Hi! I think it's Christmas evening for almost everyone this email is going to, so 메리 크리스마스! That's merry christmas in Korean. My Christmas happened yesterday, and it was so good. I'll start from last Thursday: we had a Mission Conference from 9 to 3, and then P-day from 3 to 9. So awesome. :D At the conference, our Mission President, Lee Yong Hwan (Lee is the surname) spoke about Christ and His mission, and how that ties into the work that we do. Also something I learned that was really deep came from listening to one of the missionaries who is going home next week. He is a professional-level piano player, and he said that one of the comments that gets made all the time in music is whether or not somebody plays with feeling. You can practice for hours to be able to get the technical stuff down with any intstrument, and that results in people being able to play crazy-hard pieces perfectly. But then they have no heart in them. You have to play music with feeling, and the same goes for missionary work. you can concentrate on numbers of lessons taught, how well you proselyte, etc all you want, but if your heart's not in it, it's really not what it's supposed to be. I realized that in the first half of my mission, I was concentrating just on all the technical stuff, and my heart wasn't really in it. That's something I want to work on from now on. After the speeches, all the zones in our mission (a zone is a unit of missionaries with about 16-20 people or so) came up and did a skit and musical performances. Our zones' skit was a fake district meeting where we did impersonations of some of the funnier missionaries in our mission, and it was so funny. I'm pretty sure people laughed the most at ours. :D I'd explain all the jokes in it, but you don't know any of the missionaries, so it's kinda pointless. Rest assured, however, that ours was the best. :D The other skits included one about Harry Potter becoming a missionary and converting a 전도사 (other church's missionaries) named Voldemort; a bunch of missionaries playing a board game in real life that involves Old West style shootouts; and just funny skits about hard things or awkward things or fun things about missionary work. It was awesome. We have some real musical talent in our mission, let me tell you! It was a great conference overall. Then after the conference we went to a nice restaurant and partied and stuff till we had to go home.
Then on Friday, our local church group had a party. I played solos on the trumpet, which was awesome, and I played them almost perfectly and with feeling. My companion got a video of me, and maybe I can send it home somehow. The Christmas party involved just a lot of musical performances and dances; the sister missionaries that work in our same area had been doing a dance class with the members that we participated in, and we got up to do our dance and we completely botched it. It was awesome! It was just a really fun party. Right before we had to leave they had one of the members come out dressed up as Santa Claus, and about 5 seconds later one of the little kids that had gathered around him said in Korean, "Hey, you're not santa, you're Park Jin Woo!" It was really funny. I got lots of vidoes from that and I'll try to send those home too.
Then on Christmas, me and my companion made bacon and eggs (not a common breakfast in Korea) before going to church. Our toaster handle doesn't stay down on its own, so we have to put a wire on it to hold it down while the bread toasts; I put some in and promptly forgot about it. A few minutes later I was wondering why there was so much smoke in the room, and then I realized that all the smoke was coming from our toaster, not the stove, so I had to run over and get the blackened cinders out before they lit on fire. :D But it was ok, I didn't burn the house down. We went to church and handed out the cookies we had made the previous night, and had our musical Sacrament meeting. Then we went to the Stake center (a larger unit that multiple wards meet in) and had a Christmas concert with the whole stake. I was in the ward choir, and I also played the trumpet with the choir for a couple songs. It was such a good night. I felt the Spirit so strong as we were singing up on that stage. I may be really, really far from my earthly family here in Korea, but I felt much closer to Christ than I ever have before yesterday. I'm here doing His work the best that I can, and He isn't leaving me alone.
The best part of the night was when we went to a subway station with about 15 other missionaries and sang carols! There was a drunk guy that apparently loved the attention, because he was jumping around and trying to sing and just being ridiculous while we were singing. He wasn't violent, just drunk. He did attract a lot of passerby, though; at some points there was a considerable crowd watching us. It was so fun just to stand there and sing. I sang "거룩한 밤" ( O Holy Night) as a solo while everyone else hummed, and it was so awesome. Then we went home for the night. So all in all, I had a good Christmas, and got great presents from my family, and I felt the love of God very strongly. What more could I ask for other than being home for it? But in a way, I felt like I was home to some degree. Anyway, my Christmas was good, and I hope all of yours was too. :D Merry Christmas!
Elder Matt Dean