This week was depressing because we basically had a no work week. But we still had a couple miracles. This week was filled with meetings and service. On Tuesday we had an activity with other missionaries and afterwards Elder Mauclair felt sick and so we did not go out that evening. However, later an appointment that we had missed earlier called (they were investigators that we have not gotten to have a sit down lesson with yet) and they asked if we were coming. I explained that my companion was sick. They said that they really wanted to meet with us and asked to reschedule with us. This shows they really are serious about meeting with us. This is super cool and means they will not be flakey, which is super awesome.
The second miracle was on Saturday when we contacted a referral from a member for a 15 year old girl named Natasha. She answered the door and was super interested and said that she wants to meet with us. She has been going to church with her friend in a neighboring ward. We taught her on the door step. She started crying and told us that her life has been changed because she was going to church. (Making women cry seems to be a regular occurrence with us)
Also, the Bailey family helped me buy a new suit. I gave them money and they went to Burlington (outside the mission boundaries). I had asked for a light grey suit thinking they couldn't possibly find anything too light and that they would come back with a nice looking grey suit. But the suit they came back with was almost white. Be careful what you ask for because it was crazy white. So today they are taking it back and trading it for a different one. My grey suit is almost worn out and gonna rip everywhere soon. It probably would have already if Aunt Barbara hadn't reinforced all the seams in the pants. The jacket is all sun bleached and stuff and ripping inside. It's bad. I cant wear the black one because the jacket is way too big and I look like a dork. I wear it only in emergencies, so there is still a use for it.
Sunday, June 14, 2015
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Awesome to See People Change
From
Elder Bailey on June 1st, 2015
Well,
last week was cool. I found my wallet! Also, Bishop Taylor took us to Dillards last P-day
and bought us expensive shoes. They are super cool.
Then, we have been doing work this week to
set up teaching for weeks to come. So there is one potential investigator we
have that we talked to and made initial contact with. She is going through a terrible divorce. We
shared some words of comfort with her and she cried a little and talked to us
about how it was hard to try to be strong for her son. We bore testimony of the Savior and related
her situation to Job. She cried more
when I said Job because that was her father’s story. He died a few years
ago. She needs the gospel so bad it
hurts and she knows it. She is trying to
go back to church but to Catholic Church.
So hopefully we can be the guides in the right direction. Then on Sunday we went by another lady’s house
that started coming to church a couple weeks ago. She is really interested in learning more
about the Church. We knocked on the door
and she gave us water. I felt prompted
to say Elder Mauclair is French. Her eyes lit up a little and she started
speaking French to Elder Mauclair. It
turns out she is from Haiti and that is super cool too!
Also, thanks for the package and the
tie. Elder LeGrand is jealous (we have
style competitions and right now and I think I’m winning). I wore it to the baptism of a man I was
teaching in my last area. He is super cool. It is awesome to see people change.
Also, were you making fun of me with the
superman card? Because if you were it
was pretty funny.
Monday, May 18, 2015
A Mother's Joy on Mother's Day
May 10th, 2015
We waited and waited to hear from our missionary son in Arizona. He had emailed the time for us to be ready --- 3:30 pm on Mother's Day. So we waited and wondered and wondered and waited some more UNTIL we realized that Arizona does not change to Daylight Savings Time. Ahhhhh! His 3:30 was really our Utah 4:30. So we waited some more until just after 5:00 Utah time. Then a call came from Elder Bailey. "So," the voice said, "How are we going to do this? Skype, Google Hangout, or what?" We were ready with the Google Hangout, so with a few connections we got the video conference call started. Cami and Greg promised to join us when we could add them later. There he was --- Elder Mitchell Bailey --- looking healthy and happy and well groomed. Awesome!
Elder Bailey introduced us to his host family, also named Bailey. The mother thanked us for sending such a wonderful missionary. They have two sons getting about to missionary ages and were grateful to have an Elder Bailey to be such a great example and friend for them. He also introduce us to his companion from France. I tried out my limited conversational French and then stopped abruptly when I could not go further than "Good day" and "How are you?"
Mostly we just wanted to hear him talk and tell us about anything and everything he is doing. He described the areas they support, the wards and the neighborhoods. He told about getting to drive a car for a transfer because his companion from Canada felt insecure driving in America after being on a bike only for so long. He told about the low income housing projects where they have been fortunate to find some very humble people willing to listen. He told of the incredible week when they had 20 teaching appointments. Usually they only get 5-7 teaching appointments. He talked of the many little miracles that happen day to day.
One little miracle he shared he said has been the highlight of his mission. He said that missionaries don't always recognize or acknowledge the Spirit they carry with them every day. But after this experience, he has learned to recognize and acknowledge this wonderful gift. The Bishop's wife took them to meet a neighbor who had been having a rough time. She was going through a divorce. When she answered the door, she said that she just did not have time right then to sit down and talk with the elders. Her little dog had run out onto the porch and was curious about the missionaries, but did not bark. Elder Bailey bent down and patted the dog and snapped his fingers to point commanding the dog to go back inside the house. The dog instantly obeyed. The lady was surprised at how well the dog obeyed and said that she would call when she had time to visit with the Elders. The missionaries were rather surprised when the lady called back so soon. She explained that while the missionaries were on her porch she felt a peace that she had not felt in quite some time. And her little dog, that usually yaps loudly and bites "intruders" on the ankles, was uncharacteristically calm and obedient. She just knew that she needed to feel that Spirit again. So she called the missionaries right away.
Yes, Elder Bailey said, we as missionaries need to recognize and be grateful for the Spirit we carry with us. That was truly a miracle!
We waited and waited to hear from our missionary son in Arizona. He had emailed the time for us to be ready --- 3:30 pm on Mother's Day. So we waited and wondered and wondered and waited some more UNTIL we realized that Arizona does not change to Daylight Savings Time. Ahhhhh! His 3:30 was really our Utah 4:30. So we waited some more until just after 5:00 Utah time. Then a call came from Elder Bailey. "So," the voice said, "How are we going to do this? Skype, Google Hangout, or what?" We were ready with the Google Hangout, so with a few connections we got the video conference call started. Cami and Greg promised to join us when we could add them later. There he was --- Elder Mitchell Bailey --- looking healthy and happy and well groomed. Awesome!
Elder Bailey introduced us to his host family, also named Bailey. The mother thanked us for sending such a wonderful missionary. They have two sons getting about to missionary ages and were grateful to have an Elder Bailey to be such a great example and friend for them. He also introduce us to his companion from France. I tried out my limited conversational French and then stopped abruptly when I could not go further than "Good day" and "How are you?"
Mostly we just wanted to hear him talk and tell us about anything and everything he is doing. He described the areas they support, the wards and the neighborhoods. He told about getting to drive a car for a transfer because his companion from Canada felt insecure driving in America after being on a bike only for so long. He told about the low income housing projects where they have been fortunate to find some very humble people willing to listen. He told of the incredible week when they had 20 teaching appointments. Usually they only get 5-7 teaching appointments. He talked of the many little miracles that happen day to day.
One little miracle he shared he said has been the highlight of his mission. He said that missionaries don't always recognize or acknowledge the Spirit they carry with them every day. But after this experience, he has learned to recognize and acknowledge this wonderful gift. The Bishop's wife took them to meet a neighbor who had been having a rough time. She was going through a divorce. When she answered the door, she said that she just did not have time right then to sit down and talk with the elders. Her little dog had run out onto the porch and was curious about the missionaries, but did not bark. Elder Bailey bent down and patted the dog and snapped his fingers to point commanding the dog to go back inside the house. The dog instantly obeyed. The lady was surprised at how well the dog obeyed and said that she would call when she had time to visit with the Elders. The missionaries were rather surprised when the lady called back so soon. She explained that while the missionaries were on her porch she felt a peace that she had not felt in quite some time. And her little dog, that usually yaps loudly and bites "intruders" on the ankles, was uncharacteristically calm and obedient. She just knew that she needed to feel that Spirit again. So she called the missionaries right away.
Yes, Elder Bailey said, we as missionaries need to recognize and be grateful for the Spirit we carry with us. That was truly a miracle!
Lots of Rain
Dear Elder Bailey,
I got a photo of you from Sis. Zollinger last week. She titled it "Transfers." Did you get transferred last week? Or was this an old photo? You were standing with an Elder Carpenter. Just wondering if that was your new companion.
We have had such a dry winter with hardly any snow. And now in May, we are having some torrential rains. I hope we are making up the rain deficits. How about you? Have you been getting rain in your area?
Last week felt like I was holed up in a dungeon. Just the rain, and me at my computer struggling to learn how to use the video editing program. I was going through footage from three different tapings of the show at the Provost Elementary School. Finally after days and days of trial and error, I succeeded in editing a usable product. My goal was to get them copied to take to school today. Somehow, I made my goal. Seems like I cannot reproduce the steps I used before to copy some more, though. Oh well, at least I have 25 made and delivered. Now to go back and try to learn the steps all over again.
Hope your week was good. I so enjoyed hearing about your miracles last week. It made me want to pay more close attention to recognizing the hand of the Lord in my day to day activities. Getting that editing accomplished was one of those, certainly. Now that the first wave is done, I realize that I must have had some divine intervention.
Have a great week,
![]() |
| Elder Mitchell Bailey and Elder Carpenter at the May 2015 transfers meeting |
From Elder Bailey:
There was a lot of rain this week and no I did not get transferred and Elder Carpenter is not my companion. He just happened to be standing near by when we took the picture. This week has been strange work wise but no stories. Riding my bike in the rain was fun.
All of my previous companions are now zone leaders, even my MTC companion, so that's cool.
Saturday, May 2, 2015
What Elder Bailey Does Not Tell Us About
![]() |
| Gilbert Arizona Mission Choir performing at the "Because He Lives" Concert April 30th, 2015 |
From Elder Bailey:
This week has been long and hard. We were teaching a lot this week but nobody we
have been teaching has been progressing. And that stinks.
We learned that the number of missionaries in our mission will
drop significantly in the next few transfers. When I came in, we had 210 missionaries. Now we have 150 and in August we will have 95.
Then it will probably go back up to
around 150-ish, but the next 7 1/2 months will be super hard. Most of our mission leadership will be going
home in the next transfer or two. Then
it will be a whole new mission. We are
going to cover 4 to 6 wards each companionship, and that will be super hard.
![]() |
| Elder Mitchell Bailey (right) and companions. Photo sent by an anonymous text-er. |
Tuesday, April 14, 2015
Leaving for a New Area
| At baptism with Elders LeGrand, Bailey and Jackson |
Well, I was just another 6 weeks with Elder Jackson and now I’m getting transferred. It is happy and sad. I was tired of the area, even though we were getting a lot done and the work is picking up. We were getting higher stats than the area has ever seen but, I was getting really stir crazy. I have really learned a lot from Elder Jackson and had a lot of good times. The transfers are going really fast now and it’s really weird to think about.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Transferred to SanTan Area
April 6th, 2015
This week has been okay. I got transferred to the SAN TAN Zone in the San Tan Stake, Coronado 2nd and San Tan 1st wards. My new companion is Elder Mauclair. He is is from Lyon France, and met my Cousin Race in the MTC.
This area is kinda dead. We have no real investigators, but we are going to get something going. I am excited. There are a lot of part member families here that are police officers. I want to be a cop and so that might be the way in. So that's cool. Some members told me that one of my football coaches is in Coronado 2nd Ward. I haven't seen him yet but we will and I'm excited.
This week has been okay. I got transferred to the SAN TAN Zone in the San Tan Stake, Coronado 2nd and San Tan 1st wards. My new companion is Elder Mauclair. He is is from Lyon France, and met my Cousin Race in the MTC.
| Elder Race Acheson (right) with his companion in the Lyon France Mission |
This area is kinda dead. We have no real investigators, but we are going to get something going. I am excited. There are a lot of part member families here that are police officers. I want to be a cop and so that might be the way in. So that's cool. Some members told me that one of my football coaches is in Coronado 2nd Ward. I haven't seen him yet but we will and I'm excited.
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