Here is my lovely wife, teaching our new Family History Consultant how to get into FamilySearch.org. We are sitting at a McDonald's, in the middle of a large mall, using their free wi-fi service. It may have been free, but it took forever to get into the program. While they worked, I had a cheeseburger and chicken nuggets. Linda looks too interested at this point. Our little Family History Consultant is a 13 year old in our Chinese/English Branch in JB. We were at least able to communicate since she spoke good English from her schooling.
This week, I tried my own stir/fry. We went to our favorite veggie and meat store, Jusco. It has great vegetables and fruits and a nice selection of meats. We are always able to get real beef there, which when cooked, actually turns brown. The Malaysian beef stays red and will not brown up.
Here are the fresh prawns that I bought. You first have to twist off their heads, then you carefully pull off the tail and make sure you take the long vein with it. It has all the "poop" inside of it. Then you have to get the hard shell off the large tail section and you finally have your prawn ready to put in the stir/fry. It was great.
I added some peppers, onions, pea pods, mushrooms, broccoli and cauliflower in some pure olive oil, then the prawns turn orange and look like shrimp and then I mixed in oyster sauce. It was yummy, but the oyster sauce was too salty tasting. I'll have to go on line and figure the oyster sauce part for next time.
Here is a picture of 2 of our 3 districts in our zone. We have 10 elders locally and 4 more up in Melacca, about 2 1/2 hours north of us. Elder Crum next to me, Elder Harr next to Linda, Elder Earl, Jin, Robins, Takin, Thatcher and Cook in front and Fabiano and McCarthy standing.
We really love these kids and get very close to them. Elder Cook is a great young missionary who has been in our area for the past 3 transfers. We've gotten pretty close to him.
The next 2 pictures are this unique phenomenon
that happens each year in May. We have hundreds of these moth/butterfly creatures everywhere. The white pointy part is really the back end of their tails. In our little apartment complex, there are hundreds of them flying around the inside courtyard where the elevators are. They are on all the walls and floors and trees and just about everywhere.
Interestingly, they only live a short time, laying their eggs and then dying. You see their bodies laying all over the place. When you come out of the apartment, they startle you when they all take off flying and hit you in the face and fly off. You try to scan your key card to let you out of the building and they are sitting on the key pad and on the walls and in the plants and anywhere they decide to land. We came home the other night and lots of dead bodies were lying all around the front entrance to our apartment.
We had to take a picture of this site, which happens up in Masai in a parking lot every Saturday evening. It looks exactly like "Halloween Trunk or Treat", which we do back home in America, but hundreds of cars line up in a row and open up their trunks and sell their items from the back of their cars. Most of the cars are selling hand woven dresses and clothing items. We are standing up on the side of a large hill, where the McDonalds, Burger King and SubWay Sandwich places are. We eat at one of them every Sat. night before we teach Seminary.
Our final picture for this week is the monthly "birthday celebration" that the Masai Branch does. At both branches, on the 4th Sunday after church, we have "Linger Longer". Everyone brings their favorite dish, (which they made sometime that morning and then we eat everything cold) and we all get together and eat a meal. We always bring something that is already cold, like brownies or pineapple upside down cake or muffins or cookies. One time, we actually brought some macaroni salad, which we kept in the fridge. We are always amazed that we don't get sick. All food in Masai is served stone cold. You get used to it. Anyone who had a birthday in the month of May, which is my beautiful wife, gets to come up and is sung to and then they cut the cakes that the branch purchases. Sister Norma is in red by Linda and Sister Barbara is in blue. The three make up the District Relief Society Presidency. Elder Crum had a birthday also in May, and little Eddie, always gets in line first for a piece of cake. His birthday must be every month.
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