Hey fam!
So my Auntie Wea, my cousin Maija, and I created this super cool booklet to help you #lighttheworld this holiday season. I am SUPER EXCITED about it and wanted to share it with all of you.
As y'all know, I will soon be leaving on my mission to Argentina. Before I leave the country, however, I will spend six weeks training at the Missionary Training Center in Provo. There, I will *hopefully* learn to speak Spanish and teach others about the gospel of Jesus Christ. I'm super pumped! Since I'll be there for Christmas, I wanted to find a way that I could Light the World despite being in the MTC. I won't be able to participate in any of my family's service Christmas traditions, like baking cookies for friends and family, participating in local food drives, or inviting the missionaries over for Christmas dinner. In fact, I pretty much won't be able to leave the MTC much at all: I'll be hardcore training from dawn to dusk. So traditional community service just isn't going to work for me this year.
So, my aunt and cousin and I got thinking. How could I, as a missionary, light the world this Christmas?
After a super awesome brainstorming session involving lots of Didi Reese cookies (Side note: THEY ARE SO GOOD!) and paper, we came up with a booklet to help missionaries and everyone reflect on their own inner lights. After all, how can any of us light the world if we don't have light to offer to others in the first place?
The journal has prompts for each of the 25 days of service (learn more here). The prompts are designed to get you thinking about what light you have to offer the world. What specific set of life experiences, talents, and wisdoms do you have to offer the world?
College and missionary moms, this would be a GREAT thing to send to your missionaries and college kids. It's small, so it can fit easily into a package or big envelope, and it's the perfect thing to help make a child's Christmas meaningful when they are away from home. You can even send them a Christmas service package full of things that they may need to serve others, like thank you notes, candies, stamps, stationary, or basic toiletry items for the homeless. I know for me, I LOVE getting little journals or stationary items, as they are easy to pack and super useful.
You can download the journal here
Have fun lighting the world, and stay tuned for my Christmas at the MTC!
Monday, November 27, 2017
Adios, mis amigos
Well... this is happening. This is real.
I AM GOING ON A MISSION!
I don't know if I've ever been this excited (and nervous!) my whole life. It's finally starting to hit me. I'm going to a place I've never been to, to be with people I've never met, to speak a language I've never spoken, with an accent I've never heard. Swell.
Yet, despite all this, I. AM. SO. PUMPED! I know it will be the adventure of a lifetime.
I've gotten all kinds of great advice from people as I've prepared to serve.I think the best advice I've gotten, however, is to just be myself. It took me actually becoming a missionary to realize that missionaries aren't some sort of genetically modified superhumans that are practically perfect in every way. In reality, we are literally just normal people. Nineteen and Twenty year old kids. We don't really know what we're doing, we still haven't quite figured out adulting yet, and we're pretty clueless when it comes to most things. But we're determined, and that's what matters. Our individual quirks, personalities, talents, and strengths, are what help make us successful.
I don't know what my mission will be like. I can guess that it will be scary, hard, fun, joyful, wonderful, depressing, lonely, yummy, busy, terrifying, and brilliant all at once. But then, so is life. Hopefully, I will be able to see my mission through the same eyes I see my life: with childlike wonder, gratitude, and joy.
I'm pretty sure I can be Sunshine Scatterer in Argentina too.
Now on to business...
My MTC address (until like the middle of January, ish) is:
Sister Kaila Keolalani Douglass
JAN09 ARG-POS
2005 N 900 E Unit 145
Provo, UT 84602
My mission home address (you can always send stuff here, or I *think* I'll get an actual address)
Sister Kaila Keolalani Douglass
Argentina Posadas Mission
1243 Córdoba esq Roque Saenz Peña
3300 Posadas
Misiones
Argentina
Pouch Mail Address (this basically means someone hand delivers the mail. You can send postcards or one page letters. It doesn't require foreign stamps, just first class postage. Google Pouch Mail Instructions to see more details).
Sister Kaila Keolalani Douglass
Argentina Posadas Mission
POB 30150
Salt Lake City UT 84130-0150
My mom will be posting up my emails every so often on this blog, so feel free to visit this site to catch up on what I'm up to. Until then, may God Bless you all!
<3, the Sunshine Scatterer
aka Hermana Douglass
Monday, November 6, 2017
The Lunch Lady
I'm pretty sure I have the best job in the whole wide world. Here's why:)
The Lunch Lady
The pungent smell of the blacktop
Pairs with the earthy smell of woodchips
As I pass out the school lunches
And wish I worked somewhere with good tips.
I stand and watch a heated game
Of kid soccer play out
I watch the goalie block a corner kick
Before I hear a shout.
I turn, the Kindergarteners are racing
To be the first to tattle
On the little boy who's insisting
On holding a dance battle
I'm saved from solving that problem
By the ringing of the bell
Yet I know more problems will be coming
For the older ones must eat as well
They like to act much cooler
When they tattle on their friends
Yet their tears still flow when their skinned knees
Prove beyond a Band-Aid's mend.
The older ones like to play
Group games on the field
Sharks and minnows is their favorite
As their daily play's revealed
Sure, I gotta yell at them
For climbing up the slides
And I have to have a whistle for
When I find where trouble hides
Yet, overall, these kids are great
They bring sunlight to my life
Their random hugs, smiles, and laughs
Are the only tips I need for my strife.
I hear one of them yell, "Hey teacher!"
And I smile and think, well, someday soon
I'll be filling my kids up with words
Instead of forks and spoons
For now, though, I turn with compassion
To try and address their malady
I look at their big, open eyes and say
You can call me the lunch lady
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