KM April 2002
Ask some adults who pioneered during their younger years what their impressions are and invariably they will say the same thing: "Those were the best years of my life!" A brother who experienced the joys of full-time service from his young manhood on said in later life: "It is a source of deep satisfaction to look back on the time of youth and be able to say that one has heeded the wise counsel: ‘Remember, now, your grand Creator in the days of your young manhood.’" (Eccl. 12:1) It takes good planning now, by both you and your parents, to work out a way for you to experience this kind of joy in your young manhood or young womanhood.
No I never got that joy either..I tried pioneering a couple times. Both times my associates gave and I was left alone and soon gave up too. I hated disturbing people. I knew how I would feel if they knocked my door and I think that people were nice to us really, considering what we did. Down South (UK) we had a lot of territory that was converted old big houses, you had to bring them down from 2 or 3 floors up, maybe to answer the door , but still they came....sometimes..
It all seemed such a waste of time, even if you did believe in the work. We would meet at the Hall, discuss the text pair up, travel the territory, sort our where to call, spend maybe an hour doing it then travel home - a whole morning gone and just an hour to show for it
The truth really was that my heart was not in it. I dreaded certain subjects . I thought it was "fear of man" and chided myself . Really, I know now that it was because I knew the arguments did not stand up and I was on thin ice.
The difference now is amazing. If ever religion comes up at work I speak with a natural frankness about it all, because I speak from the heart.
The only thing is that it did get me outside in the fresh air, rather than now spending Saturdays in the coffee shop and then huddled over a computer screen, but this is much more fun