Well just think you got to sit in the Lord's house for 2 
hours- in the most holy and sacred place in the world! Is not that 
fantastic? I feel it is fantastic! I would have loved that. I miss 
the temple oh so much! It's so hard to understand how great temples are until 
you are in a country where there is not a temple close at all. You have 
to fly there and the average member cannot afford to even think about 
going. I am thinking of a member in the ghumps area who I love very much. She may 
never have a chance to go to the temple in Hong Kong because she 
collects garbage for a living. She is one of the most humble people I 
have ever met. She has so much faith in God, it's not even funny. She is 
an awesome example to me.Even when her husband kicked her out
 of the house for helping the elders, she did not care. She continued to 
help us, even at the risk of her family's life and what not, she put her 
trust in God and things happened that made it possible for her to 
continue going to church. It's fantastic! Do what is right and let the 
consequences follow. It is a great phrase to live by. God always makes 
thing happen to help us grow.
Elder Richard G. Scott said:
"Your
 decisions are like switch points on a railroad system. They determine 
where you will end up in life. When you consistently make the right 
choices, you are the happiest, receive the greatest personal growth, and
 have the most productive life. When you make the wrong choices, you may
 find yourself at an entirely different destination than you want. While
 there is the process of repentance to come back, it is often painful 
and sometimes leaves permanent physical scars that cannot be cured as 
well as your spirit can.
At
 one time I worked on the immediate staff of a very hardworking, 
demanding, misunderstood man who became the father of the nuclear navy 
that provided great protection for the United States at a critical time 
in world conditions. His name is Hyman Rickover. I have great respect 
for him. After 11 years in that service, I received a call from the 
First Presidency to preside over a mission. I knew I would have to tell 
Admiral Rickover immediately. As I explained the call and that it would 
mean I would have to quit my job, he became rather excited. He said some
 unrepeatable things, broke the paper tray on his desk, and in the 
comments that followed, clearly established two points: “Scott, what you
 are doing in this defense program is so vital that it will take a year 
to replace you, so you can’t go. Second, if you do go, you are a traitor
 to your country.”
I said, “I can train my replacement in the two remaining months, and there won’t be any risk to the country.”
There
 was more conversation, and he finally said, “I never will talk to you 
again. I don’t want to see you again. You are finished, not only here, 
but don’t ever plan to work in the nuclear field again.”
I
 responded, “Admiral, you can bar me from the office, but unless you 
prevent me, I am going to turn this assignment over to another 
individual.”
He asked, “What’s the name of the man who wants you?”
I told him, “President David O. McKay.”
He added, “If that’s the way Mormons act, I don’t want any of them working for me.”
I
 knew he would try to call President McKay (1873–1970), who was ill, and
 that conversation would benefit no one. I also knew that in the Idaho 
Falls area there were many members of the Church whose families depended
 upon their working in our program. I didn’t want to cause them harm. I 
also knew that I had been called by the Lord. I didn’t know what to do. 
Then, the words of the song we sang tonight began to run through my 
mind: “Do what is right; let the consequence follow” (Hymns, number
 237). While I had never contacted a General Authority in my life, I had
 been interviewed by Elder Harold B. Lee (1899–1973) of the Quorum of 
the Twelve Apostles, so I had a feeling to call him. I explained that 
the admiral would try to call President McKay and would make some 
negative comments, but everything was all right and I would be able to 
accept my call. While doing that, my heart kept saying, “Is this going 
to turn out all right or will somebody be innocently hurt who depends on
 our program for livelihood?” The song would come back: “Do what is 
right; let the consequence follow.” True to his word, the admiral ceased
 to speak to me. When critical decisions had to be made, he would send a
 messenger or I would communicate through a third party. We accomplished
 the changeover.
On
 my last day in the office I asked for an appointment with him, and his 
secretary gasped. I went with a copy of the Book of Mormon in my hand. 
He looked at me and said, “Sit down, Scott. What do you have? I have 
tried every way I can to force you to change. What is it you have?”
There followed a very interesting, quiet conversation. There was more listening this time. He said he would read the Book of Mormon.
 Then something I never thought would occur happened. He added, “When 
you come back from the mission, I want you to call me. There will be a 
job for you.” 
You will have challenges and hard decisions to make throughout your life. Be determined now to
 always do what is right and let the consequence follow. The consequence
 will always be for your best good. You will learn that it is easiest 
over the long run to stand for what is right and do the difficult thing 
to begin with. Once you take that position, following through is not too
 hard. An individual who cuts corners and justifies some departure from 
true standards, for whatever reason, finds that seeds are planted that 
produce problems later. Those problems are far more difficult to 
overcome than taking a correct stand initially.
Do
 what is right even though it seems you will be alone in so doing, that 
you are going to lose friends, that you will be criticized. What you 
will find is that by doing what is right, after a period of testing, the
 finest friends will be discovered and you can mutually support each 
other in your resolve to be obedient to all of the commandments of the 
Lord. I have never been sorry on any occasion that I stood for what was 
right even against severe criticism. You will learn that truth. You will
 also discover that when you have taken a determined stand for right, 
when you have established personal standards and made covenants to keep 
them, when temptations come and you act according to your standards, you
 will be reinforced and given strength beyond your own capacity, if that
 is needed. Difficulty comes when you enter the battle of temptation 
without a fixed plan. That is what Satan desires, for then you are ripe 
for defeat."
This
 is the Lord's work. The devil is as real as you and I. He wants us to 
fail in all our aspires. He hates us and knows he is wrong and he will 
loose in the end. But he is going to try and take down as many of the 
elect people he can, for he knows that if he wins he destroys a family. 
DON'T EVER GIVE UP, NO MATTER WHAT COMES OUR WAY!
This
 past week I spent some time with the assistants to the president and I was paired up with a Australian elder who is going home very soon. One thing he 
said to me stuck with me. He said," I don't want to finish a mission, I want  to finish being a missionary. Because just finishing a mission means 
you did not grow and you are going back home not changed at all."
I also remember him saying during his last testimony that everyone gives at 
their last zone conference. He said this is not the end. The mission 
does not end when  you go home . You are a forever missionary and its' 
going to be great!
Oh
 man, my time in this great country has sailed by so fast. I have 3 
months and 16 days left. That's such a short time. I have 2 transfers left
 that is nothing. I
 have gotten way good at bowling. So let's go when I come home! Favorite Thai
treat would be the bread that tastes like a scone. It is covered in corn 
flakes.... so good. Another favorite Thai food is papaya salad that has 10 peppers 
in it and the thing called crying tiger yum or sunfries pork SOO GOOD!