Sunday, July 16, 2023

Chapter 40: "Righteous Dominion"

The curious thing about writing to an unseen audience is that I haven’t the faintest clue how things are for you right now. I mean to say, how’s it going?? And what adventure led you to read this? What have you been up to today? For that matter, where and when are you at right now? Do I open with a good morning, good afternoon, good evening, or good night? It seems “know your audience” was never a real option here.

So many possibilities for how I could process this week into my trademark ramblings! Where shall the tone and focus be today? Would idealism or realism be more refreshing for you? Are you settling in for a new lengthy installment, or are you frantically reading, hoping you’ll see the end of the email the moment you scroll down? Heh, if you’re hoping for the latter, let’s just say you’ve come to the wrong missionary. Anyone whose attention span dwindles faster than my cognitive regurgitation is surely doomed. Turn back now, traveler 😆.

I can’t know the exact choice of words that will suit you today, but it’s pretty amusing and mind boggling to think about just how many different ways this note might interact with you.

All of that’s to say, hi!

This past week I’ve continued to press forward in a pretty awkward transitional phase. We’re not quite back to fantastical adventure status yet, but we’re getting there. Getting all my assignments together has been a process, so in the meantime I’ve had a lot of temple opportunities, and I’ve been enjoying time with family. Being back in Utah so early is still WEIRD. Everyone's been very welcoming though (if a little taken aback in some cases 😜.

Last Thursday I got to tour the Global Services Department with my service mission leaders, Elder and Sister Lindsey. We were also joined by another missionary, Elder Richardson, and the moment we picked him up, he struck me as familiar. We spent like half the car ride shooting suspicious glances at each other and eventually halted all conversations for an ultimatum. "I feel like I've seen you before!" We briefly interrogated each other about high school to no avail, and it wasn't until we got to the topic of work that we struck gold. We both worked at Nielsens' Frozen Custard! What are the odds?! Better yet, we both left on our missions about the same time, proselytized for about 9 months, and then transferred to serve in Salt Lake South.

We had a great time meeting the service missionaries and managers at the GSD and going to lunch with them at the church office building afterward. Ever since I filled the Lindseys in on my interests and skills, they've been strongly recommending I serve there, and after touring, I could totally see why. It is such a tight-knit group of missionaries there, they hold devotionals every morning, and they do some pretty important work with a worldwide reach.

I originally had another tour at the Special Service Projects department scheduled for the following Thursday—dreadfully far away on my calendar—which would have meant I'd have to wait another full week before deciding where my main assignment would be, but as time went on it seemed more and more silly that I was waiting to start at the GSD when the chances of another tour winning me over were pretty slim. A few days later, I got word that the SSPD doesn't have a very high workload right now, so I went ahead and decided to start onboarding at the GSD! Good thing too, cause the evening after I made the decision, I found out the SSPD needed to cancel the tour on Thursday. Dodged a bullet there! So, my new home 4 days a week will be the West Office Building in Salt Lake City!

A couple days ago I went in to meet my team and get my desk set up. I'll be serving on the Missionary Services team, offering technical support for areabook (now called the Preach My Gospel App) and MaaS360 (missionary phone security). In my interview I also mentioned I have video editing experience, and from the sound of it they've got some projects for me in that area too! I'm excited!

The GSD culture is pretty great as well. As Elder Shupe, my team lead, was giving me a tour, we passed by an unattended computer. Elder Shupe's eyes lit up. "You'll quickly learn," he said, barely breaking stride as he curved his trajectory toward the desk, "never to leave your computer unlocked." He opened a new tab on both monitors and pulled up twin 10-hour clips of Never Gonna Give You Up. The unfortunate owner of the computer was about to be accosted with a double rick roll. As the tour resumed and we headed out of the cubicle, the last thing I saw was another missionary hopping on the computer to mess with the keyboard control settings. I'm glad I'm learning these lessons third-hand.

Another quick tidbit of mischief...when I first arrived for onboarding, a small group of service missionaries was waiting at the front office to greet me, and as we headed into the building, one of the elders leaned in and conspiratorially whispered "We're going to sing happy birthday to Elder Davis." We arrived at his desk where he discovered the area had been flooded with balloons, and every single object in the vicinity that could be gift wrapped had been gift wrapped. This included every framed picture on his desk, his computer monitors, the fronts of his drawers, his chair, each and every one of the little lego figures proudly displayed on his shelf, his tissue box, and more. His disgruntled reaction was priceless.

So there's the GSD for ya! With the bulk of my weekly schedule filled in, my other assignments can now start falling into place. The only other thing I have set in stone right now is serving as an ordinance worker at the temple, and I'm starting that today!

Once each month, instead of meeting for our district council meetings, our zone meets up for a service project, and this past week we did just that. We went to the food bank to assemble several pallets of food packages for a government project. The workers there repeatedly said "This is for the government, so it has to be perfect!" No pressure. We had a great time! Elder Hansen (one of my ZLs, who was with Elder Lindsey at the airport to welcome me when I arrived in Utah) and I were in charge of stacking the boxes on the pallets, and every time a pallet finished, a collective cheer rang through the room.

I had the chance to give a talk in my ward this past Sunday. I'm learning that I REALLY enjoy opportunities like that. Everything about them, from pondering on my topic, to studying for it, to writing my thoughts out and seeing them organize themselves on paper, to delivering them (anxiously hoping that at least one person in the congregation needs to hear the message). After this past opportunity, I contemplated on how everyone has their own little things they need to work on. When it comes to giving talks for instance, I haven't felt as much of a need to focus on articulation or delivery, but what I am sure I need to improve is being concise. This is to the point where I will tell myself I'm only going to write or speak for so long, but I end up going nearly double what I expected, despite my "effort" to the contrary. I get wrapped up in all the subpoints I want to cover, obsessing over delivering each one in its entirety. Unbeknownst to me, this probably results in a lot of dead horses being beaten. In a Stake Conference back in Imperial Beach, a member of the Seventy passed on a quote I appreciated. "The mind can absorb only what the seat can endure." When you're sitting there in a meeting, there's only so much you can take.

Notwithstanding, the talk went over very well! It discussed missionary work, and I decided to focus on navigating some of the barriers to it we face, namely feeling "too introverted" to share the gospel. I also tried calling the congregation to action in as practical a way as I could muster. That took some boldness 😆. I'll include a link to the talk at the end if you're curious (if this email takes half your day to read, you'll still have a whole other half left to read the talk!).

This past Tuesday we had our first mission leadership council where I met the other district leaders. Originally, my interview to be a temple worker conflicted with this meeting, which was super unfortunate, but I found out at the last minute that my interview had to be rescheduled, so, tender mercy! At MLC, a few jokes were thrown around about "unrighteous dominion", or cases where missionaries have abused the authority of their leadership positions to impose upon other missionaries. You know, basically a step below priestcraft...accomplished by rambunctious young adults. So, normally the thing to do would just be to say "Don't let your position become one of unrighteous dominion." And to move on from the topic. Instead, we flipped the joke on its head with an equally skewed paradigm. "LET YOUR POSITION BECOME ONE OF RIGHTEOUS DOMINION." If there's one thing my age group is good at, it's walking a fine line between insight and dunderheadedness. We had a good laugh though.

Looks like it's that time again...time for a gospel tangent!  This one comes from a lesson Elder Meilstrup and I taught toward the end of my time in my second area. Get this though, it's actually two messages, and the messages contradict each other--on the surface, at least. We'll fit them together at the end.

As we teach the gospel, in our homes and at church, there's a select few things we talk about over and over and over again when it comes to the actions we are expected to take. Read your scriptures, pray, and go to church. We issue these answers in response to a variety of "churchy" questions. How can I draw closer to the Savior? How can I receive comfort? How can I have a stronger disposition to do good? From time to time we'll throw in other answers. Go to the temple, do service, repent, fast, keep the commandments. They are important and distinct things, but they do all feel like they're coming from the same well-rehearsed list. So well rehearsed, in fact, that the first few items have gained a title of their own. "The primary answers", referring both to the fact that they're taught in Primary, and to the fact that they are foremost amid the things God has taught us. They're so prominent, in fact, that if you were to walk into Elders quorum or Relief Society in the middle of their discussion without a clue of what's going on, raise your hand, and say "Read the scriptures and say your prayers", it would probably fit right into whatever they're talking about. The natural man in us might be inclined to complain, "Every time I go to church I feel like we're just having the same lesson over and over with the same answers given every time." And there's even a grain of truth in this complaint.

What I'd like to talk about is not any shortcoming of these answers, but instead a shortcoming of our relationship with these answers. I suspect we typically offer the primary answers in church, seminary, and institute not necessarily because we have a personal experience with them in mind, but because we think it's the answer the teacher is fishing for, or simply because we want to keep the discussion-ball rolling. But with the sheer number of times we repeat these answers, we're left with a little bit of an awkward question...

How does the number of times we hype up prayer, scripture study, etc compare to the actual influence those things have in our lives?

Consider how much you hear and talk about those things. Then consider how much time and feeling actually goes into them in your life. If you're like me, the ratio between the two could stand to improve.

The fact is, for as much enthusiasm as we put into our lessons and talks about it, sometimes reading the scriptures is confusing, intimidating, or just plain boring. Sometimes the wondrous gift of prayer feels reducible to vain repetitions and unheard pleas. And as the gap between what we say and what we experience grows wider and wider, we may start offering the primary answers merely because they are the "correct" answers, and not because they are our answers. We lose our relationship with them, holding onto idealization more than testimony.

I proclaim that everyone has a testimony of God somewhere in their life. For every person that has ever lived and will ever live, there is at least one corresponding conduit that connects them to their creator. We each have a good thing that we can get excited about--a conduit. It's not the same for everyone, and that's why everyone's relationship with God is unique. For me, it's taking part in inquisitive gospel discussions and writing my favorite insights down. For Elder Meilstrup, it's deep diving into the scriptures. He made a hobby of FLOODING his scriptures with tabs. For Sister Ward, it's pondering on the personal nature of the atonement, realizing every pain she has felt, Christ has felt. In each case, that personal thing was what gave us our testimonies. We discovered that which meant something to us, and we seized it with both hands. What is it for you?

Whatever it may be, primary answer or not, seize it with both hands!! You've just found something you have a personal, irreplaceable testimony of. Something that isn't just capable of having power in your life, but DOES have power in your life. You know where the gospel is engaging for you. That's incredible! It's crucial!

When someone mentions living the gospel to you, do you react with the same feelings you do when someone mentions a mundane homework assignment? Perhaps it's just that you're thinking about the things you don't have a testimony of rather than the things you do.

Rather than feeling bound to pursue things that just don't resonate with you (as much as you feel like they should), draw strength from the places where you have felt God connect with you. The things that incite enthusiasm. We all flourish in different ways.

Okay, that was message number one. Here's message number 2.

Should we only focus on the parts of the gospel that we resonate with? No way! Just because you're not having the time of your life with something doesn't mean it's not benefiting you. If you don't react with excitement to a good thing, that's a pretty clear indication there's some growth that needs to happen.

"...It must needs be that this is a good seed, or that the word is good, for it beginneth to enlarge my soul; yea, it beginneth to enlighten my understanding, yea, it beginneth to be delicious to me." (Alma 32:28)

"...beginneth to be delicious." That implies that it wasn't delicious before. So press on, even when it feels fruitless. Even—no, especially—when your scripture study puts you to sleep and your prayers seem to bounce off the ceiling.

I'm struck by how comparable weight training is to spiritual growth. If a dumbbell is heavy, is that an indication you shouldn't lift it? Hardly! Well, don't hurt yourself, but think about it in principle. The resistance is the whole point!

Will you immediately feel stronger as you exercise? Perhaps you'll feel your adrenaline and endorphins surge, but exhaustion and soreness are likely to be at the forefront of your experience. Let's compare those surges to particularly spiritual moments. Sure, they're encouraging, but the actual growth happens over the course of persistence and is rarely ever noticed in the moment. Again, press on, even when it feels fruitless. The primary answers are repeated so much because they are just that important. If anything, we haven't heard them repeated enough.

Now, these two messages literally present opposite focuses. Which one of them wins out? I don't think there's a clear cut answer. It has to be a matter of what you need.

Do you have a favorite way of feeling the spirit? If not, find it!

Do you trust your effort will yield results even if you don't feel it? If not, try it!

Struggling with both? I'd suggest starting with the former. Find what builds you up, not what wears you out (yet). Kindle a passion in the gospel that will propel you forward. The gospel exists for you, not you for the gospel.

*drawn out exhalation* See what I mean about struggling to be concise? This is looong! But congratulations, you endured to the end. How's that for living the gospel of Jesus Christ? In fact, as a reward for your bravery, I've got one last announcement...

My sister Allison is a mother as of this past Wednesday!!!!!! And I'm an uncle, for that matter! And my parents are grandparents! And so on and so on! We bade William Brimhall a warm welcome into this beautiful world. It's such a blessing I was here in Utah to greet the lil guy.

God be with you,
Elder Tolman

Here's that talk: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1PpaO2w16m72B8gTI2WfT3qMEcrZhsu2x7-wbzdVTS-w/edit?usp=sharing


Me with President and Sister Kotter

The one and only William Brimhall!!! My arms were graced with his presence. :)


After the Tabernacle Choir's summer concert. It was incredible!


Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Chapter 39: A Familiar New Area

I'd like to start with a mystery. wHeRe iN THe bLAzeS waS LaSt WEek'S emAiL??

Alas! It was caught up in the chaos of a recent development...which is likely even more **shocking** than the tardiness of this message. Is that dramatic enough fer ya? Everyone's on the edge of their seat? Boy oh boy let's dive right into this!

Another transfer done! There was a LOT of apprehension about the news for this next transfer—which is funny cause we also got a lot of information leaked to us through the mission's underground network of informants. Since our mission has been losing a lot more missionaries than it's gained, we fully expected that our area was going to shrink down to one companionship. Between the elders and sisters, who would they want to keep? The sisters, obviously. We were sure Elder Rhodes and I were going to make like the House of Israel and get scattered. Elder Rhodes had such high hopes to spend his last transfer in Rancho Peñasquitos.

The news? Imperial Beach is still vibing at full strength! Sister Ward's sticking around, and Hermana Archunde was on the verge of becoming one of the first sisters on bikes in the mission, but then...she got her visa! She's headed off to Peru. Oh, yeah, there are sisters on bikes now! We had someone spoil that news to us a week prior. I'm sure there are other missions where that's not a big deal, but it's quite the change in San Diego. They're starting off with a couple companionships who were consulted about it beforehand.

As for Elder Rhodes, he'll be dying in Imperial Beach! Fourth transfer in a row there. He'll be teaming up with Elder Provencio (Elder Meilstrup's missionary son!), and all I can say is if the members liked our companionship, they'll CERTAINLY like that one. As for me, well we'll get to that. :)

First, a couple things from the week. We got to do service cleaning up Libby's front yard one morning! The opportunity was simply marvelous. Weeding, raking, wading through cobwebs, and ripping up the remains of an old fence. We were privileged to have a lad and two lasses at our side. PLUS, there were ample fortunes of good luck all throughout. A ladybug lighted upon my back, and one of our trusty fellow workers found a lucky penny. Then again, two giant spiders went galavanting across my shoulder and up my leg, so maybe that cancels out the fortune... If anyone's an expert in omen mathematics, let me know.

My last member meal in the area was with a newer family in the ward. The father is the second nuclear engineer I've met in the area, and it's really fun making a huge deal about that occupation. Actually, a quick fun fact on that topic. Did you know that a nuclear reactor going critical is actually its desired state? Contrary to the movies, it's not "Everyone evacuate! The reactor's going critical!" Critical just means that the amount of neutrons being produced matches the amount being consumed. No excess energy, no deficit. "Everyone celebrate! The reactor's going critical!"

Baaack on topic. As we were on our way to this fantastic family's home, a couple in a golf cart nyoomed along the street, and with a "Hey! Elders!" they pulled up beside us. It turned out they were members from another stake, and they were visiting a place they own in Imperial Beach. We chatted with them a bit and then they offered us a ride (we had locked our bikes up at the pier). Our journey down the street accelerated significantly, and a couple minutes later, we discovered something positively charming. The couple lived in the exact same complex as the family we were visiting! Their units were only a couple doors apart. They offered to join us on the doorstep so they could introduce themselves, and it went over very well. That evening featured some awesome discussions, and sacred experiences were shared. It's always mind blowing when you have an experience with deep personal meaning and then later find yourself in a discussion where that experience relates perfectly with what someone else is talking about.

Time to disclose my fate! I'm transferring to a service mission! That's to say, I'm a service missionary as I write this! The word count on my name tag just went up by two. I've been enduring some health concerns over the past 9 months, and it's raised an interesting dilemma for me. When do you stick something out, and when do you make a change?

The fact that something isn't easy certainly isn't an indication that it's not worth diligently pursuing. In fact, usually that's an indication of the opposite. Elder Holland's message of persistence in his BYU talk "Remember Lot's Wife" helped me realize this during one of my lower points. I listened to it in my second transfer, and it helped me let go of the crushing home sickness I faced as I was still training. If we turn away from an endeavour at the first sign of discomfort, or even the second or third sign, we are dismissing what that experience has to offer and the potential wonders the future holds. Even when circumstances seem dire, the pain seems too much, and the purpose behind it seems feeble, the greatest growth and the greatest reward often come when you stick it out anyway.

Here's the rub though. Does this mean everything is to be put up with? Of course not! To use a trivial example, if my clothing is tattered and torn, I could use it as an opportunity to exercise patience and remind myself that looks aren't important...or I could just buy a new set of clothes. Yes, some supposed 'problems' simply need to be accepted for what they are, and one grows wiser by doing so, but others can simply be solved, and we SHOULD solve them as soon as we can.

I once had the pleasure of acquiring an eye infection. My eye was bloodshot, it constantly felt like it had an eyelash stuck in it, and half my vision went blurry. For a full week I put up with it, telling myself it would get better in time and that I needed to demonstrate grit. However, finally, I decided it would be a good idea to schedule a doctor's appointment. The doctor asked me how long it had been going on, I told her, and she exclaimed "Goodness you are patient!" I don't think she was referring to that as a virtue. I was given prescription eye drops, and within a few days, the infection cleared up.

Someone has reccomended a service mission to me before, and my adamant response was, "Hmmm.... NO. I was called to San Diego, and in San Diego I'll stay. To the end. There are people I have yet to find; lessons I have yet to teach. What's more, I haven't proven myself yet; to my family, my God, or myself. If things are hard now, that only shows that I'll be all the stronger in the end." And I think that was the right answer at the time. There are people I needed to meet over course of the past few months. Conversations I needed to have. Hopefully God positioned me to touch others' lives with equal meaning, whether I noticed it or not.

About a month ago, however, the prospect of transferring to a service mission surfaced again. Though prayerful about that matter, I knew God rarely presents us with a "right answer" when it comes to personal decisions like this. I resolved to come up with my own answer, and simply ask that the Lord direct me if His will was different. With all the resources available to me, the best answer I settled on was to press on teaching in San Diego. And...in a more distinctive way than I've experience before, I found myself corrected.

Some time after my decision, the thought of transferring kept returning to my mind. I consulted President Merritt about it, and he immediately told me he believed it was more than just a thought, as he and Sister Merritt had each been praying about it, and each independently felt a service mission would be right for me. So, there ya have it! With barely a week to process it, I transferred to the Salt Lake City South mission on the 23rd. I think my main takeaway is that though endurance is powerful, it is not always what God expects of us. Sometimes He simply requires our humility.

I bade a fond farewell to Myron (who has been revealing a strong testimony of the Spirit World and a strong faith in the Kingdoms of Glory!!), and we had a final lesson with Alexander (who has been reading the Book of Mormon on his own and has great reading comprehension!!). For my final lesson with Francisco, we brought our ward family history consultant in, reviewed family history and temple work, and got him set up with a FamilySearch account!

There are a few tragedies about not staying a full two years that I had to accept, among which was missing out on all the things departing missionaries get to do; departing testimonies, a departing temple visit, and a special lunch at the mission home where you are served President Merritt's legendary homemade "Grandpa's Ice Cream". Missionaries hear about that last treat on day 1 in the field. Guess what though? After our last lesson with Alexander, we got a call from President Merritt. Even though I don't technically count as a departing missionary, he personally invited Elder Rhodes and I to go to the mission home that evening so I could secretly partake of the fabled ice cream! I was super touched, and returning to the mission home gave me a nice feeling of closure as that was the first place I stayed at in the field.

Friday morning was a blur. I needed to be at the airport before transfers, so most of my goodbyes to fellow missionaries had to be said over messenger. Plenty of people to miss. Elder Meilstrup, Elder Tausinga, Elder Rogers, Sister Snow, Sister Ward, Hermana Garrett, Elder Cox, Elder Mickel, Elder Rhodes, Elder Larsen, Hermana Christian, Hermana Archunde, Elder Nielsen, *sigh* and so on. But, I have another "guess what"! This past transfer was Elder McLean's last, so we were on the same flight home! No parent should have to see their child die, but at least we went down together. We had a great time sitting in the terminal reminiscing over memories from Calexico.

The past week has been pretty bizarre, catching up with family, working on getting my service assignments together, and meeting my new mission leaders. The options and flexibility of service missions are incredible. I'm super excited about the opportunities! It's looking like my main assignment will be in the Global Services Department in Salt Lake City, where I could have a hand in various church-wide functions, such as managing referrals for missionaries in the field and working on the Gospel Library App. I was also told about a position as an editor in church publishing, which would be wild. I'll be touring both locations soon, so we'll see what happens! I've also got 3 other opportunities for the rest of my time! I'll be an ordinance worker in the Oquirrh Mountain Temple, I get to help out at the Road Home Shelter, and...get a load of this last one...actually, a little backstory first.

A few months ago we were sitting at ward council in Rancho Peñasquitos when we had a couple special visitors. The service mission leaders in San Diego were joining us to discuss potential service missionaries in the ward. While they were there, they also had a special presentation about a pilot program the church is coming out with this year. What is this program, you ask? Drumroll please...

They're beginning to combine service missions with proselytizing missions!

When I first heard that, I thought, "Wow, it's super cool that they're doing that", and now, turns out I'm going to be a part of it! haHA! Fate thought it could keep me from teaching, but it schemed in vain!

This seriously is such a tender mercy. One of the biggest griefs I was facing was the prospect of not being able to teach as a missionary, since that's truly what I love most about this calling. But, as it happens, teaching opportunities will be plentiful! Talk about having your cake and eating it too XD.

More specifically, the mixing of the missions means: *clears throat pompously*
•Instead of having separate mission leaders between service and proselytizing, the service mission leaders now fall under the mission president, so we all work as one unit.
•Service missionaries get to attend Zone Conferences!
•The organizational structure of service missions is shifting to match proselytizing missions (districts and zones instead of just districts).
•Service missionaries can join a companionship of proselytizing missionaries to form a trio, or go on splits with them. Sounds like this encompasses both teaching and finding, and it can be as often as we choose!

I can't wait to dive right in once I finish location tours and interviews! They've also assigned me to be district leader, so they're not shy about throwing the new guy under the bus. XD

Bishop Rider's family just happened to be visiting Utah the same weekend I returned, so my parents and I set up a time to meet up with them. They were down in Saratoga Springs to attend the temple open house, so we had breakfast with them there at Denny's and I got to share one last message with them (the Rider's refer to our lessons as "Snippets" cause they love it when we include videos in them).

Mmkay, I had a lengthy fancy shmancy ultra spiritual thought to end off with, but the email length has kept up its habit of getting away from me, so I'll save that for a future week. Instead I'll write out a quick blurb I shared this past Sunday.

Everyone's testimony is unique. Each has its own strengths and intricacies. Each has points of certainty here and points of faith there. Our differing experiences entail this. What's cool is when you realize that knowing something, believing something, and merely desiring to believe in something aren't all that different in God's eyes (Alma 32:27). They all look heavenward. And, if anything, God values our uncertain decisions more than our certain ones (John 20:29, Alma 32:16, 3 Nephi 12:2). Where do you lean upon experience that has been graciously given to you, and where do you lean upon faith?

When we know something, that is a gift from God. When we believe something, that is our gift to God.

God be with you,
Elder Tolman
https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1atRRk6LwTf1jSj2UO4pq3NOwqtxtzbVSTa ta for now San Diego!

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1P87F6KwFNbOvrb6IL4k5l50qodCeNPHTOutside the mission home for departing ice cream.

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1CQX51M65e_3ceu_Kx-LDcQttqgek_ZgdFinal district lunch at Chili's.

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=13na7FJrc0-MUAQTifuxQIvh6hcpph0MoWith Elder McLean at the airport!


https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1oyM5yiV9qf0MjoAYKCnvVAYqMR9WjG4cService at Libby's.


https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=19y0uB4REKbma_jkDvU51JPsaOXrgPHiKA much sooner welcome than I was expecting :)

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1HhyyjDEnMs9kv6oyLSRFJKKqpi-6bKV3Weekly cat photo. Oh hey, I know this one!

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1LKrTuDFoFFP9JHN0xEZCAEXK8gmdCxEu
After breakfast with the Riders.