we were exhausted. Can you see it in our eyes?

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The fun for the week didn't stop with the mission tour. We spent most of Sunday with our ward. After church, we went to a nursing home that one of our members stays in and sang Christmas carols. That evening we headed back to the church for a family home evening. The bishop gave a really good lesson on managing family finances. We were in charge of the games and treats. Our ward members are all really good sports, so we had a ton of fun with the games and couldn't stop laughing. We have such an amazing ward here. I think that's one of the things I love the most about our church as an organization, is that you can travel across the world to a new culture and new language, and you still feel like you have a family when you walk into church.

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Have an amazing week everyone! Don't forget to #LightTheWorld!

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Love,
Sofi

Sunday, December 2, 2018

A Tree in a Field

Hi Everyone! 


(Good Morning. Everything is wonderful)

IT'S DECEMBER EVERYONE!!! CHRISTMAS MONTH!! The most exciting part of December for a missionary is 100% the Light the World activity that our church does every year to help people remember the Savior and follow His example (If you want to know more, click here). Most of the world is focusing on the theme 'Give as He Gave', but in Asia they decided to do things a little differently. Most people here barely know who Jesus is, so we're focusing this year on inviting members and nonmembers alike to learn more about Him, and to 'Live as He Lived'. The focus is on helping people share with their friends and family through service and testimonies so all of Asia learns a little more about who Jesus Christ is, and why He's important.

To kick off Day 1, Sister DeJarnatt and I wrote a bunch of cards with little messages like, 'you're an amazing person! Have a great day!', and handed them out randomly whenever we felt someone needed it. We made several people smile with them, which was fun. At the end of the night, we had one card left to give, and we were headed home. On the way, we saw a woman leading a very tall blind man down the street, and decided to give her the last card. As we got closer, I recognized the man she was leading as a student from a university in Zhanghua, one of my past areas! We got to stop and chat for a bit and reconnect, and his mom was really touched by the card. Yay for service miracles!



We have this one friend we're teaching, Jovan, who is very into star signs. Whenever he introduces someone to us, he'll include their star sign- 'this is May, she's an Aquarius'. In our lesson this week, I asked a little more about the personality traits of people with my star sign, Libra. He gave this analogy: 'imagine there's a field, with a tree growing right in the middle. You're lying under the tree sleeping, and there's a slight breeze across your face. That's Libra's personality'. This is now the only way I will ever introduce myself.

This week a kid in our ward opened his mission call. A lot of the ward turned out to watch him open it, and we had a potluck too. In a weird twist of events, they invited me up to read the call letter. I assumed it would be in English and they wanted me to help translate, but I got up there, and it was in Chinese! Thankfully I knew enough to read haltingly up to where he got called to California, and then a member took over and informed him that he is headed to Los Angeles! It was kind of awkward to suddenly have to read in Chinese, but it was so fun to see him and everyone else so excited about his call. He's going to make an awesome missionary!



It's not just missionaries who are involved in Christmas preparations, the ward also has a lot of plans in swing. On Sunday we stayed late with a lot of the members to practice some songs we're going to go sing at a nursing home next week. We're singing a bunch of awesome carols, including Jingle Bells in English. We helped everyone practice the words, especially the tricky way of singing 'in-a-one horse open sleigh' with the words squished all together. This is us with several of the YSAs in our ward. The one in the very front is Grace, who was visiting from one of my previous wards in Zhanghua! It was super fun to see her again!



One of my favorite parts about missionary work is our ability to connect with people. We have had a couple of experiences this week where we're in the middle of this lesson and people open up to us with very personal, deep struggles. It never ceases to amaze me that they are willing to share with two teenagers they just met about the deepest worries, desires, and sorrows of their hearts. What I love the most about this is that we are able to help. We are here as representatives of Christ, who is the Master Healer. His job is to fix the unfixable, and we get to be here and deliver this message of hope to people who think there is no hope left. The ability to spread hope is probably my favorite thing about being a missionary. 

Happy December Everyone! Have an amazing week, and Light the World!
Love you,
Sofi