Family and Friends,
How are you!? All of you in the USA, are you still with us?
I hope you haven´t been frostbitten or snowed into your houses too hard, but
I´m sure you´re all enjoying the weather and thanking God for the ¨moisture¨as
usual.
This week we were able to give lots of service, even as it
does get hotter and hotter, people need more and need help. One of the families
in our ward, sadly also one of the best famililes, moved out of their nice
rented house out to the middle of nowhere and consequently to the other ward.
The city actually gave them the land that we are now building their house on.
They don´t build houses the same here as they do in the US. Here they use lots
of cement. Cement, and Bricks. The walls, the floor, even the ceiling, all
either cement or bricks.
In order to pour their ceiling we needed to make a lot of
cement. Luckily, we had an actual mixing machine, 6 missionaries and a few
other people to help, unlike the time we poured their floor and we mixed it by
hand, or shovel rather. Anyway, with the mixing machine and help, we worked
like one big machine. 1/2 a 5 gallon bucket of water, 2 cement buckets of
cement, 10 of gravel. That was the pattern. We filled the buckets with all
haste, chucked ´em in the mixer, and repeated. From the mixer, poured on a old
car hood and then shoveled into buckets and then standing on a plastic patio
chair, hefted it to the ceiling. It was good hard work and I had the blisters
and sunburn to prove it.
Missionary work is still hard. But I´m still working at it.
Any tips (maybe from the internet) how to roll your R´s? My accent is okay, but
I still can´t roll them R´s.
Something I thought about this week is how important
families are. God made families because they work. I see it more and
more. When a loving family isn´t there, so much bad happens. It creates sadness
and broken people. Please be grateful for your family. That you have a Mom and
Dad who are committed to your family and their well-being. Love your family.
Take care of your family. You only get one.
I´m grateful that I have a family who loves me, and that we
can be together forever and that we all have that same goal--being an eternal,
happy, family. I´m really far away, but I still feel your love, and hope that
you can feel mine too, because I love you, even more than when I left. :)
I´m excited to get to talk to
you all Christmas week. In this mission they told us to do it some day during
the week during christmas, not specifically christmas, so let me know a day and
time that works best for you all, and we´ll work it out.
Pictures. I still would love
pictures. It´s very helpful in knowing what you´re doing, and it´s efficient,
too. I actually just bought a photo album, too, from the photo shop in
town. MOM: Use your camera. Thanks. :) I even like pictures of people
studying or doing boring things (pulling a funny face helps, too).
Also, this week, I received a
letter from my good friend Elder Lippert in Ukraine! That thing looked beat up
when it got to me, but I got it, none the less.
The Christmas devotional was
this week. We weren´t able to go because of some adverse circumstances, but did
you like it? How was it?
Well, I love you all and I´m grateful for your prayers and
thoughts for me. Keep up the good work.
Love,
Elder Bradley Turek
Elder Bradley Turek
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