dessert with friends

On Tuesday I spent most of the day cleaning and doing laundry. The house has been a disaster, and it was nice to get it back in shape. Mary stayed home sick with a sad little cough, and honestly that made the cleaning possible. She is the BEST babysitter and follows Clarissa around lovingly for hours. It’s seriously beyond belief. I was so, so grateful.

Then in the evening I went out to dessert with my friends, Jill and Linda. We processed our Sunday Relief Society meeting together. After Jill had to go to take a work call, Linda and I sat in the car chatting until almost 10 pm. It was such a wonderful, connective conversation.

Then I came in, gave my mom a foot massage while talking to her, talked a bunch to Abe, and went to bed with a sore throat from talking so much.

processing

On Monday Shauna and Vanessa headed back to Colorado. They are the sweetest, kindest, most creative people. Shauna is basically oozing creativity from her pores. She sings, she paints, she lathes, she crochets, she bullet journals, and she even made me an acrylic vase. She is amazing. No wonder Lydia adores her.

Abe and I went to bikram together in the morning. Basically I spent the rest of the day in a daze trying to process what it means to take a break from church. It’s almost too much for my brain to handle.

In the evening I sat on the porch in a daze while Ammon and Clarissa went crazy with the water spigot. Kathryn, one of the RS presidency, came to talk with me about my decision to take a break from church. I keep wondering if I am making some sort of huge mistake. It’s so confusing.

A turning point Sunday

On Sunday I felt very uncomfortable in fast and testimony meeting. It is very hard for me to hear people say things like “I know the Church is true.” I respect that they feel that way and I can see how holding onto principles like that can help them be the best versions of themselves they can envision.

At the same time, I feel very uncomfortable with this statement on so many levels. First of all, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is not legally or technically a church at all. It is the trademark of a corporation. Most churches in our country are, in fact, churches. Ours is not. It is a business. That is an actual fact, so literally, the statement, “The Church is true” is factually untrue. The “Church” is not even a church, so we need a different term for this statement to be true.

Secondly, if we want to speak of the Church metaphorically, then even the very orthodox will probably admit that the metaphor here is for the body of Christ, which extends beyond Latter-Day Saints.

So after hearing, “I know the Church is true” over and over for an hour, my head starts hurting. I also do not appreciate black and white thinking the way I once did (for much of my membership, I positively reveled in this type of thought and testimony!), and so again, testimony meeting is especially hard. Everyone gets up and says what they know, and since what they know is not at all what I feel I know (which, admittedly, is precious little), it is just hard.

Then after that hardship, it was onto Relief Society. There was a new teacher teaching that had never taught before, and I know this person was very well intentioned, but the lesson traumatized me. I wrote a post about this in one of my FB groups, so rather than rehashing it again, I’ll just copy and paste:

“Sorry–this is a long post because I am grieving and in pain, and apparently I am venting. Yesterday in RS we had Dallin Oaks’ talk, “Truth and the Plan.” The teacher was well meaning but presented it in an uncompromising, judgmental way. (At one point she referenced a time when she had to restrain herself from physically shaking a young woman who told her that people should be free to marry whom they love. She also referenced her aetheist SIL’s grief at losing her son as a way to show us how superior we are because as believing members of the Church, we don’t need to grieve the deaths of our children like that. I felt physically ill at the thought that someone’s legitimate trauma was being used as an anecdote to make us feel good about our religion, not to mention that even though I still feel extremely hopeful about the afterlife, that in no way mitigates the pain I, as a person of faith, would feel if one of my children died.) After I made a comment about the importance of honoring each other’s religious freedom and pointed out that policies have changed in the past, the RS president (who is my friend) stood up and through tears told us that this talk was the beautiful doctrine and plan of God, that we needed to take responsibility for our testimony of it and get God to tell us directly it was true. These really weren’t even the worst parts of the lesson–there were so many points of pain that by the end I was a shaking, sobbing mess and felt like there was no way I could participate in a community that makes judgement so normal. Up until yesterday, the majority of my experience with the “little c” church has been positive, but that lesson and the class’s reaction exposed what (to me) seemed like the one of the worst parts of the Church. I felt like I saw it clearly for the first time with my own eyes and spirit, and it was traumatic. I spent the rest of the day crying and talking with my family, and at the end decided the best course for now is to take a break from church. I don’t know if this is a permanent break and part of me really fears that outcome. For those who have taken breaks, have you found ways to re-integrate after your break, and what did that look like for you?”

What this post did not capture was the incredible tender love which my family showed me all day. When I came home, Shauna (who had given the most courageous, love-filled comment in the lesson which the teacher completely disregarded) and her mom gave me long hugs and so much love. Then my mom gave me a long hug. Then Abe, after taking care of the kids, came upstairs, climbed in bed with me, held me while I sobbed and comforted me. It might even have been his suggestion that I take a break. He spoke the kindest, wisest, softest words while I just shook and cried. He told me he loved me no matter what, that things would work out, that I needed space, that God was in charge, and that he had faith in me.

Later in the day, after he gave my mom a blessing, I went to my mom and she wrapped me in her arms, told me that I was always safe with her, that she knew from the minute I was born that God had answered her prayers for a daughter that was especially beloved of the Lord, that she thinks I am smart, and that she trusts me and believes in me. I am almost crying writing this. It was so tender, so touching, and deserves to be memorialized as a forever testament to this wonderful woman. I know there are very few orthodox parents out there who would respond this way to a child telling them they need to take a break from the Church, but thanks be to God, my mother is a unicorn. She is my forever hero.

I spent the rest of the day feeling hollow and traumatized and just trying to process what happened in class. If I have emotional energy, I might write down the rest of the lesson that I found so disturbing. Mostly it was the realization that the Church conditions good people that I know and love to be judgmental and to hand over their hearts and minds to the institution so it can think for them. We are told to think for ourselves, but honestly, if you think differently than leadership, you must not be thinking or praying or seeking in the correct way (according to our culture). It is not only discouraging, it is shocking.

I have a lot of thinking to do. I have four beautiful, smart children with the most amazing hearts that I have encountered on the planet. I know I am writing from bias, but as a mother I get to see into my kids’ hearts, and I see such pure goodness. I never, ever want them to give away their moral agency and responsibility into the hands of others. It kills me to think of them handing over their minds and hearts to a corrupt institution run by people less intelligent and pure than they are.

At the same time, I can see that the Church does some good, is good, and feels good to many people. So for now I am letting Abe just take the kids to church while I figure this one out.

Sunbathing

On Saturday I went for a really short run in the morning. I have been exercising every day and my whole body was tired from the week of bikram, cross-fit, swimming, and ab stuff. But I saw Katie Freestone at the track. It was so lovely to bump into her and witness her building her body to be strong and healthy. She is so inspiring.

Then I came home and we had a lovely lunch with Shauna. Lydia adores Shauna and wrote her this poem:

Shauna – Daddy’s Cousin

Shauna is so very smart.

I don’t even know her part.

Her hair is so very colorful.

She is never, ever dull.

She can do the best crochet.

She can do the happy play.

Shauna, Shauna should be famous.

She is very, very blameless.

Shauna was very touched and proposed to Lydia that they be pen pals. “Do you want to think about it?” Shauna asked her.

“No, I want to do it.” said Lydia, decisively. I can’t imagine a more creative duo. They will be crafting and writing up the most beautiful letters.

I spent the rest of the day outside sunbathing in my new yellow swimsuit while Abe gardened. My neighbor, Emily, came over and we talked for hours in the sunshine. I cuddled the kids a lot, decompressed, and honestly, just ENJOYED my children. They are amazing kids!! I loved watching them play so nicely together and be considerate of each other. It was very touching. I felt very blessed to have such a great family and such wonderful friends.

The zoo

On Friday I took Ammon and Clarissa to the zoo. I had the thought to listen to the Hamilton soundtrack on the way down, and from the minute I turned it on to the minute we pulled in, I felt a giant surge of the Spirit. I felt so happy, excited, and joyful at the thought that Alexander Hamilton lived a complicated but purposeful life and then that Lin Manuel Miranda could come along and layer his outpouring of creativity and art on top of that life. It is such a breathtaking thought, to make meaning of someone else’s life with art. I felt so happy and close to God.

By the time we pulled in to the zoo, it was raining, so we went to Old Navy to get rain jackets since I didn’t think to pack any (it was sunny when we left and I didn’t check the weather). Ironically, the minute we stepped out of Old Navy, the rain had stopped and the sun was shining.

The zoo ended up being the perfect temperature and so fun. Clarissa and Ammon are great ages for the zoo. They are so appreciative. Ammon is so sweet and goes, “Look Mommy! Awww, he’s so cute!” at basically every animal. And Clarissa just was entranced by every animal. We rode the train at the end and I loved cuddling with both of them.

I had camera issues so I only got this one photo before giving up the phone and just living in the moment for the rest of the time.

In the evening I hosted my Doorkeeper’s Book Club meeting, and that was so therapeutic. Abe even joined because I went to cross- fit with him right before. It was a trade off. The book club went really, really long but I think everyone was just happy to have a safe space to discuss our spiritual journeys.

Tulip festival

Lydia with her poems.

Clarissa stared at the waterfall in amazement before running full speed at it with every hope of jumping in. She adores water.

On Thursday Abe’s flight didn’t arrive until late in the evening, and since I knew I had the evening routine to do by myself, I took the kids to the Tulip Festival. I figured they could wear themselves out running around and then bedtime would be a bit easier.

Clarissa LOVED the tulips and kept running at top speed (careening, really) down the paths to point delightedly at different flowers that caught her attention. She was entranced. Mary, whose favorite thing to do is take care of Clarissa, followed her delightedly, steering her, holding her hand, and cooing proudly at her. Ammon wanted to be independent and so kept trying to wander off. Lydia brought paper and a pen with her and spent the whole time writing poetry everywhere. In between writing poems she would exclaim how her head was filled with words and how inspired she felt by everything. These are the poems she wrote:

The Tulip

The tulip mostly ruby red

Makes a dreamy feeling in your head.

It smells so very, very sweet.

Birds come to it, tweet, tweet, tweet.

I love the tulip, as you can see.

I love the tulip, now it’s we.

The Tree

The tree is the tallest of them all.

It would take some might to make it fall

Wise and old it can be,

Super firm, as you can see.

I love the tree.

I hope you love the tree.

The Stream

The stream is very, very thin.

It’s very cold when touched by skin.

Sometimes very, very green,

Others, the color of a bean.

Smooth and fish-filled it may be.

If you love it, you can see

Why it’s calling out to me.

Lydia actually wrote more poems, but these are the ones I can find. I know she wrote one about a cloud but that must be lost somewhere.

Anyway, I loved that Lydia was so happy. After the first initial rush of excitement, this outing became very stressful for me. Clarissa is OBSESSED with water and wanted to jump into the waterfall, and in the meantime Ammon was trying to constantly escape. Thirty minutes in (or maybe not even that much) Mary got hungry and tired and started whining incessantly. Then Ammon got tired and started crying. And I had no stroller so I had to coax the children through acres and acres of garden with just my words.

After a while I remembered a lecture one of my English professors gave in college on the transcendentalists. I forget the point of the lecture, but during it he mentioned that as we age, often we lose our ability to experience ecstasy in nature. I remember feeling horrified at the thought that one day I could experience nature without ecstasy. Well, while I was corralling all of my children, hiking back up to the parking lot and pouring sweat, I remembered that lecture and realized with horror that I was in the middle of beautiful nature and didn’t feel a thing in my soul. I started to wonder if my spirit was insensate and dulled from my faith journey.

Then I realized I had four young kids with me, no stroller, and everyone was tired and hungry. I realized that I probably still have the capacity to enjoy nature, but not in these circumstances. I could recognize it was all very pretty, and maybe if I go again (with a stroller and, preferably, Abe too), maybe I’ll get a bit of ecstasy.

In the evening I went out for pedicures with Ethline and didn’t get back until 10 pm!!! By that time Shauna, Vanessa, and Abe had all arrived at the house. It was great to see everyone.

An amazing evening with the Crofts

On Tuesday I wanted to give Ammon and Clarissa some fun–and also needed to get out of the house. After Clarissa’s nap, she came downstairs and I started cleaning one mess after another. I was in the middle of sweeping up crumbs when she poured a bottle of bubble solution under the fridge, so I dropped the broom and ran over to clean that. While I was cleaning that, she dragged a chair over to the kitchen counter and got into the yogurt, so I raced away from the bubbles to clean her up.

At that point, I buckled her and Ammon into the car, raced inside to quickly finish cleaning the spills, and drove them to the Thanksgiving Point Farm. My mom was very kind and picked up the girls from school and then took Lydia to her orthodontist appointment.

Ammon and Clarissa loved riding the donkey and wandered around the farm in a state of delight. Clarissa kept pointing excitedly at all of the animals and moo-ing at them. We also went on an exceptionally pleasant buggy ride.

In the evening we got a babysitter and went out for Dairy Queen and then to tea at the Crofts’ house. Betsy messaged me after the excommunication this week and wanted to discuss faith stuff. We talked with them for HOURS and loved every minute. They specifically wanted to make sure that I knew they were my friends no matter if I left the Church. I thought that was an incredible message and felt so much love for and from these beautiful humans. I love them.

Happy Easter 2019!

Today we thought we would sleep in because we put the kids down at 10pm last night. We grossly underestimated Lydia’s enthusiasm for holidays. She was up by 6:30am, and by 6:45 she and Mary had both discovered their baskets and scouted out where all of the eggs were hidden.

But the good news is we made it to church on time! And it was the most beautiful Sunday church I could possibly imagine. The Primary kids sang “Gethsemane” for the prelude music, we had wonderful speakers, and another great choir number in the middle. Then we had the BEST Sunday School class where we got to discuss, as a ward, the last week in the life of Jesus. It was so wonderful. I loved hearing the testimonies of my fellow ward members.

In the afternoon we finally told Lydia the truth about the Easter Bunny, Santa, and leprechauns. We weren’t very straightforward about fairies. Abe took her into the garage to tell her, and the first thing Lydia said was, “I know. I guessed because in the morning after these big holidays, you and Mom have big circles under your eyes, like you were up really late!” We thought that was cute. The rest of the evening Lydia was so excited at her knew knowledge and kind of buzzed around everywhere in a happy, excited state.

Nick and his roommate, James, joined us for Easter dinner. We discussed the last week of Jesus again for an hour. They were so delightful and I felt so blessed by their comments and insights.

Then the kids, Abe and I walked around the neighborhood delivering pansies to the families we minister to. We talked with those families and about three other families who were outside. It took over an hour, and we just enjoyed our neighbors so much.

Also, Mary wrote my mom the most beautiful note:

Mary gave this to my mom, gathered some stuffies, and sat down cross-legged by my mom’s chair and asked my mom to teach her the gospel. It was SO sweet. “Dear Nana, Happy Easter. You grow like a beautiful flower. You learn so much from the gospel. Can you teach me? [check yes]  Happy Easter Nana!”
This was a beautiful Easter. I am so grateful for Christ and the hope I have through Him.

Easter Eve

In the morning Abe took the kids outside with him while he built a tomato garden box. The kids appropriated it as a boat:

Then we all headed to the Springville Art Museum for Lydia’s harp recital. Lydia is still suffering from allergies and has not been sleeping very much, so she looked pretty tired and miserable at the recital. It made me wonder if we should continue, but honestly it would basically take God telling me directly to stop harp to make that kind of decision. So until then, the poor child will just have to suffer through these events.

Here is the video of her performance

Then we went to the most delightful Springville restaurant called Ginger’s Cafe with Tom and Suzanne. It was a healthfood cafe attached to a hot yoga studio, and we all LOVED it.

Afterward my mom and I picked out some toys for the Miner birthday get together while everyone else ran around the nearby park.

And then we went home and Abe headed up the egg dying activity while I napped. Thank you, Abe!

Then we drove to the Miners’ for their Easter egg hunt, which the kids had been looking forward to all week. They also celebrated March birthdays, so Lydia got another round of celebration!

Clarissa was reluctant to put her egg in the basket. She had to be coaxed, but soon she got the hang of it!
This is Clarissa’s confused face. She has no idea what to do with this egg.

Here is sleepy Clarissa being very skeptical about the idea of putting her egg in the basket.

Here is sleepy Clarissa hesitantly putting an egg in her basket.

Quick Anecdote about Lydia from today (or thereabouts):

Lily told Lydia to take a nap because she was so grumpy.  Lydia posted a note on her door saying, “Practice what you preach.  Don’t be grumpy. This means you mom.”
Then Lily talked to Lydia and said, “I’m not grumpy, I’m as happy as a bumble bee!” Lily left to play with Ammon. When she was done, Mary had posted a new note on the door that Lydia had written (Mary was her runner) that said, “let by gones be by gones.” Lily then said, “Lydia this is such a cute note” and Lydia replied, “I love idioms!”

essay writing part 2

On Friday Lydia and I went to her usual 6:30am harp lesson, and then I came home and crawled into bed for another hour and pretended that I didn’t know the morning rush was happening.

Then I finally got it together enough to take the kids to the park. Ammon, who had thrown up while twirling away to the Moana soundtrack, did not feel great on this outing. But he was still darling, as was Clarissa. At the end he told me he was about to throw up again and started to on the grass. “I think it’s time for me to go home,” he said, slightly pitifully. I felt so bad I had forced the outing and immediately toted them both home.

After I put Clarissa down for a nap and parked a lethargic Ammon in front of the Little Bear series, I headed upstairs and pounded out the rest of the first essay in the book I am trying to write.

Then in the evening after the kids went down Abe and I went out to dinner at a Provo Mexican restaurant with Matt and Emily Kahler. We ended up talking for three straight hours over dinner. It was so fun.