Monday, February 21, 2022

Another Friend Found

I was using Member tools to find addresses to mail out my Happy Chinese New Year Cards and noticed  new but familiar names- Karen and Wayne Beckstead.  I knew a Karen and Wayne Beckstead in West Jordan over 40 years ago.  In addition, that Karen was the sister of one of my high school friends from Richland-David Ord.  I looked for them at Church when we visited yesterday, but didn't see them and so asked about them.  They actually just left a few weeks earlier for the MTC.  Using their email, I sent an inquiring email off to them to see if they were the SAME Becksteads.  Within minutes, I got an response and we started exchanging and catching up with each other over messenger.  She added me on Facebook and later added other Richland friends from my friends list who were also happy to hear from her.  

She and her husband are assigned to the Massachusetts Boston Mission, Portuguese speaking.  He served a mission to Brazil in the mid-1970s.  They will support a ward in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  They had just arrived to their mission about 3 days ago.

The reason they showed up on our records is that they sold their home in Idaho and stayed for a couple of months with their daughter, Amy Moore.  Of course, we knew and loved Amy Moore and her family.  We just didn't know that they were connected to Karen and Wayne.  We probably knew Amy as a pre-schooler back in West Jordan.  Gary and I had taught their grandson, Mason, in one of my favorite Primary classes ever.

So fun to make these connections and through social media and cell phones reconnect.

The Cost of Hope

This is a disclaimer. This is not a post about things we are doing.  This is an essay I have written about me and my process as we have stood by Ben in his illness.  It is not a happy post and maybe more than anyone wants to know, but I feel it is important for my future family who may some day walk a similar path after I am gone.  Mental illness is a tough situation for everyone and the need for hope is critical but hard to find.  I wrote this over the past year.  The initial phone call that is referenced in the essay happened a year ago this month.

THE COST OF HOPE

This is small clay rose that Ben made me
once during one of his hospital stays. It has more
of a story as well, but it reminds me to keep
hope alive for Ben.

When I hung up the phone, the thought came quickly, “Are you willing to hope again?” It has been tumbling around in my head for the past week.  The phone call that started this train of thought was with a stranger.  My son’s current psychiatrist thought we “might” understand each other.  It was a three+ hour conversation filled with laughter and tears, sharing and remembering—a safe place to be understood and to understand.  Hope was the message she wanted to give but hope and I have had a checkered past over the past 13 years since our son was diagnosed with schizophrenia.  Somewhere along the journey I had put it down—one of the casualties of the battle we are fighting—he and I.  She was inviting me to pick it up again.  Could I?  Should I? What if I am too afraid?

To be clear, my family and friends would describe me as a positive and hopeful person.  I have built my life on a foundation of religious belief where faith and hope are critical components.  I have centered my life on them, and they have guided my direction and my decision making for my life.  I have confidence in who I am and the purpose of life with its many peaks and valleys.  I have chosen to have hope despite the difficulties around me.  Except for this one thing—hope that his life will someday be better.

It did not start off that way.  When our son was first diagnosed at the age of 18, we were filled with hope.  Yes, this was a hard and difficult thing, but the doctors expressed confidence that medications would help him.  Our son had insight, he had family support, we had resources, and he was medication compliant. We engaged in therapy and attended NAMI classes. And I read and read and asked so many questions of any provider who worked with our son. Our son researched his illness and learned better how to express his inner struggles to us and his providers.  We supported him as he sought for alternatives for treatment as long as he continued to take his anti-psychotic. 

We had some early “hits” to our hopes when the first two anti-psychotics caused some difficult side effects which caused him to be taken off them abruptly and switched to something else.  Side effects took a life of their own and our son’s focus became fixed on his side effects rather than the symptoms of the illness itself.  After having a stable period of about 10 months early on in his illness, side effects or the illness started causing a circular pattern of symptoms which required frequent changing of medication to allow him and his illness to be managed at home.  Our son’s functioning never returned to anything close to his pre-illness and in fact continued to decline. 

I was early one time to a team meeting at the local community mental health center where our son received the bulk of his services.  My son had not yet arrived, but most of the team was already present. I said, “I would appreciate it if you no longer talked about recovery in these meetings.  Recovery is when you break your leg, have surgery, and then eventually you can ski again, or you have pneumonia and take medication and recovery fully.  It leads our son to have unrealistic expectations of himself, the medication, and of the illness.”  The team argued the point a bit, but slowly the word dropped out of all conversations. A new word was introduced—his baseline, and even that became a moveable target with steady declines over time.  Our son, despite starting off with insight and all of the things which should have predicted a more positive outcome, was getting worse. 

One day about 8 years into his illness, my son’s psychiatrist mentioned that a new medication had been approved and seemed to perhaps work slightly different.  She suggested I research it because she might consider it for our son when it became available.  I knew then that hope had died for me although I did research it, I felt no feeling and my response back to her ended with something like—"I no longer believe that any medication will make a difference for him.  We need to simply help him make the best of things.”  A year later, he was admitted for the first time in our state mental hospital.  I allowed myself to hope for a time that perhaps with close supervision and management of side effects as they happened might be a turning point, but the difficulty of the situation did not seem to allow for that outcome.  So, my hope—our hope—was officially gone.  We had tried “everything.”  There was nowhere else to go, nothing more to do. 

We love our son and have tried to allow him his independence but also give him the support and advocacy that he needs.  We take things one day at a time and rarely talk to each other about the future for him.  This is our reality and his—and if we do not hope for something better, then day by day is not as painful and the grief is not ever present.  I was not or am not proud of where I have ended up, but I was sure that it did not really matter. I was sure that my son was not aware that I had no hope that his life would improve. I still am involved in his life, I still advocated for him, and attended appointments when he asked me.  I still love and cherish him.

After three months of terrible symptoms, our son has recently been admitted back to the state hospital on a new unit with a new psychiatrist.  The staff and the psychiatrist have said and done all of the “right” things to help me to understand and be involved in their treatment of our son, but I did not care.  I was not going to believe that things could be better for him.  After all, if things were better, great, I would celebrate along with everyone else.  What did it matter what I personally thought or felt?  The team was doing the treatment, not me.  But now--the phone call where a stranger is telling me that my son is in the best place possible with a psychiatrist who will take things slowly and will listen to us and to our son.  She is telling me that miracles still can and will happen.  She is saying that hope is what we—what I—need. It comes back to-- should I, could I, am I too afraid to hope again?  I know the cost of hope-disappointment, grief and sorrow, feelings of failure, high expectations which others do not meet, and fear.

The hope we are talking about is not the casual hope suggested in the sentence “I hope the weather is good on Saturday.”  It is the soul-binding action “hope” that helps you engage in the work that is needed with the passion that is unstoppable.  It is a hope that allows you to maintain a long-view while dealing with the realities of the day to day. For me, returning to this hope can allow me to see and acknowledge the tiny miracles that happen even in the middle of this horrible illness.  Having hope can open my heart more to take pleasure in the simple things—a phone call, an “I love you,” without being overwhelmed in the losses of the illness.  It would allow me to once again pray for my son more fully.  This hope doesn’t guarantee any outcome nor even improvement, but it allows me to explore and put myself on the line—all of me—in this battle against schizophrenia.  After all, my son doesn’t have a choice.

I wrote this essay to this point about six months ago—the realization that Ben did not have a choice in his daily battle with schizophrenia really struck me when I wrote it and it became a hinge point for me as I continue to wrestle with the idea of hope in relationship to Ben.  I realized that I was trying to avoid pain and sorrow by giving up hope, but Ben still had to take the “hits” of his illness as they came—no timeout for him. Not that I should be miserable and grieving all of the time because of his illness, but I felt that I also shouldn’t step so far from the battle either. I needed to be engaged intellectually, emotionally, and spiritually and doing that meant that I needed to find hope again.

So, I did what I do—I read, I prayed, and I pondered again and again and again.  And in little tiny moments and in small ways, a shift occurred and I sensed first a willingness and then a little flame of hope growing inside of me.  One day, as I stepped outside of the Reception Building at the state hospital, where you check in before making a visit, I noticed the setting sun—the sky and the clouds were perfect—and the air had that rose tint to it, I took a big breath in and I felt filled with the peace and hope that I had been looking for. And although Ben has had some significant ups and downs in the past month, that same feeling of peace and hope remains with me.  I have hope.

It is not the hope I sought at the beginning of this journey.  Then the hope was centered on Ben getting well or finding the right medication so he could return to the life he and we had planned for him. This new hope is based on a much more eternal view of life and its purposes.  My hope for Ben is to be able to “fulfill the measure of his creation.”  Throughout the rest of his life, I want for him to be where he should be, interacting with those he should impact, and complete the plan that His Heavenly Father had for him.  In my life, I know God has a plan.  It is not any different for Ben.  Schizophrenia may have been a surprise for Ben and for us, but it was not a surprise to our Heavenly Father—it was the plan.  I know that Gary and I have grown because of parenting Ben.  I believe that he has impacted others.  Those who have shown him kindness and respect even in the middle of a terrible illness—someday Ben will stand as a witness of their goodness.

Early in his illness when he still had insight and access to his core self, he told me one night that he had thought about it and if him having schizophrenia was what was needed for me and Gary to make it to the Celestial Kingdom, then he was willing to do it because he loved us. I, of course, began to cry and told him that “it would break my heart if I was the reason that he had to suffer through schizophrenia.  I would rather suffer than watch him.” The reality is that neither of us have a choice about this.  We can only each play the role that we have been given.  From where I am sitting, Ben is working hard.  I can do no less than my best as well. I can and will pay the cost of hope.

And Then Came A Nice Sunday

We decided to attend our home ward of Barber Acres yesterday as Olivia Randall, a young woman we have known since she was little and they moved into our ward, was speaking after returning home from her mission (she is the one that we saw a few times in the past weeks.)  It was our first time since we moved to Salt Lake that we have been back to Church.  It was so fun to see our friends, but many we missed as well--holiday weekend or other Church assignments.

Afterwards, we took a swing by the Syracuse Temple site:



In order to take the photo of the sign, I had to step in front of a parked car and ended up having a fun conversation with two older people from Layton.  They had gone to see the progress on the Layton Temple and decided to come and find the Syracuse one as well.  They didn't know where it was but just drove until she saw the crane in the sky and they kept turning until they arrived.  They told us we needed to check in on the Layton Temple so we did:




It is about a 1 to 1 1/2 years ahead of the Syracuse Temple.  We are so lucky to have these two buildings to serve the members of the Church in our area.  The work is really hastening like the prophet has promised us.  Hard to see because of the fencing and construction trailers but their parking lot is mostly done except for landscaping.

That night, we saw the movie "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood" which is about a journalist's interactions with Fred Rogers in writing a article about him.  It wasn't what I had expected but it was interesting and really despite having a cold this week---It has been a string of beautiful days in our neighborhood.  I hope it is for you as well.

The Drive Back Home

On the way to and from the BYU Basketball game, we traveled some of the back roads of the east side of the Salt Lake Valley.  It was fun to travel new roads as you never know what you might see.

This was one such oddity:  Have you seen a bike traffic signal?

Something new every day!


Sunday, February 20, 2022

Another Perfect Day

Maybe because I had been sick all week and was finally feeling better or maybe because the weather was so beautiful this weekend, but Friday and Saturday were two perfect days--back to back--a day at the temple and then a Saturday afternoon at ........

BYU WOMEN'S BASKETBALL GAME!!

One of the missionaries in our zone--Elder Mel Young, knows the BYU Women's basketball coach, Jeff Judkins and was able to get us tickets for the game on Saturday against Gonzaga.  The BYU Women's team is ranked 10th in the nation and are having a great year.  This was a big game and a great opportunity.  It was also senior day which meant extra emotions for many players and fans.

We got to go on to the court....it doesn't really look as big standing down there.  Our seats were on the front row off the court--perfect.

Pre-game warmups!

We then met the coach and actually were able to go into the locker room and hear the coach's talk to the team before the game as well as the assistants.  It was quite amazing for a basketball fan like me.  No pictures because it didn't seem like the right thing to do at the time.  Then the team walked out and high fived their coaches AND Jena!  She (and me) loved that.  I wished we had a video, but again didn't seem like something I should have done.  

This is a sign on the wall outside their locker room.



Waiting for the game to start


Young fans with their posters...


At the first there were not many fans, but in the end, they had over 6000 fans and
broke the record for the most fans for a women's sporting event in the Marriot Center.


So--if you are a BYU nut--you would want to know that the gray-haired man
in the picture below is BYU President Kevin Worthen.  He and his wife
sat courtside three rows in front of us.  Tom Holmoe, the athletics director at BYU, also
sat in the center of the courtside seats.  Both are big fans!  However, I would say that President 
Worthen is a little more reserved than Tom Holmoe, especially in regards to complaining about the referees. Sitting as close as we were, we could find a lot to complain about!  They were fun to watch.



Close up seats come with extra bonuses-----


And the BYU cheerleaders were there to cheer their team...


They did a cool thing at the beginning.  The color guard brought in three flags and they first displayed the flag from Brazil and played the national anthem for Brazil.  One of the seniors, Maria Albiero, is from there.

I loved  when the video showed her and she was singing along with her anthem.  I couldn't hear the words, but I could see her joy and emotion.  They also displayed the flag and played for the national anthem of New Zealand for another player and then did the United States...

Third period action from the student section----



Score at the end of the third period---


Goodbyes and farewells....



and good bye to the seniors....





We then went back to the Youngs' home in Little Cottonwood Canyon and had some delicious pie from St. George from a famous pie shop we have never heard of (but will look for next visit there.) and had great conversation with Mel and Joan Young.  What a blessing they are to us.  They served with us as assistant Zone leaders and we love them.  These friendships are some of the great blessings of serving a mission.  We are so lucky.

Oh, and the final score:   63-39!!   Go Cougs!


 

Saying Good-bye

to more sweet missionary friends--Elder Paul and Sister Kathleen Niemann who have been our next door neighbors and served on the first floor of the Church History Library returned home last week.  With Jena being sick we weren't able to play games one last time--so sad.  We loved having them nearby, we loved their cookies that Sister Niemann made, and we will miss them.

They tied these balloons on our door the day before they left.  How sweet is that.  They are from Sacramento California and we hope to see them again sometime.  Thank heavens for email, texting, and Facebook.

This is the hard thing about a mission--people you have grown to love being released and going home.  We have many friends who will be leaving over the next 7 months before we go, including our mission president and his wife.

Good thing we know about the eternities!


Zone Temple Trip to Provo City Center Temple

About 20 people from our zone attended the temple together last Friday (Feb. 18th).  It was a gorgeous day to be in a very beautiful and holy place.  We then went to lunch together afterwards and then we stopped and visited Ben.  It all made for a great day.





Gary and Sister Burwell didn't make it for the group picture (people had to leave so we decided to take it with the larger group and then got Gary and Sister Burwell later.)  Sister Dixon and Sister Lee and Elder Bae also stayed longer in the temple to do sealings as well.



It was a beautiful day!


And Jena shares...

her cold with me and I spent this past week, mostly with a sore throat and runny nose and feeling miserable.  So I ended up doing a Covid test on Thursday EVEN though I was sure I had the same thing as Jena. But I wanted to go to the temple on Friday and I needed to make sure I didn't have Covid.  That is the day we live in at the moment.

Of course, my test was negative. Yay!  Still have some congestion but feeling much better and sleeping in my bed rather than the recliner so that is great.

A good and bad thing about the world as we are living it now is that many of the meetings I have are on Zoom or Teams so even though I was home sick, I could still attend.  It was good because I was able to attend some interesting presentations and devotionals but bad when I really just wanted to sleep.  And in some meetings, it is hard to attend when you can't talk- :(

So far, Gary has "dodged the bullet."  Hopefully he will stay well.

Devotional- "Chimney Rock ....or Meeting BF Owen?

Jena was suppose to do the devotional last Thursday, but because she was sick, I became a last minute substitute for her.  I told the zone before our meeting started that I felt like I should have sent out an email telling people that Jena wasn't doing it so they could sleep in if they wanted to.

Since we are in the weeks before the Root Tech, I decided to talk about family history.  I started by sharing a Roots Tech ad:

https://newsroom.churchofjesuschrist.org/eng/event/rootstech-2022

It can be found on the churchofjesuschrist.org website at that url.

Then I showed a short video about family history and temple blessings--It was a bit cheesy but our zone liked it and many people said they were going to share it with their families--

https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/media/video/2018-01-0020-spiritual-dynamite?lang=eng

This can also be found on the Church site under Gospel Media- Spiritual Dynamite

Both of these are short, around a minute each.

Then my presentation-- I used PowerPoint so I will share the photos and my comments:  This story will be familiar to those who have read the blog in past years since I wrote about it soon after it happened:





In 2017, Elder Hall, Jena and I had gone to Nauvoo and decided to drive back following pieces of the Mormon and Oregon Trail. Some of Gary's relatives traveled down the Mormon Trail but my relatives followed the Oregon Trail to the Willamette Valley in western Oregon.  I was fortunate enough to have a transcription of my maternal great-grandfather, Benjamin Franklin Owen's journal which he had kept during the trip. The actual journal is held in the Lane County Historical Museum. Also I had a copy of a long poem written by John Hamilton McClure called "How We Came To Oregon". He had cross the plains as a young boy and wrote this poem in the later part of his life.   He is my maternal great-great

uncle, brother to Jane McClure who later in Oregon became the wife to Benjamin Owen. 

 

While in Nauvoo, I had reread these writings to highlight some of the locations that they mentioned along the way.  Chimney Rock was one of those locations so I pulled them out to read what they had written while we were standing at this very spot.






Because we are historians, here are some of the markers which have been placed at the spot over time.


First a part of the poem by my great-great uncle....

From John Hamilton McClure’s poem:

"We saw "chimney rock" a very great sight
For it stood a column of wonderful height
The top had been broken and so tumbled down
And lay there, scattered, all over the ground."


Next slide had these two photos side by side (PowerPoint doesn't let me copy the slide exactly--or at least I don't know how to do that.)



Now my great grandfather’s journal:

 

"June 11"----and then I started to cry.  In all of my planning for our trip and my review of the journal in Nauvoo and in the months before--I didn't make the connection.  My great grandfather made this entry on June 11 and there we stood 164 years later ON JUNE 11!!! It couldn't have been more perfect and being unplanned and unnoticed until that very moment as I began to read was so overpowering and I cried (and even as I type this I am crying again.) It was a powerful moment and one I will never forget. "June 11 Traveled til about 1 Oclock and came in Sight of Chimney Rock. One of Nature's great curiosities, days drive, about 18 M's & camped."

 

They then stayed in camp on Sunday, June 12, as was his custom and those he traveled with.  


Then he wrote:

"June 13  We passed the Chimney Rock about 10 Oclock But drove on to within a Short distance of Scotts Bluff and camped, day's drive about 16 Ms."

 

For us, traveling down modern highways and in a gas-powered vehicle--we made the journey from seeing the Chimney Rock to being there in a short 20 minutes or so.  Regardless, he and we had first seen the Chimney Rock on June 11.  I have never met my great grandfather.  He died in 1917.  My grandfather, Robert, was his 12th child out of 15.  My grandpa passed away when I was four, so I have only a few memories of him.  But at the moment, standing at the Chimney Rock, I felt them all close with me (a feeling that lasted the rest of the journey) and I felt like I will recognize them someday in the future when I leave here (earth) and travel to where they are and somehow...I felt like B. F. and Jane knew that I was there to walk near where they walked and to honor them as their great-granddaughter.  This place now is holy ground for me.


My final slide had these three photos arranged in a nice layout..... 




...with this scripture

“And he shall turn the heat of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the children to their fathers,”  Mal. 4:6    (artfully over the dandelion photo)

And I said:   

Truly my heart was permanently turned to my fathers.  His temple work and that of his family has already been done, but because of those feelings on that day—I feel a kinship with all of my family who has proceeded me and I also feel an increase tie to my descendants and urge to leave my stories for them.  I didn’t cross America on the Oregon Trail but I have also lived a life of adventure and trials and maybe some day 164 years from now, one of them may be standing in a place I stood—whether figurally or actually --and just maybe something I wrote might make a difference in the life of one of those precious family members.

The End!!

Sunday, February 13, 2022

The Sad Thing About Being Sick

......is that Jena had to miss some fun things.  As luck would have it, last week we had events planned on Thursday and Friday evening.

Thursday we were going to the BYU women's basketball team and getting to go into the locker room before the game and meet some players.  One of our missionaries knows the coach personally and he gave us some great tickets for the night.  Fortunately, the missionary found others to go with him and the coach arranged for tickets for the game on Saturday, the 19th for us to go.  The coach will let us know if they can have guests in the locker room that day as it gets closer.

Friday, we had the 4th of the 4th events of my Christmas gift for Jena and Gary-- "Bravo Broadway" with the Utah Symphony at Abravanel Hall.  I have to say that Gary was a bit too "happy" to offer to stay home with Jena on Friday and let me go to the symphony with two sister missionaries from our zone.  However, they really missed out!  It was a super fun night and I know Jena and even Gary would have loved it.  The focus was on Rogers and Hammerstein and included music from The King and I, The Sound of Music, South Pacific, Oklahoma, and others.

Rogers and Hammerstein (or maybe it is the reverse.)

They had the following guest performers:  Jerry Steichen as conductor and vocalists- William Michals, Hugh Panaro, and Scarlett Strallen.  All three are major Broadway stars and performed in many many famous shows over the years.  Scarlett Strallen is from Great Britain and her voice and accent sound so close to Julie Andrews.  It was amazing to listen to her and all of them.  The Utah Opera Choir also sung backup.  Everything was amazing!  If you love American musicals, you would have loved this show!

And Sister Shirley Cox and Sister Marianne Jones were delightful companions for the night.  We met at the Church History Library and walked to City Creek to Café Rio for dinner and then walked to Abravanel Hall, and then walked home (me) or to their cars.

A great night!

But I guess I need to think of another #4 activity for their Christmas Gift 2021!

Welcome home, Olivia!

A week ago, we saw Olivia Randall in the lobby of the Joseph Smith Memorial Building.  She is from our ward in Syracuse and just returned home from her mission in Mexico.  She was there for a job interview.

Last Monday, I saw her again on my way into the Church History Library.  She had gotten the job and was just returning from the COB where she had filled out her employee paperwork.  We took this photo to send to her mom...which I forgot about...so I am doing right....now!

Gary and I also passed Brother Dan Reinhardt from our ward at the street corner one day at the end of his work day.  He works at the COB. (Church Office Building)
 

Mission Evening Devotional

We stayed home and watched it over Zoom since Jena was definitely getting sick on Monday afternoon.  It is not quite the same as being in the beautiful chapel at the Joseph Smith Memorial Building, but we were glad that we could still watch it.

Our speakers were Elder Kevin Hamilton and his wife, Sister Claudia Hamilton. She shared about their service in Africa where they lived for 5 years before Elder Hamilton was assigned to the Family History Department.  Elder Hamilton touched a variety of topics from being senior missionaries and the upcoming Roots Tech.  He reported that people believe that 100 billion people have lived on this earth and slowly the family tree is being built to include all of those people.  He talked about the message given by Moroni to Joseph Smith when he was 17--the Book of Mormon--another testament of Christ and the power of Elijah--turning the heart of the children to their fathers.  That is how important the work of family history is!

One of the amazing blessings of serving in the Utah Salt Lake City Headquarters Mission!