Monday, December 28, 2015

Week 20 (out of 78): Feliz Navidad!

Wow so this week was really good. Not only cause I got to talk to my family, but because the members here are finally starting to come together( for a while its been a struggle). 

But highlight was definitely thursday night we went caroling. Mostly in Spanish, and well theres a little 8 yr old in our ward who was standing in the crowd... She is pretty shy, so she only sang one song with us but after she went contacting with my companion and I, and talked about Ha nacido(I think its like he is born?) Her part was to introduce the video and invite them to averiguar porque (Discover why). She did a really good job and after she told us she wanted to serve a mission. This was a little tender moment, and I get a little teary eyed talking about it.... cause honestly these people we contacted most of them rejected us... But the last one didnt. I am really happy that the last one accepted the invitation to have visits...

Also during the caroling we sang in spanish and the 6 or 7 gringos after sang in english on a ledge (look at picture). Elder underwood is a super goofy guy and was dancing... He actually reminds me a lot of Sam. 

After we had dinner with the Pulache family. They are who I feel closest to inthe ward. Just always there, and they always comment on how much my spoanish has grown in the past few months because they see me every day for lunch. But anywho they have a 1 yr old named Abish. She is the cutest and always asked for hand sanitizer, and wants it all over her body because she likes the smell, but this

last time she realized she likes to take selfies with me.. haha it was really funny, because she just kept saying mas... Half of the timeit was hand sanitizer and half of the time it was a picture. 

Monday, December 21, 2015

Week 19 (out of 78): Sullana

Well I found him. I found the person that God has prepared for me. So Jorge is 78,or something like that but lives on our street.My companion had tried teaching him but he never progressed when I came he asked us for a BOM which was weird, but then he told us why. SO before I came, he had a dream of me. I was in all white. Perfect, and there were a ton of little animals around me. HE felt like it was a vision of heaven. So when he told me I feel like he saw me in my resurrected state or something like that, but now he is progressing and he een came to church for 3 whole hours which never happens this fast.

THings with the new companion are great. She has a lot of patience and is from Neuquen Argentina. She is a really awesome missionary and so far it hasnt been awkward between us.

friday we had a ward christmas party that was supposed to start at 7... We had 5 investigators there and it didnt start until 8.30.... Whoop WHoop :( it was a little to have to explain and keep our investigstors there....) but it was cute our district sang feliz navidad and our deseos. it is by michael buble but pretty much I sang the whole thing.... kinda awkward.... 


Other than that I am excited for christmas and for our investigators it should be a really good week this week with christmas and all.

FELIZ NAVIDAD!!!

Monday, December 14, 2015

Week 18 (out of 78): Transfer 3 - Sullana

Wow so I am done being trained.. Or as people say I am leaving the egg.... I feel like it should be leaving the nest but they say leaving the egg. 
Anyway so My mama Hermana mitchell was transfered to Los Ficus in Piura, and I am now with Hermana Garcia from Argentina. She lost her accent already but she is really sweet. We get a long super well. 

This past week was super exciting! So we have been teaching Camila for a really long time and well she was my very first real lesson in the mission. SHE HAS A BAPTISM DATE FOR 10 OF JANUARY! We asked for the 26th of this month but for some reason she wants the 10th... So I am totally ok with that. 
We also had a mission part with Zone Piura Central, and played minute to win it games and watched Its a wonderful life. Its my mission presidents favorite movie.... SO that was awesomke plus we were able to watch it in english, well you got to watch it in your native tongue.... It was just a really fun day and was super exciting to see other people.

THis past Saturday the YW had their evening of excellence and had to present a number or just something.. our ward decided to sing and dance to a pop version of hark the herald angels sing, and well so far that is the most embarassing part of my whole mission... It was super funny after but during was super embarassing.....




This week we have a Ward christmas show/talent show and the missionaries have to do something for it.... Well outof 6 missionaries here 4 left.. So its just me and some Latinos... and hopefully we can pull it off...


Monday, December 7, 2015

Week 17 (out of 78): Sullana

I love being a Missionary but my whole email just erased and I can’t find it.... So back to square 1.....

So this may be shorter... 

SO this last P-day we had a really awkward situation. So the other Hermanas and I were talking and joking around, and well I winked at one of them, and the elders next to us. Our Zone Leaders started talking about how they couldn’t really wink and well I winked at our super serious Zone Leader.. HAHA really funny but super awkward... He talks to me more now... Haha

We have a baptism date with Sonia who is a single mom and well she is awesome. She drinks occasionally with friends but feels it is wrong and is going to stop. Her Grandson is also super funny. He is maybe 4 and well he shows my companion and I random dance moves. 

We have transfers next week, and my companion and I are sad for them, but it is time for change.

Things are busy but as always I love it. The Lord gives us small blessings every day. You just have to look for them.

The pic is the Hermanas in our Zone at lunch today

Monday, November 30, 2015

Week 16 (out of 78): Sullana Soccer Tournament

WELL WE WON THE TOURNAMENT!!!! WOOT WOOT

That was the highlight. Our elders are very serious about soccer. VERY SERIOUS. However we beat every other zone so ha! Our zone may have been stacked though...   

We found a new investigator Candy. She is pregnant and really interested. She is so cute, the only problem is that shes not married. We have more lessons this week with her,.

Tomorrow I have my first intercambios! The sister leaders are splitting up and Hna Valencia is coming here with me tomorrow. 


Last thing was we had a thanksgiving lunch with our district and made tacos! It was good. Everything homemade, however i dont really like tacos so kinda not exciting..... But they were ok.. It was fun to be there with 5 gringos. 

That is sadly all that has happened this week.. Not really a whole lot.. 

I love you All and have a great week




Note from Dad: Sorry for the delay.  Katie failed to mention that the shortness of the letter and the lack of much to say is related to the fact that her companion is recovering from the Dengue.  They did not get out much.  I am not sure how she saved the pictures.  Some people have had a hard time opening them.


Monday, November 23, 2015

Week 15 (out of 78): Sulla

So wow I am officially legal here in peru!!! Thursday I went to Lima and got to have real food again... AKA Burger King and McDonalds. So while there Hermana Mamani from Bolivia, she came with my group, anyway I talked with her a lot and she told me she feels like we are going to be companions and that would be awespome! She is the sweetest person ever. Also while in Lima I was able to help people from England and share the gospel in English. Way easier, because I am not worried about saying it wrong. 

This past week was a little rough, my companion may have denge(no clue how to spell it), and we had stake conference which was good until one man on saturday night and sunday morning spoke for a straight hour both times.... I wanted to be like if the Prophet only needs 15 min you do not need an hour... and there was a lot of things that were repeated, but maybe that’s what the people needed. All I know was it was hot and after 30 min of listening to him I was done. 

Today during our mission soccer tournament we totally won the first two rounds of 3. We are straight killing it. We had a comeback in the second game and at half it was 3-1 we were losing and we won 5-3. We scored all of the goals with only one gringo in, so I mean our latinos are the best haha.... 









fun  joke look up a peruvian hairless dog.... #ifsatanhadadog #bringo



Monday, November 9, 2015

Week 13 (out of 78): Sullana

Ok well we are finally not sick!! woot WOOT!

So this week was absolutely lovely... NOT. But it was not terrible. So Nov1 to the 4th are a holiday here in Peru honoring the dead.. Each day is a different catagory but  it is really just an excuse to party and drink... And Nov 5th is the anniversary of Sullana... So 5 days in a row people were just drinking, and guess what... Friday, Saturday and Sunday are all drinking days anyway. So it was hard to find the people at their homes or to contact people because we aren’t supposed to contact drunk people.... because they won’t remember any of it. 

The good part of the week is we actually got a recent convert to do family history work and send a name to the temple.. So we practically baptized someone this week!!! That made us super excited, because it’s really hard to get people here to look for the dates and places where people were born.

Also we may have a baptism this week with Marilyn which may be fun and interesting.. Everyone has to wear all white... and there’s a huge party after... She wants it to be really special.. We were supposed to have her baptism the 21st but no one told us it was Stake Conference so that doesn’t work anymore. And we cant do the week after because the ward is going tro the Trujillo Temple the 28th.  So, hopefully we can change her date....

She is really the only one progressing.. Its been hard to find Angel lately so thats worrysome to us... and Sonia did not come to church like we thought she would.... so Church was a bummer (minus the little 3yr old that leads the music with me in sacrament meeting)... AND SUPER STRESSFUL. So we have a recent convert Gianella, who is 19, and her mom came to church, which normally would be great right.... but no. Here is the story. Gianella’s mom is super against her joining the church and said she would be kicked out if she joined and would not be allowed to attend church... So Gianella decided she wouldn’t tell her... So her mom came to church and wants to talk with the missioneries, which is us, and doesn’t know her daughter is baptized. Plus she is one of those that questions and asks for proof of it in the bible so that will be fun. Also during church this man came during 3rd hour who really only wants to flirt with us and talk to us... So it is just awkward, luckily he doesn’t actually live in our area so we can reference him to elders. HAHA But both of these situations stressed me out. 

Anyway I think these were the main parts of this week. I love peru and I love being here in the semi heat, its not bad anymore. Anywho I love you all!!

Monday, November 2, 2015

Week 12 Out of 78: Transfer 2 Sullana

OK so this week was tons better!!! It was transfers, and well I am still with my companion so that’s awesome... Haha we werent expecting to be transferred... But we had a rough Wed, I actually slept through personal study because we had too many important lessons, and I was feeling quite sick. But two of those lessons have brought us 3 really good new investigators.. So I guess it was still a little blessing for staying positive. The new investigators are Isumi (17), and Karla and Karla (a mom and daughter). 

So we were super excited about them, also we found Sonia again, who was a reference from another member. Anyway she read the BOM a ton. She told us she always knew that she needed to find out more about our church, which is seriously a blessing because she believes everything we teach. Plus she gives us really good food after we teach her so that’s a huge plus.

It hasnt rained since that one night, and frankly that’s a good thing because hardly any of the members believe it will come, and some houses won’t make it with all of the rain. But others say it is definitely coming, all I know is that we are told to be prepared to stay a whole week inside without being able to leave... So we have food and water, toilet paper, and a lot of random things to keep us entertained for a whole week. 

The Spanish is coming... Slowly but still coming... I can teach and we don’t really practice what exactly I need to say, and she likes to push me a little and stop at different parts in the lesson to make me teach different parts everytime, a few lessons I lead the lesson, so overall I feel good with my Spanish. I am understanding my LDM (Libro de Mormon aka Book of Mormon) but it’s a lot slower... but I understand, so I have actually put away my English scriptures already. It was kinda sad, but ok... It’s good to grow some. 

I love the mission, I love our investigators, and I love my companion. Also everyone tells me that I started in the hottest place and I am here for summer, so everywhere I go after should be cooler!!! That made me super excited. Ha ha.. ANYWAY Have a great week! I love you all


A couple of answers from Katie to Mom’s questions:

M: Are you going to have to change apartments?

K: no we will just need sand bags to stack so water doesn't get in..

M: Being a missionary is such an awesome experience!!! You're in it, doing it, but from the outside I stand in awe.

(This is probably not the response Mom was looking for)
K: its amazing mom... really awesome here... my comp and I will be walking and hear a gunshot... don’t worry it’s never at someone.. Just up in the air when they are drunk and we’re like: Hermana we aren’t in America.... also don’t be worried about the gun shot.. It’s never super close ha ha and generally when we hear it we are close to the elders area so it’s generally from their areas..  

M: You doing good? REALLY?  

K: I am I love it here... 

Monday, October 26, 2015

Week 11 Out of 78: Sullana

So this week was extremely hard... My companion and I have both been sick with fevers, but everyday we are still working... We have a lot of work to do and not enough time to ever do it. 

On thursday it rained for a solid 10 min. But it was like actual rain. It even felt a tad cold... It was amazing and put us both in a great mood. However the rain hasnt stayed and it feels hotter than ever before here. 

Sometimes the mission’s hard... sometimes it’s happy... and well sometimes you just wanna sleep all day... And I have felt all of that this past week. Our investigators are progresing for the most part... NOT A SINGLE ONE could attend church this week. So just a little frustrating.... or a lot frustrating... 

We have been feeling awful so our numbers were low, which is depressing because we put everything into this week... everything... and to have low numbers stinks... The only thing I am happy about is our Investigators, they seem strong, they love lessons, we just need to put dates. 

Currently I am trying to not be a numbers missionary but my companion and I want to stay together for Christmas so if we have the numbers, we may actually get to stay together for Christmas which would be awesome... We teach really well together, and well in hopes to get our numbers up we are starting divisions, so I will have to completely teach by myself or contact by myself (not by myself but with a member so its different.) So thats a little scary.. may do a lot of knocking doors cause that is easy, and then just throw myself into teaching alone. 

Just honestly a lot going on... but we are finally done with the choir... Surprise!! They got asked to sing at stake conference... Did they sound better? not much... but we had to practice the song! I love the pointless activities sometimes...

Also since my ward is filled with Americans we wanted to do a fall festival.. but sadly that got shut down... We may just turn it into a district activity haha!

This is my 6th week out in the field... and well sometimes you’re used to the men whistling and sometimes like today or when you have a headache it kinda upsets you... I have found Maggots in my crackers... eaten a lot of food I don’t like... Aquired the taste for inca cola... had to skip lessons because drunk guys are outside... doors slammed in our faces... But its all typical mission things. I love everyday, I love the people that I can teach and we are trying to find more. 

I love you all and hopefully all of your weeks were a little better! 

Monday, October 5, 2015

Week 8 Out of 78: Area 1 Sullana

So everything is great here we have a lot of investigators. And a lot of people will at least talk to us. The ward is pretty good.  Only 3 active members in our area.
The big thing here is El Niño. It’s supposed to rain for 4 months and well the houses here are not prepared for a flood... at all...  We will be fine, we may have to move apartments and we need emergency backpacks, but other than that it’s just going to be service for a few months... It is scaring a lot of people here but there’s a lot of construction preparing for it.  So this past week with Angel and Estrella, we are teaching them English after we teach them a lesson. We see Angel reading his BOM while he waits for someone to need him for a ride in his moto. He is a moto taxi driver. They both attended Gospel Principles Sunday morning along with Estrella’s 8 yr. old sister. They may be some of my favorites because Estrella is super patient with my Spanish and will correct me if I am wrong.  So somehow this week at the multi-zone meeting, Elder Meier and I, both brand new, have to sing a duet to a song I have never heard before... It is not an English hymn or no one could figure it out.. Any way that’ll be interesting with our accents.  Ha-ha.  Anyway I love it here, I love the people, I love the kids, and I love my mission.

Jo Dee had asked a few about her apartment and the area (looking a little less than modern).  Here are Katie’s responses:

We may have to move apartments because water may be get into our apartment. That might be a good idea because the people beneath us are always fighting.

You have no idea how 3rd world it is.  After el Niño.... so many people will be homeless....houses are just branches and some adobe. We have a nice area and a poorer area, but our area is one of the nicest here in Sullana.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Week 4 Out of 78 CCM

Boy does time fly. It really seems like yesterday that I was leaving, and now I only have 2 weeks of English left! Crazy!
So we went proselyting. We taught some lessons and contacted people, I knew what they were saying but verbalizing what I wanted to say is still hard. I find myself translating everything to English in my head. One lesson, the missionary I was with told me I was going to start the lesson and choose the topic. Well I had no clue what I was going to say. I started with a song and prayer and I still didnt know. So I started talking about the blessing of having faith. Well unknown to me, this man had recently lost his wife and was having a really hard time. We talked about how faith helps us in all of our trials. It went well and he said he was going to go to church the next day. Over all it was a good day.
Sunday night was so amazing. Well we had a really good Sunday in general. Our fast and testimony meeting was the best one I have ever been in. But towards the end of the day, our district had our own testimony meeting. The spirit was so strong and it was so nice to hear everyone’s testimony. After the district testimony meeting, we headed up to get ready for bed. It is a tradition here that when it’s someone’s last week that on Sunday night we sing a hymn or two together (all the sisters). So it’s a super spiritual moment.
Meanwhile on the boys side, they were preparing with silly string and pillows to attack the 3rd floor. Well Presidente came, and they had to postpone it.... like 20 minutes. After Presidente left they started attacking with silly string and pillows... Just one example of how Boys are different than Girls. 
Also, Sunday night our elders have started to play guess that elder. It is a really funny game and they describe the person as they are back home. It was so fun. However one sister shut the game down EVEN THOUGH it was flex time... meaning we can do whatever we want. 
Over all the week has been really good. I feel ok with my spanish so at least that is improving. My district is amazing and I love the friends I have here.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Week 3 in the CCM!

What an Amazing week! So Wednesday afternoon we got to listen to Elder Bednar... WOW. Over 700 missionaries there and it was easily one of the biggest groups of missionaries hes ever talked with. I was in the second row and honestly the spirit to so amazing and overwhelming. 
A few things Elder Bednar talked about were the following. First, you can never feel the spirit in a lesson where the questions being asked only have one answer. Also the Spirit works over a span of weeks. It's not just an overnight thing. You may need to be patient and wait weeks to fully recieve an answer. Next thing is Elder Bednar said apostles never go anywhere without a reason. The keys are sent to people that need them, and there is always soemone that needs them. Also, stop worrying if the Holy Ghost is there, He's there. You don't want the Holy Ghost screaming at you, that means you're doing something wrong. Lastly, revelation is not an explanation. Revelations are always conclusions.
Friday Morning we went to Interpol and it was so incredibly boring, but if for some reason I die, they can identify my body, so that's one postive. Oh and there were tons of handicapped cats there... SO FUNNY! That Fridayafternoon there was a small earthquake, no damage as far as we know but it was super exciting.
Saturday was just a good day, we taught a really good lesson on the Plan of Salvation, and our district was super focused so we learned a ton. There's this one Elder, Elder Weight and he seriously is a Gospel Wiz. Every class we learn some random gospel fact that is super interesting. I am so grateful for everyone in my district, and I am sorry there is no district picture.. We are only allowed to take pictures on Pday and we had different schedules but they told us next week, we would be on the same schedule.
Sunday's are so amazing. I live for Sundays here, you feel so rejuvinated after and it truly uplifts you.
Monday night my district went a little crazy, we were just tired, and the por and para thing was just too much for the evening class. However we somewhat got it, and are ahead of the other districts. I probably know the most Spanish in my district, and it's actually frustrating. One of our teachers speaks very little English so he explains it to me in Spanish and I have to translate it to English for the rest of the class.
Yesterday we had service and well I have now mopped and squeegied the asphalt... It's the prettiest asphalt I have ever seen (Editor’s note: that is what the other picture is showing). Last night however was one of the best devotionals I have ever been in. The area President spoke in Spanish and I understood most of it without a translator, and got a lot of little insights out of it. He talked about how its a New Era, a New Time, and we need New Missionaries. The new missionaries are the ones that modify their lessons to each investigator and really work on unifying a ward, not just baptizing. Now we are in a time where members need to be so strong, we go through so much. But missionaries and ward members strengthen each other.
I am so grateful to be here in Peru. It's a blessing in my life. I know this church is true, and I know I am here for a specific reason. I love you all!!
Hermana Lang

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

1st Week: CCM (MTC in Spanish)

Hey all so my email will be short because the timer thing in the corner stresses me out.... My zone has 44 people in it and I like ALL OF THEM! 17 people going to Piura however only 3 girls.... So My spanish on day 1: I actually understand... and first lesson I taught someone to pray! I know the most spanish in my district but I still struggle sometimes with it. My comapanion is Hermana Schick from Farmington Utah, and the other two Hermanas I hang out with are from Paysen Utah. Hermana Ingram and Hermana Spainhower. I LOVE THEM. So Saturday while running I fell and well I rolled my ankle and it no longer hurts but it is all bruised and super swollen still.. AT LEAST THERE IS NO PAIN. 
 
Spiritual moment for the week is a saying which is, "If you have eyes to see, ear to hear, and a heart to feel, you can rescue them." Meaning we can always help them come closer to Christ. By the time Sunday came I was so happy I am just so overwhelmed learning the language. But I can pray in spanish and bare my testimony in spanish; so, really good for one week. 
 
Wednesdays are my Pday and lucky me, we went to the temple and did an ALL SPANISH SESSION, NO HEADPHONES... and met my mission President. He and His wife just happened to be here in the CCM. 
 
The Language is going good, I miss home, but all is well...
 
Love Hermana Lang

Monday, August 10, 2015

Farewell Talk: Overcoming Trials Through Faith in Jesus Christ

Good morning brothers and sisters. My name is Katie Lang, and for the most part I know every one in this ward. I have grown up in this ward and so looking down I see many people that have helped me through my life at one time or another. 
In April I received my mission call for Piura Peru. Which was very exciting for me because from what I knew from my older sister Carly it was pretty cool temperatures, and well my sister and I would both serve in Peru. As we looked it up and my sister knew some stuff about it we learned that Piura and Cusco, where Carly served, are as far apart in Peru as you can get. Cusco being the very southeast part of peru, and Piura being the very northwest section of Peru. 
Piura is also nicknamed the city of Eternal Heat. The record high being 102.9 and the record low being 52.  Piura gets on average every year 1.5 inches of rain. Put that into Perspective, Downtown Los Angeles this year alone has received 6.163 inches.  And this is Piura not in a drought.  Now being someone who does not like it over 75, this is going to be a challenge of its own. 
Today I will be speaking on “Enduring Challenges Through Faith in Jesus Christ.” A mission on its own is a challenge. It will not ever be an easy thing to do. However, it is the most rewarding thing I can do. I get to go to Piura and serve the people day in and out and teach people about Christ. 
When I thought of what a challenge is to me, I realized it is something that is defined by me. Now I am not saying there are things that are not going to be hard. But our attitudes can change any trial or challenge we have. Through out my life I have had trials, but its been easy. I have a family that loves me, I live in a nice area, and I have never had to worry about money.  My whole family is a member and has a testimony of Jesus Christ and the truthfulness of the gospel. I have been blessed. 
However the trials I have had, hit me extremely hard. In the beginning of high school, there was a lot of time I felt alone without any friends. I was close with my family but I needed someone else. I had a few days where I would sit in my room for hours and just cry.  There was one time my mom came in and talked with me and after I said a prayer for help. I needed help, I wanted to be accepted, and I wanted to be happy. My attitude began to change. I began talking to people I didn’t normally talk to, and well those people became my close friends. I found my group, we would get together almost every week and do something and it was so much better than being at home all of the time. Most of my trials have been made better by just changing my attitude about the trial. I could not have changed my attitude without help. I have lost a lot of dear people to me. Ranging from friends to relatives, and no matter what the circumstance is, it is never easy. I get very stuck on why they had to go, I needed them here, and I go through a cycle where I just don’t understand. When I don’t understand I begin to pray about it and the Holy Ghost can comfort me. After feeling the comfort, my attitude begins to change to a more positive outlook, and all of the great things that happened while they were alive instead of all the things they were missing. 
Due to my faith in the Plan of Happiness, I know that I will be able to see them again. The plan of happiness refers to us choosing to come down to earth to have bodies. While on Earth we will be tried and tested, and due to how we live decides where we go. We believe that there are 3 degrees of glory: The celestial being the highest, the terrestrial being the middle, and the telestial being the lowest. While here on Earth we will have many struggles. In Neil L Andersen’s talk “Thy Kingdome Come,” he states, “We live in days of wars and rumors of wars, days of natural disasters, days when the world is pulled by confusion and commotion. But we also live in the glorious time of the Restoration, when the gospel is being taken to all the world—a time when the Lord has promised that He “will raise up … a pure people”4 and arm them “with righteousness and with the power of God.”5
We rejoice in these days and pray that we will be able to courageously face our struggles and uncertainties. The difficulties of some are more severe than those of others, but no one is immune.” 
Some of our challenges may seem unbearable at times and impossible to get through. Elder Richard G Scott said “Challenges help us become more like our Father in Heaven, and the Atonement of Jesus Christ makes it possible to endure those challenges.10 I testify that as we actively come unto Him, we can endure every temptation, every heartache, every challenge we face.” 
While researching things for my talk I read a story from the June New era addition in 2004. 
Kacey McCallister stands out. He’s the only person in his family with red hair. His laugh and can’t-get-me-down attitude are contagious. His smile has been outlawed at night in six states because it’s so bright.
The handsome 17-year-old is broad-shouldered and built like a rock. He recently graduated from McNary High School, where he stood out athletically in cross country, track, and his beloved wrestling. In March he took second in his weight class at the state wrestling tournament.
But none of that is what makes this priest in the Keizer Ward, Keizer Oregon Stake, so remarkable. Kacey really stands out for two reasons. First is his unwavering testimony that God has a purpose for him. Second is that, without his prosthetic legs, he technically can’t stand at all.
    Kacey doesn't remember the accident that took his legs and changed his life. He remembers attending sacrament meeting as a six-year-old with his cousins in rural Utah. He remembers waiting to cross the highway between the church and his grandmother’s house. And he remembers waking up in the hospital—without his legs.


His parents, on the other hand, probably wish they could forget. As they waited for an 18-wheeler to pass so the family could cross, Kacey suddenly darted into the highway to catch up with his brother, who had crossed moments earlier. Kacey almost made it.
“He shouldn’t have lived,” says Julene McCallister, Kacey’s mom.
“He had zero blood pressure,” his father, Bernie, says. “He lost massive amounts of blood.”
But then the miracles began. Amazingly, local paramedics had recently learned emergency procedures for treating critically injured children. And despite stormy December weather, Kacey made it—first by plane, then by helicopter—to one of the top children’s hospitals in the nation, where the medical staff was able to save him.
“It’s most definitely a miracle, a modern miracle,” says Brother McCallister.
“There’s some purpose Heavenly Father has him here for,” Sister McCallister says. “In the hospital, the Holy Ghost told me, ‘Sit back and watch Heavenly Father work.’ We’ve been watching the miracles ever since.”
Kacey Taking second place at the state wrestling meet without legs was a challenge. But so was learning to walk on prosthetics, and doing a hilly paper route in a wheelchair, and completing a 50-mile hike on his hands.
Kacey can’t remember a time when there weren’t challenges. But if there’s anything he’s learned from wrestling, it’s that eating the mat isn’t any fun. He’d much rather come out on top.
The first year Kacey wrestled, he won only once. Some thought he should give up. Others doubted he’d ever be very competitive. “I wasn’t very good at first,” he laughs. “But I stuck with it and got a little better every year.” After years of hard work and a lot of time in the weight room, he won 39 matches during his final year and lost only one.
“He’s finished everything I’ve seen him start,” says Kacey’s wrestling coach, Tony Oliff. “Kacey’s got that attitude. He’s upbeat, and a lot of kids lean on it. He’s positive about life and fun to be around.”
It’s rare to see Kacey discouraged. Ask his family about the last time he was down, and there’s a long pause.
“There was that one time,” says 13-year-old Kirt, Kacey’s brother. “Oh, no, never mind.”
“Oh yeah …” begins older brother, Keith, 19. “Wait, no.”
Finally his mom remembers one. “He was discouraged about having to ride the handicap bus when he was little,” she recalls. “He’d rather wheel to school through the snow.”
Kacey admits that sometimes discouragement tries to get him in a reverse body lock, but he’s never been pinned. “There have been times I’ve imagined what it would be like to run and jump. But being discouraged about it wouldn’t help much. I still wouldn’t be able to do those things.
“When I start getting discouraged, it’s usually when I haven’t been reading my scriptures or saying my prayers, so I start again, and by the next day everything is better.”
One scripture in particular has helped Kacey take down challenges. “Ever since I was little, my favorite scripture has been 1 Nephi 3:7 [1 Ne. 3:7]Nephi 3:7 states And it came to pass that I, Nephi, said unto my father: I will go and do the things which the Lord hath commanded, for I know that the Lord giveth nocommandments unto the children of men, save he shall prepare a way for them that they may accomplish the thing which he commandeth them.
If the Lord says something needs to be done, there’s always, always a way to fulfill it. We just have to find it. That’s been my motivation.”

Driven by challenges, buoyed by a good attitude, and strengthened by faith, Kacey has been able to do just about anything he’s ever wanted to. Not having legs doesn’t keep him from playing roller hockey with the priests quorum (he laces the skates onto his hands). He gets around the kitchen by pulling himself up on the countertops. He climbs trees, acts in school plays (where he “lost his legs” during a battle scene in Shakespeare’s Richard III), and hopes to do a marathon soon.
“After a while you realize he can do everything you can do and more,” says classmate and fellow priests quorum member, Chris Nelson.
Along the way he has surprised everyone. “I didn’t think you could play baseball without legs,” laughs Eric Goesch, a friend and quorum member. “Pitchers hated pitching to him; there’s no strike zone.”
“One time we had to go down two long flights of stairs,” recalls Brother McCallister. “He looked at it and took the whole thing in his wheelchair by himself. I thought, ‘Huh. I didn’t know you could do that.’”
“He surprises me every day,” says Whitney, Kacey’s 14-year-old sister.
Kacey has always been different
How would you answer this question if it were on your next test: How does a six-year-old survive being hit by an 18-wheeler traveling at highway speed? Or better yet, why?
If life is a test, then this is one of Kacey’s story problems. Your test may be different, but his answer may help you.
“We came to earth to be tested,” he says. “The point of coming was to grow and progress. I know it’s with the Lord’s help that I survived because there’s no way a six-year-old kid is going to stand up to a semi. Heavenly Father has a purpose for me here. There’s more for me to learn and more for me to do for others.”
Kacey has tried to live his life accordingly, looking for ways to grow and for people to help. He has spoken to youth groups and elementary school children about overcoming challenges. He has helped make a difference for people with disabilities in his community, fighting for the right to compete in sports. And he has tried to be a good example. His friends say almost everyone at McNary High knows him, and most people who know him know he’s a member of the Church.
“His faith means a great deal to him,” says Coach Oliff. “His family has strong values. That’s a great building block for a good kid. The fact that he takes those values seriously is a big asset. I’ve learned a great deal from Kacey.”
But Kacey characteristically shrugs off the praise because he understands he’s not better than anyone. He’s different, but that’s the way God made us.
“Heavenly Father knows us and loves us. I know He has a plan for each of us individually,” Kacey says. “Each of us has different talents that will help move the kingdom forward. His plan for me is different from everyone else’s. I don’t know everything I’m supposed to do yet. But He’ll help me figure out the details.”
As I read of the strength Kacey has to achieve more than I do without disabilities, I know God has me here for a reason. I know I am being sent to Peru for a reason whether its someone who I will reach best or multiple people, it really doesn’t matter. I may never know why I am sent there. But Heavenly father knows me. He knows us and he knows what we are capable of.
 2 years ago if you asked if I was going to serve a mission it would be an automatic no. I was the little girl always planning my wedding. I was going to be married at 21 so I didn’t have to go. A mission was hard. But as I have seen each of my older siblings go, and had certain experiences in my life I know I have changed. I want nothing more than my mission. I am as ready as I ever will be and Heavenly father knew what trials he would have to give me to get me to this point. I am grateful for the trials I have had and for who they have made me. A mission has such great worth to me and there is nothing that can replace a mission. It is a unique experience where I get to serve the Lord and his people in Peru and love them day in and day out. 


Testimony