Recently my Uncle Laurence shared a fun "bombs away" window weight memory, coupled with pages of photos I don't remember seeing of my dad. "Don't worry about the 20 pages before--just look at the pictures," I forwarded them to our grandchildren.
Stories carry power. As a family literature professor in the family teaches, when we write about an experience, it becomes our own. David Isay of Story Corps (also Rootstech guest) lauds Century XXI youth and users of social media for being experts. What are they doing? They are documenting stories with pictures, commentary, and connections.
Tens of thousands of participants were invited to indicate by phone which of the governor's stories they wanted to hear.
Similarly I will share a recent story and you are invited to vote at the end--or at the beginning, which most you would like to hear!)
Today's three titles:
Getting and Keeping the Nurse
Zucchini to Durini
Close to the Cliff
Since you are not here to vote, I will begin with
Zucchini to Durini.
Monday is a day, that if the "dos balde"
or two bucket water system that missionaries use in the mountains,
from their often candlelit homes in the Polochik
This was an egg and pasta dinner, one first night in Teleman, by the Polochik river |
to receive laboratory tests or medicine not available in the mountains.
Credits to Elders Hullinger and Anderson for sharing their mountain pictures of Polochik and Peten--this is Elder H's bee sting--bites and parasites-- sometimes reasons for a long ride! |
Some Mondays include missionaries preparing to leave the mission. On Concilio Monday (usually the first week of the month) a similar sized bus carries zone leaders and sister training leaders
from the warmer touristy northern area of Tikal, bordering Mexico, more from the eastern mountains, and more still from a sunny valley to the south, where Starkeys frequent most weekends.
Missionaries coming. Time to bake. But there are children to phone, a letter to assemble, bags to unpack, and dishes calling. In the eight phone attempts, we found a few home!
Spencer sang his "Green Grass Grew" again. We laughed with Amber over sledding with Toby up and down sand slopes until he came home to drop without a whimper on the hard tile. We hailed a quick "hello" to a BYU almost-engineer recovering from mailing in an extensive write-up of managing and creating her third concrete canoe to race in Colorado in a month. We reviewed the feeling of "finishing something" --with a bang or a whimper-- remembering the Saturday visit we had just had with a sweet little family in Salama preparing to attend and be sealed in the temple soon--a lesson from February's Primary sharing time, coloring pictures of the earth's creation...noting that every day ended with a pronouncement, "It was good. It was good. It was very very good!" And here is our goal--we are working to finish each day with this same comment!
William, Savanna, Kevin, Becca; their parents, auntie, and great grandmother told us of their Wednesday adventure walking up and down winding stairways to a renovated burnt tabernacle in Provo City that will shortly be dedicated.
Five year old William recounted to his great aunt Arlene, what the temple is all about. He had seen a room with murals of beautiful trees and flowers, where missionaries and moms and dads learn about the Creation. Wandering the halls, his grandma took the hand of Savanna, who in Brigham City just three years ago woke from her sleep to coo her way through rooms of paintings of pioneer peach trees and the peaceful permanence of walking though a place that echoes heaven. 


Pouncing upon great grandma's children's library, upon crashing at home, William claimed another colorful story about Adam and Eve and the Creation, begging to bring it home. Kristen and Amber send each other uplifting things to read and hear. One of their favorites is Dieter F. Uchtdorf speaking to sisters about being creative--this we can do every day...something exalting...what if we try it!
Phone calls fizzling, Elder Starkey stuck his head out to make his weekly Sunday afternoon walk. I peeped my head out too, but not very far. (Having a dozen bags on the landing can be disconcerting.) Across the narrow paved road between our homes, on the sidewalk next to our bishop's house, huddled his helper Berta
Berta earlier had slept on my couch. But this time it was not as cold. My husband was inclined to drive to the office to finish a few things for President. Hmmmm...well, the house was a mess, a sink pretty full. But there again was our friend Berta, shivering. I like cooking in clean, but there was zucchini wilting in the fridge, a hastily scratched recipe pinned with magnet to the side...and the last bit of Allina's real vanilla waiting. "Relajo o no" (mess or not) we had an hour or so until dark. What would YOU do?
Berta giggled and glowed as we cracked the eggs and she taught me Quechi for "I make bread--" "Laa'in ninyiiB' li Kaxlan Wa!" Berta, youngest of four, has only one family member with a cell phone. Sunday can be a day to call him, but her brother did not answer. Berta rarely travels home, as it requires hours and hours of bus travel. Together we grated apples and green, mixed flours and leavening and lifted spoon after spoon into small and smaller loafs to expand and congeal in the pretty new oven.
As the muffin tins began to beckon with aroma, Mario knocked.
"We're home!"
Berta giggled again--she does that. Twenty five, the age of one of our daughters, she emanates the aura of a child. (Is this what President meant when he taught us from 3 Nephi that Christ's doctrine is to repent and become as a child?) Our suitcases eventually made their way to the closet room. The pianos got pushed under the stairs into our "Harry Potter" staircase stash. Dishes stacked themselves steadily, slowly into their place. But the moment had been captured. I was a stranger (shivering alone) and you took me in.

The company, realizing what they might be losing, returned with a different offer of a position where Juan Manuel can work from his home and travel just once every month or second month. "Seek ye first...and all things shall be added" washes in like the under tide. It's true!
Fabiola and Grandpa de Leon |
Their dog, Boster |
Our families have grown to be friends; Fabiola's daughter Sarai played in Coban's December recital and we love them! Walking past boxes on their landing, Fabiola asked, "Guess what?!"
I could not guess.
This week, they will be moving next door to us!
Fabiola brought me to see her children in bed, nursing colds with ginger tea. Another miracle in her family is that one of her family members, who received a diagnosis of leukemia, is now working for the mayor, and was out of the country on business. Not a hundred percent well, but more healthy busy than in bed. I told her about losing one of my planners, feeling super stressed. I had looked. Everywhere. On the way to sleep that night, I had read the scriptures. So happy to be trudging my way a sixth time in Spanish through the words of Isaiah penned by Nephi, and praying, praying to have a little faith. I felt nourished by the 'pleasing word' of Christ" where distress is drowned with something like "trust," and an underlying tone creeps into my heart, "All will be well."
Well, the agenda was hiding under one of the seats in the car. And all will be well. But even when the dishes are still in the sink, and bread burns, and I forget to give it to the missionaries, and the nurse and her companion are still homeless, "All will be well."
So, that is why, maybe, that we can keep reading, and writing, and asking friends and neighbors if they have had blessings or miracles in their day...
So, perhaps we can say, "It was good, it was good, it was very very good!
And that is the end of that story:
We still have more stories brewing on the brainstorm page: "Close to the Cliff" and "Getting and Keeping the Nurse."
You can vote which you'd like to hear next!
Loved reading about these events....your zucchini loaf looks delicious.
ReplyDeleteOne more thing; what you say about writing the stories is so true; if you can write them, you OWN them. So many little miracles like this tend to be forgotten over the years, so it's good to write them down.....for oursleves and posterity. I love that you do this.
ReplyDeleteLaurene:
ReplyDeletewe enjoy these letters of yours so much. thanks for taking the time to write and construct them.
John and Aloma