Thursday, March 27, 2014

March 7th - Time Capsules and Speeches

This gathering was awesome!  Altogether, I think 7 people came.  Please forgive me if I missed someone!  I'm just now catching up on the posts and it's been three weeks.  :)

Lisa was the first to come again (thank you Lisa!).  Earlier in the week I had blown eggs by poking a tiny hole in both ends of an egg and blowing on one end so the yoke and the white come out the other end.  They had dried on the inside by then so now we painted them with acrylic paints.  By then more people had shown up, among them Kaylee and Aria, and they painted their eggs, too.

While we waited for the eggs to dry, we painted little votive jars with different designs like stripes and polkadots and we put them on wax paper on a cookie sheet.  One or two more people showed up around then and we started folding origami hearts.  When those were done, we opened them back up and (here's where the "time capsule" part of this activity comes in) we wrote notes on them to our future husbands.  Then we wrote notes to our future selves.  Around that time, most of the painted eggs had dried, so I instructed everyone to try and roll up their notes to their future selves (not husbands) and put them into the eggs through one of the holes.  That kind of worked.  Some of the holes were too small, since I didn't test them beforehand.  But we just rolled up the paper super tightly and got our notes in.  Lisa actually wrote a whole page's worth of "letter."  When she tried to get her paper into the egg, she accidentally poked a whole in the other end.  Oops!

Everyone started asking, "When do we get to open these?"  Without thinking very hard, I replied happily, "Well, you can open them when you're married.  Or if you're not married in ten years, you can open them then!"  I had gotten the idea from a bucket-list item, "Write a letter to myself and open it in ten years," so that's what I was thinking at the time.

Kaylee said, "But what if I really am not married ten years from now?  Will I just sit my cat down in my lap and read the future husband note to them?"  She posed all officially and pretended to read it, "'Dear Future Husband, I love you soooo much!'"  Everyone cracked up.  "And what about the letter to myself?" she continued.  "'Dear Future Me, I'm so glad you got married!  Congrats!'"  Then she mimicked her future self saying, "'Well, so much for that!'" and threw her imaginary paper onto her lap.  Everyone laughed.

I was a little flustered but I laughed too and said, "Well... hopefully you'll just be married by then!" and everyone laughed again.

Then Lisa remembered our polkadot votives.  I had shown the instructions to everyone earlier so they got an idea of how to do them.  Now she reminded me that I was supposed to put them in the oven.  (I don't know why the instructions said to do that––they just did.)  I checked the instructions again, preheated the oven and such, then put them in, wax paper and all, at the right time and everything.

A few minutes later, something smelled like smoke.  I hurried over to the oven, thinking of the jars, and when I opened it, sure enough, a cloud of smoke rushed past my face.  I quickly took them out.  None of them had broken, nothing tragic had happened.  Except now the house was smokey, so I rushed to open a few windows and doors.

A few minutes later I was trying to figure out what had gone wrong.  Aria thought it might be the wax paper, maybe it was on the wrong side or something.  I still don't know for sure.  But they're totally fine now.  Whew!!  All I have to do is give them to everyone, since they were still pretty warm when it was time to go.

Kate and Shaylee had showed up towards the end because of school so I told them what we were doing.  We didn't have any more votive jars or eggs though (because only five people had RSVP-ed), so we gave Kate one of our mason jars to decorate and then her and Shaylee wrote letters to their future selves.

After a few minutes and everyone had been introduced, I said, "Okay, I'm going to give a speech now.  I wrote this and memorized it in the past few weeks.  Lisa's heard it but it's been improved since then."  And it had been.  "Alright," I said with an apprehensive smile, "Here goes."

"Welcome to Noble Youth!  You read about it in the email––Noble Youth is where we can come together and just get to know each other, gain new skills, learn from each other, and live our standards together.  I hope it can be a place where we can love each other, trust each other, confide in each other, and not be afraid to be ourselves.  A while ago, I kind of lost track of myself and what my personality is, who Amory is.  I’ve been trying to get back to being who that person is and I’ve been successful so far but I had this vision for a place where I could be myself and where I could help everyone be themselves and not have to worry about what other people think, like I did.  Everyone should be themself no matter what.  So, that’s my goal.

"I thought about naming this Noble Women or something like that, since we’re all girls, but I thought it would be fun to have some times where the young men are invited; I mean, we could watch chick-flicks together, do service projects together, and that would be amazingly fun!  So, I left it Noble Youth.  Plus, I just thought it sounded cool!  :)

"I really hope that we can have a ton of fun as we do things that the Lord would have us do.  I invited each of you because I felt that I could trust you with this vision of not only becoming great people but becoming noble people, Noble Youth.  I’m very glad that everyone here is interested in supporting that and I’m also very grateful that it’s working out.  I think this will be good for each of us, not just me.  So thank you, very much, for coming."

Everyone thought it was great.  Truthfully, it was only half of a page, it wasn't worded or organized all that well, and it wasn't memorized completely.  But I think the thing that everyone liked about it was the feeling behind it.  It was written from my heart.  That's what counted.

I learned so many lessons this time:
1.  Always plan for more people than you expect because sometimes they don't/can't RSVP or they don't know whether they can come until last-minute.
2.  Having every element of your supplies helps a lot.
3.  Always consult the mother before put oddities in the oven.
4.  Keep the conversation going––it helps people get to know each other better and it's good for leadership, speaking, and conversational skills combined.
5.  Always introduce everyone to each other.
6.  Test everything.
7.  Be cheery and confident––it helps create a more relaxed atmosphere.
8.  When you give a speech and mess up in front of your friends who don't know what it looks like to mess up, never you fear––they won't notice.  Just keep going.

The activity was great, the people were great, and the turn-out was awesome!  It's so encouraging when you invite more people and then they really start coming.  :D

Amory

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

February 21st - Indexing

Altogether, 2 people came to the activity.  Lisa came first and we just decided to start.  I gotta tell ya, indexing is a great way to get to know people!  The past few times I've done it, I learned not just the names of the people on the paper but I learned so much about my fellow indexers.  We think; we joke and laugh; and it's so interesting to hear what everyone else comes up with when they're trying to figure out what something says.  We had a lot of fun together and made a ton of progress for one day.  And when Aria came, the fun doubled.  "One plus one is three," right?  That kinda works...  :)

We indexed quite a few pages together.  It was a lot of fun to compare names and decipher what the photocopied, faded, messy cursive said.  It was also charmingly reminiscent of the past to get a glimpse of history through such characteristic, genuine documents.

At the end, we relaxed.  We took a Frozen quiz: Which Frozen Character Are You?  That was so fun and interesting!  When Lisa's mom came, she took the quiz too.  We laughed about all the weird questions that were asked.  It was very entertaining.

I loved how, even though it seemed like just a fun activity, the indexing we did was helping people.  It was part of "hastening the work," as the prophets have told us we should do.  I hope more and more people do it too, because that thought gave me a fulfilling joy and satisfaction that I've carried with me ever since.

Amory

Sunday, March 9, 2014

February 7th - Heart Party

To celebrate Valentine's Day, we had a "heart party."  Altogether, 4 people came.  To start, we had an opening song, a prayer, and a discussion.  The topic was, "How do you show more love to your siblings when you can’t stand them or when they’re acting annoying and you just don’t know what to do?" We got some great input there.

I also gave a miniature speech about Noble Youth itself and I'll put that up on one of the following posts.

For the first part of the activity we decorated cookies and then had hot chocolate.  That was... too much sugar.  But we had a good time.  :)  Then we cut out a whole bunch of hearts and wrote little notes on them.  We got creative, too, and cut out all kinds of random shapes.  Lisa decided that she preferred internal organs besides hearts on Valentine's Day.

Lisa's intestine - "My bowels are full of compassion (*and love) for you!"



Lisa's stomach - "A stomach full of appreciation."



Lisa's negative space hearts.



Faith got creative too.  She made all kinds of sarcastic and humorous little things.  And lots of just random things.  Here are just two samples.

Faith's dumpling lady.



Faith's "door knob heart."



Jay decided that she would follow in Faith and Lisa's footsteps.  She made some funny valentines, some really random ones, and also cut out an internal organ––except she decided that she wanted to get real and she actually drew and cut out an authentic heart.  I thought that was pretty much awesome.

Jay's real heart.



And Jay's worm.




We heart-attacked Caden's door.  Indigo showed up right as we were finishing taping everything up and then we called Caden down.  Hiding in the other room, Lisa stuck her arm out and filmed his reaction.  Then we came out and he chuckled and said, "You know I'm never going to take this off, right?"  All of us laughed.  :)

We finished the day by cleaning up and just chatting.  The day had been a learning experience for me about how to lead a group well and was probably a learning experience for everyone else, too, as we got to know each other better.  I learned a lot about how to conduct a meeting (this first one was a lot like Sunday School...  :-/) and I learned things I can do to make the gathering interesting, too.  And it seemed that everyone had a lot of fun!

So––first Noble Youth gathering evaluation?  Success!

Amory