Sunday, March 9, 2014

For those of you who are reading some of the entries on our blog who may not be members of our Church, you may be wondering why we don't say much about our actual mission, which is working in the temple.  We consider the work done within the temple to be sacred and we don't discuss it outside of the temple. 

We spend five days a week, about 7 hours each of those days as temple missionaries and work with the people who come to participate in the sacred temple ordinances.  Sometimes they travel for hours to be here, often at great sacrifice.  The vast majority of  them do not own vehicles so they have to use buses, taxis, bikes, or just walk the distance.  But they consider temple work to be a blessing and are happy to be here.  They are so very humble it makes me realize what a blessing it is in my life to be given the opportunity to be here to serve them.  I recall one sweet little lady who I was helping...she was nearly half my height and when she looked up at me waiting for my help, she had no front teeth but was smiling and was so childlike it made me think of the Savior's teachings to be humble and teachable as our little children are and I felt an immediate love for her.

The people who come from the highlands are Mayan and have 22 different dialects.  Many do not speak nor understand Spanish.  Many do not have running water or electricity, cook their meals on fires, and live in very rough circumstances.  We are always happy when they come to the temple because we know that it's at great sacrifice on their part and they want to be here.

On Sundays when the temple is closed, we sometimes travel with the other temple missionaries to visit the members of the Church who don't live near the temple to encourage them to be faithful and attend the temple as often as their circumstances will allow.  Each Monday is our Preparation Day when we clean our apartment, shop for necessities, do laundry, or sightsee.

Ken and I consider this opportunity to be temple missionaries a great blessing.  We love the work we do within the temple, we love the Savior and are blessed to be able to serve Him and to serve with wonderful faithful people, we love each other and are very happy.



The next time you need to get something
from here to there and don't have anything to haul it in, do what the Guatemalans do...use your head!  Notice the strap around her head and in the photo below.




Everyone has stacks and stacks of firewood, both for heat and cooking.  The man carrying his load of wood down from the forrest is a very common site.
 
We watched this man carry 12 - 2 x 4's about 10 feet long up the road and then up this hill to his home...but what was amazing to me is that he was an old man!  These people have such a hard life.
NEVER, EVER complain about your state DMV.  We had to change the title on the car we purchased a couple of weeks ago and what a headache!  It took 4 1/2 hours just to do the paperwork, then add 2 hours for the round-trip drive to the town of Totoniocapan where it was supposedly faster. The whole process required us to hire an agent, a notary, a CPA, and an attorney, and go to the bank 3 different times to pay different fees, AND utilize a bishop who worked in the DMV to "expedite" our papers.  It really wasn't that fun.

But while we were waiting for the agent to do some of the paperwork for us we walked through the Mercado, which is always just fun. 


We always buy our produce from the mercados.  The fruit and veggies taste as good as they look.
 

This guy below was truly a snake-oil salesman.  He promised these people that the pills he was selling would keep their hair from falling out, cure their liver and heart problems, relieve their aching back, and strengthen weak knees.  Oh, and what a deal...it was 2 for the price of 1 today.  I had a hard time holding Ken back from making a purchase!



The last couple of Preparation Days we have been out of the city the entire day with no time to add to our blog so I will try to catch up today. 

Two weeks ago President Perez took all of the temple missionaries to Lago de Atitlan, one of the main tourist attractions in Guatemala, which is situated halfway between Xela and Guatemala City and is believed to be the Waters of Mormon.  Hundreds of feet under water ruins have been found.  There are twelve tiny pueblos surrounding the lake named after Christ's twelve apostles and which are accessible by dirt roads only except for Santiago, which we visited by taking a boat across the lake and which is surrounded by volcanoes. 





Our boat ride took us from this dock straight across the lake to Santiago, situated to the left of the volcano.

While on the boat ride across the lake, Ken took this photo of one of our missionary friends, the Juarez's, whose house was the one destroyed by the earthquake a year and a half ago.

Brother Juarez is also a Patriarch in his home stake besides being a temple missionary so each Sunday morning around 6:00 a.m. they walk the mile down the hill to the bus terminal and travel an hour and a half home so that he can fulfill his responsibilities in his home stake.  Ken just loves this man and loves to tease him.







While in Panaache, the town where the lake is accessed, we took a ride in one of their little tututs.












        
 
Ken has found his new retirement dream spot...apparently there are some who live in or visit Guatemala who are not poor!  This little paradise is located just as the boat was approaching the pueblo of Santiago.
 
 
The proprietor was upset with me for taking this photo and asked me not to take any more.  These are all hand-woven fabrics, custom designed, and he thought I was trying to copy his patterns.  Aren't the colors just beautiful!
 
Some of the merchants came aboard our boat just prior to us leaving Santiago to try to sell just one more blanket or trinket.  This little girl had an easy mark with Ken...after he teased her awhile he bought the little hummingbird key chains.