Daily happiness

This post is part of the General Conference Odyssey. This week covers the Saturday Morning Session of the April 2000 Conference.
Wow! We are starting into a new decade of General Conference. Now we are firmly in "this feels like just yesterday" territory. The 2000's are recent enough that I remember some talks really clearly, especially the ones after I got married (but before I had children…ha ha). This session was the first one in the new Conference Center. President Hinckley talked about how the pulpit was made from his own walnut tree. I have always loved that. He also read a whole bunch of prophecies about the coming forth of the Conference Center! He said that "all of [these] have come to our attention since we began this construction." Isn't that interesting? You can read them in his talk here.

President Packer gave a sober warning about the times to come—our time, I am sure:
We live in troubled times—very troubled times. We hope, we pray, for better days. But that is not to be. The prophecies tell us that. We will not as a people, as families, or as individuals be exempt from the trials to come.
But then he gives these comforting words:
We need not live in fear of the future. We have every reason to rejoice and little reason to fear. If we follow the promptings of the Spirit, we will be safe, whatever the future holds. We will be shown what to do.…

I fear this supernal gift is being obscured by programs and activities and schedules and so many meetings. There are so many places to go, so many things to do in this noisy world. We can be too busy to pay attention to the promptings of the Spirit.…

But each of us has agency; ever and always light presides over darkness.

The priesthood is structured to ensure an unbroken line of authority to baptize and confer the Holy Ghost. Always nearby are leaders and teachers called and set apart to teach and to correct us. We can learn to sort out the promptings from the temptations and follow the inspiration of the Holy Ghost.

It is a glorious time to live! No matter what trials await us, we can find the answer to that question, “What shall we do?” We, and those we love, will be guided and corrected and protected, and we will be comforted.
I think my favorite talk, though, was Sister Coleen K. Menlove's. She structured her talk much like one I remember from Elder Uchtdorf (but she thought of it first!) about how to reach our "Happily Ever After." I always like that subject because I love to think about the days to come, when all will be well and God's eternal promises have been realized in our lives. But I especially liked how she urged us to find trust and happiness in our experiences now. She told a cute story about her grandson riding in the back seat of the car, murmuring "I am such a lucky boy! I am such a lucky boy!" to himself over and over again. I often feel like I should constantly be saying that same thing. I have so many blessings in my life! So much goodness!

Sister Menlove says,
…The good news is that the gospel can make us very happy.

But, you may be thinking, even within the Church there are people who aren’t happy or people who are usually happy but who experience intermittent times of stress, worry, challenge, and discouragement. That, too, is part of the great plan of happiness. Mortality is a time of testing and trial, which means that there must be times when we feel pain and emotional discomfort. However, by patiently trusting in the eternal plan, we can experience daily happiness and have hope for “ever-after happiness.”
I love that distinction between daily happiness and the hope for "ever-after happiness"—and how the two are connected. I have realized since becoming a parent (and really, I knew it before that—just didn't feel it fully) that times of unbroken and unalloyed happiness are rare, but if I stop expecting those, stop thinking that only the unbroken times "count," I can find great happiness during even emotionally wrenching times. I think daily happiness—if you define that as "at least one moment of happiness each day"—is a pretty achievable goal! I can think of a few times in my life where even that felt out of reach, but most of the time, even serious heartache and worry can be interspersed with moments of laughter, lightening, or hope every day, if you look for them. It's one of the things I love about having a big family—even if one relationship or situation is difficult, there are lots of opportunities for other people to lift you away from those worries and fill your aching heart.

Sister Menlove also quotes Elder Richard G. Scott saying,
“Your joy in life depends upon your trust in Heavenly Father and His holy Son, your conviction that their plan of happiness truly can bring you joy.”
I am always trying to increase that very trust, to the degree that it will drive out many of my worries and fears! Because I do trust God's plan, and I do know it brings both kinds of joy.

The other day I was in the temple and got into a conversation with a sweet older Polynesian lady. When she learned that I have ten children, she gasped with happiness, and threw up her arms excitedly. "Ten!" she said. "Oh! The Lord loves you! The Lord loves you!"

She was so enthusiastic and spontaneous, I started crying right there, because I could just feel the truth of her words. Yes! I am so blessed! And He does love me! And I love Him!
2

The temple, silly faces, a little girl, and some other things

Hooray for Junie! She gets all the benefits of being twelve…without being twelve. I guess that's how it goes these days! Is there anything exciting left about actually turning twelve? I guess you don't need anything else, because you just get to keep doing all the fun things: going to Young Women's, going to the temple, going to Girls' Camp! And if you get to do it all with your best friend and "twin" sister, so much the better. Lucky girls.

For Junie's first temple visit, Sam and Malachi and Daisy and I all went with her too. It was wonderful. We had just had a big snowstorm and it made everything so pretty!
Here Junie is on her first day of Young Women's.
And on a couple other temple visits since! We are so blessed to be close enough to be able to pop over for a quick visit almost anytime, and these two girls love to go together!
Daisy helped Junie find some family names to take to the temple for proxy baptism. But in this picture they have gotten sidetracked and are using the Family Search tool where you can superimpose your face over pictures of your ancestors'. They thought it was hilarious.
And here Daisy and Junie are at the temple on another, sunnier day (though no less cold! Brrr!)
———
Sweetie Clementine is getting so big! She goes to nursery now (a little early…she won't be 18 months old for a few more weeks, but the nursery is very small right now and the leaders like her :)). She has a little bit of hair…not much, it is true, but at least it isn't just fuzz anymore! Each of her older sisters takes a turn getting her ready on Sunday mornings, because that task is too fun not to be shared. Oh how they love picking out her dresses and finding the perfect shoes and headband to match! And never has a baby girl been so cooed at and squealed over! I am sorry to admit that I am just as bad as the rest of them. We can't STAND how cute she looks in every single item of clothing she owns!
2

Not perfect, but a woman of God

This post is part of the General Conference Odyssey. This week covers the Relief Society Session of the October 1999 Conference.
Sheri Dew's talks are so good! I try not to automatically assume I'm going to like hers best—but I always do. In this session, she talked about an experience where she felt a strong feeling of foreboding before traveling out of the country. So, she asked for a priesthood blessing. In it, she says, 
I was warned that the adversary would attempt to thwart my mission and that physical and spiritual danger lay ahead. I was also counseled that this was not to be a sight-seeing or a shopping trip and that if I would focus on my assignments and seek the direction of the Spirit, I would return safely home.

Well, the warning was sobering. But as I proceeded, pleading for direction and protection each step of the way, I realized that my experience wasn’t all that unique. Might not our Father have said to you and to me as we left His presence: “The adversary will attempt to thwart your mission, and you will face spiritual and physical danger. But if you will focus on your assignments, if you will heed my voice, and if you will refuse to reduce mortality to a sight-seeing or a shopping trip, you will return safely home”?
First of all—I wish I could know what would have happened on that trip if she hadn't listened to the warning! I'm so curious! (Although glad, of course, that she came out okay!) But second of all, it just reminds me that the little distractions and troubles and hardships of life I face every day are, actually, ways the adversary is attempting to thwart my mission! I usually just blame my own ignorance or weakness—and there is plenty of that, of course—but it's sobering somehow to think that Satan is actively working against me and against my family, trying to pull us away from the right path! It reminds me of a quote from another talk in this session, where Sister Jensen quoted Elder Packer saying:
“The ultimate purpose of the adversary … is to disrupt, disturb, and to destroy the home and the family.”
That's a very scary thought! Sister Dew reminds me of President Nelson when she then says, 
We no longer have the luxury of spending our energy on anything that does not lead us and our families to Christ. That is the litmus test for Relief Society, as well as for our lives. In the days ahead, a casual commitment to Christ will not carry us through.
She was so prophetic in speaking those words. And she is obviously right. It takes absolute determination to continue our efforts to follow Christ in the face of such strong cultural and worldly headwinds! And it is tiring. Tiring to constantly worry about your children, to try to fight so many prevailing attitudes, to remain strong and positive and hopeful when you see reasons for discouragement every day. But I loved how she emphasized that our commitment to Christ will actually bring us so much joy:
As a young girl I saw commitment in my grandmother, who helped Grandpa homestead our farm on the Kansas prairie. Somehow they outlasted the Dust Bowl, the Depression, and the tornadoes that terrorize the Great Plains. I’ve often wondered how Grandma put up with years of meager income and hard work and how she went on when her oldest son died in a tragic accident. Grandma’s life wasn’t easy. But do you know what I remember most about her? Her total joy in the gospel. She was never happier than when she was working on family history or teaching with her scriptures in hand. Grandma had laid aside the things of this world to seek for the things of a better.

To the world, my grandma was ordinary. But to me, she represents the unsung heroines of this century who lived up to their premortal promises and left a foundation of faith upon which we may build. Grandma wasn’t perfect, but she was a woman of God. Now it is for you and for me to carry forward the banner into the next century. We are not women of the world. We are women of God.
I love the idea that being a "woman of God" is an identity we can choose, and one we can hold to even when we don't feel very successful at it. I was talking with a friend about that this week and thinking how to keep reaching for God even when we feel tired and faithless is one of the very best ways to show our faith! 

I also loved this: 
At times the demands of discipleship are heavy. But shouldn’t we expect the journey towards eternal glory to stretch us? We sometimes rationalize our preoccupation with this world and our casual attempts to grow spiritually by trying to console each other with the notion that living the gospel really shouldn’t require all that much of us. The Lord’s standard of behavior will always be more demanding than the world’s, but then the Lord’s rewards are infinitely more glorious—including true joy, peace, and salvation.
Then, of course, it wouldn't be a Sheri Dew talk without a stirring call to action:
Tonight I invite each of us to identify at least one thing we can do to come out of the world and come closer to Christ. And then next month, another. And then another. Sisters, this is a call to arms, it’s a call to action, a call to arise. A call to arm ourselves with power and with righteousness. A call to rely on the arm of the Lord rather than the arm of flesh. A call to “arise and shine forth, that [our] light may be a standard for the nations.” A call to live as women of God so that we and our families may return safely home.
To return safely home (with my family!) is my greatest desire.
0

Not weight but wings

This post is part of the General Conference Odyssey. This week covers the Sunday Afternoon Session of the October 1999 Conference.
This Conference Session was really good—I liked all of the talks, and they seemed especially…I don't know, General Conference is often like this, but especially just…solid and basic and foundational. People were thinking about the new millennium ahead, this was the last meeting in the old Salt Lake Tabernacle, and I just felt a spirit of seriousness and determination from these talks, like there was no time to waste on anything superficial or unnecessary.

Elder L. Tom Perry had a cool quote in his talk (from some guy named Harry Emerson Fosdick) which was this:
Some Christians carry their religion on their backs. It is a packet of beliefs and practices which they must bear. At times it grows heavy and they would willingly lay it down, but that would mean a break with old traditions, so they shoulder it again. But real Christians do not carry their religion, their religion carries them. It is not weight; it is wings. It lifts them up, it sees them over hard places, it makes the universe seem friendly, life purposeful, hope real, sacrifice worthwhile. It sets them free from fear, futility, discouragement, and sin—the great enslavers of men’s souls. You can know a real Christian, when you see him, by his buoyancy.
I've been thinking about this a lot this week. I talked to a friend a while ago who seemed to feel a little adrift. She has some specific health struggles which make everyday life hard, but to me it seemed like the hardest part for her is that she doesn't feel much purpose. She has free time and money and hobbies, even fun opportunities to travel, but though they can keep her busy, none of those things seem to make her feel truly joyful and excited about life. It's interesting to me, because I can (and do sometimes) look at her life with awe and a touch of longing. It looks so different from mine right now. She kept asking me, "But what do you do for yourself? When do you have time for you?" And I kept thinking, "Well…I don't. I generally feel overwhelmed. But, which of us is happier right now?"

It's not true, actually, that I don't have any time "for me." I have lots of moments here and there, I have date night with Sam every week, I have a temple close by, my schedule is flexible. So I'm not complaining (at the moment—I do often complain—but it's not justified, is what I'm sayingšŸ˜„)—but I just think it's interesting that because I have the purpose the gospel of Jesus Christ gives me, because I have a calling and a family who needs me and lots of people around me to serve, I really do feel a sense of happiness and buoyancy that makes no earthly sense. Of course I have days of discouragement, like anyone does, but the gospel in fact does "see me over hard places" and make "sacrifice worthwhile." Ever since I read this quote I've been thinking about how all the "weight" in my life comes from worry, sin, failure, confusion, etc.—but never the gospel. The teachings of Jesus Christ, and the knowledge that I can repent and I can always trust Him—the promises to covenant Israel which President Nelson had us study and which I KNOW God will fulfill in my life—the feeling of God's love and His concern for me—these are the things that make the weight bearable. These are the things that really do lighten my burdens. I am SO grateful to have this knowledge in my life!

I also love this that Elder Richard G. Scott said in his talk:
The Lord has placed currents of divine influence in your life that will lead you along the individual plan He would have you fulfill here on earth. Seek through the Spirit to identify it and carefully follow that direction that the Lord has put in your life. Align yourself with it. Choose, willingly, to exercise your agency to follow it. Do not be overcome by concentrating solely on today, its challenges, difficulties, and opportunities. Such preoccupations must not totally capture your attention so as to consume your life. Oh, how I would encourage you to weave deeply into the fabric of your soul the recognition that your life now is a part of a much bigger plan the Lord has for you. You lived part of it in the premortal existence. You were valiant there and came here because you wanted to grow and enjoy greater happiness. What you decide to do now will affect how well you fulfill that divine, personal plan He has for you.…

It is wondrously simple and so incomparably beautiful. As you continue to live righteously, you will always know what to do. Sometimes the discovery of that may require significant effort and trust on your part. Yet you will recognize what to do as you meet the conditions for such divine guidance in your life: obedience to the commandments of the Lord, trust in His plan, and the avoidance of anything that is contrary to it. The more closely you conform your life to the doctrine of the Lord, the more capacity you will have to do what the Spirit inspires you to do.

I love the idea that living the doctrine of Christ (which I think just means having faith, acting, and repenting in a continuous cycle) will give us "more capacity to do what the Spirit inspires us to do." As I've been studying about fulness, I've thought a lot about capacity as well, and here Elder Scott seems to say that continual repentance and continual efforts to improve will have tangible results: more capacity, which means more power—more space to be filled with the power and blessings of God. Just as with the quote above, I feel a great gratitude when I reflect on the "currents of divine influence" that have led me to be on this path of learning, slowly, to truly trust God and His plan for me.

1

Full of hands

In our family, we always quote poor little Junie's sad and helpless cry from when she was about three years old: "I can't open the gate! I'm full of hands!" You'd be surprised how often one of us is trying to do something and can't because his or her hands are full, necessitating this pathetic distress cry. In fact, I've had to become rather proficient with my feet, my arms, my elbows, and my nose, in doing various tasks that really ought to be done by hands!

———

When people learn that we have ten kids, the usual response is some variation of "I don't know how you do it." There's no real answer to it, because truthfully, I don't know how we "do it" either, especially if "do it" means "raise your family without neglecting anything." (I am always neglecting something! Always!)
The other thing people say is, of course, the age-old "You've got your hands full!" This is manifestly true, and also rather un-answerable. I wish there were a way to affirm these well-meaning phrases while rejecting the implication that sometimes lurks behind them ("Why on earth would you do this to yourself?!). I suppose having a big family is both harder than, but also not as hard as, it seems! And it's not something you can easily sum up in passing in the grocery store.

The management side of things gets easier as you go (so far?). It happens bit by bit and year by year. You learn how to order routines, delegate tasks, incentivize, cut out what's unnecessary—at least until ages and stages change and you have to re-order everything again. The older kids help even as they, sometimes, hinder—there is no one more unyielding and draconian about the younger children's bedtime than a child who just barely graduated from that bedtime himself. The day-to-day logistics of big families can be hard. But they're not impossible. And figuring it out is often strangely satisfying! 

The thing for me, way beyond the logistics, that's the most utterly daunting part of being responsible for so many little souls—is just the sheer fulness of emotion it brings. That's the part that washes over me so deep these days that I feel like I'm drowning in it—

…Lying awake in the darkness, sick with worry over a teenager's heartbreak, then rolling out of bed before morning light to rock a crying feverish toddler. 

…Finding the words to delicately correct the ten-year-old without offending her growing sense of independence, while trying to shush the seven-year-old who is in the middle of describing to you every panel of the Calvin and Hobbes book he's just read. 

…Rejoicing over one child's public success in the very hour you are blinking back tears from another's secret little sorrow. 

…Realizing with horror how many basic lessons have gone untaught to the younger ones while you've been frantically reacting to the moods and impatiences of the older ones.

…Fighting not to fall asleep while on the phone with the missionary, because you stayed up till two a.m. editing the high-schooler's college application essays.

…Being interrupted the moment you finally sit down to read the book the three-year-old has been clamoring for, by the fourteen-year-old urgently needing a ride somewhere. 

…Trying to hide the tremor in your voice from your hurt feelings about what the sixteen-year-old just yelled at you, as you answer the five-year-old's question about how lawnmowers work and if one could cut off your foot.

More often than not I'm overwhelmed, not just with tasks but with the vast range of feelings required of me, and I find myself casting desperate and semi-accusing prayers up to the heavens: It's too much! I'm not up to it! I'm full of hands!

———

Every few months I ask Sam for a priesthood blessing. If you're curious about that, know that a priesthood blessing is given by the laying on of hands through the power of the priesthood that Sam holds, and is guided by the Holy Ghost. As with any revelation, there's an interaction between giver and receiver—God speaks to us in our language and according to our understanding. So of course there's room for error, but God honors those who honor Him, and I think he blesses even our imperfect efforts to hear His voice. I've watched Sam's ability to give these blessings grow and deepen over the years as he's blessed our family, and when he gives me a blessing now, I really do feel I'm hearing the literal words of God. It's interesting how often I'll mention some counsel from a blessing after it's given, and Sam won't even remember saying it! And there have been countless times when a blessing speaks to a concern Sam didn't know I had, or when he uses words only God knew would be most meaningful to me.

Not having ever spoken these feelings of "fullness" to anyone else, you can imagine how I felt several months ago when Sam blessed me in these words:
Marilyn, your life is so full. Full of concerns, full of difficulties, full of things that take up your time, full of things to think about, full of moments that may be hard to pay attention to before they slip by. Sometimes that fulness can be frustrating and leave you with a sense that you wish you could just freeze time for a moment, or take a break from it all. But your Father in Heaven knows what you need, and He wishes you to understand what a fulness means.
And so, thus encouraged, I have been trying to "understand what a fulness means."

———

I don't think I've found out yet. I catch glimpses of it in the scriptures—"Offer your whole souls as an offering." "In due time receive of His fulness." "The fulness of the earth is yours." 

Or this quote by Truman Madsen: "The fulness of truth, and the fulness of the Holy Ghost, and the fulness of the priesthood, and the fulness of the glory of the Father are all phrases that are ocurrent in connection with the temple, and cannot be received anywhere else, nowhere else on the planet. You cannot receive the fulness that the Lord has for you without coming through the temple and having the temple come through you."

But I've also been thinking about how just by living this life—by struggling through and sometimes drowning in this fulness—I am somehow starting to absorb "what a fulness means." I can't put it into words very well. Reading that list above, it would be natural to wonder why on earth anyone would voluntarily choose this kind of fulness. And without the personal experience to go with it, a balancing list of the "good parts" doesn't do justice to the joy and wonder and privilege of being caught up in all those stories. But those things are there, crammed in with the rest, bursting out of the cracks and seams—

…The ten- and twelve-year-old learning to play a piano duet together, giggling together over their mistakes. 

…The seventeen-year-old bending over the baby's bassinet after sneaking in from a date just past curfew, whispering "goodnight, little baby" and half-hoping she'll wake up to smile at him. 

…Being part of the hours of work behind the speech one child gives at his debate tournament, and the hours of effort another puts into Christmas presents for her siblings. 

…The satisfaction and the frustration of making a really good meal for twelve—or fourteen—or twenty—out of odds and ends from the fridge and fifteen minutes of notice, with only a stack of empty plates and a few thank-yous for reward at the end of it. 

…Being the one—the only one—a child wants when he is hurt or sick, the only one who understands what a particular combination of gibberish means, the only one who notices when tiny fingers heading towards the mouth say "I'm scared." 

…Even better, knowing what it's like to exchange glances and a half-smile with someone who does  understand, across a torrent of tired two-year-old tears, a surly teenage retort, an unintentionally hilarious assertion from an older child correcting a younger child.

I could tell you a thousand of those moments and not get close to capturing what they've meant or how they've changed me. And it's just as true of the first list as the second list. Every experience, every brimful emotion that grew so big inside me it threatened to break me in two—the ones that feel like they did break me in two. The worries I laugh at ten years later. The worries I feel I will never laugh at. The tears I cried, and the ones too deep to cry, and the ones I swallowed because someone else needed me when I wanted to cry them. Many of these things, no doubt, would have been part of a life with one or three or five children just the same. But the weight and bulk of them, the way they cram together to fill every possible space, the way they come at you like tennis balls from a ball machine that's set way higher than your skill level…that's what feels like too much fulness. And also…maybe…what God is trying to bless me with?

———

I wrote about playing the organ once, how for me (NOT an organist by training) there's a sort of mystical alchemy to it. Playing hands and pedals together is like seeing something out of the corner of your eye, or trying to remember a dream you've just awakened from. As long as you let it happen in the sides of your vision, things go along pretty well. But the moment you focus in and look at the thing head-on, the balance crumbles and it's gone.

With organ playing, such sideways focus is definitely not the same as a lack of concentration, though. If anything, it's hyper-concentration, super-concentration. You can't let your mind wander, but you can't zero in on one thing, either, or the rest of it comes crashing down. Now that I think about it, it's the same thing with sightreading on the piano. The music keeps rolling on no matter how much you flounder, and the only way to avoid the wave is to ride on top of it, eyes moving, hands moving, mind moving, never taking time to even think about the mess you've made of the previous page. And in the midst of the chaos, there are moments of what feels like magic, where your vision widens like a camera lens and suddenly you're seeing all of it, everything at once, the notes and the breath and every muscle in your arms and your back, everything moving together, and you're outside of yourself and deep inside of yourself all at once, unable to stop or even explain it, but strangely certain that you alone couldn't possibly have done what you've just done.

———

We know Jesus Christ has a "fulness." Of joy—of course. Of sorrow? I don't know. Maybe not for himself. But through us, through our sorrows and our losses? I have asked Him how He stands it when so many choose to turn away from Him, ignore Him, reject Him. How can he live with hope and joy, knowing some of his beloved children will deliberately not choose Him?

I don't know. The only answer I can hear, whispered, is "…all that the Father hath."

Doctrine and Covenants 88 says there are different types of fulnesses. Celestial, telestial, terrestrial. 
Some receive of his glory, but not of his fulness.
The Lord's rest is the fulness of His glory.
He who receiveth all things with thankfulness shall be made glorious.

I don't want a fulness of sorrow. All this, everything I'm doing right now, is with the desperate hope of joy ahead—joy and rest and eternal goodness. All this time I've been hoping the hard parts will cease. The weight will lift. The darkness will dispel. And we will live in fulness of joy.

I still hope for that. I think it's a true vision. 
The Lord hath redeemed his people;
And Satan is bound and time is no longer.
The Lord hath gathered all things in one.
The Lord hath brought down Zion from above.
The Lord hath brought up Zion from beneath.

The earth hath travailed and brought forth her strength;
And truth is established in her bowels;
And the heavens have smiled upon her;
And she is clothed with the glory of her God;
For he stands in the midst of his people.
What I don't know is if it's a full vision. Maybe a chosen sorrow differs from an imposed sorrow? Maybe sorrow by another name, sorrow through the lens of love and eternity—is joy?

Maybe God's fulness is something that cuts facets in us until every single surface reflects God?

———

It's too much, this life of mine. Of course it's too much! Too much good and too much failure and too much everything crammed into too little space. I need to be magnified—deepened—enlarged.

I don't know what they mean in aggregate. All these moments with my children—good ones, hard ones, impossible ones—are like flashes of light. Each one is a luminous stone, a piece of cut glass, surrounded by shadow, and what they're forming, I can't see. A mosaic? A mirror? A window through which I will at last see the face of God?

But in all their glorious fulness, these moments surround me because I have these specific children, all of them, here together in this family, and the idea of saying no to them before I even understand them, because I think I might be "too full" already—it makes my blood run cold.

I'm still pretty inept. Overloaded, you might say. Unable to hold onto much of anything without dropping something else. But please open the gate, Heavenly Father. I'm full of hands.
3

Just some chubby cheeks and red noses

It's been a long time since we had such a big snowstorm and so much snow all at once! We got 10-12 inches on New Year's Day, and about 4 more the next morning. It was so fun. Goldie and Teddy and Ziggy and Junie and Daisy played outside all day that Monday, and Gus was in and out quite a bit too. After Sebastian dug the car out of the snow, he took the girls over to a huge sledding hill where they alternated between delight and terror. Goldie confided in me later that she only dared go down twice, but didn't want to admit it to Seb!

Most of the time, though, everyone just played out on the hill and at the dip (as we call it…a drainage basin park on the other side of the hill) and had a grand time. I stayed nice and warm inside and took a few pictures with my longest lens. :)
It's not like I didn't do ANYTHING, though. I made this little guy warm again after he came in all sad and snowy (don't they always at this age?). Surely that counts for something.
And I kissed his rosy cheeks and nose one million times.
This was Sunday, when the roads hadn't been plowed yet. I got stuck twice going to and from church (which, FYI, is like one block away).
2

Fully persuaded

This post is part of the General Conference Odyssey. This week covers the Sunday Morning Session of the October 1999 Conference.
President Faust's talk "Hope, an Anchor to the Soul" is one I've come across a few times when studying hope. I don't remember it from when he gave it, though. Maybe I wasn't as interested in hope back then when I was young and carefree! I'm interested now. I loved how he started the talk right off with this:
There are tremendous sources of hope beyond our own ability, learning, strength, and capacity. Among them is the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Seems kind of obvious, I guess, but it didn't occur to me before that when I'm feeling hopeless, I can pray for the Spirit and he can actually give me hope beyond my own. That seems pretty amazing.

I've mostly stopped trying to distinguish faith from hope. They are so close to each other, and every time I think I've found a definition that tells me the difference, I find another one that mixes them up again. But I think I sort of understand in my head (though I don't know that I can explain). Faith is tied to action, I know that. And faith is properly fixed on Jesus Christ. Hope…I think…is more about ourselves, and those we love. Faith believes that Jesus Christ can save anyone, and hope says he will help ME. Or, maybe I still don't quite understand it! Anyway, I like this tidbit Elder Faust adds:
Hope is trust in God’s promises, faith that if we act now, the desired blessings will be fulfilled in the future. Abraham “against hope believed in hope, that he might become the father of many nations.” Contrary to human reason, he trusted God, “fully persuaded” that God would fulfill His promises of giving Abraham and Sarah a child in their old ages.
And then there's this:
Priesthood blessings lift us and sustain us. Hope also comes from direct personal revelation, to which we are entitled if we are worthy.
It sounds so wonderful—to be "fully persuaded" that God will always help me. I think the "fully" in that sentence covers even the cases (all of them?) where we are the ones at fault, we are the ones that lack, we are the ones keeping ourselves from progressing—still; we can "fully" believe because God makes up for all those lacks when we turn to Him!

Really, I think all of these ideas fit with my sense of what hope is pretty well. When Abraham believed God's promises, he was taking an abstract idea that God was trustworthy, and bringing it onto his own level, in his own life, to give him hope. And Abraham's personal revelation about what God would do for him gave him hope as well—again, hope that the God of Universe would actually orchestrate specific blessings in Abraham's own small story. 

It's what I want to hope for too!

Other posts in this series:

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Christmastide

We had a great Christmas Eve, starting with our butterscotch roll party in the morning. I made 27 dozen rolls this year! Here is Malachi eating…all of them?
I always love seeing so many friends together and having the house full of people on Christmas Eve. My midwife Cathy took this picture. It's so good to have an excuse to see people I sometimes don't see otherwise all year!
Here we are getting ready for our candlelight dinner that evening. Homemade tacos have evolved over the years into purchased Cafe Rio tacos, definitely a change for the better. I never feel like cooking dinner after making those rolls all morning! But it was strange and sad not to have Abe with us. This dinner is probably his favorite part of the Christmas season, and he always sits by me when I do the online ordering and tries to talk me into getting more things. I quite missed it. We did get to talk, though! He called early Christmas morning and we had a good chat, and then he called again for a few minutes to say hi to all his siblings later. So that was nice. He had a happy, busy, Christmas and I didn't worry about him. Sure missed him, though!
We had a good time at our Elf Olympics. We played a sort of Lego Pictionary. Malachi's and my team (not to brag) won pretty handily. No thanks to Little Miss Walk-on-the-Counter over there.
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Hallmark Bingo, Bigfoot, Snowflakes

Little Gussykins turned 3! He is the squishiest, funniest, most delightful boy anyone could ever imagine. He reminds me of little Malachi, who was also the sunniest sunshine at this age. Maybe it's their December birthdays, I don't know!
Gus requested what he called a "bee-nana cake" for his birthday. Sam followed my instructions perfectly (I told him, breezily, to "arrange banana slices into a Caw shape") for the top of the cake. 
Goldie drew this cute picture of Caws for Gus
He got cars and a boat for his presents, both of which he immediately started playing with (with sound effects) on the table.
He loved the candles and the singing…
…and so did Clementine!
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We haven't been to our friends' ornament party for three years! First Gus was being born, the next year it was cancelled for COVID, and last year we were in Hawaii with Abe! So we were really happy to be back at it this year. I didn't crochet anything this year. I saw a really simple nativity like this somewhere and really loved it. What I wanted to do was make it in stained glass! There is a couple that comes to the party that always make stained glass ornaments, and they're so pretty (those are some of the ones I always hope to come home with. Here are some from another year. And I got one this year too!). But, anyway, I knew I couldn't pull that off, so I decided to try shrinky-dinks!
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You'll grow into it

This post is part of the General Conference Odyssey. This week covers the Priesthood Session of the October 1999 Conference.
I thought Elder Wirthlin had a good message for New Year's. He tells a cute story about how he always had to wear clothes that were too big for him, and his mom would say, "Don't worry, Joseph; you'll grow into them." Then he says:
First, I want to tell you young men that the Lord has His eye upon you. He loves you. He knows you. He knows your triumphs and your trials, your successes and your heartaches.

He knows that at times you may look at the challenges you may face and may think they’re too big to handle. He is, however, willing and ready to help you as you grow into the men you are to become.
I feel like everything I have stewardship over is really too big for me to handle, honestly. My calling, my ministering, and definitely my family! Any time I think about all the things I need to improve, I feel overwhelmed with the sheer number of them! It's comforting to think that apostles sometimes feel that way too, so I loved this reminder:
You have been chosen by the Lord to come forth on the earth when wickedness and evil are very powerful. But you are up to the challenge.…

That does not mean you will not face your share of heartache, challenges, and trial. Since the days when I first stuffed cotton into my ice skates and put on oversized shoulder pads and helmet, my life has been filled with experiences and challenges that seemed at the time too big for me. Even today I can’t help but feel, every now and again, that the size of the mantle I have been asked to wear is perhaps too large.

But every day I try to put Heavenly Father first in my life, I try to come unto Christ and follow Him as my Savior and Redeemer, I nurture the companionship of the Holy Ghost, love and revere the Prophet Joseph, and listen to and follow God’s prophet today. As I do those things, I am confident the Lord will bless me.

Even after all these years, I can still hear the voice of my mother: “Be grateful for what you have, Joseph. Don’t worry; you’ll grow into it.”

It is my prayer that we may all grow into the priesthood and be the kind of men our Heavenly Father wants us to be.


Other posts in this series:

Priesthood Power—by Rozy 

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