Well, change is always for the best in the end, right? It's been a busy week so we'll start from the beginning:
Diana Gabriela, who left Utah in December, has met up with the missionaries at home and is getting baptized now, and even her family is showing interest! Glad to see that turned out well, even though we don't get to be there!
On Tuesday, Elder Rivera and I went to the temple, and that a was wonderful way to kick off our last day together. The day was filled with lessons setup for Elder Rivera to say goodbye to our investigators. It was very powerful to each of them and had set us on a good footings to transition.
We had a district breakfast at the new Chic-fil-a
the next day before transfers, where half our district was changed! So, my companion,
Elder Rivera is off to Orem to cover just a single Spanish ward there. He is so happy about it and I'm glad.
My new companion is literally the best, I will be so sad if we get only one transfer together! He is such a hard worker, its astounding. His name is Elder Palomares. He was actually the trainer for Elder Meyers, the only guy who came with me from the CCM. Elder Palomares is from Dallas, Texas (but was born in Mexico City and lived there until he was 9, so his Spanish is perfect). He has been on his mission for six months. He loves a lot of the same music I do. We both love tons of the same bands and he even plays guitar. We've played together where a family had two guitars. But like for real, we sometimes sing songs and discuss lyrics as we walk down the street. At first few days it felt almost too good to be true, but now I'm diving in and hope we become great friends for life.
He is a really hard worker, which is perfect since we have less stakes to cover now and we can really hammer down on getting to know them. In fact, after two meetings with the APs in the mission office and talking to many different missionary companionships, we've discovered a whole heap of overcoverage and crossing boundaries in terms of stake assignments. As such, our new area, at least for this transfer until the APs sit down with President McCune and hash it all out, is just 7 YSA stakes, nothing more. That means that we will lose the north family stakes and a couple of our investigators, but otherwise we keep a good portion of our teaching pool. That is nice, because for all intents and purposes, we're opening a brand new area. Our last assignment was so large that we suffered from a sort of "area paralysis". For now though, Elder Palomares and I are determined to suck out all the work we can out of our assignment, which means a lot of this week was contacting YSA leadership and sitting down with ward mission leaders.
We're working our tails off together in our smaller area now and having a great time doing it, I am so behind on my journal and stuff like that because we come home so tired every night. This is going to be an amazing transfer. We don't have our Spanish ward anymore sadly, nor a car, but I love walking and Elder Palomares is a former Cross Country runner like me, so we're gonna run in the mornings to work out!
We have continued meeting with most of our old recent converts, and focusing more on Felipe and Alejandro, our two current investigators. Neither has a baptismal date, but we'll solve that soon enough! We went to church with Felipe and his RM roommate also from Chile named Tomas, and that went well enough. We're going to the temple with Ximena this week to do some baptisms, and are following some leads on some potential investigators we have. Things may be slowed up again, but we're laying good foundations, and I expect our area to be flourishing by the end of the transfer.
Thanks for all your prayers, and for the thought and support you all give. I will do my best to make the most of it!