This may be the new site for the Halgren family book club. Â I want to find a way for you all to post on here. Â First I want everyone to try doing a reply to a post and I will see if I can arbitrate and add your comments to the discussion board here. Â Later we might build on some log in info so that your comments are automatically accepted. Â Right now I get way to much spam on here to do that.
Anywho, respond to this post and let me know what you think.
I think I should get back in the habit of writing on my blog, then it might be worth something to me in the future. Reading back through my past blogs, I found that I actually have a sense of humor sometimes. I hope that by writing more here I will round out my education. I find that recreational writing like this can be very good for the intellect.
Monday and Tuesday flew by for me. I only had two classes in all so I went to the temple and thoroughly enjoyed myself before vacation, that way I wouldn’t be on school withdrawals by the time Wednesday hit and I wouldn’t do anything crazy.
We had a great time in Arizona celebrating the season and talking about old times current times and future events. I love being around the family to learn and express great ideas. It is no wonder that the family is the centerpiece of this world. They bring so much peace and happiness to the people. Just looking around the apartments today it is evident that people are much happier after seeing their families.
Since the season of service is coming up, there seems to be a great amount of time spent on lessons of that theme. In Kanab where we stopped for church on the way home Sunday, there was a talk given on President Monson’s talk on service. Today I had the opportunity to listen in and participate in a reading and discussion of that same scriptural talk. There is much to be learned and applied as this world has greater and greater needs of service.
I have learned through my last two experiences of Thanksgiving with the Halgren family, that one must earn the giant dinner through a series of long workouts and near death experiences through energy exhaustion. If it is not earned in this manner it would not be nearly as justifiable to eat one pie per person in a three day period. One of these such workouts was a great bike-ride on tandems. I am impressed at how fun they are. It makes for a great easy date. Out here we can rent them for under $10 an hour, so it might have to be a date to ride up one of the canyons together.
It is depressing to be back here in Provo, yet there is excitement in knowing that the winter break is in sight. This Friday there is a Military Ball that Lexie and I get to go to. Should be pretty fun.
Saturday we are seeing the Christmas concert with BYU choirs of the best of the best of the best. Everywhere you look there are ornaments for Christmas already, I have really missed this kind of sight over the past couple of years.
I hope you all had great Thanksgiving weekends, whether working or playing or otherwise. Let me know how your week was.
Love
Jason
Sorry, last week I forgot to explain why I titled my letter “just keep swimming”. Friday we went swimming as a platoon. It is just another army way to disguise a heavy workout. We had to swim laps for 10 minutes and then tread water for 10 minutes. It was easier than I expected but still a good workout. It had been way to long since I had been in the water. Maybe now I can do the triathlon in Lamar. Near the end we did a buddy rescue so cadet Erb, my battle buddy came to rescue me. He used to work as a lifeguard, but when he took hold of me he sank and said that I just cant float. I had tried to explain this to him but he wouldn’t believe me. So this Friday we went to swim again but this time in full uniform. we jumped blindfolded off of the high dive with a rifle and had to hold on to the rifle and swim to the wall. You gain about 20 pounds with the wet ACU’s and shoes. At least they didn’t make us wear our boots. Then we had to swim a lap holding a rifle above the water, and wearing an LBE (a belt that holds canteens, ammo, compass, first aid kit. Then we jumped from the edge of the pool again with LBE and rifle and had to drop the rifle in the water and ditch the LBE before we hit the surface.
Thursday we had a lab to do what we call lanes, basically they give the squad leader an order and explains the situation and we go defeat a bunker or whatever it is. We had a COB (Civilian On Battlefield). I was put in charge of holding him and moving him around, by this time we had to be friendly to him and he wanted to be a little too friendly with me. He was itching to hold my hand and insisted walking right next to me. I learned that that is a really bad idea. By the end he was mad that we wouldn’t give him back his rifle and took off running and I had to chase him and bring him back. Afterward he told me that when we go to camp’s and such the COBs are even harder to handle. It wasn’t very fun but it was really funny.
Friday Lexie and I went outside and played some frisbee with a bunch of kids here at the apartment complex. Near the end the sun was setting and we went and hiked the Y. It was really fun, we will have to do it again when we can get up there before the sun sets, what a view.
Saturday morning I was asked by cadet Jones, one of the higher up guys to help him take down a flag at a ward activity of his. About the time we were setting up a good sized fire in the middle of the parking lot and talking about how to cut the flag I realized that we werent just taking it down, but retiring it. That was a really neat experience. To top that, one of the Deshazer boys was there, apparently he is in the ward. I think it was Dillon, but I am not really sure, I never did have them all distinguished, I was too young when they were still in the ward.
I hope everyone has a great Thanksgiving week. Keep it thankful
Jason
PS Psalms 100
MMTG La Mejor Mision
This was a fairly entertaining week. Wednessday in the Doctrine and Covenants class we had the teacher’s wife in and whe helped dispell peoples fears of dating and searching for marriage. She made an interesting argument for most of the class-time between Faith and Fear. Basically if we have fear, we have no faith, when we begin to try to believe and have faith is when our fear begins to subside. Then we can receive the blessings that come from that faith and obedience. Sometimes I think we have fear but we obey anyway, but I dont think we learn as much in that situation. The scriptures say to do everything in faith or else our work is vain, just like having works without faith, they must go hand in hand.
Thursday I wore my Army-green Class A uniform all around school. We had what they call a presidential review. Basically we stand in formation for a long time and the president of the school, President Samuelson, comes and inspects us for a minute and then we presented a two star general with a patriot’s award. We stood still for about an hour, not to mention the rehersing before. Air force is always practicing formations and such, they had 3 cadets faint, we never do it as Army but nobody fell.
Friday again into the Class A uniform for a memorial service for Cpt Perkins a BYU graduate that died in August of this year. I was impressed with the service. The school has a giant wall with the names of all the fallen ex-BYU students from wars since WWI.
Friday evening was dance-sport where Lexie danced country polka. I thought she did pretty well, but she wasn’t selected to advance to the second round. It was fun to watch though.
Saturday I had a shooting match in Salt Lake. It was a tournament between UofU and West-point and since I was there, BYU too. Heather Deppe is shooting for West point, but not very well. She is way below what she should be. I didn’t shoot well either, though they scored me about 5 points higher than I expected. We shoot 5 shots per target and I had a target of 46 the hard way, that is 4 tens and a six. I even started adjusting my sights only to find I was moving them the wrong way. Note to self…
I better get to edifying my mind and spirit. Hope everyone has an awesome week and those who are sick can recover quickly.
Love yall
Jason
PS the title was about swimming because I swam for physical training on friday. Now I might be able to do the triathalon.
MMTG La Mejor Mision
It has been a treasure to have this time back at home. I write this letter now two weeks after my last letter from the field. My English has improved somewhat and I am loving my life back with my family and friends.
I write this letter to give my personal thanks to all of you who have eagerly and lovingly read all of my sometimes tedious emails. I spent the best two years of my life in Mexico and I hope that you all understand why after reading some of my personally uplifting and building experiences. Here at home I arrived and was released Friday night in the house of President Jones. My family awaited me with open arms at my house and my nieces and nephews had to constantly remind me “Jason, Speak English”. Sunday, Father’s day I gave my “homecoming” talk in sacrament meeting in my ward. Again thank you to all who heard about my talk and were able to be there and I could see your shining faces and try to remember I can hug now. It was a great Sunday to be back in my old ward and with my greatest friends.
As far as future plans, I am working with Bob Reynolds and will work through the summer before starting school at BYU Provo in August. I will still be in contact with as many of you as possible but I am sure my life will be very busy now. Please feel free to write me or call me. My new email address is jason@jasonorvin.com or you can call me at 303-330-2349.
I had the most joyous time on my mission and hope to continue with these experiences as time goes by. I invite you all to come just a little closer to the Lord. We are never perfect, we must always strive to be the best that our Father in Heave knows we can be. Young men, serve a mission, serve with honor, and be the Lord’s servant in every moment and place. God loves us and wants us to show the world that love.
Thanks to everyone for your support.
Jason Orvin
Mission Mexico Tuxtla-Gutierrez 13 June 2007 – 19 June 2009
MMTG La Mejor Mision
Well what can I say if I am going to see you all within about a week. Let me just tell about the wonderful experiences of the week.
Monday was a crazy day as always of moving the missionaries all around the state. Elder Glazier came to our area to take my place when I leave.
Tuesday we got together with the missionaries a bit to get to know them and tell them some things to do. In the afternoon we did get to work a bit, Wednesday was used to organize the multizone conference for 120 missinaries. Thursday my companions went to a special counsil with Elder Grow, the first counselor of the president of the area Mexico. I meanwhile was left to organize the missionaries arriving and get everyone where they were supposed to be. Once I was home My companions arrived again and we worked together on some subjects that we would help explain in the conference and we were awake until about midnight, then we were up and about at 5:30 so we could go open the building and organize everything once again. After the conference, which was excelent, we had to clean up and return things borrowed from other chapels and by the time we got home, it was time to go to bed, not before treating an elder who got a bit sick. Again Saturday we were up early to go to the hospital and help a child who had fell from a roof. From there we were on the run to organize a wedding of one family and the baptism of another family. We got home a bit late and had to plan our talks, 2 each for Sunday. Sunday we never stopped running to be able to get to meetings and appointments. My companions have been really tired. I feel good, maybe I am too used to running around constantly. It made it funny that my mother had written me last week to say that this is my last week of work, but really I hardly had time to work, but we did have the blessing of 4 Baptisms on Saturday. Right now we are going to their house to have a Family Home evening and cook the last of the pies I have made in the mission.
That is all for the crazy week, next week I will be home and will tell of the last experiences of a mission well lived.
Love you all
Elder Orvin
How many blessings can one hope for in one week. One of my many investigatores that have almost been baptized before fleeing the city for work or family got into comunication with a ward member here. She says she has been baptized and is serving as teacher of Sunday School in Aguascalientes. That was the first great news of the week, skipping to the most recent, we are pretty sure we will have 6 baptisms this week. There is a family of four who we found last week and they came to church, this week again and they want to be in the water before I leave. Then a couple who I am sure I have talked about, they were waiting to get married and I just heard my comp get off the phone with the lawyer and we have a date for the wedding. Hopefully all goes well and we see more good news. In a little city outside of Tuxtla we hope to see 13 baptisms next week too, they have a couple families to dress up in white and hand out blessings. I am really excited to see the missionaries have success. Today will arrive a new Zone leader to take my place, from now until I leave I am in charge of training my companions and helping them get on a roll. I feel like the mission president with two assistents, I have all the final decisions but I can delegate almost everything. I just have to take charge that they learn how to do everything.
I hope everyone has a great week, and recieve as many blessings as we are recieving down here in the heat.
Love
Elder Orvin
I felt really well this week, I am not sick in any shape or form. However of the 28 missionaries in my zone, 10 are sick and bed ridden. Of the sister missionaries, there in only one companionship in all of Tuxtla that worked this week. The strange thing is that they all have diferent things. I think I have called the mission doctor about 150 times in the last week. The best part is that almost all of the sicknesses are contageous and if we go visit we have to wear our face masks and wash our hands and all sorts of crazy stuff.
This week we our zone conference and we had a great class. 6 missionaries couldnt come due to sickness, but outside of that it was great. The president left us to ourselves to have the class. He didnt even pretend to show up. We learned a lot and gained confidence. The greatest part is that it touched me to review what the president had told us and shared with us about his personal studies. He had also explained some talks given by President Uchtdorf and President Eyring, and I was able to explain it then to my missionaries. I really felt and understood how God works to teach us and help us grow. The spirit testified to me and the missionaries more clearly and openly than it had in the counsil with the Zone Leaders.
The next day I sent my companion off to Independence to get a signature and work a little bit. I hope some day they open the area down there, everyone we talk to lets us into their houses. My comp came back excited and had some great stories. That was just from 3 hours there in the city.
Last week I had interviewed a sister in the other side of Tuxtla for her baptism, however she wasnt ready yet, she hadnt quite given up her cigarettes still and I gave her the ability to clean up her life a bit more before taking the baptism. This week I went back and since the interview she never picked up another cigarette, and truly felt better and more conviced of the power of God to redeem His people.
Saturday, my birthday, we went to LAS AGUILAS, to help with an activity, I was able to walk some of the streets and remember everything that I did there. Every corner had a story. From there we came racing back to my area where I baptized a little girl. It was a great blessing because my companion and I had a tough time lately baptizing in our own ward.
We are trying to get a couple married and baptized in another ward we are covering. They are really excited, but this week they had some arguments and problems and almost ¨split the sheets¨ as my dad would say. We counseled them for about 15 minutes on how to resolve problems, just like we as companionships solve problems and we left them to talk it out. The next morning they came to church and excited as if something had happened to bring them more close, than they already were.
A great week for some great blessings
Love to all
Elder Orvin