As much as it would make sense to write about ministering before writing about interviews specifically, this is how things are coming to mind.
I think about ministering a lot.
That was probably true before being called to the presidency, but now it comes up a lot more.
That is partly due to the ministering interviews. We are supposed to talk to the ministering sisters in our district quarterly.
That's a lot.
In theory, there are two sisters in a companionship, and you only need to talk to one of them each time. Based on that, you could be talking to each person twice a year, which sounds more reasonable.
In reality, a lot of women don't have a companion, or they are ministering with their teenage daughter.
In reality, as hard as it can be to try and get a hold of everyone, and as quickly as time passes by, I really enjoy these conversations. I am getting to know the women in my district better and there is joy in that.
We recently updated the routes, so this quarter I am trying to make sure everyone knows about the changes; next quarter can be about seeing how those changes have been working out.
Sneaky, huh?
Part of that is that this quarter I am trying to talk to everyone, not just one out of each companionship.
It often ends up that I am running late, doing interviews are happening in the last month of the quarter. Last month, I talked to most of my sisters in September. We got the changes in October and there I was coming around again.
In September, it occurred to me to ask, "Do you feel ministered to?"
Normally we are asking about how ministering is going. Are there any needs? Any concerns?
I thought that particular question might make people think differently.
One of the most interesting things were that a lot of people said "no", but when I told them who their ministering sisters were they said "yes".
A real issue that we have is that a lot of people feel like they are ministering as they say "hello" and things like that, but the person on the receiving end is not perceiving it as ministering.
An important part of that is that there are people who feel cared for by other people; we want that!
I hope I did not shatter anyone, causing them to think that the attention that they have been getting was not sincere.
We should all be loving and caring about each other, but there is also value in having it be someone's specific job to be a resource if help is needed.
One person who said "yes" right away had just had her ministering sister arrange for meals to be brought post-surgery. Even before that, her ministering sister was regularly talking to her and knew how she was doing. I knew that she would say "yes".
Sometimes it's not so obvious that we have needs. Someone might assume you are doing fine and be wrong. That doesn't automatically mean that they don't care.
This program can't be perfect; it's full of people.
It's still something that can work wonderfully.