Monday, July 30, 2012

Monday, July 30th, 2012


Dear Family,

Week two in Japan and I am loving it like nothin' else! Really, things are great and they are about to get better.

Ah man, I'm sorry to hear about Connor's arm getting broken, that sucks for sure but it is a very good story hahaha.  Maybe it's worth it... I feel for him, in Japanese we say zanen, which is like saying I'm sorry but it's not my fault.  Zanen, Connor. 

This upcoming week, we have a Baptism! Thomas, the French guy, is getting baptized on Friday.  Elder Gallacker is doing it and I'll be sure to let you know how it goes next week.  His fiance, Audrey, is taking us out to eat like 4 times next week, for the baptism and for my Doryo's birthday.  She is awesome and loves the missionaries so much. 

Last Monday, I found my first ever real investigator while we were housing.  His name is Inoue and he is 28 and lives by himself.  He is on a dispatch for work so he left all of his friends and family for a time and is just living by himself.  We made a follow up appointment with him and we taught him an entire lesson one this last Friday.  We invited him to church, but he didn't come, and we are going to visit him in a few hours and invite him to FHE.  We have FHE with the single adults in the ward, which there are a lot of them (some in their mid thirties and forties. It's kinda the Japanese Mormon trend to end up not getting married, weird I know), which is convenient because we have FHE literally around the corner from his house.  I hope all goes well with this man.  He was very open to our discussions and even prayed at the end of the lesson.

Unusual things that I have done in Japan so far:
Eaten pizza and cake with chopsticks, bought a drink from a mystery box vending machine (ended up being an orange juice), a recent convert showed me his extremely large Star Wars light-up pop-up book, tried to reactivate my MTC sensei's convert haha, talked with a man for 2 1/2 hours straight in a park (he offered to take us out drinking afterwards because he liked us so much), met an Iranian man, a Swiss man, a Danish man, a Philippino man, taught 2 English classes (the advanced class) which consists of me explaining what having butterflies in your stomach means, streeted during a Japanese POP festival, listened to a lot of Bon Jovi sung with Japanese accents, taught a few lessons that had 6 missionaries and 1 investigator haha, eaten a lot of sushi, yakiniku, rice, noodles, and today we went to a China town and had some real Japanese Chinese food!

We went to the mall today, the Yokohama Mall, and it is absolutely insane.  They had tons of Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Dior, Coach, everything, you name it and they had it at this mall.  And everyone who is at the mall is like over 50 or under 25 and is a woman and stares at us.  We got caught in an elevator with 15 really old ladies and it was incredibly cramped and odd. 

Japan is unbelievably humid, it's crazy.  I have never sweat so much in my life.  If I am not in my air conditioned little study room, I am sweating like crazy.  And it has been in the 90's all this week.  I know why Japanese anime always portray people wearing headbands, it's because everyone does! You have to if you are working or doing anything outside.  Puddles and puddles of sweat just constantly drip from everywhere. 

The food here is great, and the beverages are so crazy! So much variety everywhere. A few days ago I had a salty watermelon Pepsi. Crazy. We always have a pitcher of mugicha at the house, it is basically Pero, but cold. It's a barley tea and the zone leaders love it. I've eaten squid and tons of raw fish, but that's only when we have sushi.  But everywhere you go or whatever you do, there is basically some kind of meat with the dish, like cow meat or pork mostly.  A lot of rice, but it is sooooo good hahaha.  They taught me the secret to making good rice so I guess I will have to show you guys when I get back.       

My Japanese is getting better, I still usually have no idea what's going on, but I'm getting better always. 

Have fun on your trip and be safe and tell the family I say Konnichiwa!

Love,
Kurandaru Choro (Elder Crandall) 

Monday, July 23, 2012

A fun visit!!

Side note from Elder Crandall's Mommy:


Kelsie had a fun opportunity to be able to see Christopher before he left for Japan!  She and her friend, Cameron, went to visit the Provo Temple on a Sunday afternoon and got to see Elder Crandall out walking the temple grounds with his companion and other groups of missionaries.  They had a great visit together.  What an awesome day for both of them!

Monday, July 23rd, 2012


Gambada Nippon!

Well I'm in Japan! I'm the city of Yokohama, which is south west of Tokyo, the second largest city in Japan, and I'm in the area of Kohoku.  More specifically, Myorenji District.  Japan is the most beautiful place I have ever been in my live.  It is incredibly unique and diverse in the scenery and the smells and people and everything.  The part of Japan we flew in to was incredibly lush and green, with tons of rice fields everywhere.  But the part of the city where I am right now is very suburban, at least for Japan, with some trees and forested areas, but for the most part it is just housing complexes, like medium size complexes and small houses.  The flight from SLC to LAX was pretty low key and easy, but the flight to Japan was brutal.  I had a terrible headache, a sore throat, and got a little bit of food poisoning from the airplane food.  It wasn't good and I ended up throwing up as soon as I got in to the Narita airport.  It was so awesome to have David there waiting for me when I arrived, I loved seeing him and talking to him for a bit.  After that, we drove to the Honbu, mission home, and stayed there for the night.  Sis Budge makes great food and I was able to meet their whole family and the AP's.  I actually met my soon to be companion that night, he was doing some computer work with the AP's and recorders and what not the day before.  The next day, we got up and did some orientation with Budge Kaicho and got to know the mission and mission life a little better.  At lunch, Budge Kaicho announced which trainers were with what people.  Everyone was eating lunch together and Pres. Budge had each of the trainers stand up, introduce themselves and then the area a little bit.  So my trainer is Elder Gallacker and he is awesome.

 
Elder Gallacker is from Mesa Arizona, graduated 2011, has been out for 8 transfers, is pretty good at Japanese, wants to go to the naval academy once he gets back, is an amazing singer, loves being a missionary, and is a really chill guy.  We get along really well and he is working hard to train me.

So at around 3, we left the Honbu and headed for Kohoku.  It was about an hour away by train. And let me tell you, the trains in Japan are so much fun, but so weird.  Everyone on the train does their best to be dead quiet, they don't make eye contact, they close their eyes and pretend to be asleep, and everyone just looks miserable.  They pack into the trains like sardines and no one says a word to anyone.  But that doesn't stop us! Usually you just have to be really chill and friendly with them and they will open up and start talking to you.  Usually I just say hello, then comment on the weather, ask them where they are going, if they are coming back from work, what their family is like, and if they have heard of the church.  Usually they smile and think it is funny that I am speaking Japanese to them.

So our home is awesome! It is the largest missionary residence in the Tokyo Mission! It is located right off of a busy street, and a york mart, and not to far from the train station.  It is two stories tall.  The downstairs has an open walk in room, a restroom, a large kitchen area, a bathroom/shower combo room, then the upstairs has two study rooms, two closet areas, and a tatami sleeping area that all four of us sleep in, kinda squished but it's okay.  This place is like twice as big as any other apartment in Tokyo.  I love it.  My companion loves to cook, I like to do the dishes, we have an even agreement with that.  I have a lot of pictures that I will try to attach to this and some other emails so get ready!

We live with the Zone leaders and they are super cool guys.  Elder Checkets and Elder Hamada. Checkets is from Provo and Hamada is from Osaka.  Hamada choro is fluent in English because he went to BYU Hawaii so that is really nice. 

Right now we have two progressing investigators, but no other investigator pool (working on that).  One man's name is Thomas.  He is our super golden investigator.  Thomas is from France, he is studying at the local university, there are two big schools in our area (a lot of college students) and is working on his masters thesis in something.... Anyway, his girlfriend, who is named Audrey and lives in France, was very recently converted to the church and was baptized.  So she told Thomas all about the church and so Thomas decided to look into it for himself.  So he went on mormon.org and was a self referral for our area (incredibly rare). So Elder Gallacker and his old comp went over and starting teaching Thomas the gospel and Thomas just loved everything that the missionaries said.  He is fluent in French and English and knows a little bit of Japanese so we have always taught him in English.  He accepted all aspects of the Gospel into his life, knew it was true, made all the changes necessary to be baptized, and is getting baptized on the 4th of August! So this past week, Audrey and her parents came over from France for his baptism and Audrey is the Genki-est person I have ever met.  She is the complete opposite of a quiet, refined, French woman.  She is like a straight Texan with a thick French accent.  So yea, that is awesome.  She is planning on taking us out to lunch like 3 times over the next two weeks.  Super excited!  August 4th, mark it on the calender!  Our other investigator is named Mr.Sato.  Sato is an English cram school (look it up) teacher at the local high schools.  He works from like 5 to 2 at night almost every day of the week.  But he has developed a deep awareness of God in his life and wants to learn more about him.  We teach him in English as well even though he is Japanese.  He is very concerned about why God punishes the wicked and he has not come to church yet because he has to prepare for work.  But he has come to two different broadcasts and comes to Eikaiwa (English class) every week.  He has been very "busy" these past few weeks and has not had time to meet with us, but after I met him this week I sent him an email just saying how much I like him basically and that I want to teach him more and invited him to church and what not and he emailed me back this morning and said that he made time Thursday afternoon before Eikaiwa to meet with us.  He also wants me to help him write a groomsman speech that he is giving in America for a family friend soon. So I agreed and will get to teach him this Thursday.  Keep Mr. Sato in your prayers.  Pray for him to have a softer heart and more of a desire to come closer to God and Jesus Christ.  Also, pray for us to be able to find those who the lord has prepared for us and that we will know what to say and do once we meet them. 

I was able to go over to a member's house for dinner on Friday with the Sis. missionaries.  We have Sis. missionaries in our ward, double teaming it, it was with the Yamazaki family.  I don't know what we ate exactly, but it was really good.  Sunday was crazy, we had a meeting at 7:30 with the bishop, then priesthood at 9:30 (everything is backwards) and Thomas and Audrey came to church that day, then we had the most interesting Sunday School of my life.  My comp gave the lesson in English for Thomas, which he translated for Audrey in French cause she doesn't know very much English, but we also had Hamada and Checkets and their investigator there who needed Hamada chorro to translate into Japanese, the two Sister missionaries there, one of which doesn't speak English so she needed a translation, and then half way through, the Stake President walked in.  So we had 1 convert, 2 investigators, 6 missionaries, and 1 stake president in a tiny little classroom speaking all kinds of different languages to each other.  It was crazy, but crazy spiritual.  A lot of chikara in one little room.  Then in sacrament meeting, I had to pass the Sacrament and then I had to give a 5 minute testimony.  And then I had ward council after that, and then we had a zone conference after that and that was a blast.  I have two of my Sempai, the missionaries, 1 transfer older than me, in my zone.  We have a really young zone, a lot of 7th/ 8th transfer people. And then after that, I was able to go home and get a good nights rest. 

My bike is pretty legit, it's white, I don't remember the brand but I didn't go cheap. I got a good, long lasting mountain bike.  Riding a bike in Japan is pretty sketchy, you have to dodge people, dodge cars, a lot of poles, and sometimes all three at the same time.  There are a lot of hills in my area which is making for a good work out. 

So my comp and I see eye to eye on a lot of things but some things not so much.  He likes to plant a lot of seeds, tell people about the church and make people see how good a people we are.  But we are not super good at finding new investigators.  We do our part and are kind of waiting to find someone who is ready.  But I am the kind of guy who has the attitude of everyone is ready, we have the ability to convert everyone, we just need to figure out how we can get into the door of their hearts.  At this point, I don't know enough Japanese to be able to do that so I am doing things his way and planting a lot of seeds, but not reaping or harvesting a lot.  But I believe this newest generation of Tokyo missionaries, me and my group, are going to be the first great harvesters of Japan.  Once we learn how to speak the language and serve the people, we will bring a lot of souls closer to Christ.  So my big focus right now is becoming fluent, working hard with the language. 

"Streeting" and "Housing" is very hard in Japan.  People on the street simply cannot believe that you are talking to them, they just assume it is someone behind them, so they ignore you, treat you as though you don't exist, and keep on walking.  No one smiles on their own, only after we smile at them and say hi do they smile. Housing is fun though.  People do not come to the door in Japan, they have little call boxes outside of their doors, little ping pong boxes, and they talk through that.  They are some of the nicest people at rejecting us.  The most common phrase is Kekkon Desu, I'm good basically.  Although yesterday, I had some lady tell me to just go home, not very nicely.  Streeting and Housing are not effective ways of doing missionary work in Japan.  There is a better way, member referrals! 60% of baptisms in the Tokyo mission come from referrals, but here is the interesting thing, Japanese people hate hate hate giving referral's and hate letting the missionaries do service for them.  They just don't do it yet, they're afraid and don't want to let us help their friends. I have been pushing for referrals since day one, after I went Streeting for the first time and saw what it was like, and recently, the zone leaders and Budge Kaicho started to push for it as well.  We need more investigators, more member referrals, and I need to know Japanese better hahaha.

Well, I love you all and I will try my best to send you a lot of pictures soon!

Elder Crandall               

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Thursday, July 19th, 2012

Elder Crandall has arrived safely in Japan!!  We are very blessed to have a good family friend, David Tarr, working in Japan and he was able to be at the airport when Christopher landed and took some great pictures for us!


David and Christopher

When they were done at the airport Elder Crandall and the group of missionaries that came with him from the MTC all headed to the mission home for a good night's rest.   



Christopher with his Mission President, President and Sister Budge

Elder Gallacher with Elder Crandall, new missionary companions

He is serving in his first area, Kohoku, Yokohama and is excited to begin the work.  He had a little glitch buying his bicycle, but all is well.  We will hear all about his first week in Japan next week!  Stay tuned!!

Information about sending mail to Elder Christopher Ronald Crandall:

All letters and packages should be sent to the Mission Home.

v   The only packages that can be forwarded to missionaries are those sent through the POST OFFICE of your home nation.
v   PLEASE DO NOT SEND PACKAGES BY FEDEX, DSL, OR UPS – they do not forward packages for us like the Post Office does.  The mission then has to pay to send it to the missionaries.
v   Please include your missionary’s first and middle names because we often have missionaries with the same first and last names.
v   Please do not send large boxes. Mail is delivered on motorcycles here– they do not have room for large boxes. The mission has to pay the charges to have them shipped by another shipper or try to get them to a zone conference. That means your missionary has to carry the large box on the train to his or her apartment. The Post Office of your country has smaller mailing packages you can use. You can send a few of these instead of one big box.

Please use the following address for mail to your missionary. They all love receiving letters from home. Again, we would like to ask you to always put the first and middle name of your missionary on the envelopes as we have several missionaries who share the same last name.  Please let your family and friends know to do this, too.

Elder Christopher Ronald Crandall
Japan Tokyo Mission
4-25-12 Nishi-Ochiai  
Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo-to
161-0031   JAPAN




Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012


Yoshi hitobito!

the i in yoshi is silent so its not like the mario yoshi, its just yosh...

It sounds like you are going to have a very lonely week mother! Best wishes to you, but I don't have any pity for you :) enjoy it kudasai.  This week was a good week.  We got our itineraries on Friday and here is the schedule.  We leave to go to the airport at 5 in the morning.  We have a Delta flight leaving Salt Lake at 8:40 am for LAX.  I will have time to call you at the SLC airport before that flight.  Around 7-ish I should be free to call.  Here is what I am going to do, as far as calling you goes.  I am going to have a few quarters and I am going to get on a pay phone and give your cell phone, mommy, a call.  I will then tell you the telephone number of the pay phone, you write it down, and then when my time runs out, you call me back on that number :) It charges the same amount as a long distant call so if we have long distance minutes, it will use those.  There is no official policy for telephone calling so I can talk for as long as I want. :).  Then, I will fly to LAX and I arrive there at 9:40am, LA time, and I have a lay over there until 1 pm.  I can also call home from LAX, using the same technique that I described above.  It is recommended that we do not use phone cards because they are extremely unreliable and are pretty expensive.  Quarters and calling back is the best way.  Then, I fly to Tokyo Narita Airport.  I am on the Delta flight 283 to Narita.  I will arrive at 4:25 pm on July 17 in Tokyo, July 16 back in the states.  I will then be picked up by my mission president and taken to their house to spend the night.  The next day I will meet my comp and begin the work :D Sooooo send me a dear elder confirming this plan.  I won't have access to email or anything after this. After about Friday, anything mailed to me I probably won't get and they will not forward anything to Japan unless it has the correct amount of postage, including dear elders.

So tomorrow, a filming crew from Tokyo are coming and they are filming our district for a few hours and interviewing us.  They are broadcasting this news story to 6 million people in the UK and to 28 different news stations throughout Japan, so basically all of Japan.  The story will have kind of a political angle to it, with, ya know, Mitt Romney running for president and all.  They think that the church is training missionaries so that we become great businessmen and political leaders so that we can spread out and take over the world. Yeah, right, not!  So we are kinda expecting to get grilled in that aspect by the reporters and such, but we prepared for it quite a bit yesterday.  So yeah, I'll basically be famous throughout Japan.  They are going to air it next week and I will send you a link to the news story.  Also, MSNBC, BBC and a few other networks will pick it up as well.  So that will be fun, pray that I don't say anything stupid and slander it like they usually do haha.

Well, should be a grand old week ahead of me, I've started packing a little bit all ready and have all my toiletries and what not ready to go for the next two years haha.  I'm excited to call you mommy and daddy! Dear Elder me the details of your lives and when would be best to call and what not. 

I'm still working hard and I know Japanese better than ever! I also know the Gospel better than ever! Should probably tag that in their as well... Tell Kyle good luck at camp and to have fun like nothing else! He will be living the same schedule I am for a few days haha. 

 Love you always!

Elder Crandall

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

July 3rd, 2012


Thank You for the MTC 4th of July package! I've been saving a lot of it until tomorrow when everyone is going to feast with each other and celebrate the fourth of July.  This week has been pretty cool.  Last Tuesday, we had 10/12 Apostles at a devotional which Elder Perry spoke at.  Only Elders Packer and Hales were not there.  Elder Perry spoke about a bunch of church statistics and on a lot of the different programs the Church offers.  This was for the purpose of us being able to reactivate members and know what the Church does for people after they are converted. 


In less than two weeks, I will be in Japan! We will get our itineraries this Friday, but we will probably be flying through LA-X and not Seatac. There is no way for me to send pictures to you guys yet.  They closed the print shop here and the computers do not have camera or sd card ports, sooo you will probably just have to wait until I can send you stuff from Japan ha.  Yesterday was the last class period for one of our Sensai's.  Shaner Sensai got an internship with Mitt Romney's campaign headquarters in Boston and he is leaving for Boston this week, so yesterday we all said goodbye to him and took pictures and held a small party in his honor.


Not a ton happened this week overall.  My Doryo and I have been working hard teaching our investigators and all of our investigators are really close to baptism.  We are trying really hard to remain focused and to endure to the end with our MTC experience.  I love just chilling with the Nihonjin and talking to them.  I know enough Japanese to understand basically everything that they say, and I can communicate back well enough.  All of them love Ichiro Sazuki and I'll be sure to tell them that my family went and saw him at a game this week.  私は日本人のために愛しています。神様は私たちの天のお父様です。ジョセフスミスは真実預言者でした。ジョセフスミスによて、モルモン書はほにゃくしました。私の家族がほんとにほんとに愛しています。この復員は真実だと証していま巣。イエスキリストが私のs食い主だとしています。Know that I love you and am trying my best to make everyone back home proud.  Most of those Kanji are correct, google translate might be able to translate that mess.


Happy Birthday Mommy and Kyle! I wish I could be there! Have a happy 4th of July and blow tons of しまた up for me!