Making a Mission
Happen, Part 5
By Laurie Williams Sowby
Editor's note: This is the fifth
installment of a series for potential senior missionaries.
Read part 4 here.
My husband and I are in the
final months of our 18-month call to the Chile Santiago
West Mission. We were in the Missionary Training Center
in Provo at the same time as our youngest son, Rob, who
will complete his service in the Germany Berlin Mission
in October. It’s been a memorable experience, one
that we’ve been glad to be able to share with other
"veterans" in the "Army of Helaman."
One of the great blessings of modern technology is that
we’ve been privileged to hear occasionally from
other friends — senior missionary couples —
serving in various parts of the world. Some, like us,
are in places and doing assignments they requested, while
others were open to accepting a call wherever and in whatever
way they were needed.
Some have planned to serve
from the time they married; some felt the need to offer
their time and service in gratitude for the blessings
they’ve received; others desired to set an example
for their posterity.
For all, it comes down to obedience to Church leaders
who have asked senior couples to serve and promised blessings
to them and their families as they obey.
Some senior couples work
in the mission office every day, taking care of the myriad
physical, financial, travel, living space, and organizational
tasks required to keep a mission running. Others have
specific assignments in such areas as family history,
visitors’ centers, employment, humanitarian service,
Church Education System, or music. Many are serving in
leadership positions in developing areas of the Church.
Still others spend much of their time visiting less-active
members and inviting them back.
Their challenges have ranged from surviving typhoons and
military takeovers of the government to more mundane things
such as struggling with the local language, fighting boredom,
and living in much smaller spaces and far less comfortable
circumstances than they’ve been accustomed to.
Along with hearing about their challenges, we’ve
been privileged to share their triumphs in overcoming
obstacles in order to serve the Lord and bring souls to
Christ. I asked them to answer some specific questions.
I believe their responses will give prospective missionary
couples a clearer picture of what it’s like to serve
together and help them know what to expect.
Challenges
Some of the challenges seem common to almost all senior
couples, while others are unique to the area where they’re
assigned, or even to their own personalities. First off,
anyone who says they weren’t homesick for the first
few months is fibbing. "Expect it" is the advice
of Michael and Roberta Vaclaw, serving in the California
San Francisco Mission.

Proselyting missionaries Michael and Roberta
Vaclaw serve dinner to hungry young elders in the California
San Francisco Mission.
Grandchildren are the biggest
void for all the couples, but "I even miss my dog!"
said Elder Vaclaw. Another said candidly, "I wouldn’t
mind an occasional afternoon in LaVell Edwards Stadium."
(Elder Sowby misses the automatic dishwasher — after
the grandkids, of course.)
Second on couples’ lists of challenges was "having
less-defined roles" and "not knowing what was
expected of us." In many cases, couples may be assigned
an area or ward but not given any specific assignment,
only told to "find your niche." For people who
need a little more direction and don’t know the
area or people or language, that can be a huge challenge.
"It took us several months to get to the point of
feeling useful," said the Vaclaws. Their lament is
echoed by many.
After our own first couple of months of feeling bored
and frustrated with not much to do in the daytime (because
people are usually only available at night, after work,
here in Chile), we started visiting stake presidents on
our own and setting up music courses. We shared our frustration
with our mission president, who has since involved us
in teaching classes during zone conferences and interviews,
doing apartment inspections, and helping with other mission-operating
tasks during daytime hours.
We started a tradition of serving a big dinner to our
16 local missionaries at our apartment once every transfer
period and on special occasions. We bought a DVD player
and started inviting members and missionaries with investigators
for family home evening with Church videos. We got acquainted
with other senior couples serving in the area offices
in Santiago and started doing a few things socially with
them. It all made a positive difference in how we felt
about our service and contribution. But we had to discover
these things on our own and make more things happen.
Grant and Gayle Drollinger, proselyting missionaries in
the California San Francisco Mission, noted that the missionary
handbook is 82 pages long, with only a page and a half
for couples. "Our greatest fulfillment has come from
seeing the needs in the wards and branches, or with the
young missionaries, and finding ways to fill them,"
they said.

Grant and Gayle Drollinger use Preach My
Gospel to teach young missionaries their duties in weekly
classes in the San Francisco area.
They say they love their
"uncluttered lives" and enjoy inviting two missionaries
to have breakfast and scripture study with them every
Friday morning. They appreciate having time to read, and
they’ve set a goal to read each of the Standard
Works during their mission.
For office couples, the situation is often the opposite,
with too much to do and too little time for such things
as reading and exercise. "It has been physically
harder than we were led to believe," said Judy Jackman,
serving with her husband, Vic, in the San Francisco Mission
office. "I am still waiting to see that 35-40-hour
week. We miss the morning study time because we’re
in the office, and at night, we have other catch-up things
to do or just fall into bed."

Vic and Judy Jackman serve in the office
of the California San Francisco Mission, where he is vehicle
fleet coordinator and she is medical coordinator.
Robert and DeeAnn
Buchanan, in the mission office in Quezon City, Philippines,
find the 10-12-hour work days challenging and miss having
time or a place to exercise. Some locales where seniors
serve are either unsafe or just plain unappealing for
outdoor exercise of any kind. Weight gain is not unusual
for seniors, who are not putting in the mileage the younger
missionaries are on foot.
Adjusting
There are a lot of adjustments to make — physical,
emotional, and lifestyle — and they can prove difficult.
If you don’t speak or understand the local language
immediately, that can lead to feeling isolated and frustrated.
Even in countries where English is the official language,
various dialects can be very difficult to understand.
Couples cope by trying to learn a handful of new vocabulary
words each day; studying their language books; making
an effort to speak with the locals; and employing the
language skills of young missionaries as interpreters.
"Everything we do is guided by the Spirit and mistakes,"
said John Robbins, serving with his wife, Brenda, in the
office of the Fiji Suva Mission. That’s especially
apt when it comes to communication.
The climate can be a difficult
adjustment for some, uncomfortably hot in some places
and uncomfortably cold in others. Several sisters said
they’ve given up on their hair in humid climates
and learned to live with less makeup. Those who live where
homes are unheated have learned to wear several layers
inside the house during cold weather.
Culture shock is common, especially for couples going
from the U.S. to less-developed countries. Victor and
Adele Austin, who served Spanish-speaking missions before
they were married and now serve as area family history
directors for Chile, decided before they came that they
would not speak disparagingly nor criticize local people
or customs, but instead "just be delighted by things
we found that were different." That positive attitude
has made it easier for them to adjust, although the transition
has not been without its difficulties.

As family history coordinators for the
Chile area, Victor and Adele Austin offer help with computerized
data bases and teach members how to use the Church's resources
in their search.
Time
Together
Missionary couples never have to wonder who their companion
will be, yet it can be challenging being together so much
of the time (although seniors aren’t required to
follow the same strict rules as younger missionaries and
don’t have to be together 24/7).
Says Elder Robbins, "We thought we would automatically be great missionaries. It was hard to recognize the same weaknesses that we’d had before we came — grumpiness, pride, selfishness." Yet, being focused on the same goals and learning the same lessons has been a real benefit, he says.

John and Brenda Robbins, an office couple
in the Fiji Suva Mission, recently attended the dedication
of a new chapel.
Some find it
beneficial to have some time apart, either alone or with
others. Even in small apartments, a "time out"
for an hour or two can be helpful. Yet, most couples say
their relationship has been strengthened by serving together,
especially if they’d been serving separately for
years in Church callings before their mission, as is so
often the case.
Said one husband, "We didn’t even drive to
church together before our mission, so we enjoy simple
walks or driving somewhere together. Serving together
has made me more aware of my wife’s feelings and
her outlook on things, which I took for granted before.
It has given us insight as to what eternity will bring."
Tom and Maryana Dunning, serving in the South Africa Cape
Town Mission, said they enjoy doing things together and
feeling their love grow. "We appreciate each other’s
talents and abilities when we’re serving together,"
say the couple, who previously served in the office of
the Micronesia Guam Mission.

Tom and Maryana Dunning enjoy
helping members and missionaries in the township where
they're assigned in the South Africa Cape Town Mission.
Hard
Realities
"I think I had romanced the whole idea of a mission,
and that we would travel to somewhere just like home and
we would be comfortable and happy in sharing and learning
the gospel together," said Sister Buchanan. "Wow!
Was I ever surprised!"

Robert and DeeAnn Buchanan are often surrounded
by Filipino families after office hours in the Philippines
Quezon City Mission.
She added that
although she and her husband had decided to "take
whatever we got," once they were called to the Philippines,
"I wish we’d put down some preferences."
(Couples do have that option. If health prevents
functioning in a hot, humid climate, you need to say so
on the application!) Five-inch cockroaches have reinforced
her wish, but, she says, "After about six months,
you simply adjust to your living conditions."
For women who’ve never served a mission before,
other realities can hit hard. One missionary admits having
trouble adapting to the frequent rejection, when she thought
people would "just be flocking to find the truth."
Some seniors who are asked to call on less-actives find
it difficult because they don’t know what the reaction
will be and, like young missionaries, fear rejection.
"We are out of our comfort zone," said one missionary
in California, "but we are making progress and will
do what we are asked to do."
Serving at an older age is an eye-opening experience.
Kent and Karen Lundquist realized a senior mission would
never happen unless they created the circumstances, financial
and physical, to allow it. "Sitting around and talking
about serving a mission ‘someday’ can drag
on forever," he says.
Now they are busy and happy in the office of the Louisiana
Baton Rouge Mission. However, "We found the regimen
of the 40-50-hours in the office a bit different, and
as our evening and weekend work in support of the missionaries
increased, we found we were, in fact, old!"

Kent and Karen Lundquist work in the office
of the Louisiana Baton Rouge Mission by day and with local
families in the evening.
For couples
where one or both served missions in their youth, it has
been hard to grasp the fact that as seniors, there’s
no way they can keep up with the younger missionaries’
daily schedule, although some have tried — and failed
— before they faced reality.
The good news is that they’re not expected to keep
up with missionaries four and five decades younger. Seniors
make their own schedule (unless they work in an office);
if they need to get up later or need an afternoon nap,
so be it. As Elder Lundquist puts it, "We find it
necessary to pace ourselves."
Words of Wisdom
Considering your own senior mission as a couple? Read
D&C 4, says Elder Lundquist. "Decide whether
you fit the description of having ‘a desire to serve’
and don’t mind handling a sickle. Then do it!"
Others wrote, "Yes, it’s hard, but just do
it!"
Writing about a new senior couple in their early 70s who
are frightened of the traffic in crowded Manila, capital
of the Philippines, Elder Buchanan asks, "What is
it that makes people want to serve the Lord when they
could be home without the frustrations and fears they
now experience?" He answers, "I think it’s
that inner feeling of wanting to share what you know to
be right and true with good people everywhere."
"Every mission and every mission assignment is different,"
say the Dunnings. "The joy comes from serving and
serving the best one can."
The challenges are many, but so are the rewards for "helping
people in ways that have been life-changing," says
Margaret Agard, serving a second mission with her husband,
Bill, in Alaska. (They previously served in New Mexico
Albuquerque.) She is one who finds it difficult to approach
less-active members, but she says she feels an equal measure
of joy when they return to the fold.

Clearing a path to the front door of the
meetinghouse is the normal Sunday morning activity of
Margaret and Bill Agard, shown here with a Primary boy
in Haines, Alaska, part of the Alaska Mission.
Finding
Fulfillment
Sister Austin received a thank-you note from a young husband
after a grueling three-hour family history training that
no one really gets excited about going to. Despite feeling
the negative energy of attendees at the beginning of the
meeting, the Austins soldier on, sharing their enthusiasm
for the work with their audience. And once in a while
someone catches it.
"I am really thankful because you changed my eternity,"
the young man wrote. The Austins felt gratified. "Every
missionary wants to feel at the end of the mission that
something they did made a difference," Sister Austin
explains. "Now this young man will proceed with enthusiasm,
doing what he can to make a difference."
"Sharing the joy of someone coming out of the waters
of baptism and giving their testimony of the Savior"
is reward in itself when that happens, says one sister.
Associating with that wonderful cadre of young missionaries
and supporting them in the work of the Lord also brings
fulfillment for many senior couples.
"The young missionaries now serving are better prepared,
more dedicated, more capable than my generation of missionaries
was," writes Elder Lundquist. "And they are
fearless."
Elder James Hurst, psychologist for missionaries throughout
South America, said as he and his wife Joan were finishing
their service in Santiago in February, "We feel blessed
and privileged to be part of a modern miracle known as
the missionary program." He noted he had felt "the
great love and devotion of others involved in this work"
and considered it "one of the Lord’s tender
mercies" to be able to rub shoulders with them.

James and Joan Hurst recently returned to Utah after serving
as psychologist for missionaries in South America. They
were based in Santiago, Chile, and worked as a team.
"The love we feel from the Lord and the knowledge that we are doing what he wants us to do" keeps senior missionaries like Wesley and Emron Montgomery in Petaluma, Calif., going despite the challenges.

Wesley and Emron Montgomery cheer a member
of the ward where they serve in Petaluma, California.
The conviction
that "we are where the Lord wants us to be right
now" was voiced by many couples, who added that that
conviction makes it possible to put up with the inconveniences,
discomforts, cultural differences, homesickness, fatigue,
and other challenges of life as senior missionaries.
The fact that their children and grandchildren are aware
of their service is also important. Said one senior, "If
I can do this at my age, my grandsons can certainly do
it when they’re 19! They’ll have no excuse!"
No, it’s not easy, but for all those reasons, senior
missionary couples carry on. In the words of the Buchanans,
"It will be wonderful to return and say, ‘We
did it!’"
Practical Advice:
1. Be thoroughly acquainted with Preach My Gospel
before leaving home. Plan adequate time between such
heavies as selling a house, moving things into storage,
etc. and the actual time you leave so you have time to
prepare spiritually and emotionally for the mission. If
you’re going to a place where English isn’t
spoken, you will need extra time to learn the language,
through MTC tutoring either in person or over the phone.
2. Try to find out from couples already serving there
what type of clothing, medications, Church materials,
and other supplies you need to bring to a particular mission.
(The general information sent to couples is not specific
enough.) Take a few good books you’ve been dying
to read, a couple of simple games to share (such as Uno
or Scrabble), your favorite music CDs, and anything else
that keeps you sane, such as needlework. Find out what
form of mail works best for that mission.
3. Take a laptop computer with you and know how to use
it! Be acquainted with using email, and downloading and
sending photos from your digital camera. Couples say the
connection with family via email is a lifesaver when they’re
thousands of miles apart. Many are able to pay bills and
do banking online. Be prepared with extra adapters and
transformers to replace ones you may not be able to get
in a foreign country when they blow up.
4. For those serving within the United States, couples
who’ve done it recommend taking a new vehicle that
will seat at least seven people safely. In many countries
outside the U.S., you may need an international driver’s
license; check with your local AAA or ask someone in the
mission office before you go.
5. Plan on spending more than the "official"
listed amount. Couples often have to provide their own
health insurance, furnish apartments, feed hungry missionaries
and, in our case, even purchase a car. Make sure your
ATM card works before you leave home, and get one with
a bank that doesn’t charge for foreign currency
conversion or "out of system" cash withdrawals.