Thursday was one of the worst days of my life. My dog got shot, I got run over by the truck, my daughter's favorite pair of shoes was stolen out her locker and my rooster came back from the dead.
Thursday morning, I went to the barn to feed the animals. I was supposed to teach a spin class at the gym, so I was in a hurry. My dog, Tibby was waiting for a run, but I knew I wouldn't have time. I decided to let her off the chain to just run, figuring she would come back to the barn by noon because it was cold and raining. She ran straight for the woods, chasing a flock of turkeys. I went to work, feeding the chickens, pigs and sheep.
My rooster had been missing for 2 days. I was actually kind of glad. He is mean and threatens me all the time. Sometimes he even runs right at me. I don't like him. I was hoping a coyote got him. As I fed the chickens, I heard a very faint "cock-a-doodle-doo". At first I thought it was coming from the neighbors place, but when I heard it again, I realized the it was my rooster and we was close by. "What the heck?" I thought. "Where is he?" About 20 feet from the chicken house is a very large stack of round bales. They weigh 750 lbs each and are stacked pyramid style. The rooster sound was coming from there. I looked under the tarps. No rooster. I looked down between bales. No rooster. And no way he could've squeezed between the bales... or so I thought. I called Troy. "The rooster has returned from the dead, but now he's buried in the stack of round bales. I can't move them, they are too heavy. Probably, he's going to die in there and you're going to have a stinky, dead, rotting rooster in your hay."
I resumed my farm chores, when a voice spoke clearly. "Go rescue your rooster." I knew it was the Holy Ghost and my first thought was "How?" I'd already looked and couldn't see where he was. If I moved a round bale, the whole pyramid would topple. And I didn't know if I could really move 750 pounds anyway. I felt inspired to trust the voice. (Probably because I was teaching a lesson the next Sunday on personal revelation and inspiration). If Heavenly Father wanted me to rescue the rooster, He would provide a way. I asked Heavenly Father to have the rooster crow again, so that I could pinpoint where exactly he was. I heard him clucking. Somehow, he was buried in the hay. I started wiggling a round bale, trying to open up a space. I still couldn't see the rooster. After working for about 5 minutes, I opened up a 6" gap around a round bale. I stepped back. Still no rooster. I pondered for a few minute, trying to think what my next move should be. Suddenly the rooster came walking out of the hay. Very much alive. Ready to eat me.
My dog? That's a really sad story. About 15 minutes after she took off, I heard a shotgun blast. I immediately knew that she'd been shot, before she even started yelping. "Someone just shot my dog," I thought. That shot was followed by two more. She stopped crying. I knew that she was dead. What kind of person shoots a dog? I heard one of my neighbors yelling at the shooter. "This is private property. You cannot shoot up here, you blankety blank!!" I drove up to his house to see if he'd seen my dog. I told him I was certain she'd been shot. He hadn't seen her. He and his wife walked all over their property but didn't see her. I went to visit Goat Guy (the farmer down the road). Maybe she'd gotten into his goats and he had shot her. I didn't think it was too likely, because Goat Guy knows her and knows me... He was milking his goats and hadn't seen her. Although he did hear the shots.
I spent the next 2 hours walking through brush and trees and up and down the road, searching for Tibby. Hoping that she was still alive, just injured, but knowing that she was more likely dead. It was pouring rain and cold. Eventually, I had to go home.
When Troy came home, he resumed the search. He found her around 6 pm, lying 6 feet from a deer who'd also been shot. The poacher (because he was NOT a hunter) had abandoned them both. Why? Well, hunting was closed for the week, signs were posted everywhere, "No Hunting" "No Trespassing", and the neighbor had yelled. He probably hightailed it to is truck and got out of there. He knew that not only had he killed a deer, but he had killed someone's dog. I can't make sense of it, so I let it go. I like to think the first shot was an accident. He didn't know he was shooting a dog. I hope the next two shots were truly to put her out of her misery, not to shut up her cries. I don't know what to think. I miss that dog.
The shoes? Well, Cadie was at volleyball practice. She put her shoes and clothes in her locker, but didn't bother to lock it. After all, who steals clothes? Or shoes? They were $24 shoes from Kohls. Really.
They are on sale for $21 today. She was so sad. She had waited so long to get these shoes. Not only were her shoes stolen, but now her dog was dead. Dumb people.
Getting run over by the truck? Well, that happened late that night. Troy found Tibby. He and Jordon put her in the truck and brought her to the farm. They dug a hole, put her in and buried her. The hole was only a foot or two deep, so I dragged a pallet over to put on top to discourage wild animals from digging her up. I was right next to the truck on the side, with the pallet leaning against my legs. The truck backed straight up. I could see that I wouldn't need to move. Then I saw the wheels turn slightly. But I was in such a stupor over losing my dog and all that had happened, that I couldn't think clearly. The truck won't hit me, I thought, just as the truck wheels ran over the pallet, pushing and crushing the pallet into my legs. I have 4 large bruises on my legs.
Yeah, that was the worst day. But I loved the whispers of inspiration that came throughout the day. Heavenly Father loved me enough to let us find the dog so that we didn't have to worry. He gave me the courage to find the dumb rooster. He helped me understand revelation and inspiration a little better so that I could better teach a lesson. I haven't replaced Cadie's shoes yet. I haven't replaced the dog yet. I would like the rooster to be gone. Maybe we'll replace the truck... probably not. And the next day was a little better. Smile.
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Monday, October 1, 2012
Suds in the Bucket...
There is a country song that has the line "How could 18 years just up and walk away? She left the suds in the bucket and clothes hanging out on the line..." And that line "How could 18 years just up and walk away..." has brought me to tears several times this week as my second son packed up his room and all his stuff, then loaded it in his car and left on a new adventure...
So I think of the mom of the Three Little Pigs, who went her 3 pigs out into the world to find their fortune. Each pig took a different path, built a different life, but in the end, they all ended up together in the same house. So, not that I want all my kids back in the same house... but they do come back, right? :)
Here's the thing. Eighteen year olds who aren't sure about their life plan (should I go on a mission? should I go to school? should I join the military?) should launch. So that's what we helped do as parents. We said, here are some options... what do you choose? And Dallin said, "Hey, this moving to Provo and getting a job thing sounds like the adventure I am craving" (because, don't you know, 18 year old boys who've graduated from High School crave some sort of adventure).
Here's another thing. Don't ever think for a second you have it all figured out. I had a plan for Dallin. It was the same plan I had for Robbie. But it never dawned on me that Dallin wouldn't want to follow that plan. So what will Jordon's plan be? And Charli and Cadie and Cami's? Launch. The rest is in Heavenly Father's hands. He knows their plan. He knows what experiences and grand adventures and trials they need to help them become amazing adults. As parents, we helped pave the way. We teach them to have faith, to pray, to serve others. We teach them to work hard, to save money, to earn money. We teach them all we know to do and then we have to let them launch.
Let them go. Let them live. Let them make their own choices and decisions and even mistakes. It's harder than it looks. Open your hands and let them fly. Launch. Suds in the bucket. Gone in the blink of an eye.
So I think of the mom of the Three Little Pigs, who went her 3 pigs out into the world to find their fortune. Each pig took a different path, built a different life, but in the end, they all ended up together in the same house. So, not that I want all my kids back in the same house... but they do come back, right? :)
Dallin backing down the driveway. |
Here's another thing. Don't ever think for a second you have it all figured out. I had a plan for Dallin. It was the same plan I had for Robbie. But it never dawned on me that Dallin wouldn't want to follow that plan. So what will Jordon's plan be? And Charli and Cadie and Cami's? Launch. The rest is in Heavenly Father's hands. He knows their plan. He knows what experiences and grand adventures and trials they need to help them become amazing adults. As parents, we helped pave the way. We teach them to have faith, to pray, to serve others. We teach them to work hard, to save money, to earn money. We teach them all we know to do and then we have to let them launch.
Let them go. Let them live. Let them make their own choices and decisions and even mistakes. It's harder than it looks. Open your hands and let them fly. Launch. Suds in the bucket. Gone in the blink of an eye.
Launch, DallyWally! The girls said the bright light over his head was his guardian angels, preparing for his journey! |
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Mountains to Climb, by Sharron Collier
(I am sharing a talk my mother gave at her church this past Sunday. As I read it, I learned so much more about my mother and the incredible amount of faith she has and wanted to share it with those who read my blog. My mother is incredible. This is her story...)
In his April
2012 Conference talk “Mountains to
Climb,” President Eyring said, “I heard
President Spencer W. Kimball, in a session of conference, ask that God would
give him mountains to climb. He said: ‘There are great challenges ahead of us,
giant opportunities to be met. I welcome that exciting prospect and feel to say
to the Lord, humbly: Give me this mountain, give me these challenges.’”
President
Eyring went on to say that President Kimball’s words so inspired him that he
prayed for mountains to climb. Much to his surprise, two days later the Lord
answered his prayer and he was amazed at the difficulty of his new challenge.
He advised that probably we shouldn’t pray for challenges but we should wait
for the Lord to decide when we are ready for them; and when challenges do come,
if we face them with faith in Jesus Christ, the hardest times in life can be a
blessing to us.
I have given
much thought to a simple statement President Eyring then made about faith. He
said the solid basis for a foundation
of faith is personal integrity – simply choosing the right whenever a
choice is placed before us. What an absolutely profound statement! I have never thought of my faith in this way, being built on my own
personal integrity. Personal integrity
is not only being honest in our dealings with others but also being true to our identity as sons and
daughters of God – no matter what our afflictions, trials and challenges
might be. Personal integrity is striving to do as Jesus would do even when our
body is hurting or our heart is aching. It means living up to our privileges
even when we don’t feel our prayers are being answered. It’s having sunshine in
our soul no matter how stormy the weather. It’s striving to make our attitude
the same as God’s attitude.
Personal
integrity is always remembering Him even when it’s difficult to feel Him near.
Personal integrity is making the best of a bad situation or as Elder Wirthlin’s
mother advised him, it’s “come what may and love it.” Personal integrity is
enduring to the end and enduring it well.
The Lord stressed
to Joseph Smith the importance of his personal integrity even in the horrible
conditions of Liberty Jail. He said, “And
if thou shouldst be cast into the pit, or into the hands of murderers, and the
sentence of death passed upon thee; if thou be cast into the deep; if the
billowing surge conspire against thee; if fierce winds become thine enemy; if
the heavens gather blackness, and all the elements combine to hedge up the way;
and above all, if the very jaws of hell shall gape open the mouth wide after
thee, know thou, my son, that all these
things shall give thee experience, and shall be for thy good. The Son of
Man hath descended below them all. Art thou greater than he?”
When trials come our way, we can
remember our Savior, who not only suffered our trials but everyone else’s too.
Through it all, He never lost sight of who He was. Our challenge in life is to
follow Him. We can also remember that trials will give us experience and are
for our good. Like you, I have had many trials and there is not a challenge
that I haven’t loved and been sincerely grateful for because of the knowledge
and strength it brought to me, and because each trial drew me nearer to my
Heavenly Father. If I exercised my faith, striving to make God’s attitude my
attitude in my trial, the challenge became easier for me.
I would like
to share my personal story to demonstrate how my own basic foundation of faith
(or sense of who I really
was) helped me with the mountain of difficulty that challenged my early years.
When I was two years old, I was walking – or so my mother told me.
I quickly learned to run, for I had a brother 14 months older than I, who I
felt a need to either chase after or get away from, depending on his mood. But most of all, I
loved to dance – to twirl and twirl on my tippy-toes like a ballerina. By the
end of my second year, my mother was considering putting me in a dance class.
She thought I was very talented and I certainly had a passion for dancing.
Shortly after my second birthday, my mother put me to bed one night
with a low-grade fever. I slept through the night, but in the morning I got out
of bed and fell to the floor. I awakened my parents with my crying. They rushed
to me and discovered I had a high fever. Even more alarming was that I couldn’t
stand up. I had no strength in my legs. A doctor diagnosed polio. Almost
overnight my legs were paralyzed and paralysis was apparent in my arms,
shoulders, trunk, back and neck. My father gave me a blessing and miraculously
my body recovered except for one leg and hip.
My parents desperately took me from one hospital to another, one
doctor to another, one physical therapist to another. Everyone tried diligently
to bring life back to my lifeless leg and hip. I was just as determined to be
well again. I endured needles punctured over every inch of my leg to determine
which nerves were active and which had been destroyed. For years, I gritted my
teeth through painful physical therapy. I spent 4-6 months in the hospital
every year or so from age 8-16 undergoing experimental surgeries most of which
didn’t work. In those days, parents were not allowed to stay with their
children in the hospital – or even visit them except for two hours on Sunday. No
other visitors were allowed.
When not in the hospital, I enjoyed being in my home with loving
parents and siblings who refused to see any way that I should be given special
treatment. My parents encouraged me to exercise faith and prayer that I would
get well. They also encouraged me to develop my talents, do well in school,
learn to play the piano, busy myself in learning crafts and in serving them and
my brothers and sisters in our home.
Doctors didn’t allow me to use a brace or crutch, thinking that
the best way to rehabilitate my leg was for me to not become dependent on
braces and crutches. The only way I could walk, then, was to reach down with my
arm and hand and hold my paralyzed knee in place with every step I took.
I was quite a walking spectacle. Children stared at me. Parents
stared at me or looked the other way and looked back at me when they thought I
wasn’t watching. I heard people whispering behind my back – what’s wrong with
her, she looks weird, she’s a cripple. Sometimes a kid would call out, “Hey,
Hop-along,” or some other rude remark. I
walked slowly – too slow for others to walk with me. I fell often. In school I felt further isolated because I
wasn’t allowed to go out for recess or take PE classes because I was crippled.
School mates didn’t speak to me – just ignored me.
I felt ashamed of myself, which overwhelmed the friendly,
fun-loving, creative little girl that I was. I became shy and withdrawn. I
began living below my privileges because of my false beliefs about myself. I
defined myself by my handicap.
Thankfully, I viewed myself quite differently during my 4-6 month
hospital stays. Fifteen to twenty girls, all with various disabilities, lived
in the hospital with me. About that many boys lived on the opposite side of the
hospital. We weren’t “different” in the hospital environment. We didn’t even
consider ourselves as handicapped, although each of the patients had disabilities
they were dealing with, many much more serious than mine. We needed each other
and became fast friends.
I loved encouraging the other girls, helping them with their
needs, entertaining and teaching them things I knew, and learning from them
anything they could teach me. We joined the boys every day in a school room
where we had one teacher who taught grades 1-8. Each day I would complete my
lessons and then help others with theirs. We had wheelchair races. I could
outdo any boy in our crutch races and walking on stilts using crutches. I also
was the yo-yo champ and the Ping Pong champ.
There was a piano in the hospital auditorium and the staff allowed
me to go there every day and practice the piano. There was no one to teach me
so I just tried to figure it out for myself. Even when I had surgery on my back
and stomach and was in a body cast for four months, a nurse would wheel me on a
gurney up to the piano and laying on my stomach and pulling myself up to the
keyboard I would practice the piano. It was during that time that I was a
freshman in high school. The hospital didn’t have any teacher for me so I
studied my textbooks on my own so I wouldn’t fall behind.
There was no Church in the hospital and no LDS patients. I loved
the Gospel more than anything. I prayed every morning and night and read
scripture stories every day. I missed being able to go to Church. I started
teaching Primary songs to the other girls. They taught me their Bible school
songs. When I was eleven, I started gathering some girls around me for a Sunday
School and I would teach them hymns and Book of Mormon stories. Every week our
group got larger and larger. The boys heard about our Sunday School and wanted
to join us. I got permission to hold Sunday School in the Cafeteria, which had
enough room for everyone who wanted to come. Some would be wheeled in on their
beds, others in wheelchairs, and others would come in on crutches. I would
conduct the meeting, lead the songs, and teach the Gospel. Often a nurse or
doctor would quietly stand in the back of the room and listen to what was going
on. I don’t know if any of those children or adults ever joined the Church but
I know seeds were planted.
I loved being in the hospital because I was normal there. I could
be my true self and that far outweighed painful surgeries, physical therapy,
traction, and even missing my family. Life
was difficult in the normal world and the most difficult thing for me was
knowing that the normal world was where I needed to live my life. I didn’t
understand it then but I saw myself as a child of God in the hospital; I saw
myself as nothing but a cripple in the normal world. I didn’t have the tools to
face the normal world with complete personal integrity – still I kept trying to
do the best I could.
When I was 10, my grandmother took me to Elder Harold B. Lee for a
blessing. Elder Lee blessed me that I would be made whole. My grandmother was thrilled
with the blessing and told me it meant if I prayed with enough faith, I would
be made well. Every night I prayed with all the faith I knew how to muster.
Each morning I awoke and the first thing I would try to do is move my ankle. It
never would move.
When I was 15, I received my Patriarchal Blessing. To my utter
amazement, the Patriarch blessed me that I would be made whole. The words rang
in my ears. What did they mean? How could I be made whole if I wasn’t healed?
Did I need to pray with even greater faith? How could I do that? The question lingered in my mind and heart
for a few more years. I graduated from high school. I was so glad to be done.
They were the most difficult years of my life – so lonely, so bluntly made
aware that I had no friends, so handicapped socially and emotionally because of
how I had succumbed to my physical affliction by defining myself as a cripple.
I carried my heavy burden to Provo to attend BYU. BYU was a very
friendly campus and everyone said “hi” to each other as we walked the campus.
At first I felt unnerved when someone said “hi.” I didn’t want to see them
stare at me but I soon saw that they didn’t stare – but they looked right in my
eyes and smiled. I began speaking to everyone I saw, too.
I heard some students talking about “climbing to the Y.” That’s
when I saw it – that beautiful white “Y” high up on the mountain. It fascinated
me. How could anyone possibly climb up to it. I knew I couldn’t. Just walking
from my dorm in Heritage Halls to the Smith Field House (which was the center
for all campus activities in those days) seemed impossible to me. After making
that trek the first day I was there, I called my father and told him I couldn’t
do it. He wisely advised I could quit and come home or I could make the best of
a bad situation and figure out a way to make it work. He always said that: Quit
or make the best of a bad situation. I always chose the latter.
I lived in Heritage Halls, in an apartment with 5 other girls. I
hadn’t known any of these girls previously. They ignored my handicap. They
expected everyone to cook and clean – including me!! When any one of them went
somewhere, they asked the others if they wanted to go – including me!! They
even walked slowly when they walked with me. Here they were – normal girls –
and they included me in everything they did. I believed they thought I was
normal!
I grew stronger and stronger as I walked the physically
challenging campus. By the end of my second year, I climbed up to that
beautiful “Y” on the mountain.
After climbing to the “Y” I reflected on how my life had changed
at BYU. Not only had I climbed that mountain, but I had reached the summit of
my personal journey up to that point. And in the process I had been made whole. Being made whole for me was no
longer about being healed from my paralysis. Being whole was being restored to
my own sense of personal worth, being defined by who I was as a daughter of
God, as a friend, a student, yes – a mountain climber, and so many other
characteristics rather than one glaring flaw. I had been made whole – whole in my heart and
mind, whole in my total soul. I still had a weakness (my leg) but it wasn’t who
I was. It was just a weakness that had actually turned my soul into one of
strength.
I was evaluating a missionary recently in the MTC for the reading
tutoring program I serve in there. He wore hearing aids and had marked on his
form that he was uncomfortable reading in front of others. I had him read two
verses of scripture for me. He read perfectly. He comprehended what he read. He
competently defined the vocabulary words I asked him about. I said to him, “You
do so well with reading. Why did you mark that you feel uncomfortable reading
in front of others?” He said, “Oh, I guess that’s because I have a hearing
disability and because I struggled with pronunciation as a child and others
made fun of me. The memory of those experiences makes me feel uncomfortable
reading in front of others.” I told him my story and told him to pray to be
made whole so that he would not handicap himself as a missionary by holding on
to how he defined himself as a child.
That’s the message I want to share with you as you go through your
trials – first of all, to meet them with personal integrity, remembering who you
are and how much Heavenly Father loves you and how willing He is to ease your
burdens and guide you through your trials, and the truth that your trials are
for your learning and experience which will ultimately bring you back to Him.
Secondly, sometimes our trials can be so difficult that we become consumed with
them and defined by them. Again, if we keep trying to choose the right,
Heavenly Father will heal our soul so that we can bear our affliction and yet
continue to be happy, grateful, submissive, gentle to others, humble, etc.
It helps me to remember He who
descended below all things will come to our aid. He will comfort and uphold us.
He will strengthen us in our weakness and fortify us in our distress. He will
make weak things become strong.
Christ came to take upon himself our
pains, sicknesses, and infirmities – to learn how to help us through our mortal
debilities. The Atonement is not just for sinners and not just for sins. It is
for disappointment, heartache, bitterness over betrayal, unfairness, injustice,
loneliness, sorrow of every kind, physical and emotional weaknesses – and many
other things.
Christ suffered the pains of a little
girl struck with polio and her struggles to heal her whole soul. He knew that
if she took advantage of opportunities to choose the right even when there was
no one to guide her, to lift and serve her fellow hospital mates, doing her
best to make the best of very difficult situations, that she would gain
experience to do those very things at BYU and then throughout her life. And
that would make her whole.
I didn’t realize it then, but it was
the Atonement that guided me along my path. Having lived a perfect life, my
Savior then chose to experience my (and our) imperfect lives. He was made like
us (mortal) so that He could know according to the flesh how to succor us – to
comfort, assist, nurture and help us.
President Henry B. Eyring said, “If we have
faith in Jesus Christ (and I have to keep reminding myself that means
remembering who I am as well as who He is and always choosing the right), the
hardest as well as the easiest times in life can be a blessing.”
When I climbed Y Mountain I realized
the significance of climbing a mountain. It was then that my heart was filled
with gratitude for the childhood challenge I had been given and for the loving
presence of the Savior and angels He sent to comfort me and guide me. The
mountain of my childhood affliction was just a hill compared to other mountains
I have and most likely will have in my life. But I am so grateful for that
first mountain for it taught me how to climb the big ones. I am an experienced
mountain climber now.
I know God lives and loves me. I know the
Savior knows my most intimate needs and never, no never will forsake me. I know
the scriptures and our modern day prophets give us counsel that heals our souls
and makes us whole. I know that if we remain true to our God-given identity,
the Lord will say to us, as He did to Joseph Smith, “My son or my daughter,
peace be unto thy soul; thine adversity and thine afflictions shall be but for
a moment. And if thou endure it well, God shall exalt thee on high.”
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Dog Pile
So, not quite three weeks ago, Troy and I got home from a quick anniversary trip to Montana. I kind of like Montana, by the way. Something about all that space... and those cows. But that's not what this is about. When we returned from our trip, we discovered that our Livestock Guardian, Miss Tiberius (Tibby) was expecting. Oh, we had warned her. That Great Dane down the road is a player. He only wants one thing. She fought him off for a while. But then she lost. Apparently. A moment of weakness.
So, a week after we returned, she a gave birth to eight puppies. They looked like Guinea Pigs. They cried and whined, a lot. When you held them, they couldn't even hold their head up. Their eyes were sealed shut, along with their ears. But they were born with this amazing instinct: to seek out their mother and find food! We have five girls and three boys. They all look like the Great Dane (whose name is Zeus, by the way) and not only that, but he hasn't visited once! His owners and their kids have stopped by. "Oh they are so cute, they are so sweet..." Hold them, pet them, love them... But they don't offer one dime of support. (Really, I'm kidding here...)
Four of these babies are black with gorgeous white markings on their shoulders and faces. One even has a white heart on her butt. I call her HeartButt. Four of them are black, with the tiniest bit of white on their feet and on the tips of their tails.
Watching a brand new mother dog is amazing! She knew just what to do, from cleaning them up, cleaning herself up, to nursing them, to wiping their bottoms. It makes me wonder if we mothers would also have these natural instincts, if we didn't have all these other expereinced mothers around telling us how to breast feed, how to rest, how to change a diaper... She did not move from them for 3 days. She would eat food we hand fed her, but would not get up to eat at all. On the fourth day, she was up and ready to go for a walk.
The babies started out scootching and lunging themselves around to get where they needed to be. Now they are nearly walking, with a few steps, then a splat. Their eyes are opening up. Their sense of smell is incredible. Without being able to see, they can find the pile of puppies or their mother, purely from scent.
And the expression "DOG PILE"? Well, now I know where that comes from! Those babies are not happy unless they are lying in a large puppy pile, some buried, some on top!
These dogs will make great Guardians, for both home and livestock. Both the Great Dane breed and the Pyrenees/Anatolian breeds are born to protect. An added bonus... These dogs will be BIG! Really Big!
Anyone want one?
So, a week after we returned, she a gave birth to eight puppies. They looked like Guinea Pigs. They cried and whined, a lot. When you held them, they couldn't even hold their head up. Their eyes were sealed shut, along with their ears. But they were born with this amazing instinct: to seek out their mother and find food! We have five girls and three boys. They all look like the Great Dane (whose name is Zeus, by the way) and not only that, but he hasn't visited once! His owners and their kids have stopped by. "Oh they are so cute, they are so sweet..." Hold them, pet them, love them... But they don't offer one dime of support. (Really, I'm kidding here...)
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Less than 12 hours old... Puppy in a Dish |
Four of these babies are black with gorgeous white markings on their shoulders and faces. One even has a white heart on her butt. I call her HeartButt. Four of them are black, with the tiniest bit of white on their feet and on the tips of their tails.
Watching a brand new mother dog is amazing! She knew just what to do, from cleaning them up, cleaning herself up, to nursing them, to wiping their bottoms. It makes me wonder if we mothers would also have these natural instincts, if we didn't have all these other expereinced mothers around telling us how to breast feed, how to rest, how to change a diaper... She did not move from them for 3 days. She would eat food we hand fed her, but would not get up to eat at all. On the fourth day, she was up and ready to go for a walk.
A week and a half old |
The babies started out scootching and lunging themselves around to get where they needed to be. Now they are nearly walking, with a few steps, then a splat. Their eyes are opening up. Their sense of smell is incredible. Without being able to see, they can find the pile of puppies or their mother, purely from scent.
Puppy in a Dish at 1 and 1/2 weeks old |
And the expression "DOG PILE"? Well, now I know where that comes from! Those babies are not happy unless they are lying in a large puppy pile, some buried, some on top!
These dogs will make great Guardians, for both home and livestock. Both the Great Dane breed and the Pyrenees/Anatolian breeds are born to protect. An added bonus... These dogs will be BIG! Really Big!
Anyone want one?
At 1.5 weeks, his paws are larger than my fingers... |
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Miracles
Miracles. Defined as “an effect or extraordinary event in the physical world that surpasses all known human or natural powers and is ascribed to God or a supernatural cause.” Miracles. If you believe in God, you really can’t substitute another word for miracle. Happening? Surprising Event? Phenomonen? Those words don’t begin to describe a miracle.
So the real question is: Why are miracles hard to accept? We have faith. We believe in God. We believe in the miracles of the New Testament. But when a miracle happens to us, how often do we try to rationalize it, even as we want to believe it is a miracle. Maybe that’s the thing with miracles. Heavenly Father doesn’t point them out. He just deposits them into our lives and hopes we take them for what they are: Miracles.
In November, my old dog Hoover, age 9 seemed to be getting a bit arthritic. This dog (half Jack Russell Terrior and half Schnauzer) has been the best dog we’ve ever owned. He comes when he’s called. He lays down when he’s told. He taught himself to herd sheep. He protects his home ferociously. He can run and run and run. So it was sad to see him struggle to get up after a nap. And to go chasing after something in the field, only to return quickly because it was too much effort. By Thanksgiving, it would take him five minutes to get into a sitting position. He could hardly jump into my car. But he still could go on a 3 mile walk. He just didn’t run.
Finally, I took him to the vet. I asked the vet, “Do you think he was hit by a car?” The vet said “no. He most likely has arthritis.” Then he gave me $136 worth of pain medication and said, “Bring him back in two weeks. We’ll have to run blood tests to make sure this medication is ok for him. Then we’ll prescribe more.”
I went home thinking, “I have to spend $136 a month on my dog?” I couldn’t afford that. I love my dog, but finances are tight. I gave him his first pills. By the next morning, we had our old Hoover back. It was amazing. He could run, jump into my car… Everything. After the first few days, I thought to spread the medicine out as long as I could. There was no point in giving it to him at night. He was just sleeping. I only gave the pills to him in the morning. About a month and a half later, I was running low on medication. I tried to go a couple of days without it. Hoover went back to barely being able to move.
One night I prayed. I told Heavenly Father I could not afford medication for this dog. I truly did not want him to suffer, but I didn’t know what else to do. I pleaded with Heavenly Father to help my dog be well. The next morning I gave Hoover the last of the medication. He had a great day. I felt sad that he was going to go back to being in so much pain.
The next morning, I woke up, expecting to find Hoover in his very painful state. Instead, he got up (a little slowly) and pretty much acted pain free the rest of the day. A miracle? Of course. I prayed for that. But still, I rationalized. Maybe he had been hit by a car and now he has recovered. After all, it had been 6 weeks. Maybe he was never really as bad as I thought he was.
But I cannot rationalize this miracle away. It is pure and simply a miracle.
Hoover has been running and jumping and chasing like a young pup ever since....
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Merry Christmas 2011
The Bise Family (according to Cami):
This is my family. Robbie is in France. I want Robbie to come home RIGHT NOW! He is teaching people and walking around and stuff. Dallin is my DallyWally. he took me on his motorcycle. He likes Chocolate Chip Cookies. Jordon playes MonkeyBall with me. He sings songs on his guitar to me. Every day, Cadie's hair looks different. She likes to paint her nails. She let's me paint my nails. Charli likes to sleep a lot. I am almost as big as Charli. She likes to play stuff with me and Cadie. I am six. I go to kindergarten. I really like Crazy Jamison. I have lots of friends. My dad likes to work. He likes me to give him hugs and kisses. Dad likes to play with me and he thinks I'm funny. Mom watches me and feeds me. Mom plays the GameCube with me sometimes. She doesn't win. Have a good Christmas!
These family pictures were taken in January 2011, right before Robbie left.
Robbie (20) Serving as a missionary in the France, Paris mission.
(He's on the left) Loves France,
Loves the gospel, Loves life!
The food in France is pretty good too!
Dallin (almost 18), Senior,
Qualified for State in X-C, attends Spokane Community College,
works at Carls' Jr., enjoys working on cars and motorcylces.
Jordon (14) Freshman,
Loves reggae and ska and most other music,
plays guitar, bass and has a part-time rock band
and tried cross country for the first time!
Cadie (almost 13) 7th Grade,
cross country, volleyball, plays piccolo and electric bass in band,
enjoys skiing, swimming, ice skating,
learned to wakeboard and loves to cook.
Charli (almost 13) 7th Grade,
cross country, basketball, volleyball,
plays Saxaphone, enjoys ice skating,
swimming in the lake, wakeboarding and skiing.
Cami (6) Kindergarten,
loves to play, run, entertain, sing
and direct anyone who will listen to her.
Still a mini-tornado, but learning to clean up her messes!
We are thankful for our Heavenly Father's gift to us:
Our Saviour Jesus Christ...
For his atoning sacrifice and the miracle of resurrection.
Merry Christmas to all our family and friends!
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
My Dream Job!
So I have this missionary son that I adore. He is in France. That's pretty far away. He writes us a letter every Monday morning. I love waking up on Monday mornings, reaching for my phone and reading his e-mail. He has been gone since January 13th. That's all. It seems like forever and it seems like just yesterday (well, really last month..) that he left. Some days I miss him so bad that I get tears. I miss his smile. I miss him asking "What I can do for you mom?" I miss his shoes in the kitchen.
But I don't want him back. Well, I do, but not yet. When it's time. He is learning and growing so much. What an amazing young man he is. He is a leader. He loves serving the Lord. Nope, wouldn't trade it...
Then there is this 2nd son. Dallin. Loves to work with his hands. Fixes stuff. Is almost 18. Is growing up. Wow. Every afternoon, after seminary, he comes home for lunch. Sometimes he calls me. "Mom, put a pot of water on so I can have Mac and Cheese." Yeah, he's spoiled rotten. He works at Carls Jr. He REALLY wants another job. He has about $1500 saved for his mission. He graduates from High School this year. He went to State in Cross Country. Did I mention he fixes stuff!?! I gave him some caulk today and told him to caulk the shower. He did, and did a good job too.
There is a third son. Jordon. Good looking kid. Freshman. Loves music. Did I mention, he LOVES music. Plays guitar and bass. Sings. Harmonizes amazingly well. Learned that on his own. Good looking kid. He ran Cross Country too. He reads his scriptures every night. What a boy. Doesn't like school too much. Wants to grow up to be a hobo. I'm not kidding. We're working on a better goal.
Thing 1 and Thing 2. Chuck and Cathy. Cadie and Charli. Charli and Cadie. Two girls. Best friends. Get annoyed with each other. Likes to have the last WORD. Both of them. So the words never cease. Giggle. Hang out. Fight. No neat freak genes. Dang. Beautiful smiles. Humble. Sweet. Kind. Inclusive. Never knew how much I'd enjoy almost teenage girls. But wait... the hormones ain't flyin' yet!!! So I'll hold on for the ride. Although I don't really expect that these two will be as bad as I was. I think that will be Thing 3.
That brings us the Thing 3. The Princess. The Boss. The Entertainer. She's six now. Six years since I had my last baby. Yeah, I'm done. She wears me out. She sings all the time. "Baby your a firework" "It's a small world", songs that only she knows. She sang a solo for the Primary Children's Program on Sunday October 25th. The 5th Article of Faith. I didn't think she could really memorize it. It has big words like prophecy, authority, administer, ordinances... I underestimated her. She loves to sing.
See how sweet she sings... She'll probably have a career in entertainment... Or she'll be a mom like me... and have a career in entertainment!
But I don't want him back. Well, I do, but not yet. When it's time. He is learning and growing so much. What an amazing young man he is. He is a leader. He loves serving the Lord. Nope, wouldn't trade it...
Elder Bise with companion Elder Stephenson |
Then there is this 2nd son. Dallin. Loves to work with his hands. Fixes stuff. Is almost 18. Is growing up. Wow. Every afternoon, after seminary, he comes home for lunch. Sometimes he calls me. "Mom, put a pot of water on so I can have Mac and Cheese." Yeah, he's spoiled rotten. He works at Carls Jr. He REALLY wants another job. He has about $1500 saved for his mission. He graduates from High School this year. He went to State in Cross Country. Did I mention he fixes stuff!?! I gave him some caulk today and told him to caulk the shower. He did, and did a good job too.
There is a third son. Jordon. Good looking kid. Freshman. Loves music. Did I mention, he LOVES music. Plays guitar and bass. Sings. Harmonizes amazingly well. Learned that on his own. Good looking kid. He ran Cross Country too. He reads his scriptures every night. What a boy. Doesn't like school too much. Wants to grow up to be a hobo. I'm not kidding. We're working on a better goal.
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Jordon's Box Theory Band |
Thing 1 and Thing 2. Chuck and Cathy. Cadie and Charli. Charli and Cadie. Two girls. Best friends. Get annoyed with each other. Likes to have the last WORD. Both of them. So the words never cease. Giggle. Hang out. Fight. No neat freak genes. Dang. Beautiful smiles. Humble. Sweet. Kind. Inclusive. Never knew how much I'd enjoy almost teenage girls. But wait... the hormones ain't flyin' yet!!! So I'll hold on for the ride. Although I don't really expect that these two will be as bad as I was. I think that will be Thing 3.
Shayla and Zoe with Charli and Cadie (after a race) |
See how sweet she sings... She'll probably have a career in entertainment... Or she'll be a mom like me... and have a career in entertainment!
Which kind of makes me realize that by choosing to be a mom, you choose to fulfill all your dreams. I am a writer, a singer, a dancer, an entertainer, a teacher, a therapist
(marriage and family--what I got my degree in)
All because I chose to be a mother of many.
I wouldn't trade it for the world.
Not for a career as a broadway star.
Not for a career as a country music star.
Not for a career as a Marriage and family therapist.
Although, when they are all raised, I might go back to school
and get a master's degree in
Social work
Special Education
Marriage and family Therapy
Speech and Language pathology.
One of those things.
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