Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Cousin Ben

 

My dad had a cousin named Ben.  When they were boys they would fish and camp together.  Ben's mother, Echo, was my grandma's big sister.  She was like a second mom to grandma.  Aunt Echo had a knack for sewing.  According to Grandma she could see a dress in the store window then go home and make it.  Grandma needed a pattern, with instructions.  Sometimes she would get stuck and she'd ask Aunt Echo for help.  She'd show her the instructions and point out the spot where she got stuck and Echo would laugh and show her what to do.  Echo's husband, Uncle Brian, also made a strong impression on my grandma.  When Ben and his twin sister were born, Brian would get up in the night to help care for them.  He would say, "Well, Echo has to work all day too."  Meaning that the work she did all day to care for newborn twins and a toddler, a house, and whatever else she was responsible for was just as important has his job.  Grandma thought that was just amazing.  (I'm not sure what that says about my own grandpa but that's a story for another day.)  

When Ben and Dad graduated from high school they had to decide if they wanted to serve missions for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.  Ben's mom and dad were both faithful, dedicated members of the church and he planned to serve a mission.  My grandma also faithfully attended church meetings but Grandpa had no use for church.  So dad was left to decide for himself.  He was a shy, anxious kid.  Church was boring.  He had no intention of serving a mission.  Before Ben left for his mission he had an opportunity to speak in church.  Dad and his mom and sister attended.  At some point in the talk Ben said something along the lines of "If I can serve a mission, so can you."  My father felt the Holy Spirit touch his heart and he knew that those words were for him.  He contacted his bishop and soon received a call to serve for two years in Japan.  

Dad's missionary service solidified his testimony of Jesus Christ and his determination to serve Him.  Throughout his life he diligently attended his church meetings, served in a variety of capacities in the church, and led his family in scripture reading, prayer and Family Home Evening.  He and Mom attended the temple often, nearly weekly for as long as I can remember.  On Sunday afternoons he would set up a card table and pull out all his genealogy papers.  He used a fountain pen to carefully copy his ancestor's information onto giant pedigree charts and family group records.  He was a faithful husband and father.

I was an adult living half way across the continent when my dad told me this story and I have often wondered if Ben ever knew the influence he had on my dad.  I can trace my own missionary service and devotion to Jesus Christ to the decision that Ben made to serve a mission.  I don't know where he served or how many people came to believe the gospel of Jesus Christ as a result of his service, but I know that I owe my own testimony to his decision to serve a mission, and his sharing of that choice with my dad.

Cousin Ben died a few months after my dad did.  (They both died during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic but not from COVID.  Dad had brain cancer and Ben had a stroke.)  After learning of Ben's passing I carried an image in my mind of Dad and Ben tromping through the woods with their fishing poles; young, healthy, carefree.  Still best friends.

Alma 17:1-2 therefore, Alma did rejoice exceedingly to see his brethren; and what added more to his joy, they were still his brethren in the Lord...

This photo is of Ben straightening Dad's tie at my parents wedding reception.  Would that we all could have such a Best Man/Woman in our lives.

Monday, December 28, 2020

Christmas

When I was little my family had an unusual Christmas tree.  I wish I had a photo of it.  I expect my parents picked it up at the DI.* It came in a big square box.  The stand was broken and some of the branches were missing, so my parents would take out the tree, close the box flaps in a particular way and put the trunk of the tree through the hole in the center of the top of the box.  Then mom would wrap a white sheet around the box.  It kind of looked like a small tree sitting on a table top.  Kind of.  We had lights on the tree that looked like two inch globes dipped in colored rock salt.  There were tin ornaments shaped like birds and Santa and other things, reminiscent of the Victorian era.  But mostly the tree was covered in handmade ornaments that us kids brought home from Primary* and elementary school every year.  And there was an Angel.  She was an iridescent white cone with a head and some feathery wings.  I don't know where she came from but I remember my mother treating her very carefully.  She must have been important to her.

The recession of the late 1970s that propelled Ronald Reagan to the presidency was not good to my family.  Dad was unemployed for a while. My little sister, Elanor, was born with Down's syndrome.  She has always been an absolute joy and a lot of work, worry, and stress for my parents.  My Sandberg grandparents kept the freezer full of meat and the storage room full of home canned peaches.  My Hinchcliff grandparents provided bananas, store bought bread,* and powdered caked donuts with raspberry filling*.  And Christmas and birthday presents, school clothes, Easter dresses and I can only guess what else.  Grandma and Grandpa Hinchcliff lived nearby and we visited them often.  We loved to play in the basement where all the random things from the previous 50 years were kept.  Dress ups that my grandma had actually worn in the 60s, doll dresses stitched by hand for actual babies long since grown, endless piles of scratch paper left over from the middle school math and science classes my grandpa taught, and the giant electric train table kept us busy for hours.  But, after Thanksgiving the basement was off limits.  I don't remember ever really thinking about it, but obviously that's where all the gifts were stored.  There was one year when a crazy snow storm came through on Christmas Eve and my parents informed us that Santa was unable to get through and had, therefore, left all the presents at grandma's house.  We accepted that and happily enjoyed all of our Santa presents when we got to Grandma's.  I'm not sure it ever occurred to us that if Santa could get to Grandma's he could get to our house, it wasn't that far. I think I used a lot of willing suspension of disbelief as a kid.  I don't remember anyone telling me who Santa Claus really was, I just kind of always knew and didn't really think too hard about it.

That Christmas when dad was unemployed and Elanor was little must have been really hard for my parents.  We received regular food orders through the church (the raspberry jam was really good).  I don't remember understanding why, but I remember unpacking the boxes and being amazed at all the food.  As Christmas approached, strange things started happening.  One night there was a knock on the door and a man we didn't know stood on our porch with a giant bag.  He handed it to my parents, wished us Merry Christmas, and left.  The bag was filled with games.  Some of those games are still on the shelf in my mother's basement.  Another day the doorbell rang and there stood all the teenagers from our church with a beautiful Christmas tree.  A real Christmas tree, with matching handmade decorations.  They also had food and gifts.  When they placed the tree and plugged in the lights Elanor got so excited.  She was sitting on my mom's lap, waving both arms and legs in the air with the biggest, happiest smile I have ever seen.  I learned later that that experience, especially Elanor's reaction, was a truly meaningful experience for those teenagers.  They felt the joy of giving.  Maybe it was hard for my parents to accept all that help, but I could see the joy serving my family brought to the people standing on our porch.  It felt like Christmas every day for me.

*DI- Deseret Industries, a thrift store owned and operated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Utah/Idaho/Arizona.  It is used for job training like Goodwill, as well as a place church leaders can go to get clothes and household goods for families and individuals in need.

*Primary- Sunday school for kids ages 3-11 in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

*My mom always made homemade bread.  I didn't really like it.  The crust was thick and tough and it didn't make very good sandwiches.  The bread would crumble to bits.  I remember one day some friends were over and going crazy about having homemade bread.  It was the first time I remember realizing that homemade bread was special.  I've learned to appreciate homemade bread since then, but I still don't prefer is for sandwiches.

*They don't sell those in Michigan.  We got some last time we were in Utah and they were good but not as good as I remember.  Maybe they changed the recipe.  Ya, that's it.  We didn't eat a lot of treats so the treats grandma brought were well appreciated.

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Walking With Dad

 


When I was a little girl I loved to walk with my dad.  We would walk around the block and talk to the neighbors, the Stevens', the Singelton's.  I loved to hold his hand and try to match his strides.  When he noticed he would take longer and longer strides until I was leaping with every step, until I was laughing too hard to keep up.  

We would often spend the afternoon at my grandmother's house.  One day we were getting ready to go home and I was certain that I should be the one to ride in the coveted center front seat between my parents but my sister had beat me to it.  My child's mind believed it had well thought out reasoning but no-one was interested in hearing it.  Looking back as an adult and a mother I can imagine that my little sisters were tired and my parents were anxious to get home.  I made a fuss.  The thing I really remember is feeling unheard.  And I was a stubborn kid.  Finally in a moment of desperation, or inspiration, my dad handed my mom the car keys, took me by the hand and started walking.  It was almost 6 miles and late in the afternoon.  We walked and we talked.  We walked a different way than I had ever been before.  Maybe to avoid the big down and up again hill that we called "the roller coaster".  It was fun in the car, not so much on foot.  The thing I really remember is feeling heard and feeling loved.  I don't remember being tired although I'm sure I was.  I remember it was dark before we got home.  My father's decision to walk with me became one of my most cherished memories.  

Soon after that my dad decided I was ready to climb a mountain.  Early on a Saturday morning, my dad, my older sister, Oretta, and I filled our canteens and packed our bags.  We drove up the canyon to the parking lot of the Snow Basin ski resort.  We started walking up the dirt service road that follows the ski lifts.  We walked for a long time.  We passed pine trees and quaking aspens, streams and fields of wild flowers.  I remember putting my handkerchief in the stream and wiping my face with the frigid water.  It was a hot sunny day and I got tired quickly.  

When I wanted to rest, dad would point to a shady spot up ahead and encourage me to get that far before we stopped.  Somehow I found that I did have enough strength to go that far.  After a rest and a drink of water I discovered that I wasn't so tired as I thought and I could cary on.  Dad was endlessly patient with us, encouraging us to go "just a little further."  About noon we reached the saddle, a low spot between two peaks where we could look over the ridge to the other side.  I thought we were done, we made it, but dad pointed up to the peak just above us.  We were close but the final stretch was steep and rocky and I didn't think I had any more strength left.  Somehow dad convinced me to keep going and it turns out I did have enough strength to get to the very top of Mt. Ogden. 

It is hard to describe the way I felt standing on the peak.  Even the wind feels different.  I felt like I could see forever.  To the west was the city of Ogden where we lived.  I could see the Ogden Temple and other land marks I recognized.  I could see all the way to the far side of the Great Salt Lake.  To the east was row upon row of mountain peaks finally fading into the sky.  I felt an overwhelming awe as I surveyed the vastness of God's creations.  I felt the contradiction of being so infinitesimally small and so strong simultaneously.  I started to understand my own value and my own weakness at the same time.  It was my first glimpse into eternity.  

So many times since then I have felt that I was done, that I had nothing left to give.  Every time I have found that I do have more.  I can push forward to the next shady spot with a log or a rock to sit on.  I can take a break and drink some water and find that I do have the strength to cary on after all.  

We ate our lunch and took pictures with my Kodak Disk camera.  We signed the registry and started back down.  Down was much easier than up.  When I went back to school that fall I pointed out Mt. Ogden to my friends and told them all how I had been to the very top.  

Last summer I went for a walk with my dad.  He had been diagnosed with brain cancer but the treatments were going well and dad was feeling pretty good.  I had hoped to climb Mt. Ogden that summer but it was too early and the snow was still deep, so we went out to Antelope Island instead.  Dad wanted to come along.  Dad and I and a couple of the kids walked along the shoreline trail.  It was flat and easy.  We went slow.  I kept checking if dad was ready to turn around.  He kept saying, "No, I want to see what's over that rise."  So we kept walking.  He was a little bit wobbly and I was terrified he would fall.  We walked so far that we ended up having to ask some strangers for a ride back to the car. It was weird and a little embarrassing, but they were kind and everything was fine in the end.  That was the last time I walked with my dad.  

When we visited at Christmas he could barely walk from the kitchen to the living room.  In January he fell and broke his arm.  He spent a few days in the hospital, a few weeks in the rehabilitation center, and then to a nursing home because he couldn't even get out of bed without help.  In March the world shut down for the COVID-19 pandemic and in April he was gone.  It was still dangerous to travel and a funeral was out of the question.  The funeral home streamed the graveside service over Facebook.  That was really weird.

This summer, more than 35 years later, I returned to the top of Mt. Ogden, this time with my own children in tow.  I encouraged them to go just a little bit further, to take a break and then try again.  I was afraid we wouldn't make it to the top.  But we did, all of us.  We sat on the peak and looked at the world just as I did when I was 10.  It's a little different now.  The ski resort got a facelift for the Utah Olympics a few years ago.  There's a helicopter pad at the top now, more satellite dishes, too.  

My feet hurt and we still had the long walk back down, but I could feel the wind as it blew and see the long lines of peaks fading into the distance.  My children were there at the top of the mountain and I prayed that they felt eternity and their own strength the way I did when I stood on top of that mountain with my dad so long ago.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Saving the World: Part 2, Social Distancing Style

I am writing this post in April of 2020.  We've been home from everything for almost three weeks and we are a little crazy.  One of the first things I realized when school closed was that we were still going to need to get out of the house every day or we weren't all going to survive, virus or no virus.  We started going for walks.  March is when the snow melts in Michigan and the freshly melted snow leaves behind six months worth of road side trash.  It can be downright impressive.  By the end of April nature has hidden it all away for another season but in March and early April it is there for all to see.
My husband likes to take long runs every day and as he runs he notices the trash.  This spot is about a mile from our house and seams to be a hot spot for trash.  So one day we put a couple of trash bags and gloves in our pockets and went for a walk.  It took almost no time to fill two large trash bags and a very old cooler as full as we could carry them.  One lady running by said Thank you. That was when we realized we hadn't worked out how we were going to get the trash back home.  We made like the trash Santa and carried the bags toward home until we came upon a dumpster and decided it would be ethical to put the bags in it.  (My apologies to the offices if it wasn't.  But, really, how much easier could it be to help save the world than donating a little dumpster space?)


After that we started putting a couple of (smaller) trash bags in our pockets every time we left the house.  The thing I have noticed most is that there is more trash than we can possibly pick up.  It seams to collect near roads and parking lots and, oddly enough, around trash cans.  The lady walking her dog was impressed: "Are you guys picking up trash?!?  I always think I should, but I never do."



West Michigan is a little shy on sunshine.  (I once had a doctor suggest that everyone living in West Michigan should take vitamin D supplements.)  So whenever the sun shows it's cold little face we drag the kids out for a walk.  We wear our coats, clean up trash, soak up whatever sun there is, get a little exercise, remember that there are other people in the world.  (They are all out trying to stay sane, too.  From six feet away, of course.)


It reminds me that I do, in fact, still belong to a community.  And I can still contribute to that community, even from a six foot distance.

The skunk cabbage was in bloom.  Did you know that skunk cabbage grows down into the ground instead of up into the air like most plants?  An old skunk cabbage is almost impossible to dig up because its stem goes so far down into the mud.  Crazy.

Monday, March 16, 2020

Saving the World: Part 1, Compost

Compost is about as un-sexy as anything comes, but my family makes a lot of fruit and vegetable scraps and my yard makes a lot of weeds so it seamed like a good place to start.
We have had a compost bin for years, but it needed some repairs and I thought we could do better with a little more information.

So I ordered a bunch of books from the library and tried to read them. The kid's books were easy to read but didn't give me any new information.  The adult books varied from easy to long but I still don't know what to do about the winter.  (Stuff doesn't compost when it's freezing outside.). We'll worry about that later.

One thing I have learned over the years is that most projects happen when you learn a little bit then just try it.  You try it for a while, learn a little bit more, try it a little differently, fail a little bit, succeed a little bit, learn a little more, tweak, try again.  Pretty much everything I know how to do is the result of that formula right there.

There appear to be about a thousand different ways to build a compost bin.  Many available commercially.  Many different styles to build.  They all have holes to allow air circulation and most are open on the bottom to encourage the little buggies to come hang out.


We used cedar fencing to build a three bin system.  One bin is where we put all those fruit and vegetable scraps and yard waste.  The center bin is full of leaves that can be layered with the fresh stuff.  The last bin is full of last year's half composted compost.  The idea of having the separate bins is that you have compost when you need it without having to sort out the not quite done bits.  If all goes well we will empty out last year's bin over the summer and switch to adding things there while this year's bin finishes up next spring.



Things a compost bin needs: air, water, green stuff and brown stuff, worms and bugs.
Air: The bin should not be air tight and the compost should get stirred up regularly to allow oxygen into the mix.  The more often you stir it the faster it turns to compost and the less it stinks.  Oxygen is our friend.
Water: The compost should be damp, not wet. If you live in a wet climate you'll need to protect from too much water, if you live in a dry climate you will need to water it occasionally.
Green Stuff: That's the fruit and veggie scraps from the kitchen, lawn clippings, garden waste, etc.
Brown Stuff: Dry leaves, mulch, etc.
Worms and Bugs: Millions of microscopic bacteria, fungi, earthworms, and lots of other bugs.  You don't have to go find these guys.  The compost is like a big old "Diner" sign.  If you build it they will come.

So all you have to do is layer the green stuff and the brown stuff, make sure it stays the right amount wet and stir it regularly.  Once or twice a week seams like the consensus. But apparently you can never stir it and still get compost. (That's what we've been doing so far.) It just takes a lot longer.

Next Big Problem: With the compost bin behind the garage the chances that anyone (even me) will run out there every evening to empty the day's scraps becomes very small.  So we added an intermediary step.  Not always a good idea but, we decided, worth trying.

The big bucket will live just outside the kitchen door.  It has a lid to keep out the critters and holes to let the air in and the juice out.  It will get emptied as part of the weekly lawn mowing.  (We are very optimistic.)









Here's the plan: We have a small bucket on the kitchen counter.  When you eat an apple you drop the core in the little bucket.  (See how optimistic we are?)


Every day someone (we are thinking positive here and imagine that it could be anyone living here) empties the little bucket into the big green bucket with a lid.


When someone (still thinking positive here) mows the lawn they will use the pitch fork to stir the compost, empty the grass clippings and the green bucket into the compost bin, throw a layer of dry leaves on top and voila it all happily composts until next time.


 So here's hoping we learned a little and will have a little better compost experience than we have in the past.  (And still thinking positive that we will do a good job getting those scraps off the counter, into the compost and stirred occasionally.)

Books I read for this project:
Kids Books:
Way to Grow! Gardening: Composting by Rebecca Pettiford
Published by Pogo, 2016 (Early Elementary)
Really Rotten Truth About Composting by Jodie Mangor
Published by Rourke (Late Elementary)

Books for Grown Ups:
Basic Composting by Eric Ebeling and friends
Published by Stackpole Books, 2003 (Short, with lots of pictures)
Compost City: Practical Composting Know-how for Small-space Living by Rebecca Louie
Published by Roost Books, 2015 (Long, with lots of information and a dry sense of humor.)

And a moment of real...

Remember this picture of my cute little compost bucket on my nice clean countertop?


















Well, if you zoom out just a little this is what you see.  Just didn't want anyone to feel bad.