Mission oh Mission
Recently I've been reading over some blogs and emails of friends that are on their missions. Every LDS friend I ever had throughout high school is currently in the mission field and I couldn't be happier for each of them. But it puts a lot of pressure on me. With the missionary age change, there was a huge influx of youth deciding to serve and leaving on their missions. In that pack of rabid Mormons were all of my friends. I've never been against serving a mission myself, but I've never had the desire to either. It simply wasn't something that I ever felt I needed to do. Recently, the pressure at BYU to serve a mission has come full force and hit me like a brick wall to the face. I've started feeling like I need to serve a mission and that everyone is doing it so that means that I need to as well. After praying about it, I realized what was going on. A mission is not in my life plan, at least not right now. While it is always a good thing to serve, it may not be the best for me at this moment. Before I came to this realization, I scanned my brain for everything I knew to be true about serving an LDS mission. So here goes.
1. It is not easy by any means
Everyone tells you how great the mission is, but how often do they tell you the downfalls? Of course, the mission overall is an amazing experience and one that everyone should get a taste of somehow and sometime in their life. However, it is in no way easy mentally, spiritually, physically or emotionally. This would never have been a sole reason to keep me from serving but keeping in mind that whole picture of a mission was important to me. It isn't all dandelions and snowflakes. Investigators often don't show up to church, cancel appointments, and sometimes bail on their own baptism. Sometimes they struggle to keep commandments that are foreign to them and fail to live the gospel standards at all times. It is hard to watch as people that you have taught fall away just as they were starting to grow. Does that make the mission any less worth it? HECK NO. In many ways, the trials that are experienced on missions make them that much MORE worth it.
2. It's going to be the best experience of your life
To me, experiencing another person's way of life is one of the most beautiful of experiences. You get to see why they are the way that they are. What made them the person that they are today. It can be an entirely different culture from your own or only a different living situation that makes them different from you. To grow to respect those differences is what makes a real human being. We are all different but we are the same in that we are all children of God. We have to accept each others's differences and that we aren't all going to learn the same way or experience the same things. That, to me, is one of the most important lessons that comes from serving a mission.







