September 9, 2016

the rsm life

i am just going to put this out now:
the rsm life is a lot different than i thought it would be.

i will be honest with you:
i thought that being a sister missionary would change
more than it did.

now, allow me to explain two parts.

part 1: the idea

when i got home, i was expecting a crowd of friends from the ward or stake.
i was expecting that in the ensuing weeks between being home and starting school,
that i would go on a few dates, figure out a few more things about this "new" world.
then i would move into a new ward at school and it all would be different.
people would treat me differently because i had served a mission.
i would get asked on dates, have some more friends.
i needed to find a job, and preferably one that paid better than minimum wage.
i needed to start over. reinvent.
but still be me.

part 2: the reality

coming home off the plane, i had just left my companion in the airport an hour ago.
i had been awake since three am that morning, with only about five hours of sleep.
i had just left home in an alternate universe, and was stepping into reality again.
and i was just excited to hug my daddy.

i got off the plane. i tried to be one of the last ones off the plane,
and thanks to "missionary seating" as i like to call it, it wasn't a difficult feat.
and then i ran down the tarmac, left my luggage in the walk way
and hugged my daddy for the first time in eighteen months.


and then the rest of the family each got their hug, and it was all just a blur.


we took some pictures with the lovely people who had come to see me home

like my favorite young women's leader, kari kah

of course, the family. grandparents included.

and the wonderful tennessee family, as i would call it
fackrells, sis pesci, sis kah and son, vaughns.

i couldn't be happier with that happy moment. 
it truly was surreal to be in the knoxville airport again.
i had dreamt of the moment so many times, that it all played out like exactly that:
a dream.

we drove home. the wind had destroyed a wonderful sign that my siblings had poured their hearts into making, but it was a play on a sign that my aunts made for me before i left

and so it said:
welcome home janelle.

daddy had a nice little surprise for me in the driveway


a "gift" that i had requested.
and he let me drive it to the church to be set apart....
crazy father.

but anyway. i showed everyone some nicaraguan culture
and shared a few trinkets that i had brought home.
and then real life hit.

i was no longer a missionary. 
i was no longer a representative of
la iglesia de jesucristo de los santos de los ultimos dias.
i was no longer hermana graves.
i was janelle again.

and it hurt like heck

it's been said that as a missionary, you are set apart from the world.
and i promise you, it's true.
the lord walks beside you, and there are moments if you catch the light just right
you can see him there in the companionship.
there are no words that describe the feelings of complete exhaustion or complete excitement
at the end of the day.

a good day is one where everything went as planned, where nothing went planned,
or when nothing and everything went as planned.
but it was all okay, because you were on the lord's errand.

stepping out of that limelight was really hard.
because it was no longer about you being a missionary,
it was about you being a return missionary with all these things to do for you now.

going to rant: i hate it when people how my mission was and 
are satisfied with the answer ::great, thanks.::
i spent eighteen months serving the lord.
the word great does not do it justice.

i appreciate the thought of asking, but let me tell you a little bit about it.
i did not get along with all my companions. but i love them all.
i had a lot of converts who are not currently active in the church. and that hurts.
but then i also have a few converts who are strong. a few who have chosen the higher road.
i did not always have success.
but i was successful.
my mission was
invite others to come unto Christ by helping them receive the restored gospel,
through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and His Atonement, repentance,
baptism, receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost, and endure to the end. 
and i did it. 

and when i got home, i had no mission statement.
i had a few plans, but definitely no mission call.
and i was lost.

my extended family came and went,
and my family tried to finish their summer strong.
i went to the temple for the first time in almost eighteen months
and made it through a session without crying for joy.

but i was wandering.

then i picked up a job for a couple of weeks and was doing something again.
being out of the house, thinking of all the things that had changed.
friends married, with children, others engaged.
it all came down to same:
i felt like the time had just been frozen on the home front
but coming to terms with all the changes was difficult.

i really had to start from basically ground zero with everything.

for my birthday, my mom bought me a new wardrobe for the "post mish me."
a new phone. a new vehicle. a new job.
a new life.


and now here we are.
seven weeks home from the mission.
and still awkward as crap.

i haven't been ask on very many social outings.
i moved into the new ward, but don't have very many friends yet.
i love my roommates. i like my new classes.
i found a great job in the bakery at a local grocery store.
and i am no closer to figuring out a few more things about life than i was seven weeks ago.
the visions of being treated differently because i am a rsm are not what i thought them to be.
i'm just another one in the crowd. 
and it's taken some time to get adjusted to that.

i don't like being one of the crowd for very long.
and like a friend once told me "you jumped on that bandwagon."

the mission was an amazing experience where i got to see the lord bless his obedient servants.
i have seen many people change their lives and continue to change themselves because of the message that we as missionaries shared with them and their relatives and friends.
i have seen what happens to missionaries that follow the promptings of the spirit.
i have witnessed first hand the lord's hand of protection in my life and that of my companion.
i have seen the light of christ in the eyes of a boy willing to follow jesus with all energy of heart that he tells his mother to go to church every week. 
i have seen the hand of the lord in so many ways.
and now i am having a light problem and can't see through it.

in my institute class yesterday, my teacher began class with the story of the brother of jared.
when the brother of jared was given the instructions to build a ship, he went and did.
and then realized a couple of problems: no light, no air, and no steering.
the brother of jared then goes to the lord and converses with him of these dilemmas.
 the lord quickly responds that he will take care of the need for steering, and the plans were given to him to create air holes. but then the lord says: 
"what do you want me to do? i can't just give you everything."
he give him parameters, some guidance. and then says: "alright, go."

and this is where the miracle comes in:
if the brother of jared hadn't had his 'light problems', he would have missed the opportunity to 
see the savior.
that's right: without trials, he wouldn't have been able to grow enough,
to show the sufficient faith, to see first, the finger of the lord,
and then the body of the christ. 

the savior awaits to show himself unto us,
but we must muddle through and solve our light problems first.
god has given us the commandments (our own parameters)
and is giving us real time commentary on what to do (general conference, anybody?)

and there's more.
the brother of jared went and did.
he brainstormed and thought of something.
he acted
and created sixteen small stones out of rock.
but they would have just been rocks, without the ability to give off light
if the lord had not touched them.

we can do all the work.
we can go and act, and do, and be busy
trying to solve our light problems.
but if we don't accept that the lord has to help us,
that we can't do it all by ourselves
our efforts are just rocks.

right now, i guess it's time to re-evaluate my light problems,
turn them into rocks,
and have the faith in jesus christ
to ask him to turn them into the stones that will

pray as though it all depended on God.
work as though everything depended on you.
-saint augustine