Monday, December 19, 2016

Week 81 "If they open the door, pretend you're not sick"

December 19, 2016

Unfortunately, Elder Blaylock has been sick this week. I came down with it too yesterday morning.  Our senior Sister Thompson gave me the advice that this is the Lord's work and I can't do it when I'm sick, so I need to do all I can to get better and ask for a blessing. I did and this morning I woke up feeling fine! Yay! I have been so blessed with health during my mission.

This week we flew to Rome.

We got to the apartment of a companionship of Rome 1 elders. They were just recently put in a trio and already were short on beds but they had planned to sleep on cushions and couches and have US sleep on the two beds! I was shocked. One of the elders got ready to begin cooking us dinner when we arrived. Honestly I've never seen anything close to that kind of generosity my entire mission. I really love the idea of reciprocal generosity. In Bari there is a cruddy bathroom and a nice bathroom. Usually an elder switches to the nice bathroom once he is the older companion in the area. I decided to take the opportunity to do my companion a service by staying in the cruddy bathroom my whole time there. I just wonder how much happier and Christ-like our mission would be if every missionary started in the nice bathroom, then voluntarily moved to the bad one after a couple transfers. You still get the nice bathroom for the same amount of time, but with such a better feeling accompanying it. In the same way, if half of your exchanges you are going to sleep on the floor anyway, why don't you make those the one where it's YOUR home? Just food for thought. Anyway I love those guys and that was one of the first things I learned at zone conference...

...which was great!! It was nuts to see the departing testimonies of six missionaries including two of the four Malta elders. They have each had such unique missions but it was super great to hear their last words.

Updates:

V IN LADISPOLI STARTED COMING TO CHURCH! AND HE READS THE BOM EVERY DAY! Woohoo!

Also, our Brazilians are doing great, they are coming to church each week and teaching lessons with the Rome 1 elders who we passed them to!

After zone conference we had the afternoon free since we flew back the next day. So we volunteered to go to Rome 1 and fill up the font for the Ladispoli sisters' baptism! When I get there I found my old Rome 1 Ward mission leader there doing the job. It was great to see people from my old areas of Rome 1 and Ladispoli that night. I was able to put together a dinner with them and a less active I used to teach. Unfortunately, the less active in the end couldn't come, but boy was that good food (see below).


The FHE went fantastic, we had I believe 17 people there, which was almost as many as had come to sacrament meeting the day before. We had lots of fun and had a great lesson. I was on scambio with Anziano Pineau, who had had like zero preparation for what we were about to do, but he did really well!!

Well, the prayers worked last Monday, so please pray for our lesson tonight with a couple. The husband used to translate church materials into Maltese, but has never actually joined... Until now!

Language is coming. There have been a couple tradeoffs now at doorsteps where I speak to people who don't look like they speak English and the people won't respond to me in broken English, they'll respond in Maltese and legit think I understand. 


Love,

Presbiteru Cannon



Yum yum yum yum yum yum yum "papas alla huancaina" [potatoes 
with spicy cream sauce” (forgive me if you are a Spanish speaker!).





Good Christmas spirit here, though it is a British Christmas 
spirit. Here is "Jingle Bells" in Maltese which we will sing.



Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Week 80

December 12, 2016

There is an African man who hadn't come to Church since I've been here. We called to set up an appointment and he just said "I'll come to church on Sunday". So there he was, In a suit and everything!  That's cool, sometimes it doesn't take a lot to help people.

We have a few members from Nigeria and Ghana. None of them are super strong in the gospel, and we figured they would do really well to meet together, and strengthen and teach one another through a family home
evening. So we planned to do that. Our branch mission leader wanted to tag along, and before you knew it got announced in church yesterday! Seriously like the whole branch is coming. I am so happy to do it because like zero of the people here come from those picture perfect nuclear families you are used to in the States.  From what I gathered I doubt anyone was doing FHEs. So we will need your prayers that this first one goes well but I can't wait to help the branch in this way.

We actually taught one of these guys, C, last Monday evening. It's getting better, but at correlation and district meeting we normally sound like Gollum from Lord of the Rings when we sing. I'm no super star myself.  But we were talking about the temple and I felt like we should sing "I Love to See the Temple". So at first I thought: "all right, I'll just read the words". Then I thought: oh, man up! So at the end I said that my companion and I would be singing a song about the temple, and we did, and the Spirit totally came into the room. It was great!

O is doing well! He is like a teabag that has been soaked in Catholicism his entire life. It just shows that the Lord prepares people because miraculously he is humble enough to accept what we teach. But that doesn't mean it's easy. One member from Ireland jokingly told us how he thinks it takes four generations of Church membership to purge all the old traditions people have that they bring from other religions. So we are chipping away.

This week we have zone conference! I'm sad to be leaving our island for a couple days because we have so much work to do but it'll be so great as well to go back to Italy. Hopefully I can do an exchange in Rome 1 or Rome 2 and see old investigators and members!

imħabba, (that's with the guttural "h")

Presbiteru Cannon



Some of our members have super nice 
houses and fireplaces like this...













Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Week 79

December 5, 2016

Wow! What a cool miracle! Sometimes missionaries get a little lazy and put on causal clothes every p-day. I was really proud that we were in our white shirts because this morning as we walked to the bus stop.  As we crossed a busy street as a Filipino couple crossed in the opposite direction. I don't know if they would have recognized us if we had just had on our name tags. But I ran back to the other side since she clearly recognized us, and she told us she is a member that she just got here a week ago! It’s great too because we have several Filipino members. The man isn't a member. We'll see if we can change that.  :)

Quote of the week:

"I've been here for two years and I haven't met a missionary who could answer a real question in Maltese" – Brother Vassallo. He is an older Maltese man and is super nice. He wasn't saying it to criticize, he was just making an honest observation in a way that made me crack up.  But silently I promised to change that. It's very easy to just give up Maltese and rely on English, but for me learning the language is a sign of love for the people I serve, and plus it's necessary now more than ever! (See next paragraph)

The same brother Vassallo translated our first lesson with O! It went great, except for the awkwardness of having a translator.  "He thinks he doesn't want to be baptized"

What???

"Oh wait, he said he thinks he doesn't want to have to have to wait a long time to be baptized". (That legitimately happened).  So yea this guy was standing outside of church a year ago and a member invited him to come to the service. He has been coming faithfully ever since, but has never been taught! We hope to baptize him in January.  He is so humble and loves telling us "thank you", which is one of the
probably ten words he knows in English.

Quick note about our branch: it's crazy, but I love it. Yesterday was an incredible testimony meeting, I loved hearing the amazingly unique stories of how the members found the gospel to be true (all are coverts except an American family). We have a couple old guys from Scotland and Ireland who made livings as a professional chef (and we are talking, professional here) and a kilt maker (he made the kilts for the movie "Braveheart").

Sorry to bring this up again, but we did another gesso [street contacting] in Valleta, and this time I ordered first: "can I have a hot date?" The ladies at the counter started laughing a bit, and I joined in because I usually do, and I thought it was funny cuz they notice we are coming to their stand often. Then they asked "how many?" And without any knowledge that this would seem weird I said "one for each of us" to the two 30ish year old women at the counter. I seriously didn't even understand why they thought it was so funny until afterward. I guess their English is better than I thought.

Malta is great!! Anziano Blaylock and I are doing really well together, we have lots of fun and work hard! He doesn't even Bible bash, I'm really impressed cuz we taught a referral that could was really asking to bash, but he and our member did a super good job.

Love,

Presbiteru Cannon








Monday, November 28, 2016

Week 78

November 28, 2016

What a week! There are so many significant things that are happening, I can't write about them all.

One is Maltese... So we have this guy, O., who has been coming to church for a while, and in the Maltese Sunday school class the teacher invited him to be baptized on the spot and he said yes. But for some reason that may have to do with the fact that he doesn't speak English, the elders didn't set an appointment up with him till I got here. He came to church yesterday and we planned a lesson through a translator! Ah! Imagine that! I can't even talk to my investigator!!  The idea of going super hard with the language and studying for like three hours a day has passed through my head to be honest. But anyway we are hoping he is as ready to be baptized as everyone says and he can do it on Christmas Eve, which would be awesome because it would also mean the zone leaders have to come down to interview him and do the exchange with us they weren’t able to get permission to do!!

Saturday night I had a hot date! Read that again, I'm serious.  We went to do a gesso [street contacting with a large chalkboard that they can write stuff on] at the capital, Valletta. It went great except that I have no idea what to say in English, but it was really good. Maltese are super cool people. As we walked to the bus stop we passed a few vendors, one sold this delicious fresh date pop-tart thing [his “hot date”] that was super yummy for just 30 cents.

We don't have much by way of youth in this branch, but we love working with A, the branch president’s son who has put in his mission papers (and as far as I know will be the first Maltese missionary ever). He has a friend who wants to meet with us that we are excited about.

I am learning to love this place and these people. And, oh boy, is this the nicest weather EVER!!! Have a great week, #dawltad-dinja #siiunaluce #lighttheworld.

Love,


Anziano Cannon


Goodbye to a good friend













Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Week 77 - Dorothy, you're not even in Italy anymore!

November 21, 2016

merħba għall Malta!!

Yea, that's right. I am currently on the island of Malta, where Paul is said to have been shipwrecked. We got the call Monday evening that I would be leaving. That night I went out on the porch to pray and cry. The next morning, I cried again. That like never happens for me.  It is highly probable that I will finish my mission here and never serve in Italy again. Goodbye to the people, the language, the mission in general in some senses.

But I've warmed up to the idea, in my heart and physically (it's so warm here!)  The good news is that it's not that hard to learn to love a people.  All you have to do is work super hard and serve them and it will come.  I am basically serving another mini-mission in the United States...  Except I'm not.

We are supposed to be learning Maltese, which is derived principalmente from Arabic, with a bit of Italian and English mixed in. Malta was colonized by Britain, so people drive on the left and the wheel is on the right. A lot of people speak English, but a LOT DON'T. So I am planning on really seeking the gift of tongues, even though no missionary ever comes off of Malta "really" speaking Maltese. People here are of every skin color imaginable. There are also places like KFC and other American stores. 

Our house is a MANSION. I have no idea how much the Church payed for it. I literally have to run down the hall because it takes so long to get from one side to the other.

Fun fact – my new companion Elder Blaylock is dying [going home] right after Christmas. He was in my mission prep class at BYU. And his twin brother tried out for the BYU cross country team with me over two years ago. 

Yesterday there were 27 people in church plus four missionaries. It's an interesting branch. There are awesome couples from America, Scotland, and Ireland as well as some Maltese. We sang one Maltese hymn, which coming out of me sounded like "was harsh  shagash". 

Couple cool miracles:  Transfer day is Thursday. My plane left Friday morning. So Thursday I got to be with my zone leader and friend Anziano Vrska and help missionaries get places (Rome is the center of all transfers so it's pretty hectic). We also were miraculously able to meet with Grazi, one of the Brazilian new converts who was in Rome getting her permesso, and say goodbye to her. They are struggling to find time to read the scriptures, and we had a lesson idea, but right before I decided instead to tell her the scripture the Lord showed me when I asked for understanding of why I was going to Malta, and I felt like he was talking straight to me. It was great!


That night I went with the Rome 2 elders, which meant I got to return to my English group there! They live with the assistants, so the next morning one of them stayed home while I went running at 4:30 AM with Anziano Whiting! He is a CHAMP!  It was his idea, I was so happy to go with him on a run for the first time in many months.


Love,


Anziano Cannon


No time for pics, next week.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Week 76

November 14, 2016

Wow!  Just wow.  A bomb dropped in Ladispoli this week!!!

Heark, all ye nations! There is a lesson here for members about boldness! We had been over to see Fratello P. once before and he had spoken to us of his friend V. who lives in the same apartment complex.  He invited him to the activity we had a couple weeks ago. When V. didn't come, and we asked him about it, Fratello P told us he didn't want to bug his friend and would wait till the self-sufficiency course restarted and invite him to come to that. Thursday night, V. got on his computer and went to LDS.org and requested that missionaries come to visit him and bring him a Book of Mormon. He then told Fratello P. about his self-referral and told him a little about how "I might want to become part of your church". Talking to our friends about the Gospel is just like asking a girl to dance, you don't have a 100% chance of success, but you will never know unless you try.

On Monday the food was soo good. Our brownies were rock solid in the pan, but luckily the Italian family brought a huge pan of tiramisu.  But it got to be time to go and we hadn't taught them, so Jonathan pulled the plug and we went home. But on the ride home the dad took us and was asking when we could meet to learn about our church, so that's good.

Jonathan also came to our lesson with Patrick. It went so well, we never ever explain "pregare per sapere la verità mediante lo Spirito Santo" [pray to know the truth through the Holy Spirit] well enough but we talked about it and his questions and responses were perfect. Hopefully that witness from the Spirit comes soon.

Favorite line of the week:


We went to the L. family, our accidental house to house contact.  Basically what my family does of taking whole wheat muffins to the new family in the neighborhood is not considered normal here, so Sorella Dini Ciacci referred the family back to us. Once again the husband was sleeping but we found out it was because of his work schedule and the wife invited us to come back. So we'll see this week what's up.


When we were in Rome we would always laugh at the pizza places that noted they were of "Alta digeribilità". Who cares if it's highly digestible? Being here in Ladispoli where there are only pizza places run by guys from the Middle East or North Africa and bars, we see why.  Literally we are in the "pizza ghetto". I seriously couldn't finish my pizza the other week, after a while it just becomes terrible.

Love, 
Anziano Cannon



I finally "worked those Mr. Macs' right off (my) feet!" The sole became separated on one of the pairs and I got it fixed today. I don't know how many miles we walk, but I bet over the course of two years we give the pioneers a run for their money.




Is it illegal to take a picture of the ingredients of a vegetarian 
patty and try and make it yourself?

Ethan is on the front row





Saturday, November 12, 2016

Weeks 72-75

October 17, 2016

Yesterday at zone conference my sisters [missionaries who were in the same MTC group] gave their death testimonies [their last testimony before going home].  Wow, the Spirit was so strong, I am sad to see them go. I will be a wreck when that day comes for me. One of them, who also served in Bari, was really happy to hear during the conference that an extended family is now joining the church. This in a town outside of Bari where there had formally been only one active member. It is an incredible story how my friend found their apartment on an ancient map with markings of where investigators lived. They went to see these people, one of which had taken the lessons in 1993 and was wondering where the missionaries had been the whole time. The rest is history.

We have been planning an awesome activity! Our ward is great; we should have about 30 or more members come. When we got here the plan was sort of a church tour, but Anziano Jorgenson and I wanted to work in some of what we learned from General Conference: rather than explain the differences and similarities of our church from theirs, just teach the plan of salvation! So, we will have a pre-Earth room, an Earth life, and a post-mortal life room. We are hoping to get many non-members there!

This week we went to see the Dini Ciaccis. We had the street name but had to ask someone if they knew the family, since we couldn't specify the house. He pointed us where to go and we rang the button. A little kid came out and asked who we were. We responded that we were the missionaries. I could see inside that the dad hesitated when the kid told him who we were, but then had us come in. IT WASN'T THEM. This guy said he loved the Bible and would love to share a tea with us.  He always welcomes missionaries, but unfortunately, we were so off balance that we politely refused the opportunity, saying we had to get to our appointment. Here's the thing: I know that the Dini Ciaccis go super hard on missionary work, and these were their next-door neighbors, so I assumed they had been invited umpteen times to take the lessons. But we learned after we had found the real house, that these neighbors were new, and that the two families hardly even know each other! So, we are definitely following up with that.

We are stoked to see president Nelson on Thursday in Rome. We are sending our investigator Claudio to the session on Wednesdays night for the members that we aren't allowed to go to.

Love,

Anziano Cannon


Help! Does anyone speak Portuguese? These two new converts from Brazil showed up in church this week. During sacrament meeting whenever someone referenced a scripture or talk I found it on my iPad in their language, but they will need a lot of spiritual nourishment as they are so young in the Gospel and plus don't even speak Italian.








October 24, 2016

President Nelson said some awesome, awesome, awesome stuff. It was a little General Conference as we also got to hear from President Kearon, Elder Hallstrom, and their wives. I don't feel the need to share some of the most spiritual stuff with all of you, but here are some funny things: he told us how he has new scriptures he got in May. With his old ones, he said, he could just think about a scripture and they would fall open to the correct page. These ones aren't "broken in" yet. I believe it – he once asked everyone to look up a scripture. He commented after the first person found it: "not bad, for an electronic device". He had been there for a couple seconds already.  He told us how when he got the scriptures he wanted to read every word contained in the standard works. "Two weeks later, I had finished...along with adding all of my annotations and cross references from previous worn out scriptures". It's funny because it would sound straight up prideful out of anyone else, but you know he is completely stripped of pride so it's just funny.

Well, we have had like no time this week. It started last p-day, I didn't get to email, and we've been running around everywhere, literally not a moment to spare, ever since. Sunday was so nice, we actually got to sleep in until 6:30. Literally, it is such a miracle how the Lord sustains us as we live lives where our physical and emotional health sort of fall by the wayside sometimes.

A lot of it had to do with the activity. We worked super hard on it.  In the end, we had over 40 members there, but only 3 non-members, two of which were English course students! But one of them was Fabio, who was already a potential in our minds. We are pretty excited for him. There was also a Mongolian lady and her son who the sisters are visiting this week. Her husband is Nigerian and speaks 10 languages. I can't wait to meet him!

Pat is making nice progress. He is in the golden age and shows every sign of it based on the questions he asks. HOLD YOUR HORSES we'll get to that In a few lessons! He's great though.

Love,

Anziano Cannon





This is our whole MTC group, back together for the first 
time in over a year and for probably the last time ever.









October 31, 2016

This week I did a scambio with Anziano Castillo. It went great! He is from the Philippines and started it out by making us fried rice for lunch. Then we went on our bikes to find an old investigator, but the chain came off his bike several times, so we had to go back. I was super bummed, no one wants that to happen on your scambio. We were walking the bikes back to the store when we got a call from Sorella P, who we had only met once in the pharmacy. She doesn't come to church, and had had to tell us "Hey elders! I'm Mormon too!" We like to be bold but hadn't planned on talking to the lady in front of us at the pharmacy. But she wanted us to give her a blessing right then. It worked out perfectly.  We later realized that had we gone to the old investigators house we never would have made it in time. She was really touched and grateful, and yesterday she came to church for the first time since I've been here! 

The next morning, we were doing a little contacting before an apartment inspection at 10:30. We were just walking back to our apartment when the Thackers (senior couple) called us to say they would be a few minutes late. So, we decided to go see this other old investigator in the couple minutes we had. We rang the doorbell and just then she came out. Not to talk to us, she was literally leaving and had we come a minute later we would have missed her! We have been working on unity with the sisters and were then really glad to give her as a referral to them. They had their first appointment last night and said it went great!

Pat is a stud and wants to be baptized but he will be returning to live in Torino and later move to Caserta. I'm hoping to hatch a plan to pass him off to Anziano Cunningham (from my hometown of Medford) and Anziano Cutrignelli (his greenie who I knew in Bari) if that goes through!

The joke I talked about with a couple of my college friends who are serving missions called "trick or referral" is actually taking life, much to my surprise. Don't worry, it's not as bad as it sounds, but we are going through with it tonight :)

If you want to say a prayer for someone, make it for the referrals we are working on! Sorella Gambi was a stud and found an African guy at store who wants to know the purpose of life, and the Dini Ciaccis are working on the family we stumbled into the other week.  We are really excited because they are not committed or anything to the Jehovah's Witnesses, they are just investigators for now, so we hope to be able to veer them to a different course.

Love,

Anziano Cannon

Classic missionary looking pic in (almost) Tuscany








November 7, 2016

Yesterday in church, Jonathan, our awesome ex-missionary friend, got up to bear his testimony of missionary work. He practices what he preaches, and tonight we have a dinner and restoration appointment with six people! Pray for us! The last time I got this many referrals was Bagheria and that was with a bunch of old Catholic ladies!  You know how some testimony meetings have themes? After Jonathan's talk, Yesterday's turned into "explain why two missionaries changed your life". I sat back and loved it! Side note: do you take notes in church? Why would we not? I have gotten so much inspiration that I am sure wouldn't come if I didn't appreciate it.

We were very blessed that we were inside doing language study when an incredible wind picked up. I looked outside and saw furniture blowing off balconies. When we left, everyone was outside. A bunch of trees had been uprooted in Centro so traffic was diverted onto our street. The street of the church was the worst off; there was rubble everywhere. A tent type thing blew over the wall into the courtyard, and a family came to get their mangled laundry rack from their house 200 meters away. But the Lord takes care of His servants, and the only damage we incurred were two plants on our balcony that fell over (like literally they just fell over on their side). It felt really nice though and I do love our members. We got a couple calls making sure we were ok.

One morning we planned to go do finding at a park and found the place literally deserted. Pretty discouraging. So, we felt to go back to Centro and passed by the church. We talked to a lady who wasn't interested in our survey, but were able to open her up after asking her why she was holding a pizza. She was going to see her husband in the hospital. She wouldn't commit to taking the lessons but told us "it as if two angels had just stopped me!" Kind of cool how the Spirit works with people. She wasn't at zone conference! How did she know we are supposed to be Angels!? This kind of thing happens often.

I don't remember if I told you this, but we had gone to see Matt last Sunday night. We basically pulled out exactly what President Uchtdorf talked about- we NEED you! Well, he showed up at the youth activity Friday and came to church Sunday for the first time since we've been here! Also, Sorella P from last week came again!

Pat lives in a barracks in Rome so we are still working on getting him to church, but he has read a lot of the Book of Mormon. As I read in a talk recently, you don't have to tell them how normally Mormons need a study calendar and stuff to get through the BOM. To them it's just a 500-page book, why would you limit them to just the introduction or something when they are capable of so much more?

Another bike I took lost its chain repeatedly so we had to walk it back... Until I had the excellent idea of "sailing" it. Basically, I stuck one foot on one pedal, leaned to the side, and pushed myself forward with the other foot over and over until that leg got tired and I could switch. It actually worked. We were moving!

What?? This just in! There was a little kid that was like 12 years old who we met in Bari that asked us for a Bible. I was like "you are 12 years old? Why do you want a Bible? Let's teach you!" But it didn't work out. I just heard he has been coming to church every week and wants to be baptized, but his parents aren't letting him yet. Wow!


Love,

Anziano Cannon


Heading off to zone calcio amid the rubble. I am really lucky.  This was my 
14th zone calcio in 12 transfers. That doesn't usually happen for missionaries.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Week 70 and 71.

October 3, 2016

After one session of conference, we did a split and I went to help an old lady in our apartment complex who needed our help. She needed us to go to get her groceries. It was an excellent lesson in patience. To be honest it was kind of a weird sight to see Anziano Ruiz going to replace the 1.39€ wine for the .89€ wine on a Sunday at the grocery store because she couldn't afford it.  A couple times I wanted to
leave her and drop the bags off at her house so we could be at the church in time for the conference, but I felt not to. After we left her, we ran to the bus stop, and soon after Syv (changed name) walked up. "Are you late to see the prophet?" he asked. After we responded affirmatively, he replied "me too".  So, we got to go with him to conference!

Which was AWESOME… like always.  I encourage us to all go back like Elder Kearon told us to and underline actions we plan to take because of this conference. I made up my own Italian saying, "c'è chi fa ma non sa, è chi sa ma non fa" [translated roughly as: who does but doesn't know, and who knows but doesn't do]. Basically, I've noticed that a lot of excellent disciples are pretty new to the church and sometimes uneducated, but they live the gospel 24/7. Sometimes there are others who know it all, but don't follow through with the basic stuff. So let's do it! We were so happy that Clytus, our less active new convert, came.  I've really tried to take him under my wing (no one else even knows his correct name).  Yesterday everyone was telling "Clever" to get in the picture) but with my love for Africans it was easy to want to work with him. He heard two Book of Mormon talks that gave him a wake-up punch.

Rose is taking a break right now. But pray for us tonight with Diego, our first referral here! We were so excited, that isn't very common. I went on a scambio with my old friend Anziano Vrska. I was so happy to hear how my favorite unit in the mission is doing- Palermo 3, the international branch. I love the priesthood service that Fratello Mannino gave as he clearly groomed his counselors to take the reigns of the branch. He was called to the stake presidency since I left and Joel Kefas is the new president. I've heard rumors about them being the highest tithe-paying unit in Italy and the stake president telling them that this branch, which was six strong in 2014 and had over 20 active members when I was there, will be a Ward within a year or two at its current growth rate. We also saw an awesome miracle as we stayed to eat fufu after teaching a new convert and got to meet the incredible land lord couple who agreed to start taking the lessons because they love the way the missionaries act and treat our friend.

Love,

Anziano Cannon

P day at Nike store. Look at the seat next to me

 




October 10, 2016

 

Well, we got transferred to Ladispoli. I said "we" because basically Anziano Jorgenson and I got sent to another city to be companions again. Good thing we like each other ha-ha. Ladispoli is pretty close to Rome, normally the zone leaders buy your tickets for transfers but they told us this time just to find our way to Ladispoli by getting a train whenever we wanted.

Walking into the apartment was interesting. We spent a few hours today and whatever time we could find in these past few days to clean it up.  It was pretty filthy in addition to the straight up problems it has like how you have to turn on and adjust the shower with a wrench, and the elevator we stopped using because it makes you sick like it were the Hollywood tower of terror. But these are all things you can for the most part just laugh about.

I told the assistants on Monday that the phone would be on silent that night when we taught our referral. I wasn't kidding. I felt the phone vibrate as they called give us out transfer calls, but we had more important things to do with Diego who is awesome and I think will be baptized!

Ladispoli is an interesting place, it is a very small city compared to Rome, but the missionaries have done good work here, plus it is the home of the translation center for Italy where about 12 people work.  In other words, our ward is STACKED. Elder Dini Ciacci, the stake president I knew in Rome, who is now an area 70 wasn't even at church yesterday.  But there are so many other great people, including Gianni, who I used to know as Anziano Calvagna from this mission, and Dario, who I knew in Rome 1 and is literally the most jaw-droppingly good teacher in lessons that I have ever seen. We are really excited for the ward unity and strength and will be working a LOT with that this transfer.

I'll let you in on our secret plans: obviously, all of us missionaries loved the talks by Elder Andersen and Elder Oaks, but we want to pull a little from President Uchtdorf as well. The reality is that each member in the ward is an Amulek. We need them; we always have.  But in a city of this size and with the plain statistics of who is most likely to stay active, we really are going to be pleading with them to
make missionary work an attitude rather than a program.

Cool analogy: probably my favorite part of our house is the mirror in our study room. Why? Because the way it is positioned, I can only see Anziano Jorgenson –  and Anziano Jorgenson can only see me. What a great model for humility and selflessness.

Super exciting announcement:


WE ARE GETTING BIKES!!!

Love,

Anziano Cannon



I loved our last English group with this crowd. It grew quite a bit 
last transfer.  I would be remiss if I didn't note how many times the
Lord has taken care of me this week, like during our last spiritual
thought where I basically just started going off on something I had
not expected to do, very much grateful for the spirit.

 

 





Ethan on his birthday.



Sorry.  We received no letter from 10/17 and no explanation why.

Week 70 and 71.

October 3, 2016

After one session of conference, we did a split and I went to help an old lady in our apartment complex who needed our help. She needed us to go to get her groceries. It was an excellent lesson in patience. To be honest it was kind of a weird sight to see Anziano Ruiz going to replace the 1.39€ wine for the .89€ wine on a Sunday at the grocery store because she couldn't afford it.  A couple times I wanted to
leave her and drop the bags off at her house so we could be at the church in time for the conference, but I felt not to. After we left her, we ran to the bus stop, and soon after Syv (changed name) walked up. "Are you late to see the prophet?" he asked. After we responded affirmatively, he replied "me too".  So, we got to go with him to conference!

Which was AWESOME… like always.  I encourage us to all go back like Elder Kearon told us to and underline actions we plan to take because of this conference. I made up my own Italian saying, "c'è chi fa ma non sa, è chi sa ma non fa" [translated roughly as: who does but doesn't know, and who knows but doesn't do]. Basically, I've noticed that a lot of excellent disciples are pretty new to the church and sometimes uneducated, but they live the gospel 24/7. Sometimes there are others who know it all, but don't follow through with the basic stuff. So let's do it! We were so happy that Clytus, our less active new convert, came.  I've really tried to take him under my wing (no one else even knows his correct name).  Yesterday everyone was telling "Clever" to get in the picture) but with my love for Africans it was easy to want to work with him. He heard two Book of Mormon talks that gave him a wake-up punch.

Rose is taking a break right now. But pray for us tonight with Diego, our first referral here! We were so excited, that isn't very common. I went on a scambio with my old friend Anziano Vrska. I was so happy to hear how my favorite unit in the mission is doing- Palermo 3, the international branch. I love the priesthood service that Fratello Mannino gave as he clearly groomed his counselors to take the reigns of the branch. He was called to the stake presidency since I left and Joel Kefas is the new president. I've heard rumors about them being the highest tithe-paying unit in Italy and the stake president telling them that this branch, which was six strong in 2014 and had over 20 active members when I was there, will be a Ward within a year or two at its current growth rate. We also saw an awesome miracle as we stayed to eat fufu after teaching a new convert and got to meet the incredible land lord couple who agreed to start taking the lessons because they love the way the missionaries act and treat our friend.

Love,

Anziano Cannon

P day at Nike store. Look at the seat next to me

 




October 10, 2016

 

Well, we got transferred to Ladispoli. I said "we" because basically Anziano Jorgenson and I got sent to another city to be companions again. Good thing we like each other ha-ha. Ladispoli is pretty close to Rome, normally the zone leaders buy your tickets for transfers but they told us this time just to find our way to Ladispoli by getting a train whenever we wanted.

Walking into the apartment was interesting. We spent a few hours today and whatever time we could find in these past few days to clean it up.  It was pretty filthy in addition to the straight up problems it has like how you have to turn on and adjust the shower with a wrench, and the elevator we stopped using because it makes you sick like it were the Hollywood tower of terror. But these are all things you can for the most part just laugh about.

I told the assistants on Monday that the phone would be on silent that night when we taught our referral. I wasn't kidding. I felt the phone vibrate as they called give us out transfer calls, but we had more important things to do with Diego who is awesome and I think will be baptized!

Ladispoli is an interesting place, it is a very small city compared to Rome, but the missionaries have done good work here, plus it is the home of the translation center for Italy where about 12 people work.  In other words, our ward is STACKED. Elder Dini Ciacci, the stake president I knew in Rome, who is now an area 70 wasn't even at church yesterday.  But there are so many other great people, including Gianni, who I used to know as Anziano Calvagna from this mission, and Dario, who I knew in Rome 1 and is literally the most jaw-droppingly good teacher in lessons that I have ever seen. We are really excited for the ward unity and strength and will be working a LOT with that this transfer.

I'll let you in on our secret plans: obviously, all of us missionaries loved the talks by Elder Andersen and Elder Oaks, but we want to pull a little from President Uchtdorf as well. The reality is that each member in the ward is an Amulek. We need them; we always have.  But in a city of this size and with the plain statistics of who is most likely to stay active, we really are going to be pleading with them to
make missionary work an attitude rather than a program.

Cool analogy: probably my favorite part of our house is the mirror in our study room. Why? Because the way it is positioned, I can only see Anziano Jorgenson –  and Anziano Jorgenson can only see me. What a great model for humility and selflessness.

Super exciting announcement:


WE ARE GETTING BIKES!!!

Love,

Anziano Cannon



I loved our last English group with this crowd. It grew quite a bit 
last transfer.  I would be remiss if I didn't note how many times the
Lord has taken care of me this week, like during our last spiritual
thought where I basically just started going off on something I had
not expected to do, very much grateful for the spirit.

 

 




Sorry.  We received no letter from 10/17 and no explanation why.