Hey, everybody!
So guess what? I'm on a train. :D That's right, I'm emailing while traveling at 40 or 50 miles an hour! Cool huh? There's a train that goes from our city to Seoul in 6 hours and 20 minutes or something like that, and it goes through all the mountains and cities and things. I got some great pictures for sure. I also met a guy who was slightly drunk and made friends with him. :D He was going to Taebaek, the area widely regarded as the worst area in our mission because it only has 50,000 people and they have literally ALL talked to the missionaries before. Sure enough, the guy I talked to had talked to them twice before. He was coming back from a big hospital in Gangneung because of an accident at work that hurt his leg. His wife died a while ago, and he has two high school kids, a boy and girl. He showed me pictures and he was really proud of them. :D He actually drives a train too, and he was really proud of how Korea is one of only three countries in the world that does switchbacks on threir railroads. Our train stopped and started moving backwards, and he interrupted a conversation I was having with someone else and said, "Dean--we're supposed to be going that way [forward], right? Now we're going backward. Do you know why? Switchbacks." It was pretty funny. I didn't tell him that the three countries (Korea, Switzerland, and Japan) were the only ones with mountains that made them have to have switchbacks in the first place, though. :D I gave him a Book of Mormon, and he accepted it really well. He invited me to come stay with him so he could show me Taebaek, but I had to turn it down unfortunately.
Our baptism with Hwang Gi Seok got postponed because he smoked last week. We were really disappointed. However, he's confident he can stop smoking and willing to do it, so we're not worried.
One cool miracle that happened this week was that this way old guy came to church and introduced himself as a member that was baptized in the 90's in a place about 3 hours away, but he stopped coming to church when that ward got shut down. But he moved down to Gangneung, and now he's back at church. We were really excited about that. It doesn't happen every day here.
So my amazing grandma sent me a football in a package, and now me and Elder Larson play football every morning. I'm learning to run routes and also to throw them, and it's way fun. I don't think I have a career in the NFL, but it's way fun nonetheless. :D
One funny thing that happened was on Sunday. Me and Elder Larson were leaving the church after Ward Choir practice, and one of the little girls followed us outside. She's maybe 3, and she is definitely the cutest little girl I have ever met. Hands down. To sum up her personality, as one missionary that served here put it, "Her hobbies are being adorable and crying." We definitely proved that on Sunday, because as we were pulling out on our bikes she started to climb up on another one in the parking lot. If we had left her there she would have fallen and died or something, so we tried to get her to go inside, but as everyone knows, reasoning with a 3 year old will almost never work. So we just tipped the bikes over instead. :D She pulled the puppy dog eyes on my companion, and it almost worked, but I convinced him to walk away, and when she saw that she started crying at the top of her lungs. We were going to just leave her, but all the passerby were looking at us like we were child abusers, so we just picked her up and brought her inside. The ward members know her well, so they took her with a look of "here we go again..." It was way funny. :D
The food of the week is aloe. It comes in a drink here, which tastes similar to grape juice, only you have to chew it a little. I love it.
:D I hope you have a good week, You are all awesome!
Elder Matt Dean