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Snowy Mountains and Chinese with Lisa

Monday, September 26, 2016

Okay so honestly, this week was a little rough. It was a lot of crazy stuff and a lot of crazy people. But we made it to PDay. Woo. Thanks to all the homies that sent emails and photos though, it seriously saves my life. The mountain tops were white with snow when we woke up on Thursday morning- winter is here!! It's already starting to get dark around 6pm up here and it makes the days feel super short because the sun doesn't seem to come out until 10am. Sister McGee and I take tons of "Sunshine Shots" aka Vitamin D supplements everyday and drink tons of water to keep our bodies going. We're supposed to be able to see the Northern Lights later on this week! Alaska is such a crazy (but awesome) place. 

When we went grocery shopping last Monday, Sister McGee and I were walking down the isle and this cute lady who was giving out Dove product samples stopped us and said, "are you the Mormon missionaries?! I was just watching a documentary all about y'all and how you put your whole life at home on pause to come and be out here in those black name tags and share your gospel with strangers! And now, y'all don't just wear those name tags and cute floral dresses on Sundays at church, but you're missionaries EVERY DAY! Young ladies, your faith inspires me!!". Meet Lisa Langley, everyone. She's awesome. We talked to her about what we do as missionaries and then I gave her a Book of Mormon. Sister McGee gave her our contact information and Lisa told us she wanted to meet with us sometime so she could ask us more questions about missionary work. OKAY!!

Friday night, we met Lisa at this super sketchy hole in the wall Chinese restaurant (home to the biggest goldfish I've EVER seen). I was terrified the whole time but we made it out alive & without throwing up. Blessings. We shared our stories with Lisa and then she shared hers with us too. At first, we had to do some clarifying between Mormons and the Amish for her, but eventually we got it all sorted out. She asked us if we could contact our Amish for her because she wants to go live with them and learn to make furniture like them haha. Lisa is almost 50 and has lived her whole life trying "a little taste of everything" and serving others. We shared with her Mosiah 2:17 and she LOVED it (and thought we had planned to share that with her but no, it was a prompting from the Holy Ghost)! She told us about how meeting with us would be something for her "Memory Box" forever and how she doesn't believe in coincidences and that God does everything for a reason. Lisa is the bomb! We taught her about the Restoration and the priesthood and invited her to read the Book of Mormon and as we were testifying of it, she started to cry. The Spirit was so strong in that scary little Chinese restaurant with Lisa. I'm so grateful for my knowledge of the gospel and for the way that it has shaped and molded my life. Never take that for granted. I love being able to share that knowledge each day with these random people and to help them come to know Heavenly Father and the Savior better that way.

We've been teaching this family (the Heckels) where both the mom and dad are less active members of the Church and they have three kids who haven't been baptized yet. This week, Sister McGee and I decided that we are going to focus on teaching the kids and helping them grow their faith and testimonies, then hopefully be baptized soon! It's so cool to see how the gospel impacts and blesses families. That's what missionaries do! We walk around teaching about eternal families and of Heavenly Father's love & His Plan and of the Book of Mormon & the Restoration!! It's so awesome!! The Heckels have been coming to church every Sunday that I've been up in Alaska and when we told them that they could watch General Conference this weekend (so stoked) from their couch, they were so excited haha. Side note: y'all need to watch General Conference this weekend because it's going to be powerful and we get to hear from our LATTER-DAY PROPHET which is the coolest thing ever so don't miss out or you'll be bummed. 

Remember Pastor Steve and the homemade tortillas from last week? Yeah well, he invited us back for his giant Sunday night family dinner this week! SO BLESSED! Sister Jewel, Sister Martinez (the Huffman sister missionaries), Sister McGee, and I are the powerhouse Quad Squad teaching Pastor Steve and his family about the gospel right now & it's so cool. I shared with him the story of my car accident and how Heavenly Father has a plan for each of us and then we jumped in to teaching him about the Restoration and he asked us about temples and thought it was so "inspiring" the work that we do in temples for eternal families and how he believes everyone should have the chance to know about God and Jesus Christ. Pastor Steve is literally a Mormon, he just doesn't know it. So that's awkward. We're working on it. He said he would watch General Conference with his family this weekend so that's super cool & amazing. Go Pastor Steve! 

I know my emails keep getting shorter and shorter...haha sorry about that. But shoutout to [Sister] Allie Winter for heading to the MTC on Wednesday afternoon before she goes to Alabama for 18 months! She's going to do big things people, y'all better watch out #rolltide

"...behold, I say unto you, that the thing which will be of the MOST WORTH unto you will be to declare repentance unto this people, that you may bring souls unto me, that you may rest with them in the kingdom of my Father..." -Doctrine & Covenants 15:6
"The time has verily come that it is necessary and expedient in me that you should open your mouths in proclaiming my gospel, the things of the kingdom, expounding the mysteries thereof out of the scriptures, according to that portion of Spirit and power which shall be given unto you, even as I will...verily this mission is for a season, which I give unto you." -Doctrine & Covenants 71:1-3
I testify that there is NO GREATER OR MORE IMPORTANT work than that of missionary work. This is the most important job in the world! That's been going through my head over and over this week. Something that Sister McGee and I always say to each other is, "you only have eighteen months to be a superhero, so don't you dare waste a moment,". Missionary work is hard mentally, physically, and spiritually (I'm still trying to figure out how to wake up 6:30am every morning...) but I know that there is no better work than this. We are up here literally saving souls and it's the coolest experience ever and I feel so lucky to be a part of it all.

I have to drive down to Soldotna this week so #prayforsisdunlop2k16 that it's not icy.
Watch General Conference, read the Book of Mormon, go forth & be awesome. 
Thanks for all the love and support, y'all rock.

xoxo Sister Dunlop

PHOTOS: some from PDay hikes, the sister missionaries in the Anchorage Zone, and we stole the rubber duckies from one of the Elders's truck

Fashion Shows, Pastor Steve, Spanish & Doughnuts

Monday, September 19, 2016

Hi peeps! I promise this email won't be as long as last week's haha.
Sister McGee and I have been doing a lot of work this week as we are trying to "make Oceanview great again" haha. PS there are so many Trump supporters in Anchorage like what the what. The Oceanview Ward has been in a lull for a while in regards to missionary work and so #TheRedsareonfire will fix it!

Sister McGee and I put on a Zone Conference training on Wednesday this week.  President Robinson wanted us to train on dress code...boring. Everyone hates dress code lectures, let's be honest here. But we decided to make it awesome! We split everyone into groups and then they had to make missionary outfits from garbage bags, duct tape, and newspaper-that Sister McGee and I went dumpster driving for (another good story). Then, we had a mini fashion runway to show off all their fabulous designs. They actually were pretty awesome haha. After that, Sister McGee and I rallied it all in by talking about how as missionaries, we are representatives of Jesus Christ. His name is on our tags and we wear them everywhere we go so it's important for us to follow dress code and look good as representatives of Him. "When you look good, you feel good. When you feel good, you teach good," -Sister McGee.

After Zone Conference, Sister Martinez and Sister Jewel (who are serving in the Huffman area of Anchorage right now), Sister McGee and I went to the Farr's house for waffles. All week, Sister McGee had been telling me about their waffles and how they were like French toast/waffle/croissant amazingness...they were!! The Oceanview Ward knows how to make some amazing dinners. I'm starting to understand why missionaries have to exercise every day haha.

After waffles on Wednesday night, I went on exchanges with Sister Martinez in Huffman for 24 hours. Sister Martinez and Sister Jewel are "pink washing" that area (meaning that President Robinson decided to pull the Elders that were serving in that area and replacing them with Sisters) and there hadn't been a ton of missionary work being done there so on Thursday Sister Martinez and I drove around tracting in the rain all day. We found this super steep driveway at the end of a street and decided to go up and check it out. There was this guy up there with all his dogs (Alaskans have a thing for having gigantic dogs and having a lot of them) out building a shed in his yard in the rain. His name is Pastor Steve and was the nicest guy. He told us about how much he looks up to the LDS Church for not just "walking the walk, but talking the talk as well" and he told us how much us going out and devoting 18-24 months of our lives to sharing the Gospel inspires him. Then he invited us to come back for Sunday dinner with him and his family- it was taco night. DUH! Pastor Steve is a homie.

I never thought all those painful hours sitting through Señora Bowker's Spanish classes in high school would amount to anything; especially not when I was serving as a sister missionary in Alaska. But Heavenly Father has a sense of humor (like when I told Him I didn't want to serve a mission somewhere hot and so He called me to serve in Alaska #frozenchosen).

This week, Sister McGee and I were referred to a lady named, Adrianna, from Colombia. When we first met with her, she spoke English pretty well but I could tell that she would feel way more comfortable speaking and learning the gospel in Spanish. I gave her a Book of Mormon in English and one in Spanish and told her that she could read from whichever one she wanted to. Our first lesson with her went really well but that night I tried to figure out how we could help her learn and understand the Gospel better. Oh wait-we have awesome Spanish-speaking elders in our mission (bless). At Zone Conference on Wednesday, we tracked down Elder Paulson & Elder Taylor and I was like, "yo, we've got a homegirl for you to teach,". Not those exact words, but kinda.

Friday night, we all met with Adrianna to do a pass off lesson together. IT WAS ONE OF THE COOLEST LESSON EXPERIENCES EVER. Sister McGee and I had prayed to know what we could do to help Adrianna and understand her needs better and changing her over to the Spanish elders was exactly it. Here's how the whole thing worked: Sister McGee (who speaks zero Spanish) and I were leading the lesson and so Sister McGee would say whatever in English and I would add on to her in Spanish. The Spanish elders then translated what Sister McGee said into Spanish for Adrianna, Adrianna would reply to them or me in Spanish, and I would translate what Adrianna was saying to them into English and type it onto my iPad under the table for Sister McGee to read so she could keep teaching the lesson. Then the elders would teach a little and then Sister McGee would speak in English a little and I added on in Spanish and explaining it sounds like it was a mess but it was seriously so cool and the Spirit in there was SO STRONG. Luckily, the Holy Ghost is a perfect teacher. My brain was stuck in Spanglish for the rest of the night. But hey, I guess I must have learned something in Bowker's class. Or it was just my little Hermana Dunlopez coming out haha.

Saturday was my one month mark!! I'm like 5% done with my mission haha. I've heard that with missions, the days feel like weeks and the weeks feel like days...true. Sister McGee and I celebrated with doughnuts (Alaska makes some amazing doughnuts people). Later that day, we had a District Tract in the Huffman area and it was sprinkling rain the whole time but as Sister McGee and I were walking down the muddy and bumpy gravel road in the forest, I was like, "this is exactly how I pictured being a missionary in Alaska,". It's so awesome. Being a missionary is hard sometimes but something Sister McGee always tells me is that, "giving up these eighteen months and devoting them 100% to serving Heavenly Father through a mission is the best thing you can do for you, your family, and your future,". That's so true! I haven't been out very long, but have come to realize more fully how much the Gospel has blessed my life and I'm so grateful for it and can't imagine my life without it. THE SCRIPTURES ARE TRUE YOU GUYS! HEAVENLY FATHER REALLY LOVES US! Now, being able to be out here and sharing that good news with people makes it mean even more to me. I love being a missionary. I'm staying in Alaska forever.

Okay so going back to Pastor Steve. On Sunday night, we and the Huffman Sisters had planned to go have dinner with Pastor Steve and his family. We had thought it was just going to be Pastor Steve and his wife but PSYCH, it was their whole family!! It was so awesome. His son in law, Jorge, made us homemade Mexican food- Mama Laura, you would've died it was SO GOOD! He even hand pressed his homemade tortillas with a mini tortilla press like the ones they have at Costa Vida (blessings)! The whole time we were there, I kept thinking about The Family: a Proclamation to the World and how the ability to be with our families forever is one of God's greatest gifts and it makes my heart so happy. Pastor Steve and his family aren't members of the Church-yet-but I kept feeling like we should share The Family Proclamation with him. So Sister McGee and I ran out to Ronda (our car who doubles as a moving LDS Library) and grabbed one for him then came back and gave it to him. I told him about how this Proclamation was like God's blueprint for families and how families bless our lives. It was really cool and he promised us that he would read it before we saw him next. Pastor Steve and his family are so cool and they already seem like members of the Church haha, we'll work on that.

Sorry if that wasn't very exciting. Here's an awesome scripture to make up for it: "I know that which the Lord hath commanded me, and I glory in it. I do not glory in myself, but I glory in that which the Lord hath commanded me; yea, and this is my glory that perhaps I might be an instrument in the hands of God in bringing some soul to repentance" -Alma 29:9.

Anyways, I love y'all.
Winter's coming.
Go forth & be awesome.

XOXO Sister Dunlop

Twins!
Alaskan ocean wind
"why can't they just say speed limit?"

First week in Alaska photos!

Monday, September 12, 2016


First letter from Alaska - better take a seat, it's a long one!

First of all, I feel like I should just give y'all the heads up that I'm never leaving Alaska- it's freaking amazing here. Second of all, your first week in the mission field is like trying to drink out of a firehose. It's really wet but really awesome.

My alarm going off at 2:15am on Tuesday morning in the MTC was pretty rough to say the least. I felt like a zombie. Sister Richards and I had to drag our giant suitcases from the fourth floor to the first floor which was awful because the MTC doesn't believe in elevators so I'm pretty sure we woke all the sisters up as we went banging down the stairs. PS they had to move a whole building of sisters into our building because theirs was being raided by bats and they all have to stay in the MTC for an extra week of Rabies Testing hahaha #adventuresoftheMTC.

Our travel group to Alaska was five sisters and seven elders (one is Spanish speaking and the other is Tongan speaking) and we all struggled together to figure out how airports work without our parents. Walking through the Salt Lake City airport with your missionary tag on is kinda like being a celebrity. It's awesome.
There are all these grandparents that want to take photos with you and know where you're heading and then there's all these cute parents that want to tell you all about where their son/daughter is serving and how long they've been out.

Elder Hunter and I sat by this random dude on our flight from SLC to Seattle and we decided to test out our newly learned MTC missionary skills on him (poor dude, I think he knew he was done for as soon as we sat down) and started asking him about his life and what he was doing in SLC and all that jazz. Oden -for reals that was his name- was in Utah visiting his girlfriend and they had visited Temple Square a few days ago and he wanted to know more about temples! Well Oden, temples make it so that FAMILIES CAN BE TOGETHER FOREVER AND IT'S THE COOLEST THING EVER!! We talked to him about temples and eternal families and then as soon as the plane took off, Oden put his headphones in and fell asleep in like .02 seconds. Awkward but whatever.

We had to BOOK IT (picture twelve sleep-deprived and super lost missionaries running around the terminals like chickens with their heads cut off in straight panic because that's what we looked like I’m sure) to our flight from Seattle to Anchorage. It was funny to see the difference between how missionaries were treated in the SLC Airport v. the Seattle Airport. People either turn around and walk the other direction or come up to you and ask why everyone is wearing suits and skirts. Yay real world! I was super blessed and got a window seat on our flight to Anchorage and totally started crying as we landed. I’m pretty sure they were tears of joy/panic/exaustedness/holy cow Sister Dunlop what did you sign up for. I think that actually "going on a mission" didn't seem like reality until I was actually in Alaska- the MTC just makes all of it seem like a dream.

When we got off the plane, we walked out (more like stumbled out because all of us are so sleepy/jet lag weird/hungry from only eating two Biscof cookies all day) and met President & Sister Robinson and the STLs & APs. It all seemed so unreal like some dream that I'll wake up from and it will only be my first day in the MTC (I would cry). We took a group photo by this giant stuffed bear. I don't have the picture, but I bet it's floating around on the AAM Facebook somewhere
or some thing like that. Then we loaded all our bags in the car and headed to the Mission Office for lunch. REAL FOOD WAS SO GOOD! Honestly, any food that's not MTC food is amazing. After lunch, we had all this orientation stuff to do and interviews with President Robinson. Then we all went to the mission home (it's super cute and blue on the outside) and took naps until dinner. Missionary life is the life to live, I'm telling y'all! After dinner, we watched "Alaska: For Cheechakos" PowerPoint that the APs made for us. In Alaska, a Cheechako is basically a greenie and the only way to not be Cheechako anymore is to drink water from a glacier and kiss a moose. After that, you become sourdough. We're working on planning the moose-kissing adventure for next week!! Then it was (finally) bedtime. I don't think I've slept that hard in a really long time. It was amazing.

On Wednesday morning, President Robinson had us get up at 6:30am (yay missionary schedule) and then we had breakfast and studies before heading over and getting our trainer and area assignments. It was like having to re-open a mission call all over again. All that we knew was that one of us Cheechakos would be needing to be on a plane in an hour to head up to Fairbanks. It was terrifying & awesome.

President Robinson handed us a fishing pole (after explaining how we are now going to be "fishers of men" (Matthew 4) on our missions) and then told us to go and point on the map of Alaska & Yukon where we thought we were going. EXCUSE ME SIR ALASKA IS GINORMOUS PLEASE EXPLAIN TO ME HOW I'M SUPPOSED TO KNOW WHERE THE PEOPLE ARE?!

So I just guessed Wasilla haha. Then he was like, "Sister McGee, why don't you show Sister Dunlop (I'm still working on helping people pronounce my name right, it's a daily struggle) where you two will be serving??". Basically, there was a lot of screaming.

We're serving in Oceanview! And yes, we do see the ocean every day. Alaska is super weird because it has ocean on one side of the road and then pine trees on the other. Weird but awesome. Sister McGee is an STL and this is the last transfer of her mission and so I didn't think she would be training (but deep in my heart when I met her at the airport I was like, "please, please, please,") but PSYCH she’s training me!! SO PUMPED. Minus the fact that she's leaving me in six
weeks and it takes twelve weeks to be trained so we are just going to get done in six weeks what takes most twelve. Woo. This is where the "drinking out of a firehose" part of my mission life started. Because we only have half the time to train as the other trainees and because my companion is an STL (there's three of them- Sister McGee is over all of the sisters in Anchorage and then there's a sister over all of the sisters in Fairbanks and then there's a sister over all the other sisters who aren't serving in either of those areas), I start exchanges with her next week and will have to drive all over Alaska in our super soccer mom Chevy Equinox car named Ronda and all this other crazy stuff. Scared but stoked. I think Heavenly Father and President Robinson must trust redheads.

The Relief Society fed us all lunch (I think there was moose meat in the soup, but no one could tell for sure) and then we walked across the parking lot to the Anchorage Alaska temple! It's super tiny and so, so, so pretty. I honestly think it's like the same size as our house haha. PS it's been cold and rainy ever since the temple so don’t get your hopes up and yes, I'm already wearing my SmartWool tights.

After the temple, we went out to dinner with the bishop and his wife at this steak house and then ran errands with Sister Martinez (trainer who's been here for 4 months, like what) and Sister Jewel (trainee who flew in with me) who are pinkwashing Huffman. Then we had to help them find their apartment because elders gave horrible directions and then we had to help them clean their apartment because elders are horrible at cleaning too. I was dying inside a little bit because of how nasty their apartment was and then we went to ours in Oceanview and it has a dishwasher, a garage, laundry, two bathrooms, a study, and this super retro (but terrifying) microwave. The Oceanview apartment is life.

Side note: Sister McGee and I are the same human. Seriously doppelgängers. We both went to USU (she's an Alpha Chi), love pizza (we went to Moose's Tooth on Saturday and it was AMAZING) and brownies, eat straight peanut butter, and we've even had all the same dental surgeries! It's insane. We laugh more than we breathe. I adore her.

Thursday was my first day of real missionary work and it was AMAZING.
To sum it all up (sorry this email is seven million years long, I promise to chill out next time), we went to Fred Meyer for groceries (PS: if you scan the barcode on your Book of Mormon at the checkout there, you get 10% off!!) and then got some Qdoba to go and set up our iPads at the church before we got to go and teach. Other part of drinking out of a firehose: Sister McGee was in Oceanview last transfer so she already knows all of our investigators which is super
awesome but I have to play a ton of catch-up with her to figure out where everyone is. I'm getting there!

We met with Randi, who's this super cute mom that wants to be baptized (she pretty much told us she wanted to be a missionary too so she could share the happy news of the gospel with others) but she's not married to her husband so they have to get married before she can be baptized. But they're a "Snow Bird Family", which means they only live in Alaska to come and work in the summer, and they're heading back down to Arizona in a few weeks so we have to hurry if she wants to be baptized here!

Then we had a little while before our next appointment and so we were heading to do a potty stop at the church and then Sister McGee was like, "Do you trust me? We're about to do something crazy...".

Our companionship has been thriving off this "YOMO" (You Only Mission Once) fire where Sister McGee is finishing up her mission and I just got to Alaska, so we've been doing some boldly insane things so far- I love it.

And then I was like, "heck yes I trust you!!", and so we whipped a U-turn and pulled next to this super cute house and Sister McGee told me this whole story about how this family was family-friends with her family at home and they had taught them a few weeks ago but were asked to drop them because they felt like they were already on the right path with this other church they were active in but Sister McGee felt prompted that we should stop by and play the "Potty Break" card on them today and see if it worked. It did. AND we got Krispie Kreme doughnuts out of it! The mom of this family, Jen, would seriously be the Primary President if she was a member. The homeschool room in their house is a library themed like Beauty and the Beast- it’s insanely accurate and adorable. We ended up staying there for almost an hour just talking to her and then before we left Sister McGee asked if Jen would think about letting us come and teach her and her family again. Jen said she would pray about it and then let us know! Woo.

The next house we went to was a less-active family who's "dog” is literally a polar bear. Yay Alaska! We committed them to coming to church with us on Sunday and they came! It was the first time they’ve been at church in years! Yayayay!

Then we had a dinner appointment with this cute newlywed couple that Sister McGee and her old companion had tracted into and done some service for a week or so ago. They had wanted to make us dinner to thank us and then wanted to hear more about the gospel. WE WERE THERE FOR TWO HOURS talking to them about the Restoration of the Church and about eternal families and the Book of Mormon and they were so intrigued the whole time. It was so cool! They said they would read and pray about the Book of Mormon and that we could come back next week some time and keep teaching them! Two new investigators on my first day #TheRedsareonfire (the Mission Office staff call us “The Reds").

One of Sister McGee and I's goals for this transfer is to make everyday a "Disneyland Day". You know how when you're at Disneyland you play super hard all day and then come back to the hotel and fall dead asleep each night? That's what we've been doing here and it's so awesome. You only have 18 months to be a missionary so don't you dare waste a single day!

On Friday, I learned everything about everyone and we basically planned out the rest of our transfer. We went through the Area Book (PS it's an app now combined with our Planner (which I hated using in the MTC because it's so tiny) so that's AMAZING) and talked about each person and where they're at and the needs they have. If you ever want to love complete strangers, go on a mission. You can feel just a taste of how much Heavenly Father loves each of these people and His concern for them and their needs- it's such a cool experience.

The only reason we left our apartment Friday morning was to take a planning break and get 60¢ ice cream cones from McDonald's down the street (I FOUND A DQ! CHURCH IS TRUE!) and then went right back to finish planning. We had to plan lessons for the upcoming week, exchanges, Zone Training on Wednesday that I'm teaching at (lol my firehose drinking life), and get everything scheduled for the Bush Branch that we're over for Sunday. Bush Branch church is super cool because it's all over the phone, I'll tell you more in a sec.

We had a dinner appointment at the Flint family's and ate salmon! I knew it was going to happen sooner or later (especially after already eating moose (maybe) and lamb in the first 72 hours here), but it was super yummy and I think the next weird Alaskan food I'll eat will be muktuk or porcupine...yay. One of their family-friends brought her new boyfriend over to meet us and he was seriously so strange. His name is Sam and he spent like twenty minutes trying to sell us a baday -I don't know how to spell it but they're those toilet spray bum cleaners or whatever- and it was so awkward. He's from Lehi, UT and he and his girlfriend met on LDSSingles.org (oh no) and told us all about how he bought a plane ticket to Alaska as soon as they were "official” and how they speak the same love language and the first present he ever sent her was a baday. Hahaha Sister McGee and I were DYING. But Sam was dead serious about all this hahaha.

Then we went to help at this "Grandparents Day" dinner at the senior center with a bunch of other missionaries from our Zone and when we walked in, there were flashing disco lights and some grandpa was jamming out on the keyboard and there was a magician there. Alaska knows how to celebrate! We cleared plates for a few hours while everyone sang karaoke and then the DJ started playing songs like “The Cupid Shuffle" and "Cha Cha Slide" and "Wobble" so this cute little old lady dragged Sister McGee and me onto the dance floor with her to show her how "do all the moves" haha dying.

Saturday morning we had to finish up planning and then went to Moose’s Tooth for lunch with the other Sisters in our District. Moose's Tooth has pizza nationally ranked for it's yummy amazingness and it was so good. PIZZA IS A BLESSING!

Then we headed over to Beach Lake to meet with the other STL and then Skype up to the STL in Fairbanks and talked about our plans for Zone Training. While we were there, I saw Sister Richards (who's serving in Beach Lake) for the first time since we got our new companions. I don't remember if I told you this while I was in the MTC but, Sister Richards is a vegetarian and so I was asking her about what she's been eating here and what people have fed her. SHE ATE MOOSE. MOOSE ARE HER FAVORITE ANIMAL. Hahaha I was dying, poor thing. She looked so scared. She'll be fine haha.

As the Oceanview missionaries, we are over both the Oceanview ward and the Bush Branch stake. We have eight hours of church on Sunday's (5 of Bush Branch and 3 in the Oceanview ward) and had to sneak candy into our bags to make it through haha. Now I know why missionaries carry such big bags around haha. We had SIX investigators at church on Sunday which was super awesome #TheRedsareonfire.

So here's how the Bush Branch works: everyone (like all 40 of them) calls in and it's like a big huge conference call. The Bush Branch is all the people that live in literally the "middle of nowhere” Alaska and don't live close enough to a church so they call in. We met with Branch President Anderson and the senior missionary couple, the Mayhue's, in Branch President's office for the call but other than that, everyone else just calls in from home. First they do announcements like, "make sure everyone has all their firewood for the winter" and "remember to keep your food storage stocked" and stuff like that. Then we sing the opening hymn and Sister Mayhue presses "play" on the CD player and we all sing along. It's like bad karaoke haha. Then Branch President talks about callings or whatever (there are 6 youth in the Bush Branch and they have 1 missionary out from there!) and then they have Roll Call where they do attendance to check in on everyone and see who's there. After that, we sing the sacrament hymn. Elder Mayhue prepares, blesses, and passes the sacrament to us in the room and if there is a priesthood holder in the family that's calling in, they can prepare, bless, and pass the sacrament to their families which is really cool. However, there's a ton of people in the Bush Branch that don't have priesthood holders in their homes BUT they’ve been promised by the First Presidency of the Church, that they can STILL receive the same blessings! Isn't that so cool?! After the sacrament, a family is assigned to speak on a topic and so they all speak, we sing the closing hymn, someone says the closing prayer and bam that's Bush Branch! Then they have priesthood/YM on one line and then Relief Society/YW on another. It's so cool.

Then we went to Oceanview ward which is a cute little family ward and got to have normal not on the phone church. Yay! It rained all day and made the mountains so lush and green and pretty! Alaska is amazing. PS Sister McGee and I are trying a take a selfie every day so you’re probably just going to be getting selfies from me for the next six weeks haha.

Sunday was 9/11 and so a bunch of churches got together to have this American themed choir concert and guess who was there??
Abe Lincoln (see photo for evidence).
Alaska takes America very seriously.

And now it's PDay!! This morning we went out to the army base and watched them test fly all these military planes. Because if you have a squad of billion dollar airplanes, you should fly them every chance you get. They were SO LOUD & HUGE.

Other random things about Alaska from Sister Dunlop:
- There are a ton of roundabouts here (which I hate) and all of them are
DOUBLE LANES so that's awful and so scary.
- The water here isn't that yummy. Maybe it's just an Anchorage problem.
- I saw one of the last-standing Blockbuster Video the other day, it's huge.
- No two days are the same here which is awesome.
- It was so windy and rainy last night, we thought there was going to
be a hurricane
- This email is as long as a ENG 2010 essay, so sorry.

Anyways, missions are just one big and amazing adventure and I'm in
love with Alaska.
Go forth and be awesome!
Love, Sister Dunlop

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Sister Dunlop arrived in Alaska yesterday afternoon. Her p-day is on Monday and we are looking forward to hearing from her and finding out where she has been sent!

Last week in the MTC

Monday, September 5, 2016

Caitie and most of her district were sick last week, so her letter home was short. But, thankfully, she sent lots of photos from her last 10 days in the MTC. Here's a little piece of her letter. She should be in Alaska on Tuesday afternoon!

"Last week felt forever long but on Friday night we were sent our travel plans for next week which is so crazy! I feel like I've been here forever but at the same time, it feels like I just got dropped on the curb. Sister Richards and I are flying out before everyone else in our district (tears) and we have to be on the MTC front curb by no later than 3:30AM next Tuesday morning. Woo. Then we fly from Salt Lake to Seattle and have a little layover before flying from Seattle to Anchorage. I am so pumped to finally be on my way!! We get to fly with the other five Sisters and five Elders who have been called to the Alaska Anchorage mission and I am so excited to be united with the Frozen Chosen." 

 
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