Wednesday, May 15, 2019

facebook conversations

Super busy PDay again, as always. It's funny how I used to think that PDays were actual resting days. hahaha. This is mom and I'll be your guide to this blog today....all interpretations are subject to mom thoughts.




Walking through the Montmartre artists quarter, where everyone tells you you're pretty to get you to pay for a drawing of yourself. Funniest compliment : "Can I draw you? You're looking very Irish."





Sacre Coeur, not sure if this is the hidden abbey they found or a main place. Sacre Coeur is her favorite place.

Tourist season has started, Sacre Coeur 

I just got a buckwheat crêpe with mozzarella, salsa, onions, mushrooms, bell peppers, jalepenos, and tomatoes. I got all the veggies but potatoes that they offered since it was "one base, one filler, as many vegetables as you want." I suspect they're trying to get their revenge in jalepeno Literally think this is 50% jalepenos...Ah, I see the issue. They also gifted me some Tabasco sauce on the receipt. "Someone ordered jalepenos? Looks like she likes spicy! Let's get rid of this bottle!"

tourist season and a late train




Our Mother's Day chat. I LOVE being able to talk with her! Most of our talking was about classes and registration and such but, it was still great. BYU-I is going to get an amazing person in the fall. 


Tuesday, April 16, 2019

The week Notre Dame burned

I'm starting this with an apology to everyone who didn't get an email response today, it was a little nuts. (I don't have an excuse for the other weeks, sorry!) We didn't do our time consecutively, missed some of our time, and had to get glasses for Soeur S in Paris. Great, but busy. I'm sending this to everyone this week. 😅

I think just about everyone must have heard what happened to Notre Dame by now, and it's a big enough event that I'm going to remember a lot of things in relation to this point on the time-line. 

I loved visiting Notre Dame. Happily, I've been inside when I had the chance and got to enjoy it and make memories there. I was there with my sweet French host family when I was 16, I've been there as a missionary, and my Grandma Amott left us a small replica of the beautiful stained glass window that I'll be taking with me when I get home. I was going to go to Notre Dame today and buy another little replica to give my parents, but it looks like plans have changed.

Since a lot of missionaries serve in the immediate Paris area, our mission president (the good man lucky enough to be in charge of all 160+ of us) sent our parents an email to help them not freak out. (I love you, Mom!) I really loved a part that was shared by a few parents.

So, in Président Sorensen's words,
"I spoke this evening with a Catholic Priest we know from the nearby Église de la Madeleine and he reported that Notre Dame Cathedral just celebrated 850 years.  While they are so sad at the damage to this house of worship, he said "if it had to happen, Holy Week is not a bad time.  Easter is all about resurrection and rising from the ashes."

My heart hurts for the faithful people who worshiped in that cathedral, and for what a symbol it was for France, but I love that response. 

(Old photo from 7 years ago, Alyssa and Eulalie in front of Notre Dame)

We have our friend, B, on date for baptism on the 27th! She's amazing and we're so excited for her. She just passed her interview this afternoon and we had an awesome lesson on the Priesthood, which is also why I'm cutting p-day short... Again. 

She's awesome, it's worth it, but next week I'm still really looking forward to getting the whole time needed to do groceries and things 😄 And to go shoe shopping, because in an interesting turn of events and a long story, almost all of my shoes have just been accidentally donated to the homeless population of France. It's been an exciting week. 

Song recommendation for this this week is "God help the outcasts" from the Hunchback of Notre Dame, because of Notre Dame, but also its a pretty great song. 

Missionary invitation for this week is to invite someone to church for Easter. Easter is Christ. It's about hope and new starts, and everyone should feel welcome, so please help them feel welcome and loved. We're all a part of their family. 



I love you all, have a great week and be safe and have fun!! I'll see you soon! 


Tuesday, April 9, 2019

She's still alive!

Soooooo I (Mom) have been loving the ability to talk online and have completely neglected my duties in posting. Between hard things at home and the old computer dying, it's just not happened. Soeur Amott is totally alive and well! :)  I'll try to post again but, wanted to just put this out there for those who think she's not. Sorry!!!

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

The Cold Never Bothered Me Anyway

Hello, everyone! Sorry about that two week pause for those of you who do read this! And also an apology for my future posterity who are going to get to read my weekly emails instead of the journal that I'm still not great at writing in!

A lot of things have happened in the last few weeks. I'm just going to bullet point them for now in order of how important they must be to my memory. 

-Elder Neil L. Anderson of the quorum of the twelve apostles came to visit and all the missionaries in the whole mission were in the Versailles chapel to listen to him. He has the same authority as John or Thomas or the other apostles of Jesus Christ in the new testament, so this was a really exciting day for us. He was a missionary in France, then directed a mission in France, so he has a very unique understanding of how missionaries work here and gave some amazing insights that I wish I'd known my whole mission. I got to shake his hand and he made jokes about Bountiful, Utah, where he's also from. 



-It snowed a LOT that day and this part of France is confused and distressed by snow. Everything shut down again. Just for a few days, instead of a week like last year, we had no busses and couldn't drive to Mantes so we made a lot of cookie dough and called lots of people.



-We've tried a new approach to visiting members which is "we have American cookies and we're in your neighborhood, would you like us to come now or in an hour?" and it's been very successful so far. 
-Related: Using this approach, we had an awesome "Come Follow Me" lesson with the Bishop's family, using the new program for home study that the church made to help us spend more time together and get a more personalized understanding of the scriptures, and it was super cool watching the kids put it together. Their daughter was a hundred times more excited to scripture chase when she got to use the missionary phone. The bishop liked it so much that he asked us to visit a few other families with kids to help them get excited about this program! 

-A year ago, soeur Oulès and I met this cool security guard at the mall who walked right up and said "hey, you're missionaries! You've got Jesus Christ on your name tag! I want my daughter to meet you!" and he gave us his phone number and name but was too busy to meet so we paused talking to him. Now soeur Oulès are together again, in a different city, and we got a referral... For the same guy! He actually lives in our new area and we're still going to get to teach him and his daughter!

-An Austrian company was doing some detailing on the temple buildings and we ran into two of their workers in the grocery store. They didn't recognize us but we talked to them and they said they've been working at "the Jesus temple down the street!" and they'd also worked on "other Jesus temples that are being built, or the one in Frankfurt, and Lisbon," and went on for a while. It was awesome. They suggested we go visit "the Jesus temple" sometime and we're happy to hear we were already serving there. Honestly, it seems like the random people invite more people to the temple than anyone else.

-Last preparation day I didn't write because we had our district activity, with all the missionaries in our local group, and we played ultimate Frisbee with one of the Mandarin speaking companionship people they're teaching. Afterwards he showed us this random Pho restaurant and we eventually made it to Sacré Cœur, which is always my favorite thing in Paris and where I find my second favorite stained glass. Since it's a church they have signs asking us not to take pictures, and I didn't, but if you get the chance to look up the stained glass for Joseph it's my favorite. The lilies are beautiful!




-Yesterday we were knocking on doors to talk to people in apartment buildings and met a very nice and confused man who spoke Arabic, Dutch, German, and Spanish, and who did not speak French or English. I know roughly 10 words in Spanish and most of them relate to food or testifying, but I was able to say we were missionaries and somebody at our church speaks Spanish, but he kept talking to us and called his Dutch friend to speak English to us and held the phone in front of my face. Eventually we got things cleared up and apparently he was really concerned about us because it's a neighborhood where little American girls with nerd glasses don't typically knock on doors talking about church so he was worried we needed help and he didn't want to turn us away if we did. It was super sweet and we thanked him before we left.
-related: we've learned to go to the bakery first in a new neighborhood and ask the girl at the counter if it's a safe neighborhood. Her verdict in this place is that people wouldn't necessarily be interested in talking to us but we'd be totally safe, they're all proud of taking care of people. 
-still related : a family in the same building a few doors later said they'd love to talk to us again next week!

-I just figured out to make American pizza crust and we're having veggie pizza for lunch

-My favorite local dog was so excited to see me yesterday that she lay down on her side so her dad couldn't walk away until I walked past, and she licked my hand. I typically talk to her female owner so the man was a little confused, to say the least, but it was awesome. She's a tiny goofy looking Yorkie. Dogs are one of my favorite things about living on earth. 

-We visited a family and felt like the topic we should talk about it the Christlike attribute of Humility, and let me tell you, that was a tricky thing to plan. How do you even approach that? We decided to be totally honest and start with "so we always pray about a topic and this time we felt we should talk about Humility and we're as confused as you are, basically, but here goes." We got humbled real quick but it went pretty well, aside from still being confused. Then their teenager gave a talk this last Sunday about Humility and said he'd been assigned that topic just before our lesson and had been stressing out and wasn't sure what to do, and then the sisters came over, and he knows missionaries are inspired because we looked as confused as we felt but we talked about it. That was a cool moment. 

-I met a dog named Utah. 

And there's so many other stories I don't know where to start, so you'll just have to ask me about them after my mission!

MISSIONARY INVITATION: Go invite someone to spend time with you. You can do a gospel related thing, or just something positive. Like, go walk in a garden with somebody who's been stuck inside, call a friend, something that's specifically interacting with somebody. 

Song suggestion: If you could hie to Kolob, the Lower Lights. It's a really good one! I think it's just music, no words, at least in the version I heard. 


God doesn't often talk to us in one single huge, clear, defining, road-to-damascas moment. He wants us to learn and grow for ourselves, and talk with him on the way. We teach a lot of people that don't want to believe in God or themselves or anything else until they see physical and undisputed proof that they can hold in their hands, but what would the point of that be? I am grateful that God loves us enough to let us be confused sometimes, and that he doesn't always give us the answer in the way we want it. I'm grateful for the snow, and the cold, and the people that are waiting it out with their families or their dogs. I'm grateful for people that don't understand yet but they keep meeting with us because they want to understand something, even if they don't know what it is. I'm grateful for peace in clouds and that we can follow light by light, like on the road back into our city in the thick white January fog, and that nobody is asking us to see the whole picture right now. I'm grateful for the gospel of Jesus Christ and that I get to share it with people I love so much.

And I'm grateful for baguettes which I need to go buy, so I've got to end there, but I love you all and hope you have a great day and week and year!!! 
From Aunt Chris-fun surprise! 

cutest diner with the worst "nachos"



artistic district



tasty water from the viking spring


Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Angels round about to bear us up... And our suitcases

Hurrah for another week!

Today I did my second year Legality which was a unique experience. I've been studying the Christlike attributes again recently and I think it was a great study in patience, and how we need to wait for the right moment but be ready when it arrives. People looked like they were napping but when that buzzer sounded with their number they were up like they sat on a bee. It was pretty impressive.

My own personal study on patience got a little ironic when I got to study it for three hours and took half an hour to make the passport machine work. (lesson learned: always carry lots of change. In lots of sizes. Nothing gives extra back.) 

On the bright side, yesterday I studied hope so I got to put that in action by *hoping* I had more coins, *hoping* the line would move faster and we'd get on with our day earlier, and *hoping* my brain would slip into gear and I'd suddenly have a revelatory experience with this other experience and get to share it with the guy next to me, but instead I got to lean more on faith and saw a really cute toddler dancing with total joy to music only she could hear, and that made everything more awesome. She had better rhythm than I could ever hope for.

The last week has been an adventure non-stop. For starters, soeur Ilizarbe went to Belgium, soeur Oulès and I are back together, I got a week's worth of arm workout moving those suitcases and I decided mine will be empty when I come home, we got a new ami, and we got the cute neighbor pug's owner to come to a temple fireside AND set up a lesson with the sisters! He's the sweetest little old man so this is really exciting! And we sang a capella at a retirement home and got asked to come back (thanks, elders and soeur Campbell) and so much more.

With the suitcases... There's a TON of stairs in these train stations and there were several sisters with lots of heavy suitcases with spinner wheels. They just snap right off on cobblestones or on the gaps, it's terrible. (hurrah for two wheel suitcases!) but I was the only sister who could really lift or carry them in our group and it was going rough. We had many, many stairs to climb up and down and no elevators and escalators. 

But, every time we just couldn't do it, someone would come help us. That... Just doesn't happen here. Especially one sweet man, he carried our suitcases up and down an entire Gare for a full half hour and they were HEAVY and then at the end he just disappeared before we could say anything but thanks again. We kept saying if he needed to go he could, we were incredibly grateful, but he went the whole way with us to our stop and then was just gone. I gave him a visitors center card and said we'd give him a tour and thanks but he had a train to catch himself so he left. But really, right after that someone shared the scripture about angels being around us to bear us up and he stood out. That was an amazing act of service for a bunch of stressed out young women who needed help but had nobody to ask. 

So, I've got to go again, but I love you all and hope you have an amazing week! Missionary invitation is to go out and do good, serve somebody, and you never know what it might do. At the very least it'll light the world a little more. Service is non-denominational and crosses every cultural border.

Say your prayers, read your scriptures, see you soon!! 

Apparemment, quelqu'un veut que j'apprends français

Soeur Amott and Soeur Ilizarbe

We got the répertoire for transfers yesterday morning and, as always, it was full of surprises! Sœur Ilizarbe is headed up to the Hermanas in Belgium, and my new companion in Mantes-La-Jolie is going to be...

*drumroll *


Sœur OULÈS! YES! The same Sœur Oulès! After 3 transfers together and 5 apart, we will be finishing her mission together. I'm a little confused but really excited.

This also means that in my mission so far I have served with:
Sœur Oulès, who is French, 
Sœur Sedrick, who was almost finished and spoke French really well,
Sœur Montalvo, who is Québécoise, 
Sœur Ilizarbe, who lived in Québec for five years and speaks fluently and we can only communicate in French, and 
Sœur Oulès, who is French. 

I think somebody might be trying to give me a hint over here. I'm not sure what it is, but, y'know... 

In other exciting news, this means that we will be moving apartments (though still living near and spending half the day at the temple) and I will be the one showing someone where everything is but I'm still totally lost. Any spare prayers in my direction would be grand. 

We just spent the day packing and visited Consecration Hill for the new year, so this is another short email, but I love you all! 

Video recommendation this week is "look not behind thee." I can't link it since I'm on the tablet, but it's really good. OH, JUST KIDDING, IT WORKED! https://www.lds.org/media-library/video/2010-12-21-new-years-look-not-behind-thee?lang=eng&_r=1 

I love how videos like this take a scripture story and tell it in a way that are relatable and interesting. Scripture study doesn't have to be work, we can genuinely enjoy it. (Liken the scriptures, anybody ?) So, my goal for this year is to help people find the fun and the joy in the scriptures. I'll recommend an interesting scripture story à week, and this one is Samuel the Lamanite! (yes, autocorrect, that is actually a word). Go study it, tell it to à few small children until you can keep their attention throughout, and then share it with some random people to get them interested too. Have fun! 

OH, and happy new year!!! 

facebook conversations

Super busy PDay again, as always. It's funny how I used to think that PDays were actual resting days. hahaha. This is mom and I'll b...