Hello everyone! I hope everyone enjoyed their General Conference weekend! I missed being able to sit at home with my family on the couch and watch conference, but watching conference in the MTC with 2,500 other missionaries takes a close second. I am very grateful that I did get to watch it here, because it is something that my entire life will revolve around for the next two years. I felt like this conference definitely had a "back to basics" kind of theme. An overwhelming majority of the talks revolved around those precious gospel essentials such as faith, The Plan of Salvation, and putting our trust in the Lord. I loved the homage that was paid to the recently deceased apostles, and the conference of the century with the naming of the three new apostles.

It's very hard to pick a favorite talk, they were all very inspiring. One talk that I especially loved was the one from Larry R. Lawrence of the Seventy. He talked about how she should always ask the Lord, "what lack I yet?" It was a great reminder that just repenting isn't enough, we must always seek to improve our lives and come closer to Christ. Additionally, I have no doubt that Elder Holland's talk about mothers will be quoted every single Mother's day from now until the end of time. I could go on about General Conference for hours, but I only have an hour to email and somebody else is already in charge of writing the Conference issue of the Ensign.
Anyways, after Conference we went for our weekly Sunday devotional and it turned out to be Vocal Point, the BYU singing group. It was quite the treat, and all of them are Return Missionaries so they took turns speaking. Immediately following that, all the Koreans went to watch the Restoration movie in Korean. I was very surprised of how much of it I actually understood, and having Joseph Smith's First Vision memorized in Korean definitely helped.
After that, we sang an original song written for the Korean speaking missionaries departing the next morning, followed by "God be With You Til We Meet Again" in Korean, as is tradition every time Korean speakers leave the MTC. As for the original song, nobody in our districts had written a song and it was 3 days until we were supposed to sing, so I had to save the day. I wrote a parody of "Part of Your World" from the Little Mermaid. It was about how the MTC is great and all, but we can't wait to get to Korea where we get to teach real people. Luckily the departing missionaries loved it, and I plan to have David Archuleta record a version of my song upon my return.
Yesterday, we got new Korean speakers, making us the oldest Korean speakers here. That leaves us with about 2.5 weeks until departure to Korea, which is terrifying and exhilarating at the same time. All 7 or 8 of the Korean speaking Elders are going to the Seoul South Mission, so my companionship finally has some company around here. However, if only one native Korean reports next week, someone from my companionship will most likely become his companion.
I believe this is my last week as District Leader, so I get to have maximum study time after this Sunday. Also this Sunday, I'm blessing the Sacrament in Korean which I am quite nervous for. Because priests have to repeat the Sacrament prayer all the time when they're speaking English, so I am positive I'm going to mess up in Korean. I do think it will be a great experience though, and it does decrease my chances of randomly getting selected to give a Korean talk in Sacrament Meeting.
One of our teacher's name is Brother Driggs, and he is majoring in Korean and he is so good at Korean, the native Koreans that came said that he spoke better Korean than they did. Anyways, he became one of our teachers last week, and he is also an amazing teacher. One thing that he's doing with everyone once while we're here is a quick 20 minute personal coaching session. Both of my companions had theirs last week, so I got to do mine this week. He asked me a question that I never thought I would hear while learning Korean at the MTC... "Is the class moving too slowly for you?" We talked about the Gift of Tongues a lot and how I could further develop it. He talked about being an agent learner, which means that I still choose to learn even if I already know what's being taught/reviewed in class. So he challenged me to write down every word I heard in class that I didn't already know, and then ask what it means. He said that if I did that, I could be able to be fluent in teaching lessons (not fluent in Korean) by the time I leave the MTC. Along with his challenge, I have doubled my daily word memorization to 30 words every day for the rest of the time here at the MTC. If I can keep it up, I'll know over 1000 words by the time I get to Korea. I love learning Korean and I know that I would never be able to learn this quickly without the help of my Heavenly Father. 저는 방언의 은사를 사랑합니다! ( I love the Gift of Tongues!) And even more than that, I love being able to serve the Lord these two years and share this wonderful gospel with the people of Korea.
Thank you everyone for your letters and prayers, they are appreciated!