October 27, 2007 – November 5, 2007
The elders of District
47-D with our flight plans out of the MTC. From right to left, Elders Shearman,
Stojic, Newman, and Lindsay.
After weeks in
the MTC, most missionaries are itching to get out to the mission field. Two
weeks before you leave the MTC sends you your flight plans, which give you your
itinerary and instructions on how to get to wherever you’re going. It’s pretty
exciting, though maybe not enough to justify that photo.
Bro. Toledo’s jack-o-lantern
on Halloween in the MTC. I don’t know why there’s toilet paper inside. He stuck
his cell phone in there to light it up.
Halloween also came
near the end of our stay at the MTC. Of course no missionaries dressed up or
did anything really unusual, but it stuck in my mind as the first significant
holiday of my mission. Bro. Toledo showed up dressed in his normal white shirt
and tie, but also brought a costume just to show us for a second.
Bro. Toledo as Morpheus
(from The Matrix) and as a vampire. Yes, at the same time.
Occasionally,
we worked with instructors other than Bro. Toledo and Bro. McDaniel. One
instructor that taught us a couple of times was Bro. Nelson, who, as it turned
out, had served in the Mexico Veracruz Mission, where we were about to go. Like
many MTC instructors, he had been an assistant to the mission president while
on his mission. The assistants to the president (usually two of them working as
companions) are the highest positions of mission leadership to which young
missionaries are assigned. They work directly under the mission president and
oversee the zone leaders. Bro. Nelson was so excited that we were going to his
mission; he told us all about the mission president there and showed us a bunch
of photos. We could tell that he had loved it and would have gone back in a
heartbeat if he could have.
He also told us
that we would soon meet his “hijo”
(son). Huh? Turns out it was more mission slang. He explained that new missionaries
refer to their trainers (their first companions in the mission field) as papás (moms and dads). As it turns out, this little joke has all
sorts of extensions, and missionaries will talk about their mission hermanos (brothers and sisters), abuelos (grandparents), and other
things, all in reference to who trained whom. It’s all part of a larger joke
where the mission is your “life”. You get “born” when you leave the MTC for the
mission field, and you “die” when you finish your two years and come home. I
even heard one or two missionaries talk about being “pregnant” when they heard
they would be assigned to train new missionaries. I guess this is the kind of
amusement people turn to when they aren’t allowed to watch TV.
Anyway, Bro.
Nelson explained that his hijo, Elder
Olín, had recently been assigned to be an assistant to the president. The
assistants always help pick up the new arrivals from the MTC at the airport and
give them a brief orientation before sending them out with their papás, so Elder Stojic and I would meet
Elder Olín and his companion soon.
On one of the
last days in the MTC, they put all of the missionaries leaving that week for
Mexico on a bus and brought us to the Mexican consulate in Salt Lake. We’d had
to apply for our visas before we entered the MTC, and they only just granted
them in time. It’s not uncommon for American missionaries to have to wait
longer than the two months they spend in the MTC to be allowed into Mexico.
Those missionaries usually have to stay in the MTC longer (which sounds awful)
or they get temporarily assigned to a mission in the U.S. until their visas
come through. We were fortunate enough to get ours in time.
My Mexican visa. Note that Mexico’s formal name is Estados
Unidos Mexicanos (United Mexican States).
My
trainer later joked that I was still in the United States when I got there.
When we came back to the MTC later that
day, someone from one of the other districts had drawn this on our classroom
chalkboard:
The text reads, “BROTHER
TOLEDO VERSUS THE WITCH.” The drawing Bro. Toledo is throwing an apple and
saying a word that translates roughly to “the impact of an apple” (as in,
impacting against the witch’s face). The real Bro. Toledo wrote, “Jajaja,” which
is how Mexicans write “hahaha.”
By this time,
Bro. Toledo was famous among the other districts in our zone. It hadn’t taken
long for everyone to figure out how awesome he was.
With visas in
hand, it was finally time for us to leave for Mexico. Our last Sunday was a
chance to reflect on the MTC, take photos, and say goodbye to people we might
not see again. Our district took a walk back to English’s grave and took a happier
photo to make up for the long-faced one we took before. It’s funny; while I was
still itching to get out of there, in the end I realized I’d miss it, too. For
some reason it’s so much easier to look back on really hard times and remember
them so much better than they seemed when you were in the middle of it.
District 47-D with our
instructors on our last day before leaving. From left to right, Elder Lindsay,
Bro. Toledo, Sis. Gordon, Elder Newman, Elder Shearman, Elder Stojic, Bro.
McDaniel.
We had our own
testimony meeting on Sunday night, and Bro. Toledo joined us, even though he
wasn’t working that day. He just came because that’s the kind of guy he is.
The elders of District
47-D at our departure testimony meeting with Bro. Toledo in the center.
Even more
surprisingly, Bro. Toledo showed up at 4:00 AM the next morning to see us off!
His dedication level bordered on crazy, but we loved him all the more for it.
Bro. Toledo, as happy and
positive as ever, as we sleepily loaded into the bus to the airport.
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