simple

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Christmas Tradition: Episode 1

    My mom is pretty much the best, most creative, most loving, most bond-encouraging mom ever. We have a lot of very unique traditions, and I didn't realize how fabulous it is to have traditions until I moved away to college and people I talked to thought that our traditions are over the top. So, since I mentioned one in my previous Post!, I will expand on that thought and share one of our traditions with you: The Bells

When I was about 8 or 9, my mom heard of another family that has this tradition and she wanted to recreate it with us. So she purchased 6 large hand bells. They look something like this:


For most of the month of December, they sit on the mantle piece and look pretty and festive until Christmas Eve when the tradition begins.

This is how the tradition is supposed to work: on Christmas Eve, we all go to bed with a bell. When you wake up in the morning, you are allowed to strike your bell one time. If anyone else is awake, they can ring back to you. If no one rings back, you have to go back to sleep. You can't sit there and ring and ring and ring until the whole neighborhood is ringing back. When you hear six more bells ringing back at you, then everyone is awake and we can get up and celebrate Christmas. 

This is how the tradition really works: one of us quietly tiptoes into every other room until all six of us kids are awake. Then you go back to your own room and ring the bell, and magically everyone else is already awake and ringing back to you! Awesome! We can all get up now! My parents pretend they can't hear anything until we all march into their bedroom with our cling clanging bells, and then they force us all back downstairs until the video camera is ready. While waiting for the camera, we try to convince Nate and Abby that it is more than okay to STOP. RINGING. NOW. Because let me tell ya, those bells are loud.

Now that I'm older, I have developed a huge love for the hymn I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day. Our churches don't really have bells, and so we don't normally get to hear the bells on Christmas Day. One line of that hymn has really burned in my heart this year after all the sorrow we've experienced in our country and in the world. It is: 

And in despair I bowed my head;
"There is no peace on earth," I said;
"For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!"

In absolute certainty, I reject that message. Yes, there is sorrow and pain and hurt in this life. There is also joy and peace and laughter and in my family, there are bells on Christmas Day. This year, those loud and lovely bells will mean something different to me:

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
"God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men."




Saturday, December 22, 2012

Post!

Hi friends!!

Henceforth will be a completely unorganized list of updates that some of you may find interesting. I find them so interesting that I cross stitched this entire post into a tapestry to hang on my wall as a sort of rough draft.

Kidding.

But I have taken up embroidery!! What is embroidery? Embroidery is something you do when you have no finals to study for, no internship hours to gain, and you realize that your Number One is leaving on a cruise for a week over Christmas Break. I'll embroider my woes into a shirt vest for him to wear when he gets back.

I saw a gas station selling gas for $2.99. It made me feel like an extreme couponer.

I get to work all night Christmas Eve and I am so excited. I get to hold little sweet babies all night on the night that we celebrate THE BABY. And also I get to wear clashing colors and call it festive. And also I get to be Santa for my patients. And also I get to miss out on the Bells. I should do a post about that tradition later.

Oh my car came back to me! In perfect condition! Not even the gas tank was emptier than it had been five days previously. I did have to pay a ridiculous fee though. Because that makes sense: someone stole your car, so you can pay for it. I laughed when I got the police report in the mail: "contents of located vehicle: misc. garbage." UM NO. Don't be calling my papers with educational information about breastfeeding and what to feed your infant at different ages mixed with homework assignments mixed with internship forms mixed with LDS.org printouts garbage. That is my life, thank you.
(Okay....there were also several peppermint patties, a crinkled and waterlogged Ensign, a bin of movies I plan on donating, an empty water bottle, and some flip flops...)



Thursday, December 13, 2012

What Doesn't Kill You Makes You Stronger, Part II

Hi. How is finals week going for everyone?

Mine is okay. Did well on my Physiology final. Turned in my written final and the packet with all of my internship materials (Internship is OVER, my friends. OVER. SO weird. What will I do with all this time on my hands??)

Oh I know.

I'll shop for a new car.

Because mine was stolen.

S T O L E N.

In the middle of finals week.

What other stressful thing happened this week??......oh yeah. I came half a step away from losing my job. That was great. And terrifying.

So. I think I shouldn't even have to take my Stress Management final, because I am LIVING it. Yup. Managing stress over here, like a boss.

I think I'll go on a date tonight.


Monday, December 3, 2012

15 Ways to Get Fat

1. Drive your car to your next door neighbors house.
2. Butter
3. Paula Dean
4. Keep a stash of candy under your pillow and eat it as you fall asleep.
5. Never, ever exercise.
6. Bacon.
7. Eat 30 twinkies because this is your last chance.
8. Eat a whole roll of Tollhouse cookie dough as fast as you can.
9. Texas Roadhouse
10. Top Ramen
11. Deep fry everything. Even your laptop, because then you can lick your fingers.
12. Bring a camp chair to sit in while in line at McDonalds.
13. Never kiss anyone. (Burns 2 calories a minute, people!)
14. Pop tarts, taquitos, ranch dressing, and pasta.
15. Date Bryan Pistorius. Because he will be sweet and bring you oreos while you are studying and encourage you to eat them. Maybe I just ate 12. Maybe he is the best ever. He is the best ever. 






Monday, November 26, 2012

Of Passions and Dreams

-this is not a serious post-

For my internship, I work with people in cardiac and pulmonary rehab at IMC.
One day, I discovered the IMC cafeteria.
this is not your typical hospital food, people. 
It has probably ruined my life.
Because I am addicted to their Whole Wheat Crust Vegetarian Pizza. *moment of silence* (I alternate between marinara and alfredo sauce)
Seriously: artichoke hearts, cucumbers, bell peppers, mushrooms, onions, cheese glorious cheese, on WHOLE WHEAT. 
(Did I mention you get a honking huge slice for $2.20?!)

You know that quote from Camelot? "We must not let our passions destroy our dreams."
Today, I was on my jolly way to the Cafeteria, dreaming of my Vegetarian Pizza.
And I got distracted.
Today, they were offering taco salad. I adore taco salad.
I'm pretty sure I experienced something akin to WWI, the conflict was so terrible. Pizza or salad?!?!
So then I did the stupidest thing ever and listened to Robert Frost and took the road less travelled to the taco salad. 
All I'm saying, is I let my passion for taco salad destroy my dream of my Vegetarian Pizza with marinara sauce on Whole Wheat. 

It won't happen again. 



Saturday, November 24, 2012

Brykaitlaurnatmama


Come drink

When I was younger, I became very fascinated with the story of the Woman of Samaria in John chapter 4.
   I didn't understand why He was asking her to draw up the water. Normally in stories about our Savior He is serving the people, not the other way around.
   My cute mom asked a few of her very dear friends (women whom I admire and try to emulate) to write me letters with their viewpoints on this story, why it is significant, and what it means to them.
    Since then, I have come to love this story. It is so beautiful. This woman, whom I like to think had a very broken heart and was living an isolated and rejected life, was completely and suddenly wrapped in pure unconditional love in the middle of one of her chores. He knew her. He knew her story, her sins, her heartache. He knew her desires and hopes. And He gave her a beautiful gift: He let her serve Him.
     I can learn a lot from this. I've noticed that I don't really let people serve me or take care of me. I am the caregiver. I am the strong one. I cannot be broken. It doesn't matter what happens to me, I've seen worse/felt worse/lived through worse, you cannot hurt me, blah blah blah. It's not healthy people! We're supposed to let others care for us, as the Savior showed us in this story of the Woman of Samaria.
    Bottom line: it is as important to let others care for you, as it is that you care for others.


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Relaxation+Free Stuff

This will bless your life!

For an assignment, I have to engage in 15 minutes of relaxation a day.
Ironically, it was one of my more stressful assignments. There is simply not time in my day to spend 15 minutes relaxing? I should spend that time studying/driving/sleeping/cuddling, anything but relaxing!!

I was wrong, my friends. I believe that God, in His great wisdom and mercy, wants us to take time to relax and love ourselves. So take 15 minutes of your facebook/pinterest/email time and relax.

BYU has this great website with some skills and audio files to help you. Wait, did I say the word free? Oh yeah, its all free. Just download it, listen to it, and watch how the tension slips away.

I recommend the Creation Visualization (under Visualization in the Audio Files) and "A Walk to the BYU Testing Center" (under Performance Rehearsal). This one is best if you are a BYU student and are familiar with campus, but it has some really important skills in it even if you aren't a BYU student. I listened to it right before taking my midterms in September and I got an A on all three. No lie. (I also studied, but my history at BYU was that studying was overruled by panic and self doubt so this audio file made a huge difference.)

So anyway. Point: listen to some stuff. Relax. It will bless every area of your life.


Link to the audio files:  https://caps.byu.edu/audio-files
Link to other stress management goodies: https://caps.byu.edu



Monday, November 19, 2012

I feel blessed.

Remember this post?

Well, it lead to this:


Look at how perfect he is.
God works in mysterious ways. Who would have known that the girl who lived two floors below me who was assigned to be my visiting teacher would later marry my cousin and then have this perfectly beautiful baby boy?? I love it. I love it so much.

Makes you wonder what small things will become big things in your life. What human orbits are occurring each and every day.

Also, yes, he and I are dating. We are happy. <3

Friday, November 9, 2012

My Soap Box

I can approach this topic in a number of ways.
Aggressively.
Rantingly.
Passively.

I composed it in each of those ways and decided to just be honest.

It hurts my heart when girls dress immodestly.

How can you claim to want to make covenants in the Temple and then turn around and dress the same way people of the world dress?

When you look at someone, can't you tell something about their family life and the way their home is from the way they look, present themselves, and dress?

Shouldn't they also be able to tell something about your relationship with the Savior and what you know and believe and what your "home" is like from the way you look, present yourself, and dress?

The standard has been set. We've been told what is and isn't appropriate. They don't lower the basketball hoop (commonly referred to as the basketball standard) for shorter players. Instead, all the players adapt to perform their best with the same hoop. Likewise. We should not make exceptions for ourselves. Instead, we should change and adapt to the standard, and increase our skills and abilities in the process.

Please let the way you dress be part of your testimony. Please be consistent. You will never, ever regret it.




Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Another One Bites the Dust...

I stalk people.

Not in a bad way, in a really good you-are-inspiring-so-cute-love-your-life-happy-for-your-happy kind of way.

Nigh about a year ago I stumbled across a blog that I fell in love with.

Yes, I went back and read every post from 2008. Because the girl reminded me of me. And she made me laugh. And her love story was so sweet. And I just liked her blog, okay?

As of about 20 minutes ago, she made her blog "open to invited readers only"

And I'm not an invited reader, because I've never met her in real life!

WHAT?! You mean you don't want random strangers reading about your life and your cute baby and the picture you posted of his cute little bum when you painted a pumpkin on it??

I can't really blame her....I mean....I'm probably the reason....but still.

Also I was talking to Bryan about this today. I'm going to get arrested. Because since I work at my awesome job and have an infatuation with babies, I just feel qualified, authorized, and entitled to all the babies. In the whole world. And I literally forget that its not socially acceptable to walk up to people and offer to hold their children for them. Like the guy who was up and down and up and down in church with his screaming baby. My muscles were tensed about to stand up before I realized what this would look like:

"Hey, I just met you, and this is crazy, but I'm not a pedophile, so can I hold your baby??" 




Sunday, October 28, 2012

I've Come a Long Way!

So. I didn't get in to nursing school. Again.

I really, REALLY, believed I would get in this time. Hardly anyone doesn't get in their second try.

    But there is beauty in every loss. One of the major beauties of this loss is how different it is from last year when I got the rejection email. Last year, I cried and cried and felt worthless as a person, hopeless, desperate, and confused.

     This year, I cried. I cried because it meant I still have to keep fighting for this dream of mine, and now the path is unclear and there is much more work to do. But I didn't base my self worth on being accepted to nursing school. I have hope. How exciting to be able to look at so many other potential programs and meet new people and have new adventures. How wonderful that I got to go to BYU and meet friends who have changed my life and will be my friends forever, but now I get to move on and keep being a mover and a shaker in other schools, with other people, and make more life changing friends. Seriously, it's unreal how blessed I am.

     I'm so thankful for my Savior. I've been praying for months that 1. I would get in, but 2. if I didn't, help me to have hope and courage and trust and make a new plan. And He has helped me do just that. I can honestly say I did the very best I could do, and obviously BYU Nursing School was not in the plan for me. That is okay!! I truly feel okay. Nervous, but blessed.





Sunday, October 21, 2012

All the Souls

I had a special experience today, on my birthday.

I was at work. I saw the Priesthood brethren who bring the Sacrament to the LDS families in the hospital pass. I grabbed one and told him I hadn't had the Sacrament yet today.

So just me and these two brethren went into an empty room and they blessed the Sacrament for me.

And when they said "for all the souls who partake of it" it occurred to me that right then, at that moment, I was the only soul they were blessing it for. Just me.

The Savior is the same. He would have performed the Atonement, the saving Atonement, just for me. He would have done it, just for you. One soul was worth it to Him.

But, He did it for All the Souls. No one is exempt. You cannot go beyond the reaches of His Atonement. All the Souls.

It was a birthday gift to me.


Twenty One

Well, now what am I going to do. My whole life I wanted to be 21 and now I'm 21?! Sheesh! I've only got 365 days to be my favorite number!

So in the spirit of Living it Up this year, here are Twenty One things I have been so grateful for this year.


1. Jesus Christ, His gospel, His Atonement for me, His scriptures that bring me peace,  and the organization of His church. Number One.




2. Them. We are whole.




3. The Temples. And that I have 5 within 30 minutes of me. FIVE! That is unreal. 






4. That there are only 4 days left.




5 and 6. The Hymns which bring me peace and help me not feel lonely when I'm alone, and technology. My perspective, as a medical person who had to miss 3 sessions of General Conference because of work, is so grateful for technology so I didn't really miss it at all. Also, GPS systems, texting, calling, photo sharing....I love technology.




7. (This is not my nose, FYI) Noses!! I LOVE things that smell good. Smells can take me back to so many happy memories. I'm also grateful for my other senses, sight, touch, taste, and hearing.




8. My job on the Infant Medical Surgical Unit at Primary Children's!! I adore the people I work with, my patients, the atmosphere, the hope, everything. I keep learning and growing and I am so grateful. 


9. This is just to represent all of my truly fabulous, faithful, loyal, be-there-for-you dear friends. I wish I could name or picture all of you who have given advice, offered prayers, hugged me, cried with me, hoped for me, been excited with me, and supported me. (This also includes my mom's friends who have become my dear friends. I love you!)





10. For when I need to celebrate something or when I need to feel better about something. Jamba is my pal. 




11. We've come a long way, BYU and I. We began at where I was a little obsessive and adored the place, to last year where I struggled to find anything I liked about it at all. Turns out it was me, not my awesome school, that had a problem. Go figure. I love going to school here and all the opportunities I've had and all that I've learned. 

12. Blogger!!! I love blogging. I love typing out my thoughts and sharing them. I love posting about my testimony. I love that words have power. 


13. Albus. My car. Takes me everywhere I need to go, from Provo to Salt Lake to Murray to Sandy and back again. So good to me. 

14. I don't have a good photo for this, but I am so grateful for my aunts. They offer me so much love and advice and willingness to serve. I'm especially grateful for my mom's sister, who is her dearest friend and gives her so much strength. 




15. What I have learned about the power of thoughts. I'm not perfect, but I have been able to dramatically change my life by changing the way I think. I am so grateful.




16. Laughter!! I am so grateful for every time I laugh, alone or with friends or family. This goes along with the power of thoughts. Laughter+thoughts=secret to life.



17. The Fall. I love being an October baby. I love that portion of mountain by Holladay that I drive past on my way home from the hospital that takes my breath away every.single.time. 




18. My hands. They have excema, they are rather big, they have callouses, the pinkies are disproportionately short compared to the rest of my fingers, but they can do so much good. They can play the violin, make food, hold a pencil, send a text, type on a computer, reach for a baby, comfort a friend, and turn the pages of my scriptures. If you think about it, my hands are really the only part of myself I see as long as I'm not staring at my feet. Love them. So grateful for them. 


19. EFY. Best summer of my life. I went home after my first week and prayed that if there was a career where I could do this for the rest of my life, please help me to find it. The beauty is this: it doesn't have to be a career. I can teach the gospel, share my testimony, and love the youth always. 



20. My parents' marriage. I'm grateful they keep their covenants and are devoted to each other and our family. I'm thankful that they have taught me the truth and been such lovely examples. 




21. Me. I'm grateful for me. I'm grateful for my testimony. I'm grateful I know that I'm a daughter of God. I'm grateful that I can do hard things. I'm grateful for my whole life. Everything is so beautiful. I'm grateful for this life. And I CANNOT WAIT to see what 21 is going to do with me!! 


Friday, October 19, 2012

6 Years

6 years ago I was at a pumpkin patch.
While I was picking out my perfect orange beauty with my best friend Anna, Andrew was being told he probably had cancer.
So they gave him a biopsy.
And two days later, while I was taking my freshly opened birthday presents upstairs, I heard him tell my little sisters about the bone cancer in his leg.

We didn't know that he would never go back to school.
We didn't know that pediatric cancer is a whole different ball game than adult cancer, and that his cancer, Osteosarcoma, is in a class and regimen of its own.
We didn't know that we needed to accept all the offered help.
We didn't know that saying "We're fine" wasn't doing us any favors.
We didn't know how expensive living in a hospital is.
We didn't know what resources we had at our disposal, if we had asked.

We didn't know the nurses and doctors would become our family.
We didn't know that we were about to develop a whole new vocabulary. (EMLA, Cisplatin, mucositis, Methotrexate, portacath, hyperbaric, Vancomycin, the list goes on....)
We didn't know that one year would become two, and two would become three.
We didn't know that he would get too weak to read, or talk, or watch movies.
And speaking of movies, we didn't know that there are some we would stop watching forever, because it was too raw, too painful.
We didn't know that Andrew would be spitting up blood while trying to smile opening presents Christmas morning.

We didn't know that angels will truly stay with you, minister to you, and help you. They will be on your right hand and on your left.
We didn't know that many of those angels were the people we already knew, who stepped up to the plate, even when we said "we're fine."
Before cancer, we didn't know how much we loved just being together, all 7 of us (until Nate came along right in the middle of it) and watching movies, laughing, talking, driving, anything.
We didn't know that Nate would be our joy in the middle of pain.

But now I know.
I know that you don't ask what you can do, you find something to do and do it.
You ALWAYS smile at the people you pass. Who knows what their life is like.
I know what is real. What matters.
I know that you don't just heal after something like that. We are still healing.
I know never to believe "we're fine."
I know that the Savior never abandoned us.
I know that Andrew is strong. My strong, brave, triumphant big brother.

I know that I am a better person because of this hard thing we lived.
Here's to many, many more years.





Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Promises promises....

Okay, Friends.
I made you a bang promise
and I am STILL keeping that promise
.
.
.
.
BUT LOOK AT THIS PHOTO.


It was taken first day of school 2011.

WHAT SHOULD I DO?!

to grow. or not to grow.

that is the question.

(I should not look at old photos.)

(8 days)

Saturday, October 13, 2012

My Beautiful Life

Monday: Worked. See previous post.

Tuesday: School. Missed Kaitlyn.

Wednesday: Internship hours at IMC. Then surprised Abby for her birthday and checked her out of school. We went shopping. Then to Sweet Tooth Fairy. Then we went and hiked the Y per her request. The Fall colors were magnificent. It was beautiful. We finished the evening with Texas Roadhouse. I love my sweet 11 year old.



Thursday: woke up late. Missed my first class. First missed class of the semester! Went and got to nanny my sweet baby with the curly hair.

Friday: More internship hours. Ditched out at noon to run and play Belle at a sweet girls' birthday party. It was SO fun. I asked them to email me photos...so photos forthcoming. Left and returned to IMC for more internship hours. Then left to go nanny my baby again. She stuck her finger in a cheese grater and had a bad owie this week. So sad.

Saturday: Temple. Then went to the BYU homecoming game with my dad. On the way to the game I asked him to please explain the game of football to me, since I have never understood it. FYI: never ask my dad to explain something like this while he is driving. He gets very in to it and forgets to hold on to the wheel. However, I now understand the game very well. And going on a date with my dad was so fun. I asked him questions about his life with my mom in their early marriage, about his college experience, about how he likes what he does now. He asked me about school, my work, my life. He and I are so similar. I haven't been on a date with just him and me since I was 6 years old and he bought me french silk pie at Village Inn. It was long overdue.

I am so busy. And so happy.

12 days.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

A Happy Me

Last school year was a really difficult time.
I tried not to blow up my blog with all the details and the doom and gloom of how I was feeling, but when I personally go back and read certain posts, I can feel and remember how truly desolate I felt. Very hopeless. Very sad. Very lost.

I'm so grateful for last year. I learned how to let it go and trust God. I learned that happiness is not getting into your program, having a significant other, being beautiful, getting perfect grades, having cute things, or knowing all the answers. Happiness is a choice. Happiness is living close to the Spirit so that you can see what step to take, one by one. Happiness is controlling our thoughts. Happiness is serving and loving something more than ourselves. Happiness is hope.

This beautiful thing keeps happening to me. I'll be sitting in class taking notes, or driving to work, or standing in line at the Taco Bell to get my $1.07 Fresco Bean burrito, and I'll feel that happy tremor resonate inside me: I am so happy. 

I'm busier than I was last year.
I work more, have harder classes, spend about 12 hours a week driving, still haven't started nursing school, and fall into bed exhausted every night.
But I am the happiest I can ever remember being.
So I am so grateful for that dark place last year, because now I can clearly see how bright everything is. How good everything is. How blessed I am. How kind and loving my Heavenly Father is, to have given me a year of trial so that I would appreciate this year of happiness.

I want to share some skills for how to cope with sorrow and disappointment. I'll just share one today. I want you to know that this skill seems simple, but it is just like any other skill and takes practice. Some days you will be amazing at it. Some days you will probably fail horribly. Don't give up. There is happiness ahead.

It's called stop thought.
Some parts of our bodies we can control: arms, legs, mouth, turning our heads, etc.
Some parts we cannot: heart beat, eyes blinking, digestive mechanisms.
Guess what. Your thoughts fall into the first category. Your thoughts are something you can control. It will take some training, but you CAN do it.

There was a boy I dated in high school. It is a very long complicated story, but I eventually got to the point where I needed to stop the relationship. I needed to close the door.
So I pictured a door closing.
Every.
Single.
Time.
I thought of him.
DOOR CLOSED.

I use this technique when my mind tries to tell me bad things about my body, or that I'll never be successful, or I'm going to fail the test, etc. etc. DOOR CLOSED. STOP SIGN. Don't go there.

I would love to hear about your progress and experiences. You can email me privately at bethany . coleman 21 @ gmail . com




Monday, October 1, 2012

The Love Wall

I'm kind of big on visualization, mind control, and picturing yourself as the person you want to be.
(My blog is titled 'becoming' after all)
When I first left for BYU, I was stunned to find that they weren't just stereotypes: some people really do run around like chickens with their heads cut off trying to get married. (SOME, not all.) Anyway, as an innocent freshman girl, I was a little shell shocked with it all and wanted to find some solid ground, something to picture Becoming. I knew I didn't want to be anything like what I saw in the movies, or had witnessed in high school, or that Twilight fanatics pictured as their happily ever afters. I wanted to picture something real.

So I made The Love Wall.


It has moved with me to two apartments and still lives on my wall today. It is incomplete. There used to be a photo of Nie and her Nielsen, and there are more people in my life that I admire and look up to and would be honored to stick them on my Love Wall. But the biggest one missing is me. I can't wait to stick me up there.

All I have to say, is it is October 1st.


Friday, September 28, 2012

Give Me Advice, Oh Wise Ones



Something sad I heard at work today from a cute mom with six kids who waited for her husband on his mission:

"I love my husband, but I wish I still felt giddy. 
I wish there was a magic pill to bring that feeling back."


Um. Whaaaat??? 

I'm not ignorant enough to believe that marriage is rainbows and butterflies from the beginning into Eternity, but I also fully plan on still getting giddy and twitterpated on occasion once I am married. My mom told me that she still gets that feeling sometimes when my dad walks in to the room, and I thought it was the sweetest thing ever. 

So, I'm compiling advice. I would love your thoughts, no matter how long you've been married, on how to keep "that feeling" alive. I want it to go viral. I want people to believe that you can feel as delighted to see your spouse after being married for 9,125 days (which will be how many days my parents have been married come December 28th) as you did while you were dating.

 Hit me with it. 



Monday, September 24, 2012

I'll Participate.

Everyone loves a good blog game. But I'm breaking the rules and not listing 11 random facts, not making new questions, and not tagging anyone because this is a study break and I only have 6 minutes to contribute.
I was tagged by Lauren over there at Zip A Dee Doo Dah!


1. If you could travel to any place, right now, where would you go? Montréal, Quebec Canada.
2. What is your favorite sport to watch? To play? I love to watch Basketball and Swimming. I like swimming, running, and the sport of watching others play sports....
3. Where do you see yourself in 7.5 years? All I have to say is if I'm not an RN by then, I'm selling everything and moving to Peru and adopting all the children. New dream.
4. What is your favorite time of day? I don't even know anymore. Depends on what shift I just finished at the hospital. I like driving at home during the dawn after a night shift. I like when the shift ends on a day shift. I like it when Kaitlyn is at work and messaging me.
5. If you could have a million dollars, what is the first thing you would buy? A Jamba Juice.
6. When and where did we meet? Creeper health class Sophomore year. It was Divine intervention.
7. What color would you say your mood is right now? steel.
8. If you were stuck on a deserted island and had to choose one person to be with you, who would it be? Nate. He would ask so many questions the time would go by fast. Or maybe Captain America. 
9. What is your view of socks? depends. If my dad is throwing them at me, my view is of them spinning towards my head. 
10. Where's Waldo? Wherever you want him to be.
11. Name three things you love about yourself. My luscious lips. My green eyes. The way I can spin words.



Saturday, September 22, 2012

Promise still being kept!



They are at the most awful length. Too long to style, too short to tuck behind my ear. But I will not falter! They will not be trimmed!! The last time I grew out my bangs was 2nd grade...and I'm remembering why I haven't grown them out again.....

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

About Mirrors

     I was talking with my very dear friend about bodies and perception. We discussed the odd phenomenon girls (and many boys) go through where others look at them and see a lovely, desirable, perfectly normal person, but when you look at yourself, you have a whole different list of adjectives come to mind: "fat. pale. uneven. undesirable. too tall. too short. crooked. imperfect." Sadly, the negative list we make about ourselves is somehow always longer than the positive list we make about ourselves, or that we make from comments from others.
     I'm very guilty of this. It breaks my heart, because I know that people look at me and want me to have the same self confidence that I want for my sisters and friends. But yet I don't. I still tear myself apart in the mirror.

     I found this quote:

"If you are discouraged about your appearance, it will help to see yourself through the eyes of those who love you. Hidden beauty seen by loved ones can become a mirror for self-improvements. This phenomenon of the person internalizing the expectations of others with subsequent positive change has become known as the Pygmalion effect, after the famous play in which the “guttersnipe,” Eliza Dolittle, becomes the refined My Fair Lady. The beauty was always there; Eliza only needed help from others to discover it.

Our Father in Heaven provides the perfect example of this principle. He sees our divine nature. We are His children. The way He sees us, because of His love for us, is perfect. The mirror which He holds constantly before us, if we will only raise our sight to look, is the one in which we should trust. Its image is always true and never distorted. He reminds us, as He did Moses, “Thou art my son [or daughter]” (Moses 1:4)." (complete talk here)

So I'm going to use different mirrors. I'm going to use my mom, my sisters, my best friends, those who look to me for an example, those whom I admire, those who love me, as my mirrors. Most importantly, I'm going to use God as my mirror, and see what He reflects back at me. It cannot be anything short of beautiful, I'm sure.

And if you are discouraged and need a different image, I would be honored to be your mirror.


Friday, September 7, 2012

Just so you know, I love you.

I want you all to know that I love you.
I want you all to know that my love for you is there, whether or not you think it is.

The semester has started.
I commute to and from Provo on Tuesdays and Thursdays. I'm there until 8 p.m. on Tuesday and 3 p.m. on Thursday, and that does not include the commuting time.

On Saturdays, Sunday afternoons, and occasional Fridays and Mondays, I am working at Primary Children's, which also includes a 45 minute commute either way.

On the other days, I will be squeezing in at least 20 hours a week in the Heart and Lung Institute at IMC for my internship in cardiac rehab.

I will also be giving time (usually Wednesday and Friday nights) whenever I can to my second job, nannying a beautiful baby girl.

Somehow, I will also eat, sleep, prepare Primary lessons, study for my 14 credit hours, get perfect grades so I will FINALLY GET IN TO NURSING SCHOOL, and maybe wash my hair once and a while.

I love my life. It is so good. It is so busy, but all with good things. It is my season to be in school and busy and learning.

But I still love you. Even if I never see you or only have a minute to hug you in passing or if it takes me three days to reply to a text message or all I can offer is a Facebook post here and there, please don't think I don't care. And chances are, I pray for you often.

So, good luck in everything going on in your life, and when mine stops to take a deep breath, let's do lunch!


Tuesday, September 4, 2012

The Cost of Instant Messaging

I'm in class.

It is a three hour class.

So naturally, I am instant messaging Emily, my 15 year old sister. She is giving me advice about life.

I told her she was a wise woman.

Her reply:

"thank you for listening for additional information enter a quarter."

Yup. Love her.






Saturday, September 1, 2012

The Things of My Soul: An Autobiography


     I was born two years and nine months after my brother, Andrew. Hoping to avoid the typical brother/sister relationship of competition and antagonism, my parents introduced me to Andrew as “the queen, and you must always treat her like a queen.” Of course he was too young to really understand that statement, and so I credit my brother’s kindness and gentleness to my dad, because I am sure that is where Andrew learned it. My dad named me Bethany Christine because Bethany is the city where Jesus Christ spent Holy Week before He was killed, and Christine contains the word ‘Christ.’ According to my mom, my dad always handled my little baby self as if I were made of porcelain, whereas he had been rougher with Andrew because he was a boy.
     This deep love and adoration that I received from my dad from day one was and is pivotal in my personal identity. As a little girl, I would earnestly wait for Daddy to come home from work because I knew it meant tickling and laughing and rolling around on the carpet. I loved to sit on his lap at church and tried to keep my head immediately under his chin, not realizing until I was old enough to hold children on my own lap how uncomfortable that is. I loved to play princess and always imagined that my prince looked just like my dad, because how could there be a more handsome or more loving man in the whole world?
     The only other person that compares in devotion to my dad is my mother. It is not always easy for me to write or speak about her, because she is the dearest friend to my heart that I have ever known. No one has ever had a more enthusiastic cheerleader, a kinder teacher, a more patient leader, or a more dedicated advocate, short of Jesus Christ, than my mother. Abraham Lincoln said it best: “All that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother.”
     When I turned eight and went to be interviewed for baptism, my bishop asked me whom I wanted to baptize me, and of course I answered “My dad!” I can remember thinking how stupid it was to even ask that question. The day of my baptism was beautiful and perfect, especially the tender moment where my dad meticulously tied the big white satin bow in the back of my dress, taking extra care to plump the curves and make the tails hang just right.
     I began taking violin lessons around this same time in my life, a skill I had been dreaming of developing and was so excited to begin. I underestimated both the difficulty of this instrument and my parents’ unyielding determination that I master it. A crucial lesson came when, after tiring of listening to me crying about “the violin is too hard!”, my dad promised he could find something harder for me to do. After pushing a manual lawn mower through mid-day August heat, I agreed with him. I have never since forgotten that whatever my situation may be, it could always be worse, and even difficult opportunities are a blessing.
     The week before I turned ten, my youngest sister Abigail was born. We knew before she was born that she has a heart defect called Tetrology of Fallot. Among other things, she was missing one of her heart valves and had a hole in the center of her heart. Her little body turned blue from lack of oxygen when she was 10 weeks old, which led to her first open heart surgery. This was my first experience in giving up my desire for control to Heavenly Father and trusting His will. It was also the first time I noticed nurses and decided that I wanted to be one of them someday.
     Twelve was the year I learned to pray. Of course, I’d been praying my whole life, as is tradition in our Latter Day Saint culture, but the year I turned twelve I really learned how to pray.
     It began at the end of fifth grade when my teacher, Miss King, asked me if I was on the waiting list for enrollment into a new charter school that would be opened that fall. Confused, I went home and asked my mom and discovered that I was indeed on the waiting list, but the chances of me actually getting in to American Preparatory Academy (APA) were slim considering the vast amounts of children from all over the Utah Valley being added to the list every day. Being the adventurer that I am, I wanted to be accepted. I wanted it badly.
    I began checking online obsessively at the school’s progress, willing the phone to ring with the news that there was an opening and my name had reached the top of the list. Summer dragged on with no phone call, and the first day at my previously attended elementary school arrived. I sluggishly pulled myself onto the bus, knowing that my best friend since third grade was in a different class, and I would be alone. The prayers that I had been offering all summer of  “please help me get in to APA...please please please!” multiplied. APA’s school year didn’t start for another month, so there was still a margin of hope to hold on to.
    After two weeks of school fraught with loneliness, evil little boys that sat next to me, hundreds of more prayers, and sobbing every day after school, a miracle occurred. Knowing my love for the Harry Potter books, my dad fashioned an acceptance letter similar to Harry’s Hogwarts letter, and gave it to me with my new American Preparatory Academy uniform. I cried with delight and gratitude knowing the Lord had tested my faith and taught me a lesson on prayer that continues to bless my life.
     Thirteen was the year of being ugly. I think most people are ugly around that age, because it’s the time of puberty and your mind is changing and you’re learning and growing so fast at a time when all you want is to be accepted. I’ve always been tall, usually the tallest in my grade, but for some reason 7th grade I towered over everyone. I was tall; I was loud; I probably scared a lot of people. Add to that a really horrendous haircut mistake and necessary glasses and I was a sight to behold. Picture Goliath in a plaid and navy uniform with a bun and female-ish voice: “I DEFY THE ARMIES OF MIDDLE SCHOOL THIS DAY!”
    Lucky for me, I didn’t know I was ugly because I was wrapped up in being smart (because I was good at school and my parents told me I could be anything I wanted) and developing my music skills. I had played violin my whole life, but it really started to escalate in middle school. My parents firmly believe in having strong daughters who develop their talents and they always sacrificed and supported me.
    Thirteen was also a year of rapid spiritual growth. My young women leaders issued a challenge to read for ten minutes a day out of the Book of Mormon. If you read ten minutes every night for the whole week, then on Sunday you could add a toy compass to a jar. It was a competition between the Beehives, Mia Maids, and Laurels to see who could fill their jar first. Every week I was determined to be able to add one of those little compasses, but I always missed a night or forgot and didn’t get to contribute to the Beehive’s jar on Sunday. The last Sunday before our ward boundaries were reassigned, I added my first compass to the jar. It was a huge milestone for me and even though my family was put in a different ward the next week with new leaders and no compass jar, I never stopped reading my scriptures every night from that week on, which has made all the difference in my life.
     I finished the Book of Mormon for the first time all by myself on Father’s Day, 2005. I had been reading and marking up a paperback copy that the same compass-leaders from my previous ward had given me, and I gave the finished, colored, Testimony-earned copy to my dad that day. I had written my testimony in the cover and I can still see the look in my dad’s eyes after he read it. He told me it was the best gift he had ever been given and I made another resolve that day to never do anything that would take that look for me out of his eyes.
    Later that year, my dad was offered a job to work as a contractor in Iraq for 9 months, a respite from the unemployment we had experienced over the previous year. Around that same time I felt the desire to receive my Patriarchal Blessing, so the Sunday before he left for Iraq we went to the patriarch’s home where I was given my blessing. The timing of that blessing was certainly inspired, for on its heels came six years of the Refiner’s Fire that have defined me into the person I am today.
    Two days before I turned fifteen, on October 19th 2006, my best friend and life-long guardian, my older brother Andrew, was diagnosed with cancer. My good friend Anna and her mom took me and my three little sisters away to a pumpkin patch that day so my mom could take Andrew to the doctor regarding a funny, painful bump on his leg. When I came home, I found my mom in the kitchen and jokingly asked, “So, is it cancer?” A shadow passed over her face and she answered, “Might be.”
     My whole world changed that day. The routine became: wake up at 5 a.m. go to early morning seminary. After seminary, go to school and pay attention in classes because ‘Your grades count for high school now!’ Come home from school and take care of the little girls, help them with homework, help them eat dinner. Do your homework; help the little girls get in bed. By that time, my mom would be home from the hospital and she and I would lie on her bed until midnight talking and crying. Then wake up and do it all again.
     In between hospital trips, I watched my hero brother get sicker and sicker. His hair, which had grown long enough to fit into a ponytail, fell out in clumps on his shoulders. His body became thin and weak and he soon resembled a Holocaust victim. The cancer in his leg and the many surgeries resulting made it mandatory for him to walk with crutches and the sound of crutches to this day makes my heart wrench. He began keeping an emesis basin with him at all times because the chemotherapy treatments caused sores to develop up and down his G.I. tract and he would either vomit blood or spit into the basin because it hurt too much to swallow his own saliva. Medical equipment and Diane, his wonderful home health care nurse, became the norm around the house. My brother, the one who had never said an unkind word to me, was so incredibly sick and I couldn’t do anything. I rarely saw my dad because he spent his days at the office and his nights at the hospital, sleeping on a hard pull out chair so Andrew would never be alone.
    As painful as it was to watch and live through, I wouldn’t change that year for anything. I learned without a doubt that the Savior Jesus Christ is aware of my family and me. I couldn’t sit with my brother all night, but He could. I couldn’t make sure he would come out of surgery and chemo treatments okay, but He could. I couldn’t do anything to reduce the excruciating pain Andrew was in, but He could and did. Through the power of faith and fasting, Andrew was able to overcome much of the pain. My faith grew so much as I turned my beloved brother’s life over to my Beloved Older Brother. The first night Andrew went in for chemo, I locked myself in my bedroom and played Abide With Me, Tis Eventide over and over on my violin. I learned what it meant to have the Savior truly abide with me.
     Amid the dark and painful days of cancer, my family was blessed with a bright and constant light. Nathaniel Joseph was born March 5th, 2007. Nate, as he is known, brings me daily joy and a small glimpse into the kind of mother I will someday be.
      My dad returned to Iraq again Fall of 2008, and came home the following April. I can remember looking out the door and seeing him walk up the steps late that night and not even knowing what to say. All I managed was “Daddy....Daddy!” and reaching out to feel him and hug him. It was a very spiritual experience for me; I knew then that at some future time when I meet my Father in Heaven again it will be a similar experience filled with joy and relief at being united again.
    At this same time, the Draper Temple had finished being built and was in the process of showing thousands of people through the open house. I was privileged to be able to clean the Temple one night after a long day of tours. I was handed a towel and cleaner and told to take care of all horizontal surfaces. What an amazing experience it was to be in the Temple at midnight, walking through nearly independent of anyone else and taking in the peace and the joy of being in such a building and knowing that I would do whatever it took to be worthy to come back there and be married some day. I was also invited to sing in the youth choir at the cornerstone dedication, which solidified my love and appreciation for this Temple that I could see out my front window.
     In January of my senior year I began a Certified Nurse’s Assistant course through my high school. The course included 100 clinical hours and I got to serve and help those who cannot care for even the most basic aspects of life themselves. I had both funny and spiritual experiences caring for the elderly that taught me that you truly love those whom you serve. I also got a head start on the path to becoming an RN and discovered how much I really do love the field of medicine.
        Many who have known me and seen me throughout my life have said it was unfair for me to go through so much, that I “didn’t get to be a kid” and it must have been so hard. Yes, it was hard. My mom compared it to pulling a handcart like the Mormon pioneers. Like them, it was heavy and painful. Like them, I was cold and broken and bleeding. Like them, we had to rely on our dear friends and family to bring us in. Like them, I had only my faith in Jesus Christ and the knowledge that someday, it would all be made up to me. I am indebted to my Heavenly Father for blessing me with so many struggles and shaping me into who I am. I am strong and I am brave. I can do anything. My self esteem, identity, and values were all developed during these years when I faced so much and had to decide to find the strength inside myself to keep going.
     I hope to continue to live my life as my parents have modeled and lived theirs. They are covenant keepers and kind friends. From their example I desire simple things: to become a nurse, to be married in the temple, and to be a mother. These desires are the product of my experiences and developments so far in this life, and when I get to the end of it, like the handcart pioneers I will say, All is Well. 





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