Sunday, June 30, 2013

My dearest mother..
This week has been another great week. We are really trying to get the members involved in teaching.
Half of our lessons this week were with members which is really hard here.
I have been super busy trying to speak Hindi, you would be so proud of my progress in just a week.
I'm also learning how to read Sanskrit. We have an investigator that is teaching me.
The work is going really well and I am so happy.. I love this place. So fun.
I'm taking care of two branches. One has over 500 members but 80% of them are inactive because they are so dang racist.
I love it because I can't Iaugh about it..
My companion is named Elder Hancock.  We get along great.

 Love you Dalberticus


Sunday, June 2, 2013

I have a name sake

Dear Family and Friends,

I found out last night that I have a name sake and I started crying.. Their are the greatest people back in Sigatoka and the wife is Vanessa and the husband is Amritt.
Amritt is a recent convert to the church and I would go visit about 3 times a week and they would feed us.  When I left Vanessa told me that I'm the only missionary that Amrit has ever wanted to be friends with and they just had a baby and his middle name is Dallin.. They told the elders there they named him after me..!

This has been such an amazing week. Me and elder Rokodakunivosa went to Lakeba. That doesn't mean anything to you guys but we are the first two elders to ever have gone to Lakeba. It was such an awesome experience. I almost died like ten times... its the best ha ha.. 

I get a new companion.  His name is Elder Hancock, and he is a way cool guy I already know him. It should be fun..

I feel so much love here.. 
this place is wild..
Love your ever adoring..

Elder Ronald Reagan 


I can't tell you how stoked I'm am about missionary work.. sometimes it's so slow and you have to do some stuff you just never want to do but you must be willing to do it and just go the extra little mile.

A typical day.


 woken up by the sun
 cup of cocoa
 make a lesson, i started a lesson book of sunday 
lessons 
district and zone meeting lessons,
12:00 go into town for lunch, there is a way good chinese place,
after that lessons scattered all over the rest of the day
sometimes eat dinner at the Terry's and/or go back to that chinese place or be fed after a lesson with an investigator..
9;30 usually go to bed..

The elders from Seaqaqa are sometimes up in Labasa an they are really good company,
almost all Fijian lessons. 
LAKEBA, FIJI

SIX YEAR DRIVERS LICENCE


The poorest most loving family in the world.. Arian birthday(not staged..)




Sunday, May 19, 2013

may 2013 Labasa, Fiji




Water, bridges, sharks and weird dialect



Dear Everyone,      May 19,2013


 That Dangea fever rumor you heard about... if you get it twice you will die!! Not true.. People get it quite often here. 
So. We were on such a crazy dirt road for four hours just flying. We ended up in this little village and it was great. We were in the river for about four hours. (Walking )  It was so cold but was so great!  We had two baptisms there.
 There is this little bridge that we drove over... super sketchy... The river is the deepest river in Fiji and it is full of sharks! My heart was pumping just looking at it! ahah!!!. I'm never coming home..!!!

My Fijian is actually better than I thought. I kept twenty people entertained the other night during an interview that lasted for about an hour. They were just shooting questions at me in their weird dialect. I cannot believe I survived it.
I'm going to come home completely fluent.. I hope... 

Thanks for stopping by..

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Baptism happening in the oceans of Fiji




Hola mi amigos, 
No one in Fiji has ever heard spanish before. I keep trying to talk to them but they just look at me like I am an idiot. But that okay!

This week was just Dapper. I love feeling the spirit and that is all I try to do.

I want to be the fun teacher.  Its still hard because I am not the best at the language yet. I want to be the person people ask "when are you coming back" and they just want you to come back and teach them while they are just so pumped to listen to you. I'm in love with being a missionary.

This week we had some baptisms. 
Tovou, Hali and Jonetani. They all have my sense of humor! It's the best! When we visit, they run to us and we are just so happy to see each other. It couldn't have gone any better. The spirit was so strong and it was on the beautiful Cuvu beach.

Health is good.

I received my transfer last night. I am so pumped! It's going to be such an adventure. I'm not even quite sure how im going to get there. The place is called Labasa on Vanua Levu. (the northern island). I heard its like 50 years behind the rest of Fij,  but fiji is so far behind. So like 100 years behind America.  I have no idea what it is like.  All I know is that they don'tt say their K's so that will be interesting. Instead they like grunt or something like they got the wind knoked out of them. I haven't had sugar cane yet.  I heard it really good but will murder your teeth.
 
God bless you all,
 
John stockton   aka (Elder Moulton)

Labasa, Fiji

Experienced voyagerExperienced voyagerExperienced voyagerExperienced voyager Aaron Moss 
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Labasa (pronounced Lam-bah-sah) is a hot, dusty sugar mill town entirely dependent upon cane which is grown in great quantities in the area. With a population of about 25,000, it's much larger than Savusavu and entirely different in nature. The population is primarilly Indian in origin and consists of Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs, with their distinctive turbins. The surrounding countryside, covered with cane and golden sunburnt hills also has volcanically sculpted black lava outcroppings in nearby Vunika. During cane crushing season (between June and January) keep an eye out for trucks overloaded with cane heading for the mill. Source: www.fijiguide.com