Friday, September 4, 2020

RELEASE AND START OF OUR NEXT CHAPTER

Last month we were officially released as full-time missionaries.  It took several weeks after we had been notified by the Missionary Department that we would not be able to return to the Philippines for the release to go through.  Eileen has been serving part-time in Senior Missionary Services (SMS) doing medical screening of senior missionary candidates.  SMS wanted her to continue in that role and waited until she had been officially called as a Church Service Missionary to release us.  I have been looking for a volunteer role that would occupy me two to four days a week and just this week found a position in the Welfare Department’s Strategy and Innovation Services Division as a strategy consultant.  This is the same division as our former bishop, Jon VanWagoner, works in.  I want to leave one day a week open to be an ordinance worker again once the temple opens back up.

On Sunday, September 13th, we will be speaking in the three sessions on our ward’s sacrament meeting.  Attached below are copies of our talks.

The last five months since we returned from the Philippines have been challenging, primarily due to the pandemic and our inability to meet in-person with our family, neighbors, or Church Service Missionary associates in SMS.  We are home in our house but not home with those around us.  It will be very interesting to look back on this time after the pandemic is over.  A few important events have taken place in the last two months.  

First, we met our youngest son Jon again.  He left over a decade ago and despite my efforts to contact him, we had not heard from him until our older son, Vijay, ran into him working at FedEx.  Since then I have met with him twice and it has helped me feel better about the difficult years he spent in our home.  For the first time I have felt that perhaps our experience in parenting Jon wasn’t a complete failure. I don’t know where the relationship will go, if anywhere, in the future, but I do consider our meeting a gift from God due to the peace it has brought me.

Going out together bike riding has been one of the few things that we have been able to do while safely getting out of the house.  Seven weeks ago we bought Eileen a new and relatively expensive bike.  On her first ride, just after we had gotten off the Legacy Parkway trail, Eileen was telling me how much she loved her new bike when the pedal suddenly came off.  That caused Eileen to lose control of the bike.  In the resulting crash,  the ligament in Eileen's left thumb was severed, she hurt her left foot and right shoulder, and suffered “road burn” abrasions all along the right side of her body.  She now has a cast on the left hand following an operation to reattach the ligament and going to physical therapy for her shoulder.  Her left foot is in a “boot.”  I don’t think she will be riding again this season.  Interestingly enough, I was in a bike accident three weeks after that.  A van decided to turn right at a red light and somehow didn’t notice that I was on my bike in in the crosswalk in front of him.  Fortunately, other than two skinned up knees and a bruise on my left hip where the van hit me, I was unhurt.  


EILEEN'S SACRAMENT MEETING TALK


We were asked to spend a few minutes talking about our experiences from serving in the Philippines Antipolo Mission.  Our call was to serve for 18 months, however we returned home after 9 months due to the Coronavirus pandemic.

My role was to serve as the mission nurse, while Russell worked with missionary housing. Russell played a vital role in assisting me with the sick missionaries, both in offering input regarding their care and also as the driver when I needed to get a missionary to the doctor or hospital. Even though we have served 4 full-time missions together as a couple, this was the first mission where we have worked with the young missionaries. It was very rewarding to me to be able to get to know them as individuals, hear about their success stories and concerns, and help them through their health challenges while still trying to serve. 

The Antipolo mission was newly formed on our first full day in the Philippines. I didn’t have anyone to train me or give me recommendations regarding hospitals or doctors. Each day as I said my prayers, I would ask Heavenly Father to please guide and direct me so that I would have the wisdom and inspiration to know how to deal with each specific health need. Sometimes it was just learning by trial and error, but I felt like many times I was prompted to know when a missionary needed immediate medical care and with Russell’s assistance I was able to get the elder or sister to the hospital. 

We had been in the Philippines just a few weeks when I was called by a zone leader stating that two of the missionaries in his zone were ill.  Russell and I went to visit these missionaries. As I walked into their apartment I knew that they were both really sick. Elder Bio was burning up with a fever and had sweat pouring down his face.  He was  so lethargic he could barely speak. His companion Elder Evans was laying on the floor moaning with pain. It was like something out of a bad movie.  Before taking them to the hospital I asked if Russell would give them a blessing. The spirit in that small apartment was very powerful as a worthy priesthood holder called on the powers of heaven to help these two missionaries. I silently prayed for inspiration to know which hospital to take them. I was prompted to take them to a hospital which was quite close to our apartment. While most of us here would consider that hospital woefully inadequate, it was fairly good by Filipino standards. This was the first of my many visits to that specific hospital with missionaries having Dengue Fever.  I learned far more than I ever thought possible about Dengue and the effects it had on individuals who caught it. Elder Evans spent 10 days in the hospital recovering. Fortunately, Elder Bio recovered more quickly. I was so grateful for the blessings they both received and their being able to fully return to the work.

As a mission nurse I could never really plan out my day because I didn’t know what kind of challenges might come up.  Some of my nursing calls were quite serious, others were humorous. We had one missionary from the U.S. who was 6’4”.  He called me one day saying he had split open his head while walking into a local shop. He didn’t duck far enough and he cut his head on the door jam.  From the picture he sent I thought he might need stitches.  He wondered if he could super glue his head together. It ended up being quite funny. His companion had convinced him that if you could superglue broken household goods in America, surely you could superglue a lacerated head in the Philippines. 

I think that sometimes there is a perception in the church that if you have a missionary from your family serving, that life will be free from trials and adversity.  From my experience I can assure you that this perception is not accurate.  However, Elder Robert D. Hales said, “As we serve in the mission field, our children and grandchildren will be blessed in ways that would not have been possible had we stayed home.”  I can testify to the truth of Elder Hales statement and would like to relate two experiences of how I believe our family was blessed through their adversities while we were gone.

My parents have suffered with health challenges for several years, my father with physical challenges, and my mother with memory loss. When I said goodbye to them prior to leaving for the Philippines it was very emotional for me as I knew it would be the last time I would see them in this life.   Dad was 95 years old when we left, his pacemaker battery was running out in a few months and my father refused to have it replaced. He kept assuring me that he and Mom would pass on together. I would question him and say, but Dad what if it doesn’t happen that way?  His response always was, “It will, I have talked with the Lord.”  He had much more faith than I on this matter. Dad died within days following a fall and breaking his hip just 7 weeks after we left for the mission field. Although he had assumed for many years he would die of his cardiac issues, it was the fall that took him quickly. The concern for our family then became how could we help Mom?  Out of necessity she was moved into a memory unit.  One week to the day after Dad passed on, Mom also passed on. Although I was very sad to have both parents leave this life, I knew that God had granted Dad his fervent desire that they could pass on together.  This was a wonderful blessing, not just for them but for all of our family.

Another  tender mercy for our family occurred  when we had been out in the mission field just 5 months. My daughter Jessica mentioned to me one day that her back was really bothering her. I suggested that she needed an MRI.  Her family had recently moved to Oregon and she was having a challenge even getting in to see a primary care doctor. The following Sunday, Russell and I fasted that Jessica might be able to be led to the appropriate medical care. Sunday evening a friend of hers who was aware of her symptoms brought dinner over to Jessica and her family. While there, this woman said that her husband was a neurologist, and after checking with him arranged for Jessica to be seen by him at the end of his schedule the next day. Following that appointment Jessica had several MRIs which showed a tumor  wrapped around her spinal cord. This neurologist was able to get Jessica in for surgery to remove the tumor shortly thereafter. It was quite remarkable that within 2 weeks of our fasting Jessica was diagnosed and having surgery.  Through some very miraculous events, we were able to get permission to go be with her during her surgery.   We are confident that the Lord was in the details of not only putting them in a location where she could get the appropriate care very quickly, but also guiding me and others to encourage her to seek and find the appropriate medical care she needed.   

Celebrating holidays in the mission field is always a bit different. It seems kind of strange to celebrate Christmas without being around family, without Christmas decorations, or even Christmas music being sung at church. While the Filipinos love Christmas (they celebrate it during all of the “ber” months: September, October, November and December), it seemed like life sort of went on as normal there on Christmas Day.  The malls and stores were all open. Traffic was only slightly lighter than usual. The temperature on Christmas reached the low 90’s - very different than in Utah with it’s snow.  The pool at our apartment building was crowded with families enjoying the sun.  To me, it really didn’t seem much different than any other day of the year. 

In the midst of my trying to sort out my feelings, our daughter Heather sent this quote to us by Elder Vaughn J. Featherstone.  “Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s will never be the same again once you have celebrated them while serving a mission. Imagine a small Christmas tree with a few decorations, Christmas carols, a humble apartment, never more in love with your wife—a Christmas spirit that makes that little apartment seem as a sacred temple. You pack your white baptismal clothing and walk, hand in hand, to the chapel, where a little family waits patiently to enter God’s kingdom through the waters of baptism. You see the star of wonder, not hanging over Bethlehem, but in the eyes of the humble, sweet converts. You look at your wife, she looks at you; nothing need or can be said, both of you overcome with joy.  The twelve or eighteen months will seem as a small moment, but the memories will last through the eternities.”

This quote was very touching to me, and made me think beyond the “normal” events of Christmas, and directed my thoughts to the joy we have felt the last few months in observing the conversion process of our newly found friends, Lance and Grace.  We invited Lance, Grace and their family along with a single sister missionary over for dinner on Christmas Eve. We had barely sat down at our tiny table when Lance announced he had decided to get baptized on January 11th. I was overjoyed. He then said he was looking forward to going to the temple. When Shannon, their 13 year old daughter asked her mother what going to the temple meant, Grace told Shannon, “It means you will be my daughter forever!”  At that moment I couldn’t think of a better way to celebrate the birth of our Savior than to have a small part in bringing souls to Him. I could more fully understand the scripture from Doctrine and Covenants 18:15-16. “And if it so be that you should labor all your days in crying repentance unto this people, and bring, save it be one soul unto me how great shall be your joy with him in the kingdom of my Father.”

In all of our years in trying to share the gospel with others, we have never had an experience like that which we have had with this family. It has seemed like something you would read about in an Ensign article.  Things like this don’t happen to us, yet it has; and I have thoroughly enjoyed it.  My experience with Lance and Grace has been the highlight of my years serving on missions, a memory and relationship I never want to let go of.


Lakeview Ward – Sept. 13, 2020        Russell's Philippines Mission Experiences

When Alma was instructing his son, Helaman, about the importance of keeping the records of their people, he said, “Now ye may suppose that this is foolishness in me; but behold I say unto you, that by small and simple things are great things brought to pass; and small means in many instances doth confound the wise.  And the Lord God doth work by means to bring about his great and eternal purposes; and by very small means the Lord doth confound the wise and bringeth about the salvation of many souls.”  (Alma 37:6-7)  Today I would like to tell you about a few “small and simple” things that occurred during our time in the Philippines.

As Eileen mentioned, my primary role was dealing with missionary housing.  The quality of missionary housing (for both young and senior missionaries), while viewed by the local members as ranging from adequate to good, left a great deal of room for improvement.  As one new mission president’s wife in a neighboring mission (whose son had previously served in the Philippines) commented, “If I had known my son was living in these conditions, I would have brought him home.”  Over the nine months we were able to serve in the Antipolo Mission, we acquired new, or turned over approximately 40 percent of our apartments.  Most of the time, finding adequate housing was quite a challenge and time consuming.  But on a number of occasions, seemingly small things would happen that facilitated us getting the apartments that we needed.  I bear you my witness that the Lord is involved in the details of our lives.  The challenge is, are we in tune enough to recognize them?

One of the things President Alder stressed most with the young missionaries was issuing “Invitations to Act” (ITAs).  As in most missions, records were kept to note the number of baptisms, investigators attending church, lessons taught, Book of Mormons placed, etc.  But it seemed to me that his focus was getting the missionaries to invite others to do something, be it hear about the gospel, come to church or be baptized.  His point was that with missionary work, not much happens if you don’t first open your mouth and invite someone to do something.

Shortly after we arrived, the first series of zone conferences were held in which President Alder presided.  The meetings started with President and Sister Alder greeting each missionary, shaking their hands, President hugging the elders and Sister Alder hugging the sisters.  President Alder started and ended the meeting telling the missionaries how much he loved them.  After a few brief introductory remarks, President Alder asked by the raise of hands, how many of the missionaries used their morning commute to invite someone to attend or learn about the Church.  When only one sister raised her hand, he expressed his disappointment.  He then challenged every missionary to have at least one invitation offered by that evening and asked the missionaries to text him and let him know what happened.  By the end of the evening 172 invitations had been extended by 44 missionaries. 

Between President Alder’s challenge delivered at the first series of zone conferences and then with the mission leadership setting a goal of 15 ITAs per day for each young missionary, it did create a culture in the mission of talking about some aspect of the gospel to everyone around you. 

Occasionally I would take the missionaries with me when I was buying things for their apartments or getting something to eat.  It was fun and inspiring to watch as they would talk to anyone and everyone around us.  I had to be careful not to rush things in my effort to be efficient in accomplishing my housing duties, as the young missionaries were usually busy making contacts.  I think the most impressive example of this was Elder Ivins.  When he was sick and had passed out several times from Dengue Fever, Eileen asked if I would drive to the far side of our mission to pick up Elder Ivins and his companion and then meet her at a hospital on the other side of our mission.  I knew Elder Ivins was really sick because he wasn’t talking much on our long drive.  But once in the hospital Emergency Room, waiting his turn to see a doctor, we observed Elder Ivins sharing a pamphlet with a fellow patient waiting beside him.   

This example of speaking to everyone you meet about the church began to affect even Eileen and I to some extent.  While we spoke to several people who lived around us, and the head cook at our favorite restaurant, seldom did any express genuine interest to learn more about the Church.  However, one couple did.  

We met Lance and Grace Cendana while riding up the elevator in our apartment building.  It was early afternoon and we had decided to drop by our apartment after doing apartment inspections before going back to the office.  Lance and Grace were just returning from a doctor appointment.  What some would describe as just a coincidence that we were both home in the middle of the day, I know now was not.  In the brief couple of minutes we had with them Eileen started talking to Grace.  Then to my surprise Eileen told them we were with the Church and asked if they had heard of it.  When Lance said yes, and that his aunt was a member living in the U.S., I asked if he would like to learn more about the Church.  I think both Eileen and I were in shock when he said he would.  That brief encounter set in motion a series of events which would change their lives and ours over the next few months.

Lance, Grace and their two daughters lived two floors below us in a small one bedroom apartment.  Like many Filipinos, Lance worked nights in a call center.  Grace had recently quit her job so that she could stay at home and be a full-time mother to their two girls.  From what Grace told us, she was a bit rebellious during her teenage years and had a challenged relationship with her very religious, now deceased mother.  She actually reminded me in some ways of my youngest daughter.  The first time we visited Grace in her apartment, she expressed to Eileen and me, her desire to have a closer relationship with God.

Lance and Grace first met the sister missionaries in our home over dinner.  That night they were introduced to Joseph Smith and the restoration.  They were also given a  Book of Mormon and invited to read from it prior to our next meeting.  At our next meeting, when the sister missionary asked Grace if she had been able to read in the Book of Mormon, I began to realize what a special event I was witnessing.  Grace proceeded to give us a book review of 1st and 2nd Nephi.  Her account of the lessons and doctrine Nephi gives his readers let me know that Grace was not just being taught by the sister missionaries, Eileen or me; Grace was being taught by the Spirit and I was privileged to be able to witness it.

While as missionaries we love to teach families, we must never forget that true conversion to the Gospel of Jesus Christ is an individual matter.  Testimonies are achieved and the saving ordinances entered into on a one-by-one basis.  Lance was progressing at rate consistent with most serious investigators. However, his wife was doing so on an accelerated basis.  The family started attending church during November and in December Grace was baptized.  A month later Lance was baptized.

This was my fifth time serving as a full-time missionary, but it had been over 40 years since I had baptized someone I helped find, teach and fellowship.  It was a humbling and truly awesome experience.  Watching Grace give her first talk in sacrament meeting and then a few weeks later give the prayer at stake conference was like my being a proud parent all over again.  Even better was listening to the two of them tell me after stake conference how inspiring they thought the remarks of Elder Taniela B. Wakolo (from the Area Presidency) were.

Due to the pandemic, church meetings were discontinued in mid-March.  And two weeks later we were on a plane heading home.  While I felt bad about leaving President and Sister Alder half-way though our mission, it was leaving Lance and Grace that hurt the most.  On the morning we were to leave, Lance and Grace came up to our apartment to say our final good-byes.  As we stood there together, not able to hug or even shake hands, we were able to cry together, and we did.

You worry about your converts, praying that they will remain faithful to their covenants and active in the church.  Knowing that there are no weekly church meetings and that the Metro Manila area, which includes parts of our mission, have been under strict lockdown much of the time has only increased my concerns.  Fortunately, Lance and Grace have been blessed to have a good bishop and other missionaries who have stepped in to help support them in our absence.  Since returning home, I have emailed Lance periodically.  Words cannot fully express the joy I felt as I have heard about Lance blessing the sacrament and getting his first “ministering” assignment.  I look forward to the day when Lance will baptize his daughters, and then once the temple is open again, for them to be sealed as a family together.

As Alma said, “by small and simple things, great things are brought to pass.”  I have often wondered how different things might have been had I not asked that simple question and if Lance had not said “yes” when we were in the elevator that day.  That brief encounter changed Lance’s life, the life of his family, and my life.  I will be eternally grateful for the opportunity to serve a mission in the Philippines and for President Alder’s challenge to the missionaries of the Antipolo Mission to invite others to act.



Sunday, July 19, 2020

PAST THE POINT OF NO RETURN

Last week we received a phone call from the Missionary Department informing us that we would not be able to return to the Philippines to complete our mission. This was due to the covid-19 pandemic, specifically: in both the Metro Manila area and Utah, as well as many other areas of the world, the medical situation is still getting worse; our having less than six months left before our release date; and since I (Russell) am turning 65 soon, Missionary Medical considers me a greater health risk . We have also learned that to date almost no senior missionaries who returned early have been allowed to go back out and almost all new senior missionaries called with start dates from April through September have been postponed or are serving from their homes. When we left Antipolo, I thought we might be back by July. Eileen has been telling me that I was underestimating the severity of the situation. Once again she was right. I should have listened more closely to the Mission Nurse, particularly on this medical situation.

In his April 2020 General Conference talk titled, Shall We Not Go On In So Great a Cause, Elder M. Russell Ballard invited us, “As we listen to the Spirit during this 200thanniversary celebration this week-end, consider what offering you will present to the Lord in righteousness in the coming days. Be courageous—share it with someone you trust, and most important, please take time to do it!”

Both Eileen and I decided to take up Elder Ballard’s challenge; Eileen to organize her over 80,000 photo library and then utilize it to add to ancestors profiles in Family Search, and for me to write my personal history. We have used the time at home provided to us by the pandemic and each been successful in our efforts. We have also worked/served a day or two a week in the Missionary Department; Eileen doing medical screening of senior missionaries and I doing projects for Senior Missionary Services related to office missionaries. Since returning home, both Eileen and I have occasionally been involved in supporting the missionaries in Antipolo but the time involved has been minimal. 

While this is not the way I would have imagined our mission to end, I am glad the Church was concerning with our health and evacuated us when they did. I can clearly see that the Church is led by a prophet and that President Nelson has been preparing us for this latest challenge; be it the Come Follow Me program, telling us to prepare for an April Conference like no other last Fall, reacting quickly to close Church meetings and Temples worldwide, etc. I am grateful for the opportunity to have served in the Philippines and look forward at some later date to serve on another mission. 


Saturday, March 28, 2020

NOT RELEASED, JUST TRANSFERRED

We have been back in Utah a week now.  It appears that our Missionary Department directed two-week self-isolation period will be in effect extended by Utah Governor Herbert’s stay-at-home directive announced on Friday.  Driving to the grocery store will still be allowed.  Our daughter Heather had bought groceries for us prior to our arrival and they are tremendously appreciated. There were still a few things we thought maybe we should get while we still had the opportunity.  Walmart’s delivery service is great!  Eileen ordered and paid for our groceries on-line and then someone came to deliver the goods.  No face-to-face interaction required.  The Governor also encouraged people to order takeout dining to support the locale economy, a suggestion that Eileen and I anticipate following with pleasure.  Although we are confined to our home, life is pretty good here.  We are especially feeling spoiled with hot water, a dishwasher, a clothes dryer, spring flowers blooming outside, and the sounds of neighbor children playing rather than the sounds of motorcycles and jeepneys driving nearby. I hope we can continue to recognize how blessed we are and not become so accustomed to our lifestyle here that we take it for granted and fail to give thanks to God from whom it all came.  We look forward to the time when we will be able to see and interact with our family members rather than just through car windows or over Skype or FaceTime.

We have been in contact with several members of our mission in Antipolo this week.  I (Russell) have exchanged about a dozen emails with the new office elders answering questions.  On Friday night I used FaceTime to do a more in-depth training on missionary housing issues.  The elders are doing a great job.  I’m amazed at how fast they have picked things up and how well they are dealing with the chaotic situation they have been thrust into.  Their technical support, the Area office personnel and I, are all working from home. The Antipolo branch of the bank we use just announced that they are closed until April 14th.  A manned barricade on the street near the mission office did not allow any access to our office for the first few days this week.  Fortunately, our office guard, Mackie, was able to work out a pass so that President and Sister Alder, Sister Gibson, the two AP’s and the two office elders could get in to work there. 

Eileen has communicated a few times this week with Sister Alder.  She told Eileen that there have been no medical calls from the young missionaries since we left.  Prior to our departure, Eileen would field several calls a day, between 90-110 recordable cases per month.  Most cases involved multiple calls or text messages.  While I do believe that the Lord is looking out for His missionaries during this difficult time, I can also understand why the missionaries would not want to call with any health issues for fear of being told they should go see a doctor at either a local hospital or clinic.  Hospitals and clinics seem to have gone from being considered as places of refuge to potential sources of contracting the virus.

There have been many miracles, large and small, that have happened over the last couple weeks.  One example - on Thursday morning at 1 AM, Eileen woke up and went downstairs.  I followed her wondering why she was up.  I found her downstairs looking at her phone.  She said that Sister Alder had sent a brief text message just 10 minutes earlier.  We keep the phones on our main floor and cannot hear when messages come in while we are upstairs, particularly when we are asleep in bed.  Sister Alder had a pressing family issue and needed some medical advice quickly. As I listened in on the subsequent FaceTime conversation, I realized that my wife had been woken from her sleep by the Holy Ghost so that she could minister to Sister Alder’s urgent need.  In our work I have found that what the world considers as coincidences are actually just small miracles.  The challenge for me is, am I in tune enough with The Spirit to recognize them? 

On Thursday evening we were to meet (via Skype) with our stake president, President Dushku, regarding what would happen to our calling as full-time missionaries.  From information we received from the clerk making the appointment, we learned that the possible outcomes were: (i) total release; (ii) temporary release with reinstatement when/if return to the Philippines became possible; or (iii) in the unlikely event that we could foresee 32 hours or more of work per week supporting remotely the mission in Antipolo, we could remain as full-time missionaries. While we both intend on continuing to support the Antipolo mission in any way we can, realistically it will not qualify as full-time.  We would also like to return to Antipolo if conditions surrounding the pandemic allow us to do so prior to our scheduled release in December.  On Thursday morning we called Art Johnson, our former manager at Senior Missionary Services, to see if he needed any help.  He did, and so for now we will continue as full-time missionaries serving both to remotely support the Philippines Antipolo Mission and work on projects in Senior Missionary Services (part of the Missionary Department).

We are most grateful for all those behind the scenes who made our repatriation possible. In the last couple of weeks there have been thousands of missionaries who have returned home from all over the world. It is all rather mind-boggling. Since I (Eileen) am usually in charge of our travel plans, I recognizes to some extent the huge effort that was made on our behalf and that of others. I truly believe that it is a miracle that travel arrangements have been able to be made. The Lord is surely mindful of His missionaries. 
  
This morning we had two wonderful things happen. A friend "heart attacked" our door and left messages in Tagalog, and our son brought over a full package of TP.  The kindness of others has been wonderful

Friday, March 27, 2020

RELUCTANTLY GOING HOME

Just last Saturday (March 14), I (Russell) was trying to absorb all Elder Bills could teach me about the mission financial secretary role.  And today, just seven days later, I am sitting in a hotel near the airport waiting to board a plane sometime tomorrow to return home.  On Tuesday we got the word that almost all foreign missionaries, both young and senior (approximately half our mission), would be sent home.  Last week I was concerned about how I was going to do what both Elder Bills and I had been doing for the last eight months.  Today I am concerned about how two young Filipino missionaries are going to do what both of us had been doing.  While my eight hours of training was far from the desired norm of four weeks, at least I have a financial background and some familiarity with the computer programs.  The four days of training for the first elder (Caguicla) and one day for the other (Abquina) was at best woefully inadequate and at worst cruel and unusual punishment.  However, I was impressed at their positive attitudes and how quickly they picked things up.  I will be trying to support them from home the best I can, as Eileen will try and continue helping out with the medical role.  How successful we can be in helping from halfway around the world is a concern to all involved.

Not only has our life in the office changed dramatically over the last two weeks but life in general has, all due to the pandemic.  Church services have been canceled, almost all businesses are closed, lines at grocery stores and ATMs are long, traffic on the roads is light, and police/military manned blockades restrict travel in a number of locations.  In general, the locals are scared of the coronavirus and don’t need to be told twice to stay home and wait it out. 

Leaving a mission is usually an emotional experience; doing it quickly and unexpectedly just makes it more so.  We both feel terrible about the mess we are leaving President and Sister Alder in.  Most of the progress we had made since starting the mission from scratch (in the office, in the medical care, and in the living conditions of the missionaries) seems to just have taken a big hit.  We will miss the Alders greatly and they will be in our prayers.  

Seeing half the mission leave was hard on the Alders and the missionaries that remained behind.  Our foreign missionaries within Metro Manila (the Pasig and Taguig zones) were not allowed to meet with President Alder prior to their departure due to the travel restrictions.  Three of the other zones left on Wednesday from the mission office.  We and the Siniloan zone missionaries did not, just because there was not enough room to do so.

This morning just before we left, Lance and Grace came over to say goodbye.  It was an emotional time for all four of us.  One great thing about this mission that cannot be taken away by the virus pandemic is our association with them.  That will live on, in this life and the next.

I am indeed grateful for the opportunity to have served here in the Philippines Antipolo Mission, to serve with Eileen as my companion, and to be a representative of my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.
We got very short notice that we were going to leave this morning. As it turned out we didn't leave for several more days. This was the last of the office missionaries.
Sisters departing for the hotel, taking a photo of us departing for the hotel.
Lots of tears were shed as the last of the Americans left President and Sister Alder.

We stayed one night at the airport Marriott, hot water, a bathtub and our TV says our name on it. Have we entered another universe?  We were duly impressed. Sack lunches were delivered to our doors, rice and a small amount of meat. HMMM, that didn't seem like Marriott food, but it was free and we didn't have to prepare it!

Our view out our hotel window. It is hard to believe that the city is on lockdown.
Elder Wacolo of the Philippines Area Presidency came to address us at 5:45 a.m.
Missionaries listening to Elder Wacolo

Some of the Antipolo missionaries
Sister Torkonoo studying scriptures among all the visiting missionaries

We were all woken up at 4:30 a.m. and told to be in the lobby for departure by 5:30 a.m. We didn't end up leaving the hotel until 10:30 a.m. by which time we were all rather hot and exhausted.
A few Antipolo missionaries at the airport
The line of missionaries waiting to check in was incredibly long. Over 1,600 missionaries left on five charter flights this afternoon and one commercial flight the night before.  There were just a handful of people at the airport other than the missionaries. 
Families were instructed to stay in their cars for pickup in SLC. Our daughter Heather became creative in welcoming us back home.

Trying to be careful by wearing masks. 

We are now on a 14 day quarantine. Although neither of us is sick, we want to make sure that there isn't any possibility that someone thinks they got sick from us. The Church has instructed all returning missionaries to be on a 2 week quarantine whether or not they are feeling ill.

Sunday, March 15, 2020

RESTORATION AND RESTRICTIONS

President Russell M. Nelson has asked all of us to prepare for April Conference by immersing ourselves in the glorious light of the Restoration! We did just that in Zone Conference this past week. On both Wednesday and Thursday approximately 70 missionaries came together each day in the Antipolo stake center to be edified and inspired through the message of the Restoration. Missionaries were challenged by President Alder a couple of months ago to study about the Restoration and invited us to find a creative way to share our feelings with our fellow missionaries at Zone Conference. I (Eileen) was able to attend both full days of presentations and came away uplifted, with a desire to increase my study of the Restoration and of the life of Joseph Smith. I was amazed by the remarkable talents shared by our missionaries. Artwork was done, poems were read, and several original musical numbers were performed. I determined a few weeks ago that I would like to share a musical number. During the time I was convalescing from my pneumonia, I was able to scour the internet looking for piano solos. I finally decided to play a medley consisting of three songs, “Oh, how Lovely was the Morning,” “Praise to the Man” and “We Thank Thee oh God for a Prophet.” I was excited to find a video online consisting of short clips of Joseph Smith’s life, which were matched with the music I had chosen. The video started at the First Vision and continued with snippets of his life through the martyrdom, and then ended with just a few seconds of him kneeling in the grove. It was a wonderful way for me to reflect on the life of Joseph Smith.  If you are interested in viewing the talents of our missionaries you can view them on the Philippines Antipolo Mission site on Facebook. 

It seems like Zone Conference was a haven away from the chaos which has been occurring due to the Coronavirus. I have done a great deal of reading on this illness over the last several weeks. I am not sure if my acute interest is because I was in the hospital recently with a respiratory infection, or if  I just feel like it is important for me as the mission nurse to stay up to date on medical news, I view the news several times a day. At night when I can’t sleep, I open the news online to see what the current status is. It seems like the news changes quickly, sometimes from hour to hour. A couple of weeks ago during the night I felt impressed that our missionaries should be advised to do three things: 1) Have a supply of food to get them through a possible quarantine; 2) Have enough medications on hand so that if they are sick they won’t need to run to a pharmacy; and 3) Stop shaking hands.  This last week saw direction from our Area Presidency implementing these ideas, and just in time. Thursday evening President Duterte, who is the president of the Philippines, gave a news conference stating that the Metro Manila area would be put under “lockdown” starting Sunday March 15th at 12:01 AM. Even before he gave his news conference, panic had set in. Stores were packed with shoppers. The grocery store where we shop had people triple parked. Fortunately we had gone to the store the week previously and stocked up on some food items after feeling prompted to do so. You can’t put very much food in an apartment as small as ours, but we have enough that we wouldn’t starve if we couldn’t go to the store.  The Filipino government is trying to take drastic measures to stop the spread of the virus.  Two of our six zones are now within the lockdown area. The only people that can go in and out of the Metro Manila area are those with valid work IDs requiring them to work. Malls and restaurants have closed down. Our missionaries who are in the contained area are to a degree on their own for at least another month. It also means that missionaries who get sick outside of the contained zone, will not be able to visit the doctor in the area where I usually send the more serious cases. It gives me cause to seriously reflect how badly a missionary needs to go to the doctor.

This week was supposed to be transfer day on Wednesday, which means we would get a new batch of missionaries. Since the missionaries were all at the MTC which is in the lockdown area, they were sent spur-of-the-moment to our mission yesterday. A lot of effort was made to get transfers done five days early.  

Friday morning our office couple Elder and Sister Bills, were informed that they and some other senior missionaries would be leaving the Philippines on Saturday evening for precautionary medical reasons. This decision was made at the Area level. Honestly, I thought we would be going home with my having recently had pneumonia. I guess as Russell said, we made the “medical cut” - at least this time around. What now has happened is that all the duties which Elder Bills did previously are now being coordinated by Russell to make sure they get done. Russell spent all day at the office on Saturday with Elder Bills, trying to learn in a day what is usually taught in a month; and we both spent the day at the office today trying to complete needed tasks.  We weren’t alone at the office as missionaries were coming and going all day long with the accelerated transfer schedule.

As I was going into the office today thinking how crazy it seems like life is getting, I was notified by email about a new video put out by our prophet just this morning. As I viewed it, I was gratified for the presence of a prophet on earth. He brings peace and hope to what can sometimes  be considered a chaotic existence. I know our Heavenly Father loves his children and is aware of their needs. I am not sure how the future will play out. I just know I have to put my trust in Him.


These missionaries are obviously not obeying the Coronavirus separation precautions.
Making a transfer

Pasta on bread?
Elder Allred on the left is feeling much after a recent bout with Dengue

Elder Briggs teaching the zone
Eileen playing a Restoration medley
Sister Gibson reading a poem on the prophet Joseph

Russell gave out fire extinguishers to the missionaries so each apartment would have one



Coronavirus signs at the front of the grocery store. Your temperature is checked and alcohol spread on  your hands as you go in.

Meat anyone?

Saturday, March 7, 2020

SHE'S ALIVE

The doctor told Eileen that if she was not better by this last week, following her latest round of antibiotics, that she should come back to see him.  Reluctantly, with some coaxing from me, she did so on Tuesday. The internist referred her to a pulmonologist, also in the same clinic.  Eileen was prescribed another antibiotic and continuation of some other medications she has been taking.  This would have been her third oral antibiotic, in addition to some IV antibiotics given while in the hospital. Feeling a bit frustrated that she was not getting better after more than a month, Eileen called the AMA (the Philippines Area Medical Advisor, a doctor from the U.S.) that she as the mission nurse consults with on difficult cases.  He questioned if she was being over-medicated.  Eileen decided to forgo the new antibiotic and stop the other things she was taking and within a day was coughing much less and feeling better!  I have wondered if she was having a bad reaction to one or a combination of the medications she was on.  On both Thursday and Friday Eileen returned to the office for portions of the days.  Both of us realized just how long it had been that she had been house bound when Eileen commented on how bad the traffic had become on our way to the office.  The traffic has not changed.

I (Russell) have been going to a gym across the street most mornings when it opens at 7:00 AM.  Yesterday as I was looking out at the street from the treadmill, the traffic was almost at a standstill for quite a while.  First a fire truck and then an ambulance came.  I could tell that it was close but could not actually see what had happened.  It turns out that just after I had crossed the street (a major road here - three lanes each direction), a jeepney lost it’s breaks and hit a number of pedestrians in front of WalterMart; killing two and injuring several other, one of which was a new security guard at our apartment complex.  The government is trying to get the jeepneys off the roads within a couple years.  Given what I have seen of them it is a wise course of action.

This week the Philippines Area Presidency sent out a letter to the 23 missions here regarding the coronavirus.  This letter was then shared with parents of the young missionaries.  In it, they instructed the missionaries to no longer shake hands, fist or elbow bump, or hug others.  This is something Eileen has been advocating for a while.  Yesterday it was reported in the news that three more cases (total of six) were diagnosed in the Philippines.  Two of those are a couple in their early 60’s who live in Cainta, a city within our mission just a few miles west of our apartment.  We are fortunate to not have the number of cases that those in Japan or Korea are facing.  Asking that the spread of the virus be contained and that those affected may be comforted and protected has become a regular part of my daily prayers.

Eileen took this photo in a bathroom of a nice restaurant. Quite often when she uses the restroom, or comfort room as they call it here, there are foot prints on the toilet seat. I guess there are a lot of women who sit like frogs out there.





Sunday, March 1, 2020

RELAPSE


Eileen’s recovery from pneumonia took a turn this last week - just not the right direction.  Her cough has just persisted and by Tuesday was bad enough she went to the doctor.  He proscribed some medications, including another antibiotic, and told her to come back in a week if the cough had not gone away.  In church today they read a letter from the Area Presidency over the pulpit.  The letter asked members not to attend the temple or other church meetings if the had any flu-like symptoms, including a cough.  I (Russell) was glad Eileen had decided to stay home today.  She continues to field phone calls from the missionaries about their health and give advice from our apartment.

My activities this past week sound a lot like most other weeks.  I have been trying to find and rent apartments, close down old ones, do apartment inspections, and shop for appliances and other apartment items.  I think I am the local Ace Hardware and Shop-Wise’s best customer.  The novel things this week were: I fixed one sisters apartment’s washing machine; and helped two sisters catch a mouse.  If you know me well then you have to admit, my fixing a washing machine that wouldn’t drain is pretty much a miracle.

The mouse on the other hand did not experience a miracle.  The sisters had told me they found evidence of a rodent in their kitchen and I advised the sticky-paper/glue type trap.  It seems to work well here.  However, this time the sisters reported that only hair was found stuck to the glue covered plastic board.  So now they had a rodent with a bald spot!  Since Eileen was home sick, I took the APs with me and we bought a “live” cage type trap at a hardware store and bait from the local bakery.  One of the APs, Elder Ivins, asked me if I was going to tell the sisters what to do with the rodent if they caught it.  I told him it would work best if we took it one step at a time.  This morning at 6:30 I got a call from the sisters.  They had a mouse in the trap and wanted to know what to do with it.  I told them to fill a large bucket with water and then put the trap in the bucket.  If they had been in the province then perhaps they could have released it “into the wild.”  But given where they live in the city, the mouse just got to go cage diving.

This sign was at the door of the hospital. Similar signs (although smaller) are at each mall and store.
View from the front of a jeepney. Russell was sitting in the front giving directions. On one visit he was sitting on a plastic chair which didn't sound very safe to Eileen.
The bunk beds were being delivered in a jeepney. This is Russell's view looking towards the back.
Taking the bunkbeds out.  We paid for delivery and women and their children showed up.
Random electrical line hanging down in front of our car
Setting the trap