~ Highlight of the Day: Paying 10 shekels to drive home from the Israeli Museum instead of walking ~
(best idea yet)
(best idea yet)
Guys. This is post #100. How crazy is that?! And it's going to be a pretty good one.
On Saturday President Monson announced that they are lowering the minimum age for missionaries to 18 years old for young men, and 19 years old for young women. The reaction in the auditorium where I was watching it (with all the other JC students) was crazy. It's definitely been some serious food for thought for the last day or so!
First of all, it's not going to influence if/when I serve a *mission. I'm going to be 21 this January anyway, and I'd already decided I wasn't going till the end of the summer if I did end up going. So my excitement stems from the amazing opportunities that have now opened up for so many of the people around me.
That being said, , if I do go I'll be going with people who are younger than me (not bad, just different), I'll be in the MTC (Missionary Training Center) for a shorter time, and the social scene at BYU is going to change drastically.
*a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints includes dedicating 18-24 months to service and spreading the gospel. Young men go for 2 years, young women go for 1&1/2. We send our papers in to Church headquarters and are then assigned a mission based on Divine revelation and the specific needs of the Church. It could be in the United States, it could be out of the country. It could be English Speaking, it could be Foreign Speaking. The minimum age was previously 19 for men and 21 for women, so this change is very exciting to people who've been waiting and counting down the days till they can turn their papers in. . .
Anyway, cool stuff. Church history in the making :)
How about pictures:
Outside Hezekiah's tunnel, in the water :)
On the steps of the pool where the blind man in John chapter 9 washed the clay from his eyes
My first bite of Guava. I ate the whole thing and still couldn't decide if I liked it. . .
This is some tall grass (like taller-than-the-ceiling-tall) that I'm going to identify someday
Temple Mount, cool arches.
Awesome sundial on the cool arches
Coin from some Disney original movie I saw ages ago. It grants this kid some wish that changes everything and then he has to spend the rest of the movie finding the coin again and wishing it all back.Can't tell you what it was called. . . just that this coin was in it!
The road to Jericho from Jerusalem. We walked along the top of a ridge above it
since we didn't have time to go down to the bottom, though that would have been awesome :)
since we didn't have time to go down to the bottom, though that would have been awesome :)
A TON of cats. They're everywhere, all the time. Some look friendly and adorable,
others could probably give you a myriad of diseases just by looking at you.
Unfortunately they all have flees, and cannot be touched safely.
others could probably give you a myriad of diseases just by looking at you.
Unfortunately they all have flees, and cannot be touched safely.
The t-shirt design (in it's early stages) that may or may not used for
our Fall 2012 Jerusalem Center shirt. . .
our Fall 2012 Jerusalem Center shirt. . .
a beautifully 'turtled' backpack :)
And for those of you who've never heard of turtling (or burrito-ing, as my roommate called it), you simply take everything out of the backpack, turn it inside out, put everything back in, and zip it up! It's great because it's harmless (mostly), way inconvenient, and super noticeable :)
How's that for a random order of things and events! Sorry. . . and happy 100th post!
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