Tuesday 11 February 2014

"And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children."

"And all thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children." 3 Nephi 22:13

That was my first thought as i read this weeks letter from Elder Cocker.  It's a mad, mad world out there, as a mother, we breath in deeply and pray often for our children when they are blessed with that great opportunity to serve the Lord on a full time mission, to whatever part of the world they may be called.  
The journey to arrive at the casual and happy sentence of, "My son is serving in the Sydney South Australia Mission".  The realities of this journey began something like this:  March 1993 our first and only--(oddly enough favorite son), was born.  He was blessed at church a month later; as his father held him in his little white tuxedo I had made him.... I thought..."Someday son, we pray you will have the opportunity to serve a mission." and it excited my soul to think the Lord would be so mindful and gracious....there is no wiser teacher, I could think of no greater opportunity to help assist him in that vast chasm of chaos between boyhood and manhood.  Then, Elder Cocker almost two years of age; how he cried the first sunday we put a suit on him. Big tears. Big. 
I thought, "Oh, it's gonna be interesting if we don't work through this in 18 years."  (It took sixteen, 16 more years to work on that little wrinkle). So the years went on. The time came the decision was made by him, and he put his heart and soul into the prospect of serving a two year mission.  Echo the words of 1 Nephi 3:7
"“And it came to pass that I, Nephi, said unto my father: I will go and do the things which the Lord hath commanded, for I know that the Lord giveth no commandments unto the children of men, save he shall prepare a way for them that they may accomplish the thing which he commandeth them.”

A mother's thoughts are not the Lords thoughts, He told us so, in Isaiah 55:8-9 8 "For my thoughts are not your  thoughts, neither are your ways my  ways, saith the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my  ways higher than your ways, and my  thoughts than your thoughts. "


 My thoughts were more along the lines of, "He doesn't even cook for himself." He will go 'find', 'fish', 'harpoon' or 'skin' for his dinner....but hand him a box of macaroni and cheese and  he would hand it to one of his three sisters and ask them to please make him some food.   Two years seemed a very precarious amount of time to me. 

There was also his sense of humor. Elder Cocker loves to laugh. Loves to see 'the joy in the journey'. More often than not he will just speak his mind.  That point to a mother can be a bit disconcerting.  We send out our young men and women to serve the Lord, full of energy and vigor and the resolve and resilience of youth; often the "wisdom of Job"---not so much. 
                               (his big sister's wedding reception--the uppercut photo....typical boy fun)



That good nature has been one of his greatest strengths. It has served him well.

(A video Elder Cocker and his companion took while watching some Kangaroos 'fighting'.  I guess that is part of the Australia mission experience!  except mom doesn't know how to upload it....but heres a shot)



As a mother we think: "When he is gone; I am not there, to listen, to support, to help". How I have been humbled by the tender mercies of the Lord as we have gone week after week, month after month, now into the last six months of his mission.  I understand more deeply, and with an intimate knowledge the words of Nephi 9:6
“But the Lord knoweth all things from the beginning; wherefore, he prepareth a way to accomplish all his works among the children of men; for behold, he hath all power unto the fulfilling of all his words. And thus it is. Amen.”

I loved this weeks message from Elder Cocker....he talked about a concept that rings  true with all of us from time to time.  "Don't get caught in the thick of thin things".  He shared some of those same feelings ( in a secular sense) with us when he returned from his time in Papua New Guinea before his mission.  He saw the world through different spectacles, humanitarian, versus the worlds capitalist agenda.

(spending some time with village children Papua New Guinea)



His letter was like that this week, with a deeply spiritual resolve, that experience and trials teach.  He said,

 "This week has been swagalicious and today I've got something good for everyone. A simple and sometimes overlooked little phrase. "Dont sweat the small stuff" or "Its all good, no need to trip" or "Dont get caught in the thick of the thin things". If your sitting there reading this and saying, "ya. ya. I know",  then congrats, guess what?  Things are probably going well for you right now! But, we all know when things suck, its tuff to see past it, so, if you can't use this now keep it and remember it; use it later, cause I know this will help. 

My comp and I this week, we realized that, we go through the motions, a lot, and we wondered 'why?'.  We talk about faith a lot, with everyone and the scriptures teach us that faith and action must be together or faith is dead(James 2:17-18-26) and faith comes before the blessing. So, we have faith to act; we know cause were doing it;  but how do we do more? 

We decided that we were doing some things, just cause we knew we should; we knew it would be hard, but thought we just have to do it.  Like-- talking to everyone.  One of the hardest things about missionary work, because we put ourselves out there for people. Some people are nice; most aren't interested, but, there are a few who are hard to deal with; for real. They'll say anything, to put you down and make you go away. And because of those few experiences, it always plays on you, holds you back sometimes....Just yesterday, I was in church....... and I heard Elder Pearson say: 

"We need the faith to act and we need the faith to succeed."

 which made me think "ya-- they are different,huh." It turns out, life is what you make it.  Ya, thats right, that little, dinky, fortune cookie was right.  YOU choose how this plays out. YOU make and call the shots. If each and every day is a gift don't send it back unwrapped, thats dumb.  Use it, experience it, let it take you new places......Dont let past experiences weigh you down.  Why? because yes, our faith is in the past and ya its now in the present but it has been and always be pointing forward, to the future.  Remember, "BETTER DAYS ARE AHEAD!" and great things are to be had by all, saith the clause of santa."


His letter went on......but I really could hear him, hear what he was sharing, and it is true.  I know they've had a tuff go this past while...He doesn't say too much...a few weeks ago he said it was hot.....it's been average temperature in the 40c/105f +......they are walking every day, everywhere in the sun.....like missionaries do.  I don't like to hear that people are unkind....but we read about it every day. There are missionaries every day, all over the world experiencing the best and worst of humanity, face to face and door to door. 

I see from what he shared with us the words of Nephi 1:20, when he said:


“But behold, I, Nephi, will show unto you that the tender mercies of the Lord are over all those whom he hath chosen, because of their faith, to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance.”

I see Elder Cocker and his companion Elder Larsen, being delivered out of the hands, of apathy.  Out of the pitfalls of mediocrity, self absorbtion or self pity.  I see the windows of heaven open up to them and their hearts and minds expanded with a willingness to grow.  
It makes me want to try harder, be better, do a little more, be a better contributor. Stop being tired.  

Oh, the commitment for the week he left us with (his sister shared this one with some of her friends):
"Commitment: When things try to get you down, punch that crap in the face and say "get off me child's play, cause that ain't happenin' today, mister jackson." A.K.A. Don't blame your circumstances for feeling bad, we are all better than that. Have faith that it will get better and keep going. Swim on you beautiful gold fish.......... swim on." 
             ("If its 41degrees and and you ain't got no car and have to walk all day-- your face                    should look like this. why? cause that dont phase us dude")  #YOSO


**again......i needed a translation for the 'generational' acronyms. 
YOSO= You Only Serve Once.


To that I say.................................
'Kia Kaha!"  (Maori--Be strong!) ;  "Tsol-haw!" (Kiowa--That's the way!)






Monday 13 January 2014

"I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. My help cometh from the Lord"

What day of the week do  missionaries families love the most?  The day they hear from their missionary.  This week i received an email, "mum you there?"  I'm always here i keep my phone by my pillow....but today, i wasn't feeling good, feeling a bit 'down in the mouth', feeling a bit 'lowly' and had taken a nap. To wake up and see, "mum are you there?"  

AWAKE....who's awake now?  So i jumped up, ran upstairs and threw open my laptop and read the best letter. It reminded me of a scripture of the psalmist......."O Lord do I lift up my soul" (Psalms 25:1)

Before I read the letters, I always flip to the bottom first to see if he sent photos. Everything is blurry so i couldn't read the caption above the picture.  I could however see the 'helu pelu' (machete) in his hand.  Had to laugh, my Tongan boy has been doing iate (yardwork) with a helu pelu since he was four. (I remember once when moved back to America and neighbor came over flustered and aghast that we would allow our son to hold a machete.....Elder Cocker's dad was standing over him as he was teaching him how to cut weeds).  I guess from this photo, Australians are more adept to the sight of machetes. 

below: Elder Cocker and Elder Larsen service project, cutting down tree limbs. 





The letter.   Our unconventional author. The story began:

"What up planet earth! So,  last week was good for sure; last week of transfers is always exciting. Guess where I am?!.........Woden, i'm still here, nothing changed but still exciting!

 Yesterday elder Larsen and I had a swag experience. We left the flat late and started walking down the road and its Aussie,so over here, its hotter than hell, so naturally we cross the road to walk in the shade. Right as cross the street, we were walking past this trailer park and this dude just walks up to the fence and almost yells at us and says " do you's have a bible?" i looked at my comp and said "ya" (a bit worried though i thought this guy was going to try to have a go at us witch sucks, always, but its worst when people do it to you in public). Anyways ,he tells us to come around the gate and now i'm confused but , 'sweet as', we walk around, we get to his tent that his partner is setting up, he breaks down and tells us that he is from canberra and him and his girlfriend back in the day left and moved up north to Harvey bay  in Queensland because he was caught up in bad stuff down here; and is trying to get full custody of there baby girl she is only 2 and a half but in order for him to even have a chance he has to be able to appear in court. So he and his partner left Queensland 2 weeks ago and came down here they've been living in a tent now for 2 weeks. they literally just tried to move into a property that was up for rent and when they got there the lady upped the rent so they couldn't afford it . All he has is dole money and his partner doesn't have her blue card to work her in NSW  (when we met them he had just pulled back up he just set up the tent and his partner was making trips back and forth from the car to put there stuff back inside the tent)  he said he didn't believe in God but he could use something anything.

He literally said "tell me something". 

At first i just about crapped my self ,I'm thinking, I'm only 20 man, my comp is 18 what do i have.......what can i say........what are you meant to say to that? its not like we get trained on what to do and what to say we just share what we believe. Anyways, I took a deep breath, gathered my thoughts and remembered I have what we know, so we shared about faith and how our God, his God, is a god of miracles, that he loves us and is ready to helps, if we allow him to.  We gave him a book of mormon and promised him if he read it he would be happier and he would find answers to problems. He accepted our little message and said thank you. But right before we left we asked them if they needed dinner tonight and he said he'd call us. So, we got his number and he took ours and then we left. 

When we left we called EVERY MEMBER IN OUR PHONE no picked up so we walked to their houses literally no one was home and we kinda start to worry this took all day from 10 am to 4:30 just phone call, after phone call and a hell of a lot of walking, then the sister missionaries called us and said they wanted to know if we needed dinner tonight? my mind is just straight up blown right now like seriously, the timing was nothing short of perfection! We said yes, obviously.  I never say no to food.  That's just silly...anyways, we get dinner sussed we go over to the library print out directions to the house, its bishop Abel's by the way and then try to call them and guess what happened?! they didn't answer. So, we went by, they weren't home. Talk about buzz kill. So we go to dinner at bishops and eat, teach his nephew that lives with him, then go home with left overs. 

...Now up until this point we didn't know if they needed food, we just knew he was down for a feed. So, we just made that priority #1. We drop the food off.  He's all smiles and happy.  His partner is happy, they say thanks and we leave. About 20 minutes later get a text saying "thank you we havent eaten in 2 days"........................ Elder Larsen and I were going CRAZY we were sooooooo happy we could help out and just i don't even know, just happy."

NOW THIS IS THE BIT, that had tears streaming down my already teary face:




"People can say what they want,  "we're stupid for leaving education, jobs, girlfriends, families, sports"...whatever. But you know what?  That day, yesterday and that text, proved to me, it confirmed something i already knew. God is our father and he loves us ALL of us. In total, there were 8 people involved Elder Cocker (NZ) Elder Larsen (US) Chris (Aus.) Shelly(Aus.) Bishop Able (NZ) Sister Abel (NZ) Sister Bushnell (US) Sister Parr (NZ). 

 What are the odds of us leaving the house late crossing the road just in time for him to get back from getting rejected from renting a room he thought he already had and then to see us and having the courage and humility to stop us? ..... What are the odds that the Abel's had too much food about to go bad and needed to cook for more people? What are the odds of us meeting him, or more specifically, me meeting him, If i was at home in auckland? Was all of that just coincidence? No freaking way. Thats the right place at the right time. I thought i knew or had an idea about how much our father in heaven loves us, but seriously the more i think about my mission and about yesterday the more i dont even know. The happier i get, like I feel like I still have a lot stuff to learn. it was soooooooo cool to be able to help out."


As I read this letter from Elder Cocker and absorbed the experience they were having it reminded me of D and C 46:30.  "He that asketh in the spirit asketh according to the will of God; wherefore it is done even as he asketh."  Those times, (when they happen) that God answers our prayers seemingly instantaneously.   

I think of that young couple, who saw the Elders and asked for help.  One could hear the words of the Psalmist, "Unto thee O Lord, I do lift up my soul".  (Psalms 25:1)

Elder Cocker always leaves us with a commitment challenge.  We are all sinners and strivers in a world of imperfection. I have grown to really enjoy these challenges.  They bring with them rays of hope and encouragement.  Food for the soul and the mind. So I leave you with these thoughts, our challenge:

"Commitment: People need what you have, so give it. If it's time, if it's just to listen or if it's an apple, whatever it is, look for opportunities to help out cause it is sooooooo worth it. There is an old lady in my last area Dapto,  Mrs. ------,  she said, "If you have time to do anything, it's to do the right thing" and she's right; at the end of the day thats all we are here to do." 
#YOLOBIF"


(to all of us who are older and maybe not so hip to the going lingo.....i never knew YOLO meant 'You Only Live Once'. )