To be honest, the mission was hard.
To be honest, I’m overjoyed to be back.
To be honest, I don’t know if I could do something like that
again.
To be honest, while I want to always serve my Savior with
all my heart, sometimes I want to do it in my own way, at my own pace.
Sometimes my way is not the mission’s way. Not my district
leader’s way. Not my companion’s way. It’s never against Heavenly Father’s way
– but it also never forces me to be someone I’m not.
The thing with the mission field is that you’re constantly
surrounded by people who expect you to act a certain way. Be a certain person.
From random people you tract into who are not afraid of speaking their opinion
of what you’re doing and how you’re doing it, to mission leaders who it sometimes
seems are merely there to remind you how low your numbers are or the many
aspects of being a missionary that you haven’t quite perfected yet, to
companions whom you can never quite convince of the strengths that do exist
deep down inside you – always always it seems that there is someone who is not
quite satisfied with all your physically emotionally mentally demanding
efforts.
And sometimes you worry that that someone is God Himself. Are
you sure you’re doing your best? You notice all the problems in this area, this
teaching situation, this companionship – why haven’t you fixed them yet? Why
can’t you do things right? And always always you feel the pressure, the
infinitely high expectations, emanating from your district leader your fellow
district members the ward members – from everyone – everyone, including
yourself.
I could give specific examples of missionaries that I love
and respect putting what I thought was unfair pressure on me to be someone I’m
not – but I won’t, because that would be me putting pressure on them to be
perfect missionaries, perfect leaders, and I don’t expect that from them. At
least, not anymore. You see, on the mission I realized: Everyone needs to know
that they have room to make mistakes, permission to speak even when they’re not
sure that what they have to say will come out perfectly, permission to act like
someone different than the stereotype, permission to still be in the middle of
the learning and growing process. There were transfers where I felt that if I sneezed
wrong in front of an investigator, my companion would be on my case – and I’ve
forgiven those companions since then because I understand that they too were experiencing
intense growing pains. But during those transfers, I had no room to breathe, no
room to cry, no room to be myself – because who I am is so far from perfection.
When I’m myself, I make mistake after mistake and sometimes, with a lot of
unconditional love from others and even more determination from myself,
gradually I begin to make fewer and fewer mistakes, until mistakes are the exception
rather than the norm. That’s where we all want to be. But none of us start out
that way. And to be able to progress, we need to know that it’s okay to make
mistakes along the way. When we’re constantly being reminded that what we’re
doing is so far from perfection, discouragement sets in. We freeze up. What’s
the point of going on if what I do is never good enough anyway?
While we do need to know what we’re doing wrong in order to
make it better, we also need to know that we can mess up and still be loved. Mistakes
are vital part of life. They’re an essential part of Heavenly Father’s plan for
us. He gave us agency and the Light of Christ but no practical experience of
how to use those two tools. And then he made us all unique, so that what works
for one person may not work for another. Of course he doesn’t expect us to go
through life without making a few mistakes along the way! Exploring, seeing
what works and what doesn’t, learning from experience and knowing that it’s
okay that you don’t have everything figured out right away, this is what makes
life rewarding. This is what leads to growth. Each of us needs permission to be
imperfect, and we need to give each other that same permission as well. Otherwise,
self-esteem plummets and it’s hard to convince yourself to do something new.
You’ll probably fail at it anyway, so what’s the point? When we have
unrealistic expectations for others, then instead of helping them grow, we’re
cutting them down, hindering their growth. We need to look at people the way
the Savior does – look into their hearts, see their strengths, what makes them
them, and work from there to encourage them to f
flourish in a way that’s true to
them.
And we need to treat ourselves the same way. Don’t have as
many baptismal dates as the next companionship over? As good of grades as your
classmate? As many dates as your roommate? As spotless a house as your
next-door neighbor? How hard are you trying, how far are you progressing? Those
things matter more to Heavenly Father than the outward results. The Savior’s
life, from the outside, looked a failure: born in a stable, raised a simple
carpenter, hated and mocked and eventually killed even though He claimed to be
a God – He did not come to earth to impress the world with His power, but to
teach us forgiveness and healing and love. To teach us that, just as He never
does anything to impress us but merely to show us of His love, so to we need
never do anything to impress Him, but merely to convince Him that He can be as
sure of our love as we are sure of His. If Heavenly Father wanted us to make
perfect choices all the time, He would have gone with Satan’s plan. But He
believes in freedom, and with that freedom comes mercy and patience and room
for experimentation and growth. And I am grateful for a church and a gospel that
emphasizes sincerity and love and growth over anything else this world has to
offer.

