Friday, March 28, 2014

Senior Couple Meeting

Our mission president and his sweetheart took all the couples here in Saratov out to Il Patio for dinner tonight.  Nice Italian food and wonderful discussions about our assignments.  Each couple gave a ten minute report on their assignments and the Schwabs expressed their love and appreciation for what we do.  They talked about the sacrifices we have made to serve.

We feel that any sacrifices we have made have been waaaaaaay offset by the blessings we and our family has received.  We are, and ever will be, in debt to the Lord for the eternal blessings we are enjoying.  We are so grateful for the blessings of the temple in our lives and the eternal nature of our family relationships.  Our marriage is not "'til death do you part" - we are married for time and for all eternity in the House of the Lord.  We can never serve Heavenly father's children enough to show our gratitude for that blessing.

Tomorrow we have teacher training in the morning, Super Saturday in the afternoon and district conference meetings all evening.

Life is good.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Kholodets

Here's a picture of Elder Reed and I trying some kholodets - Russian Meat Jelly - that Sister Markelov made for us.  You make this by boiling a bunch of meat and bones - bones is where the gelatin part comes from - and letting it cool down and set up.  It's supposed to be eaten cold.

The taste was good but the cold part was not very delicious...

I also read that if you eat kholodets while you are drinking vodka you won't get drunk...and it's good for hangovers...that might explain it's popularity!

Kholodets was the last Russian food I had wanted to try - now I have.  I like borscht better!



Thursday, February 13, 2014

CES Conference

Here's a couple of pictures from our Turkey trip...one of some old ruins in front of some other old ruins...another of us as we were in the conference room and the obligatory picture with the General Authority...Elder and Sister Bennett.  He is the first counselor in the Eastern European Area Presidency and was the Samara Mission President before the Sartoris.  He is a retired orthodontist from Hollywood. 



We took a picture of a bobsled at the Moscow airport and one of the Mediterranean Sea looking slightly less lovely than it did in the pictures Jared took while on his mission in Italy!
This is the last CES Senior Couple conference in Turkey...in the future the couples will be divided up into faculties based on similar sized programs and meet via Skype.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Guns, More Guns and Bows and Arrows, The Circus, Random Stuff & Mexican Food

We visited the Kalashnikov Museum while in Izhevsk...Izhevsk is the city where all the firearms are manufactured and has been for a hundred years.  In World War Two they produced over 12,000 rifles a day.

I have attached pictures of manly men shooting bows and arrows and handguns.  If the picture of the hog was a real hog Zhenya would have killed him and we would be having shashlik for dinner.   

The first AK-47 was produced in 1947.  Kalashnikov was self-taught and designed many weapons during his lengthy career. He recently died at age 94.







In an effort to save money from our budget we have stayed in less fancy lodging on this last trip.  The first two nights we stayed at the circus.  Really.  Many towns have a permanent circus building and in Izhevsk we stayed in the circus building...they have about twenty rooms they rent.  We were asked if we were acrobats - pretty hard to tell just by looking at us! The next night we stayed in a place named KOMFORT.  A little place with only five rooms just a block from the branch building.  I have attached some pictures of the room and furnishings...I think we may have been in the honeymoon suite.  Again, easy to mistake us for newlyweds.




Here are two more pictures...one of the baptismal font in one of the branches. Many of the buildings have similar fonts since they are leased buildings.  We assume they move the ping pong table and the ladders on the wall before the baptism.  Probably.

The picture of the three trees was an attempt to capture the incredible beauty of the snow...which we didn't do.  The trees and fields glistened and twinkled like fields of stars. We've never seen snow that sparkled like the snow on this trip.  It was very cold and we suspect that had something to do with it.  There were forests of birches that sparkled like they were festooned with strings of diamonds.  Sparkle is really the only word that does justice to how they look.

The fields looked like that fake sparkly snow Mom used to buy for the Christmas village she put up every year.

So, we stopped at a Mexican place for lunch.  The door was locked so Zhenya called them and the manager came and unlocked the door.  Seems like they forgot to do that when they arrived that morning.  Oops.  We ordered a burrito and fajitas and chicken wings and shashlik.  I've attached a picture of my burrito...I've never seen a burrito that looked like this one!  It was really tasty.  We ordered drinks and they said they didn't have any soda but we could go next door to the grocery store (they are called magazines in Russia) so we got our sodas there. Here's a picture of Zhenya with something he ordered...tasted good but we have never seen them before, either.

I enjoyed the shashlik but it was pretty fatty so Sherry made me eat most of it.  Dang.


Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Traveling & More Traveling

Feb 5--
 We are off again tomorrow...2500 kilometers in six days!  Probably thirty hours in the car with our long-suffering coordinator.  It ought to be fun...dinner tomorrow night with the mission president and wife.  Bought 10 kilos of cookies today for 2000 rubles...we will be meeting with students and teachers along the way. Cookies and tea and juice.

This will probably be our last trip for a while.

Feb 9--
Made it to Kazan!  Beautiful city...snowy, too.  Having another CES Devotional...the talk by Elder Callister is assume.  

Zhenya, our boss, took us to a wholesale renok before we left and we bought cookies - like 15 kilos of cookies - for our trip and to use at home.  That's a lot of cookies and they are really good.  However, we are getting a LITTLE tired of cookies.  I mean, if they are in the car and you're driving down the road you sorta have to eat a few, right?

Last night we stayed in a circus.  Really.  The circus rents rooms.  Tonight we are staying in a five room hotel called KOMFORT. Our boss is being frugal since we are spending the Lord's money.

Feb 10--
We're in Ulyanovsk today.  One active YSA - she is a returned missionary and the relief society president...and she works doing sound and lights in a couple of dance places here.  Fun.

We had lunch in an Irish Pub...you know how Mom gets when she see a leprechaun.  Noisy places but we ate our fill of chicken wings and fries and delicious authentic Irish food like that.  Fries are made from potatoes and potatoes are Irish, right?

We should get home tonight about 23:00.  My job is to get Zhenya to keep drinking his Coke and listening to MY playlist on the iPod instead of mom's so he can stay awake.  He did buy his first Mountain Dew today...we are making progress with his training...;-)!  He even said we would eat in the car while driving tonight - which is a first.  He always wants to stop and eat and then keep driving.  
Like that's a good idea.

He has much to learn.  It would be so cool to drive across America with him...hot chocolate at Starbucks every morning, cup holders (our car has no cup holders), 44 ouncers with shaved ice (our drinks never have ice) and other All-American delights. 

We made it home to Saratov at 23:00.  Nine hours in the car plus a few hours with the two students in Ulyanovsk.  Cold snowy drive home.  Really glad to sleep in our own bed tonight.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Speaking in Church

A week ago Sherry got to speak in church.  Her assigned topic was We Are Children of our Heavenly Father. She worries a lot about speaking in church but, as we all know, she does a great job.  It was neat to have a sister missionary to translate for her...Sister Crane and her companion, Sister Johnson are wonderful  It has been a while since we have had sisters in our district and it is a joy to work with them.  Sister Johnson is brand new and wonderfully pure and enthusiastic.  Sister Crane has been serving for a while - she has lived in Russia before and speaks Russian very well.  She has studied Russian Literature and she and I share a love for Chekhov's story "Misery."  She did a great job translating for mom.

Last Sunday our branch president, President Semonov, came up to me right before sacrament meeting and said he had a little problem.  Actually, he said "маленький проблема" which means the same thing in Russian.  His problem was that the concluding speaker for sacrament meeting hadn't shown up and he wondered if I could speak.  Since I don't know enough to worry like Sherry does I got excited and said I'd love to.  Getting asked to speak on the spur of the moment is what I daydream about. Crazy.  I got to tell a few stories about how our prayers have been answered.

The best part for me was after sacrament meeting Sister Reshetnikov, who speaks a little English, came up to me and said that I speak very good English.  I said "Thank you! I have been practicing all my life."  She said she understood every word that I said.  What she meant, of course, was that I enunciated and she could follow what I said.  I can only think of one other time that I have felt so complimented.

What the heck - I'll tell you about that other time, too.  I was High Priests Group Leader - which is a title that means I oversaw the old men at church - I mean, experienced leaders - and one Sunday a month we had a member of the group give a personal history.  Before they did so I gave a short talk that the brethren could use as they visited people in the ward that month.  One Sunday Brother Stanard, a Phd who taught at Humboldt State came up to me after the meeting and said that I could say more in two minutes than most people could say in twenty.  For him to say that tome was the greatest compliment I have ever been paid about my teaching or speaking ability.  It meant a lot to me. 

MISERY
by Anton Chekhov
"To whom shall I tell my grief?"
THE twilight of evening. Big flakes of wet snow are whirling lazily about the street lamps, which have just been lighted, and lying in a thin soft layer on roofs, horses' backs, shoulders, caps. Iona Potapov, the sledge-driver, is all white like a ghost. He sits on the box without stirring, bent as double as the living body can be bent. If a regular snowdrift fell on him it seems as though even then he would not think it necessary to shake it off. . . . His little mare is white and motionless too. Her stillness, the angularity of her lines, and the stick-like straightness of her legs make her look like a halfpenny gingerbread horse. She is probably lost in thought. Anyone who has been torn away from the plough, from the familiar gray landscapes, and cast into this slough, full of monstrous lights, of unceasing uproar and hurrying people, is bound to think.
It is a long time since Iona and his nag have budged. They came out of the yard before dinnertime and not a single fare yet. But now the shades of evening are falling on the town. The pale light of the street lamps changes to a vivid color, and the bustle of the street grows noisier.
"Sledge to Vyborgskaya!" Iona hears. "Sledge!"
Iona starts, and through his snow-plastered eyelashes sees an officer in a military overcoat with a hood over his head.
"To Vyborgskaya," repeats the officer. "Are you asleep? To Vyborgskaya!"
In token of assent Iona gives a tug at the reins which sends cakes of snow flying from the horse's back and shoulders. The officer gets into the sledge. The sledge-driver clicks to the horse, cranes his neck like a swan, rises in his seat, and more from habit than necessity brandishes his whip. The mare cranes her neck, too, crooks her stick-like legs, and hesitatingly sets off. . . .
"Where are you shoving, you devil?" Iona immediately hears shouts from the dark mass shifting to and fro before him. "Where the devil are you going? Keep to the r-right!"
"You don't know how to drive! Keep to the right," says the officer angrily.
A coachman driving a carriage swears at him; a pedestrian crossing the road and brushing the horse's nose with his shoulder looks at him angrily and shakes the snow off his sleeve. Iona fidgets on the box as though he were sitting on thorns, jerks his elbows, and turns his eyes about like one possessed as though he did not know where he was or why he was there.
"What rascals they all are!" says the officer jocosely. "They are simply doing their best to run up against you or fall under the horse's feet. They must be doing it on purpose."
Iona looks as his fare and moves his lips. . . . Apparently he means to say something, but nothing comes but a sniff.
"What?" inquires the officer.
Iona gives a wry smile, and straining his throat, brings out huskily: "My son . . . er . . . my son died this week, sir."
"H'm! What did he die of?"
Iona turns his whole body round to his fare, and says:
"Who can tell! It must have been from fever. . . . He lay three days in the hospital and then he died. . . . God's will."
"Turn round, you devil!" comes out of the darkness. "Have you gone cracked, you old dog? Look where you are going!"
"Drive on! drive on! . . ." says the officer. "We shan't get there till to-morrow going on like this. Hurry up!"
The sledge-driver cranes his neck again, rises in his seat, and with heavy grace swings his whip. Several times he looks round at the officer, but the latter keeps his eyes shut and is apparently disinclined to listen. Putting his fare down at Vyborgskaya, Iona stops by a restaurant, and again sits huddled up on the box. . . . Again the wet snow paints him and his horse white. One hour passes, and then another. . . .
Three young men, two tall and thin, one short and hunchbacked, come up, railing at each other and loudly stamping on the pavement with their goloshes.
"Cabby, to the Police Bridge!" the hunchback cries in a cracked voice. "The three of us, . . . twenty kopecks!"
Iona tugs at the reins and clicks to his horse. Twenty kopecks is not a fair price, but he has no thoughts for that. Whether it is a rouble or whether it is five kopecks does not matter to him now so long as he has a fare. . . . The three young men, shoving each other and using bad language, go up to the sledge, and all three try to sit down at once. The question remains to be settled: Which are to sit down and which one is to stand? After a long altercation, ill-temper, and abuse, they come to the conclusion that the hunchback must stand because he is the shortest.
"Well, drive on," says the hunchback in his cracked voice, settling himself and breathing down Iona's neck. "Cut along! What a cap you've got, my friend! You wouldn't find a worse one in all Petersburg. . . ."
"He-he! . . . he-he! . . ." laughs Iona. "It's nothing to boast of!"
"Well, then, nothing to boast of, drive on! Are you going to drive like this all the way? Eh? Shall I give you one in the neck?"
"My head aches," says one of the tall ones. "At the Dukmasovs' yesterday Vaska and I drank four bottles of brandy between us."
"I can't make out why you talk such stuff," says the other tall one angrily. "You lie like a brute."
"Strike me dead, it's the truth! . . ."
"It's about as true as that a louse coughs."
"He-he!" grins Iona. "Me-er-ry gentlemen!"
"Tfoo! the devil take you!" cries the hunchback indignantly. "Will you get on, you old plague, or won't you? Is that the way to drive? Give her one with the whip. Hang it all, give it her well."
Iona feels behind his back the jolting person and quivering voice of the hunchback. He hears abuse addressed to him, he sees people, and the feeling of loneliness begins little by little to be less heavy on his heart. The hunchback swears at him, till he chokes over some elaborately whimsical string of epithets and is overpowered by his cough. His tall companions begin talking of a certain Nadyezhda Petrovna. Iona looks round at them. Waiting till there is a brief pause, he looks round once more and says:
"This week . . . er. . . my. . . er. . . son died!"
"We shall all die, . . ." says the hunchback with a sigh, wiping his lips after coughing. "Come, drive on! drive on! My friends, I simply cannot stand crawling like this! When will he get us there?"
"Well, you give him a little encouragement . . . one in the neck!"
"Do you hear, you old plague? I'll make you smart. If one stands on ceremony with fellows like you one may as well walk. Do you hear, you old dragon? Or don't you care a hang what we say? "
And Iona hears rather than feels a slap on the back of his neck.
"He-he! . . . " he laughs. "Merry gentlemen . . . . God give you health!"
"Cabman, are you married?" asks one of the tall ones.
"I? He he! Me-er-ry gentlemen. The only wife for me now is the damp earth. . . . He-ho-ho!. . . .The grave that is! . . . Here my son's dead and I am alive. . . . It's a strange thing, death has come in at the wrong door. . . . Instead of coming for me it went for my son. . . ."
And Iona turns round to tell them how his son died, but at that point the hunchback gives a faint sigh and announces that, thank God! they have arrived at last. After taking his twenty kopecks, Iona gazes for a long while after the revelers, who disappear into a dark entry. Again he is alone and again there is silence for him. . . . The misery which has been for a brief space eased comes back again and tears his heart more cruelly than ever. With a look of anxiety and suffering Iona's eyes stray restlessly among the crowds moving to and fro on both sides of the street: can he not find among those thousands someone who will listen to him? But the crowds flit by heedless of him and his misery. . . . His misery is immense, beyond all bounds. If Iona's heart were to burst and his misery to flow out, it would flood the whole world, it seems, but yet it is not seen. It has found a hiding-place in such an insignificant shell that one would not have found it with a candle by daylight. . . .
Iona sees a house-porter with a parcel and makes up his mind to address him.
"What time will it be, friend?" he asks.
"Going on for ten. . . . Why have you stopped here? Drive on!"
Iona drives a few paces away, bends himself double, and gives himself up to his misery. He feels it is no good to appeal to people. But before five minutes have passed he draws himself up, shakes his head as though he feels a sharp pain, and tugs at the reins. . . . He can bear it no longer.
"Back to the yard!" he thinks. "To the yard!"
And his little mare, as though she knew his thoughts, falls to trotting. An hour and a half later Iona is sitting by a big dirty stove. On the stove, on the floor, and on the benches are people snoring. The air is full of smells and stuffiness. Iona looks at the sleeping figures, scratches himself, and regrets that he has come home so early. . . .
"I have not earned enough to pay for the oats, even," he thinks. "That's why I am so miserable. A man who knows how to do his work, . . . who has had enough to eat, and whose horse has had enough to eat, is always at ease. . . ."
In one of the corners a young cabman gets up, clears his throat sleepily, and makes for the water-bucket.
"Want a drink?" Iona asks him.
"Seems so."
"May it do you good. . . . But my son is dead, mate. . . . Do you hear? This week in the hospital. . . . It's a queer business. . . ."
Iona looks to see the effect produced by his words, but he sees nothing. The young man has covered his head over and is already asleep. The old man sighs and scratches himself. . . . Just as the young man had been thirsty for water, he thirsts for speech. His son will soon have been dead a week, and he has not really talked to anybody yet . . . . He wants to talk of it properly, with deliberation. . . . He wants to tell how his son was taken ill, how he suffered, what he said before he died, how he died. . . . He wants to describe the funeral, and how he went to the hospital to get his son's clothes. He still has his daughter Anisya in the country. . . . And he wants to talk about her too. . . . Yes, he has plenty to talk about now. His listener ought to sigh and exclaim and lament. . . . It would be even better to talk to women. Though they are silly creatures, they blubber at the first word.
"Let's go out and have a look at the mare," Iona thinks. "There is always time for sleep. . . . You'll have sleep enough, no fear. . . ."
He puts on his coat and goes into the stables where his mare is standing. He thinks about oats, about hay, about the weather. . . . He cannot think about his son when he is alone. . . . To talk about him with someone is possible, but to think of him and picture him is insufferable anguish. . . .
"Are you munching?" Iona asks his mare, seeing her shining eyes. "There, munch away, munch away. . . . Since we have not earned enough for oats, we will eat hay. . . . Yes, . . . I have grown too old to drive. . . . My son ought to be driving, not I. . . . He was a real cabman. . . . He ought to have lived. . . ."
Iona is silent for a while, and then he goes on:
"That's how it is, old girl. . . . Kuzma Ionitch is gone. . . . He said good-by to me. . . . He went and died for no reason. . . . Now, suppose you had a little colt, and you were own mother to that little colt. . . . And all at once that same little colt went and died. . . . You'd be sorry, wouldn't you? . . ."
The little mare munches, listens, and breathes on her master's hands. Iona is carried away and tells her all about it.

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Russia

We drove to Samara Wednesday and back to Saratov Thursday...twelve hours in the car total.  That's like a million American hours because the roads are so bumpy!  We ache for days after a trip!

We enjoyed teaching an institute class.  The teacher called us on the road and said she had a cold and couldn't teach that night.  We planned our lesson as we traveled and team taught the class.  It's is a joy to have an occasional chance to teach.  Having our coordinator translate is a neat experience...we love him and trust him and having him speak for Dad seems seamless.  After class we were invited to a party with the mission president and his wife.  Just three couples and them.  It was really fun!  We got to meet the Ledfords who are the new office couple - and newlyweds!  They've only been married a year...both are a bit older than us.  Great people.

Saturday we had teacher training. Dad got to teach a little and told some experiences with journal keeping and with getting to know students outside of class.  He told of Jared's challenge to him to keep a mission journal and also talked about his first calling as twelve-year-old Sunday School teacher.  

I've attached a picture taken from our car window.  Typical landscape driving to Samara...Russia is HUGE.