Treeholder – Part II

By Larry Shurilla

As I climbed the stage in the banquet hall of the Pfister Hotel, bits of sharp-edged confetti stung my face while a barrage of clustered red, white, and blue balloons floated softly to the floor and bounced like pulsating jellyfish.  My wife and kids swarmed around me, hugging me, and everyone was jumping up and down amid a deafening clash of campaign music and cheers.  Behind the stage and hanging some10 feet above was a gigantic banner that read “Congratulations Senator Justin Thao!”  

Jerry Strong took the podium and started clapping his hands over his head.  The  crowd, sensing Jerry’s intention, joined him in unison and filled the hall with a thunderous beat—the drumbeat of victory.  As I took my seat in the front row of the stage, I noticed a security man standing near the door that led to the hallway.  Besides the typical short blue coat, matching pants, and walkie-talkie strapped to his waist, I noticed he was wearing a bright red St. Louis Cardinals’ baseball hat. 

*****

“Check out all the cardinals!” my sister Katie shouted into the glass pane of the window that looked out into our small back yard.  There I saw a tree with a half dozen cardinals looking like an apple tree in the early fall, except this was a maple tree in the middle of the summer.  “And look!  Grandpa Xeng is at the bottom, holding the tree trunk again!”

As a wiry boy of 13, I was ready to run at any time of the day or night.  Just point me in a direction and I was off, like a fun-seeking-missile on a seek-and-annoy mission, and this time my target was Grandpa Xeng. 

“Grandpa, what are you doing?” I asked.  Grandpa Xeng didn’t make a move.  He just stood there, holding the tree with a smile on his face and his eyes fixed on the birds. 

He never turned around as he said, “Don’t make so much noise, Justin.  You’ll scare the cardinals away.”

“How did you know it was me, Grandpa?” I asked, but Grandpa Xeng never turned around.  I tapped him on his shoulder and for the first time he looked at me and gently put both hands on my face.  I repeated, “How did you know it was me, Grandpa?”

Grandpa Xeng was looking very intently at my lips and said, “You run heavy, like a bouatay.”

“What’s a bouatay?”

“It’s a wild boar, like a small buffalo.  There were many bouatay in our native land of Laos.”

“Oh! A buffalo, like on the back of an old nickel, Grandpa?”

“No, Justin, like in the back of our yard.  I knew you were coming the moment I felt the door slam.  Now be still, Justin, and listen to the cardinals’ music.”

Grandpa Xeng gave the back of my neck a squeeze and then returned his hands to the tree trunk.  “They won’t stay long, Justin.  The cardinal song is very beautiful, but they have much to do and little to say.  They are God’s messengers.  I sometimes wish people were more like cardinals.”

I finally thought the right moment had come for me to ask Grandpa Xeng what his accident was all about, how he lost his hearing.  I tapped him on the arm again and when he looked at me I asked, “What happened to your ears, Grandpa?  Why can’t you hear?”

“I had an accident, long ago, Justin.”

“Grandma Blia already told me you had an accident, but I want to know what kind of accident!  Did you hurt your ears swimming in the Mekong River?  I saw you on Grandma’s tapestry swimming in a big river.  Did you get sick and not have good medicine?  What happened, Grandpa?”

Grandpa Xeng looked away and said, “You are too young, Justin.”

“I’m not too young, Grandpa!  If it’s a war story, don’t be afraid to tell me!  I’ve seen war movies on TV that show people’s heads blown off!  I can take it, Grandpa!  Plus, I‘ve played M-rated war games too!  I can take it!”

Grandpa looked away from the tree and seemed to stare off into space.  His smile was gone now and I knew by looking at the lines in his forehead that his mind had gone to a place with pain.

“My story is no movie, Justin–no video game.”

“Grandma Blia said one day you would tell me the story of your accident.  I know you can’t hear, Grandpa, but I will listen well!  You’ll only have to tell me once and I’ll remember; I promise.”

“Perhaps it is time, Justin, time for you to know.  I am growing old and my memory is fading.  What I tell you now, you must always remember and tell your own children someday.  Our road to America was not an easy one.  My story is your story.  It is your father’s story.  It is our people’s story.  We must always be thankful that God has led us here to America.

“To understand my accident, you must first understand more about me.  I was born long ago about a day’s walk from Phou Bia in the country of Laos.  Phou Bia is a beautiful mountain, Justin.  Phou means “mountain” in Laotian.  It’s over 9,000 feet tall and is the highest mountain in all of Laos.  Sometimes living here in Wisconsin, I feel so unsheltered, like I’m on top of the world and the wind will blow me right off!  When there’s a mountain always looking down at you, you somehow feel protected and watched over.  I grew up with Phou Bia watching over me.

“About 100 miles southwest of Phou Bia is the Capital of Laos-Vientiane, which we visited often.  My parents were born in China and moved to Laos before I was born.   I went to school in Laos everyday until I was 15.  Then I decided to join the Phatoo, the Laotian army, and I served for many years under the famous general, Vangpao.  At that time, our country, Laos, was at war with North Vietnam.  It was my job to guard the northern part of Laos and make sure the North Vietnamese didn’t invade our land.  Do you know about the Vietnam War, Justin?”

“I saw a movie about Vietnam once, with a lot of American helicopters and people in the jungle fighting!  Did you work with the Americans, Grandpa?”

“Yes and no.  The Americans came to us and asked us to help defeat the North Vietnamese, secretly.  I never saw a lot of Americans, but we usually had an advisor or two helping us to plan attacks and disrupt the North Vietnamese operations.”

“Did you ever get shot, Grandpa?  Did you ever see any real action?”

Grandpa Xeng didn’t answer a word.  He simply held up his left hand and pointed to a round scar the size of an acorn between his thumb and forefinger.  “A bullet went through my hand, right here,” he said. 

*****

“It was a hot and rainy evening in August, 1972.   I was on patrol near Phou Tong in northern Laos close to the Vietnamese border.  Our scouts had reported hearing some movement in the jungle about 300 yards from our base camp.  I was sent as a part of two patrols of 8 men each, to investigate the area. 

“Nighttime in the jungle is especially dangerous, Justin.  The enemy can be hiding in a bush right next to you and you can’t see them.  The only thing that helped us was that the North Vietnamese army wore yellow uniforms.  They stood out much easier against the jungle than did our own green uniforms, but the nighttime blends the colors.  Without sunlight, there is no color in the jungle.  All things appear in shades of gray and black, just shadows, dark and darker spots.  We were looking for the shapes of men, men holding rifles.

“Because our vision was so limited at night, our hearing became very good.  You may think that is funny now, Justin, but there was a time when I didn’t have to look at people’s lips to understand what they were saying.  When I stood still in the night, I could hear the breathing of my fellow soldiers many feet away.  If anyone or anything  made a sudden movement, even if it was nothing more than someone scratching his shoulder, I could hear it!  When you’re on patrol, you’re even more sensitive to sound because your life could depend on what you hear or what you don’t hear. 

“We spread out in a searching pattern that we often used. At first we could only hear the wind as it passed through the heavy jungle leaves.  Suddenly we heard a hissing sound above us! 

“Five of us pointed our rifles toward the sky and were ready to shoot at the slightest movement in the trees.  Without any warning, one of my friends, Meng, screamed as something fell on his bare arm and bit him!”

“What bit him, Grandpa?!” I asked.

“It was a Nanblong, a leaf snake.  They are about one meter long and an inch thick.  Nanblong are green and have red eyes, like a devil.  They have very sharp teeth and are extremely poisonous.  If you are bitten by one, you will become very hot with fever and after a few days in the steamy jungle, you will die.  There was no cure for their venom.

“After Meng was bitten, we saw many nanblong in the trees above us and their hissing sounded like many tires losing air.  With Meng groaning and the nanblong hissing, the North Vietnamese had a fix on us and opened fire.  Within seconds, the air was filled with the loud cracking of rifle fire and the pffffft of bullets slicing through the thick night air.  I fired in the direction of most of the rifle flashes until my rifle flew out of my hands and then I felt a burning in my left hand like someone was pushing a red hot stake into it.  I fell to the ground and grabbed my left hand with my right and felt hot liquid oozing through my fingers.  It looked like black water in the nighttime, Justin, but it only took a moment to realize it was my own blood.

“When the shooting finally stopped, we heard the North Vietnamese soldiers shouting insults and running away into the night.  We took a few more shots in their general direction and then cared for our wounded.  Five soldiers in my platoon of 20, five of my friends, lay dead in the tall, elephant grass.  I was one of the lucky ones.  I was only shot through my hand.  Meng made it through the firefight with the Viet Cong, that was the name of the North Vietnamese Army, but the fire of the nanblong in his veins took his life four days later.”

Treeholder – Part I

Grandma Blia reached down with her leathery fingers and grabbed my little hand and said, “It is time for you to know, Justin.”  She led me up the carpet worn stairs to her bedroom in our old house in downtown Milwaukee.  She paused before her room, pushed open the handleless door and led me to her bed–a well-worn mattress lying on the floor. 

As I sat on the bare hardwood floor, Grandma Blia went to an old dresser and pulled out the bottom drawer.  Ever so carefully, she placed one hand beneath and the other on top of a large piece of folded blue fabric.  She said in the Hmong language it was called a naj ntaub, a flower cloth.  She gently took the cloth out of the drawer and with great care, unfolded, and laid it out on her mattress. 

To a boy of seven, the heavy fabric was about the most wonderful piece of art I had ever seen.  It was about six feet long and four feet wide.  Most every inch of the cloth contained some sort of detailed embroidery depicting majestic trees and exotic flowers, colorful birds, a churning river, and swirling clouds.  There were also many types of people, some in beautiful dresses and some in soldiers’ uniforms carrying guns.  There were strange looking animals, grass roofed huts, cornfields, razor-wire fences, and oriental style buildings.  In a word, the tapestry was magical.  It looked more like a famous painting on canvas than intricate needlework on cloth.  Grandma Blia then pulled me close and staring deeply into my eyes with all the love gathered from a lifetime of sacrifices said, “This tapestry tells the story of our people, Justin, our family, the story of the Hmong.  You must never forget it.”

*****

“Never forget it…never forget….”

My reverie was broken by the sudden skid of tires and the bright, strobelike flashes of reporters’ cameras.  The car door flung open and amid wild applause and boisterous chanting, my campaign manager, Jerry Strong, stuck his head in the car and shouted, “We did it Justin!  With 95% of the precincts’ votes counted, we hold a 4% lead!  We can’t lose!  You’ve won Senator!  Get used to hearing it, Justin.  Senator Justin Thao of the great state of Wisconsin.  It has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?”

Jerry led me quickly through the jubilant crowd that had gathered outside the Milwaukee Pfister Hotel and into a small receiving room near the main banquet hall and anxiously waiting press.  After shaking all my party leaders’ hands, Jerry said, “OK, Justin, here’s the scoop.  About five minutes ago, Ex-Senator Nelson thanked his people, conceded the election and congratulated you.  You’re scheduled to make your acceptance speech in about ten minutes!  This is what we’ve waited for buddy…ah, I mean Senator.  Go knock em’ dead Justin!  Show the people of Wisconsin why they made the right choice for senator.  Man, I’m so proud of you.”

As I walked down the plush red carpeting that led up to the podium, I thought of all the people I needed to thank, all the people that helped me get to this point in my life–my family, my teachers, my friends.  With all these faces swirling around my thoughts like loose photos in a dust devil, my mind was suddenly drawn back again, thirty years, to that room with my grandma, Blia.

*****


Pointing to a small image on the tapestry of a man standing under a tree with both hands touching the trunk, I asked, “Grandma, who is this man holding the tree with all the colorful birds?”

“That is your Grandpa Xeng (pronounced Seng).  His nickname in Hmong is “Tug Tuav Ntoo,” or in English, “Treeholder.”

Over the years, Grandma Blia had brought out the tapestry many times to show me the embroidered scenes and explain what they had to do with our family.

“Why was he called that, Grandma?”

“That is not a short story, Justin.”

“Oh, please Grandma!  Tell me about the Treeholder and the birds!”

“Well then, as you know, Grandpa Xeng is deaf, but he was not born that way.  Once, long ago, Grandpa Xeng had an accident in our native land of Laos that took his hearing from him.  After the accident, he couldn’t hear anything—not a sound!  Even if you stood up on a chair and screamed into his ears, he still couldn’t hear a word you said!  This made Grandpa Xeng very sad.  One day, while he was still recovering from the accident, he was sitting under a small shady tree in the hot afternoon sun.  He said he felt a strange tingling along his back, and quickly jumped to his feet, violently brushing his back, thinking some ants or other bugs had crawled up his shirt!  When he realized there were no bugs on his back, he looked up and noticed that a handful of birds were perched not too far up in the tree.  He could see their beaks moving, but he could not hear their song.  While he was still looking at the birds, he gently touched the trunk of the tree and said he could feel the vibrations of the birds singing!  Their song had traveled through the trunk of the tree and into his hands!  Grandpa Xeng said he felt that God had given him the gift, to hear with his hands. 

Ever since that day, Grandpa Xeng was given the name, Tug Tuav Ntoo, Treeholder.  He once told me that he could tell what kind of bird was in a tree by the pattern of vibrations he felt in his hands!  You know, Justin, Grandpa Xeng doesn’t say much; he’s too worried he won’t understand what other people are saying, so he thinks it’s just better to keep quiet and not risk the misunderstanding.  But give him time and he’ll talk; he’ll talk a lot.  He’ll say things that he thinks are important for you to know, things that a person should really listen to without asking many questions.  This may also sound strange, but I really believe birds come to him, just so he can feel their song!  Many times when we go for walks, he’ll touch a tree and in a few minutes the tree will fill with birds!  It is really amazing, Justin.  Whenever I see a tree full of birds now, I think of him, and I wonder if he isn’t too far off somewhere.  He is such a gentle man and has done so much for our family.”

“Grandma, what accident did Grandpa Xeng have that made his hearing go away?”

“For that answer, Justin, you’ll have to ask Grandpa Xeng yourself! You might have to ask him more than once and make sure you’re facing him when you speak, but give him time.  Over the years, he’s become pretty good at reading lips and he learned very good English before the accident.  He’ll understand your question and eventually he’ll give you an answer.  Just be patient with him.  You’ll be surprised at how much he might have to say.”

*****

Public Virtue

By Larry Shurilla

The greatest public act of personal integrity in my lifetime-the vote of Mitt Romney in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump.

Few times in my life, have I seen a political leader under the kind of pressure our government can inflict, stand so tall, reject the easy way out, and give us all the hope that there is still virtue in our elected officials. It only takes one voice, crying out in the wilderness of consensus, to raise our eyes to the public virtue that our Founding Fathers believed exists within us all. In our society of hurricane force media bias, the only fear I have is if America can still recognise truth. I believe we can. Truth is calm. Truth is clear. Truth feels right in our hearts. It always has and always will.

I quote from Romney’s speech:

“Like each member of this deliberative body, I love our country. I believe that our Constitution was inspired by Providence. I’m convinced that freedom itself is dependent on the strength and vitality of our national character. As it is with each senator, my vote is an act of conviction. We’ve come to different conclusions fellow senators, but I trust we have all followed the dictates of our conscience.

“I acknowledge that my verdict will not remove the president from office. The results of this Senate court will, in fact, be appealed to a higher court, the judgment of the American people. Voters will make the final decision, just as the president’s lawyers have implored. My vote will likely be in the minority in the Senate, but irrespective of these things, with my vote, I will tell my children and their children that I did my duty to the best of my ability believing that my country expected it of me.

“I will only be one name among many, no more, no less, to future generations of Americans who look at the record of this trial. They will note merely that I was among the senators who determined that what the president did was wrong, grievously wrong. We are all footnotes at best in the annals of history, but in the most powerful nation on Earth, the nation conceived in liberty and justice, that distinction is enough for any citizen.

“Thank you, Mr. President. I yield the floor.”

It is interesting to compare the two Utah Republican senators’ explanations of their differing votes on the impeachment of President Trump. If you have the time, watch both speeches and perhaps, gain a deeper insight into your personal beliefs.

Senator Mitt Romney, Republican, Utah:

Senator Michael Lee, Republican, Utah:

Fellow Citizens, let us all become footnotes in the history of America this November. Stand for what you believe in and for the virtuous ideals that make America great-honor, integrity, truth. Please vote for the candidate of your conscience.

Finally, in the realm of public virtue, I yield the floor to the senator from Utah, Mr. Mitt Romney.

Angel On My Shoulder

By Larry Shurilla

There’s an angel on my shoulder
That wasn’t here yesterday
That’s because we laid her down
Not so very far away
She comes around when I’m feeling down
Whispers, Hold on Dad, you must be strong
Got an angel on my shoulder
She wasn’t here yesterday

I hugged you in a drizzling rain
Held on tight before the police came
Watched you stand in line for a snack at nine
Wished I was there, not you
This dark thing came right at your bloom
A force so strong it tricked your mind
Got an angel on my shoulder, saying,
Dad, that wasn’t really me

When you’ve done your best and it’s not enough
You tried and cried and tried
But that doesn’t help so very much,
When you’ve kissed her cheek, Good bye
Some things we cannot understand
Strange voices making cruel demands
You thought they were from Heaven
Even though they came from Hell

The Good Lord knew how strong you were
Knew your heart was pure and good
It seems He always brings those home
Much younger than He should
She comes around when golden sun goes down
Whispers, Look here, Dad, beauty’s all around
Got an angel on my shoulder
That wasn’t here yesterday

She comes to me in her daughter’s laugh
Saying, Take good care, Dad, she’s all I had

There’s an angel on my shoulder
She wasn’t here yesterday
That’s because we laid her down
Not so very far away
She comes around when I’m feeling down
Almost any time of day
Whispers, Sorry Dad, It’ll be OK
I’m up here now, to light, your way

Mitchell’s Pumpkin

By Larry Shurilla

Mitchell woke up to the sound of poplar leaves rustling behind a cold, October breeze. “Maybe we’ll go to the pumpkin farm today?” he thought as he put on his favorite football jersey and hurried downstairs to breakfast.

Fall was Mitchell’s favorite time of the year. He loved playing football, watching the autumn leaves turn bright shades of orange, red, and yellow, and of course, he loved Halloween! Each year after school began in September and as the days turned cooler and cooler, Mitchell knew that Halloween couldn’t be far away. That meant he could start buying Halloween candies and begin hunting for just the right costume for trick-or-treating, but Mitchell’s favorite Halloween custom was picking out and carving pumpkins. He especially loved gathering with his family into a darkened room to sing spooky Halloween songs around a freshly carved jack-o-lantern with a candle burning brightly inside it.

“My pumpkin will be the biggest and most expensive pumpkin ever,” bragged Mitchell’s sister, Molly, as they sat down at the breakfast table, “and everyone will wish it was theirs!”

“Biggest, maybe,” said Mom, “but don’t count on it being the most expensive.”

“I don’t care how big mine is,” said Mitchell, “but I hope I can find one with a perfect shape and deep orange color!”

“Well today’s the day we go to the pumpkin farm,” began Mom, “and you two better dress warmly because there’s quite a chilly breeze blowing outside.”

Mitchell’s face was glued to the window as the car pulled up to the pumpkin farm. The huge pumpkin field looked like a great green sea with brilliant orange buoys floating everywhere! Molly kept pointing to pumpkins saying, “That one is the biggest! No! This one! Well, may that one over there!”

As Mitchell, his mom, and Molly walked up and down the rows of the pumpkin field, Mitchell marveled at all the different shapes, colors, and textures of the pumpkins. Some were green and rough with yellow spots. Some were orange-yellow with a flat side and some were tall and smooth with tan vertical lines. Which one should he pick?!

Mitchell’s thoughts were broken by the screams of his sister, “Mommy! This is the one I want! This one! This one!” Molly stood next to a tremendous, golden orange pumpkin that was a full two feet tall and almost perfectly round!

When Mitchell saw the size of Molly’s pumpkin, his mouth hung open and his eyebrows arched into his forehead. “What a beauty,” he thought as Molly demanded, “I want this one, Mommy!!”

“I’m sorry,” Mom replied. “That one is a little too expensive, Molly. Try to find a cheaper one.”

When Molly heard that, she stomped up and down in the field, twisted her face into a knot and screamed, “I WANT THIS ONE! ONLY THIS ONE! AHHHHHHHH! YAAAAAAAAA! MOOOOOOOOOOOOM!”

“Alright! Alright! Just calm down, Molly,” Mom looked around and cried. “You can have that pumpkin, just quit making a scene!”

Molly grinned as Mitchell thought, “I don’t blame Mom for giving in to Molly. Listening to her tantrums is worse than getting booster shots.”

“What about you, Mitchell,” Mom asked. “Have you found a pumpkin yet?”

Just as Mitchell was about to say, No, he spotted a small, under-grown, half-green, half-orange pumpkin with a flat side, partially hidden under a large green leaf. It was as if the pumpkin was begging for a kind owner. Mitchell thought, “I bet if I don’t pick that little pumpkin, he’ll probably just rot in the field or end up in someone’s pumpkin pie!”

“I think I’ve found one, Mom,” Mitchell cried back to his mother.

When Molly saw the misshapen, oddly colored pumpkin that Mitchell selected, she teased, “You’re not really going to take that puny thing home, are you? It’s a runt!”

“Y-Y-Yes, I am,” stuttered Mitchell, “and he’ll be the best looking jack-o-lantern on the block!”

Molly turned up her nose to Mitchell, looked at her own huge pumpkin glistening in the October sun and gloated, “We’ll see who’s got the best pumpkin.”

During the ride home, Mitchell kept wondering if he had made a good choice. “Maybe Molly was right,” he thought. “My pumpkin sure looks dinky next to hers.”

When they arrived home, Dad had just come home from work. He said, “Well, would you take a look at those pumpkins! Two real beauties, I’d say.”

“Two beauties?” Mitchell thought.

“Now remember, Molly and Mitchell,” Dad continued. “Keep your pumpkins in a cool, dry place and don’t carve them until the day before Halloween; otherwise, they’ll spoil and you won’t have them for trick-or-treat night!”

“OK, Dad,” both Molly and Mitchell promised, “we won’t carve our pumpkins,” but only one of them would keep that promise.

Two weeks may be a short time if that’s all the vacation one has left in the summer, but when it’s that long a wait to carve a pumpkin, two weeks seems more like two months! “I can’t wait, Mitchell!” Molly screamed. “I can’t stand it anymore! I going to carve my pumpkin right now! It’s so big and beautiful and I want everyone to see it now! I’m sure it will last until Halloween night.”

“Dad said, no, Molly,” Mitchell cautioned. “I don’t think it’s a good idea.”

“I don’t care,” Molly snipped. “It’s my pumpkin and I can do whatever I want with it!”

Molly crept into the kitchen and snuck out a knife to carve her pumpkin.

“You know you’re not allowed to take knives out of the silverware drawer, Molly!” Mitchell warned, but Molly was determined to carve her pumpkin. Molly excitedly spread out some newspaper on the basement floor, cut out the top of the pumpkin and scraped all the seeds and slimy strands out of the center of the orange giant. Molly continued, carving the eyes and then the nose of her grand pumpkin. Just as Molly was finishing the face, Dad started walking down the basement stairs!

“Oh, No!” Molly thought as she hid the carving knife behind her back. When Dad saw what had happened, he stood there with his hand on his chin, shaking his head back and forth. “Let me have the knife, Molly,” Dad asked disappointedly.

Molly gave Dad the knife and squeaked out, “I’m sorry, Daddy. Am I in trouble?”

“I’m sorry, too,” Dad said calmly.

Molly continued, getting louder as she spoke, “I just had to see my pumpkin carved! Isn’t it the most beautiful pumpkin you’ve ever seen?”

Sure enough, the gargantuan pumpkin was a gorgeous sight! Its eyes were the size of California cantaloupes and its mouth was almost as wide as a tee-ball bat! “Yes, Molly,” Dad replied. “It’s an awesome bit of nature.”

“Are you going to punish me?” Molly asked.

“You’ve punished yourself already, Molly,” Dad counseled. “I don’t think your mother or I need to do anything more.”

“I don’t believe it!” Mitchell exclaimed to Molly after Dad went back upstairs. “He’s not going to do anything?!”

Molly had a puzzled look on her face as she said, “I wonder what he meant when he said I’ve punished myself?”

It didn’t take long for Molly to understand what her father meant. The first day after Molly carved her colossal pumpkin she radiated delight and looked admiringly at her creation. It was hard to imagine a more perfect pumpkin, but as each day passed, the pumpkin’s smiling, shining face began to droop. The bright orange color began to change to yellow, then brown, then black. The once hard shell began to soften and shrink. The pumpkin’s jolly smile became sadder and sadder and sadder.

Molly now understood her father’s words. Her punishment was to watch her pumpkin slowly rot, as each day brought her closer to Halloween.

A week before Halloween, Molly’s once grand pumpkin was a rotten mess. “I’m sorry, Mom and Dad,” Molly sobbed as tears ran down her cheeks. “I won’t ever do it again.”

“We know you won’t,” Mom comforted, as Dad scraped up the rotten pumpkin with a shovel and dumped it into the trash can.

At long last it was the day before Halloween and the family had gathered together to sing Halloween songs and carve Mitchell’s pumpkin. “Come on, Molly,” Mitchell beckoned. “Help me carve this little guy!”

“Are you sure you want me to help you, Mitchell?”

“Yeah,” Mitchell replied, “I know I can’t carve half as good as you can.”

As each member of Mitchell’s family took turns carving the pumpkin, Mitchell pondered, “This pumpkin didn’t look so good sitting all alone in the field, but with a little help, he sure turned out great!”

On Halloween night, as Mitchell in his Frankenstein costume and Molly in her vampire cape took off down the dark block trick-or-treating, they both stopped in front of their house and listened to the joyful screams of trick-or-treaters running through the neighborhood. They both gazed at the happy, glowing jack-o-lantern beaming from their kitchen window.

“You know what, Mitchell?” Molly asked.

“No, what?” Mitchell replied.

“Your little pumpkin doesn’t look so bad after all.”

“Yeah,” Mitchell grinned, his eyes wide and dreamy. “Sometimes the worst looking pumpkins turn out the best.”

#

Custodians of Education

By Larry Shurilla

Ace Summer Custodian

Teaching is not a thankless job. The kids bring you notes, drawings, and gifts on occasion and many parents express thanks for your efforts in teaching their children. In fact, there is a whole week devoted to thanking teachers-Teacher Appreciation Week in May! Now custodians, on the other hand, do not receive the thanks they deserve.


As teachers pack up for the summer months and get ready for a break, the custodians are ramping up for major summer cleaning and building projects. Teachers, and the public at large, don’t realize the nearly miraculous fete of thoroughly cleaning, painting, repairing and updating 7 schools in our district in roughly 2.5 months, all the while working around summer school and summer teacher inservice activities!


I was one of those teachers who taught summer school in the morning and then worked with the custodians in the afternoons. I would paint the halls of our middle school after summer school let out and by doing so, I got to see much of the work custodians did behind the scenes.


Taking care of a school is much like taking care of a home, just on a larger scale. There is a constant battle between maintenance and finding better ways to do things. Heating and air-conditioning problems, electrical work, plumbing work, meeting room set-ups, and the relentless classroom and floor cleaning are just some of the activities custodians do all the time.


From my own experience, I saw an interesting dichotomy in the educational workplace. Either teachers and administrators treated the custodians with respect or they pretty much ignored them. From my own experience, I loved working with the custodians. I was a custodian. A new teacher to our building, who was a tad aloof and grumpy, first saw me as I was painting the hallways during the summer. When she saw me seated with a bunch of other teachers at the first faculty meeting of the new school term, she thought, “What’s he doing here?! They let custodians sit in on faculty meetings?!” I had a lot of fun with that one for a long time. Still do.


Custodial work is not easy. Just try replacing your own kitchen faucet sprayer, when you have 2 inches of work space behind your sink and three inches of fingers. You get my point. After a few years of summer painting by myself or with student helpers, I convinced a fellow teacher that summer painting was not such a bad gig. It was only four or five hours a day in a mostly air-conditioned working environment. We could listen to music, drink Mountain Dew, etc. Well, he bit, and we became a painting team. The very first day he joined me, I was so excited to show him the ropes. I loaded up the rolling scaffolding cart with all the necessary materials: paint, screwdrivers, blue tape, paint-splattered radio, five-in-one tool, FPMD (Full Power Mountain Dew-all sugar, all caffeine), etc. I laid down the red rubber painting tarp in the hallway, pulled out a few brushes, filled the roller tray with fresh white paint, all the while briefing him from my vast knowledge on the basic practices of professional painting. I then proceeded to step backwards onto the roller tray and splash a gallon of white paint all over the terrazzo floor, onto my pant leg, and halfway up the adjacent lockers! Thus ended my first and last painting lesson.


No, custodial work is not easy. It’s kind of like screaming at the refs during a basketball game. With our instant and super-slow-motion replays on tv, we think it’s so easy and we know all the calls. Until you’ve officiated anything, just hold off on your criticism. Put on a whistle and try to make any kind of call on the court, live. It is quite difficult. Same with custodial work. Until you’ve grabbed a broom, paint brush, or screwdriver and done it yourself, hold off on your criticism of others.


Custodians work hard day after day and I think they enjoy seeing frazzled teachers buried behind mounds of paperwork at their desks after the end of the working day. It reminds them they don’t have to interact with people too much on the night shift, and when the clock hits eleven, they’re going home with nothing under their arms. Every job has its advantages and disadvantages.


Having spent many a summer afternoon rolling paint onto what seemed like endless hallway walls, you can imagine that the mind can drift a bit. As a matter of fact, the mind screams for activity and like a weed sprouting up from a crack in the middle of a Walmart parking lot, humor finds a way to make tiresome tasks palatable. Custodians like to have fun and ribbing each other is prerequisite for the job.


One communication technique I learned working with the full-time custodians was to assume your buddies know less about repairing a problem than you do. You could hear things like, “What on earth are you doing?! Here, let me show you how to do that!” or “Where’d you learn how to do that, in the circus?” It’s fun to act like you’re the expert and no one wanted to admit they didn’t know how to do something like fixing drinking fountain valves or replacing ceiling tiles. This attitude brought about many moments of humor, especially when “the expert” took over and quickly proceeded to screw the job up worse than it was before. Even then, you could always blame it on the district! “Why doesn’t the district ever buy top-of-the-line tools?! Always skimpin’ on the budget. Damn crapperware!” Even with the joking and maybe because of the ribbing, the fountains always got fixed and the ceiling tiles were seamlessly replaced.


I experienced the lack of respect custodians may feel from time to time and I’m as altruistic as the next teacher, but even I have my limitations. Case in point…one fine summer afternoon, whilst in the middle of painting the wood shop walls, a parent of one of our former students caught my painting companion and I in the doorway as she was showing her daughter her new locker and practicing combinations. She was surprised to see us in painting clothes and wielding brushes. The conversation went something like this:


“Hi Mr. Shurilla and Mr. Schmidt. You guys paint here during the summer?”
“Why yes, we do!”
“Well, I guess that gets you up and keeps you busy!”
“Sure does.”
“Do you get paid for this?”
An awkward pause and moment of silence.
“As a matter of fact, yes. Yes we do.”
“Awesome. Have a great year. Bye!”


Perhaps I am too small. Perhaps my ego wouldn’t fit, even in a distorting circus mirror. Perhaps Mother Theresa’s picture doesn’t hang in my hallway at home, but come on here, folks. “Do you get paid for this?!”


“No, I don’t get paid for this! Are you kidding?! Who would pay to have this done?! I don’t have anything better to do on summer afternoons than haul around ladders and tape the bottom edges of endless hallways. I love rolling and brushing miles of paint. Paid for it? Well, maybe if Charles Ingalls from Little House on the Prairie bartered with me, I might paint in exchange for a pork butt, but money? No way! You love it when you get the chance to paint a room at home, don’t you?! Well, how blessed am I?! I get to paint classrooms and hallways every day! Paid for it? Just to slap on paint?! No way, my friend. I’m better than that.”


I am not better than that. Put me in a donkey suit and spray paint “Cheap O” on my side, but I actually expect to be paid for my efforts. Teaching and painting are work, people! During the school year, we would often use the phrase, “Do you get paid for that?” whenever work of a dubious nature came up, like coaching, tutoring, teaching, hauling bricks, rocketing to the moon, or being elected President of the United States, etc. You get the picture.


The sanctity of break time to a custodian is akin to a mother rabbit protecting her fuzzy newborns from a circling red-tailed hawk. Do not mess with our break! That fifteen-minute period of peace seemingly affords the only buffer between sanity and lunacy, between congeniality and hostility, and ultimately between “Okay, I’ll do it” or “That’s beyond my pay grade!”


One could be moving radioactive plutonium into a lead containment vessel, but if the break whistle blew, you’d drop that canister then and there, and rush to the break room for a few pretzel rods and a Diet Coke. Plutonium be damned!


The only possible way that break time could be shortened would be if you were sitting around a table in the break room, playing Star Trek Uno, sipping your soda, and then the boss walks in. We’d get back to work faster than cockroaches scattering when you turn on the light!
Since I’m speaking of break time, let me entertain you with a joke my dad told me many years ago when I was a kid and has been repeated ad nauseam in the Shurilla family ever since. It contains a punchline that works in the custodial world quite nicely and just about any other occupation. The joke goes something like this:


One day a very bad man, Mr. Walker, died and went straight to Hell (he must not have been a teacher because they didn’t give him his “ignoring kids” video first). Upon entering Hades, he met The Devil who was more than happy to greet him.
“Welcome to Hell, Mr. Walker!” spewed Satan. “Ya know this place isn’t as bad as people make it out to be.”
“Really?” questioned our malignant sinner, suspiciously.
“Most certainly,” replied Beelzebub. “As a matter of fact, we here in the Pernicious Inferno believe in free choice! You believe in free choice, don’t you, Mr. Walker?”
“Why yes, yes I do!”
The Devil coughed. “Well then, let me present you with three choices. You see before you three doors. Behind each door is a Personal Hell designed with you in mind. You may choose which door of Hell to enter.”
“Wait a minute here, Satan. It’s no choice if I don’t know what’s behind the doors!”
“Right you are, my bad man, right you are. But in today’s Hell, we are much more politically correct. In the old days, we’d just have you guess your door and ‘Poof!’ off you’d go to oblivion, but not in this day and age. I will personally open each door of Hell for you, let you take a look inside, and then you may select the door of your choosing.”
“I don’t know, Lucifer. This kind of has a Twilight Zone like feel to it.”
“Well, Mr. Walker, you have some choice here, but you don’t have much choice now, do you? You are in Hell after all! Would you prefer I make the choice for you?”
“Ahh, no, no, that sounds like a bad idea. Go ahead. Show me Door #1.”
“As you please.”
The Devil opened Door #1 to reveal a scene of fire and brimstone, with numberless bodies tied to wooden posts, burning to death, shrieking, and writhing in agony!
“Close the door! Close the door!” shouted our sinner in horror. “That was terrible!”
“So say they all,” quipped Satan and eagerly added with a sinister smile, “Here’s Door #2!”
Door #2 opened to a man screaming, strapped to a hospital gurney, while seven ghouls, each with a different size knife, were playfully carving his flesh without any anesthetic.
“Shut the door! Shut the door!”
“Of course. Of course. Now, are you ready for Door #3, Mr. Walker?”
“Somehow, I don’t think I’ll ever be ready. Go ahead, Devil. Do your stuff.”
Door #3 creaked open to expose a host of poor souls standing amid a football field-sized pool of fecal matter that came right up to their chins. Only their heads showed. The Devil’s minions patrolled outside the pool. The smell was overwhelmingly vile and putrid, but there was no screaming. The Devil shut the door.
“Well,” Mr. Walker began, “I definitely don’t want Door #1 or Door #2. There’s just too much suffering there. Door #3 is no picnic, but I guess it’s the least of three evils.”
“A wise choice, befitting your crimes, Mr. Walker. You may enter Door #3 and take your place alongside your fellow sinners.”
Mr. Walker stepped gingerly into the putrid pool of raw sewage and stood at attention, stiff and rigid, with his chin just above the foul mess. He thought for a moment, “Ya know? This isn’t that bad.”
Just then, Satan came in grinning, looked at his watch and said, “Break’s over. Back on your knees.”


Imagine the good-natured ribbing you would endure if ever you were caught resting in the hallways by a couple of custodians, shouting a salvo of “Break’s over. Back on your knees” imperatives your way. Ahh, what a fun-loving bunch!


Another interesting anomaly of the summer custodial work force were the high school kids who signed on as summer helpers. I dubbed them, “The Walkers.” Now these walkers have nothing to do with the previously mentioned, Mr. Walker. No sir, these “Walkers” were more of TV’s The Walking Dead kind of walkers. You know, the head twisted zombies, roaming through vacant city streets, …that kind of walker. Well, in the middle school summer work force, young walkers were aplenty.


The high school summer staff, just like any work force, exhibited all the working traits you see in adults. Some were born leaders. Some followers. Some worked their butts off and others just wanted to get work done and go swimming. I certainly didn’t blame them for that, but back to the walkers.


It would begin simple enough. As the clock inched toward 1:50 p.m., the walkers would begin to appear, slowly coming out of darkened classrooms or dimly lit hallways. Their walk would be stilted and their cell phones illuminated their blank, expressionless faces. An occasional grunt, groan, or giggle could be heard as the devices pleased or angered them.


The walkers would sometimes randomly converge and bounce off each other in the hallways, like bumper cars at an amusement park, all the while their collective movement hypnotically leading them to the break room and the 2:30 p.m. sign-out sheets. Since my painting cohort and I usually painted until around 3:30 p.m., we could gauge the time of day to the minute by the first walker appearance. “There’s a walker now, Paul, must be 1:50.” Or perhaps we would overhear one of the custodial walkie-talkie’s blast, “There’s been a walker sighting in central hall; synchronize your watches accordingly.”


Al McGuire, the legendary basketball coach of Marquette University and NBC Sports analyst, once spoke of the need for making “a right turn” in life. You see, McGuire lived in the suburbs of Milwaukee in a town called Brookfield. Day after day for thirteen years, McGuire would take a left turn out of his affluent subdivision and head to downtown Milwaukee to coach the Warriors. I guess many of us make a similar, monotonous day-to-day drive to work each day. We just put our brains on auto-drive and after a half hour or so we arrive. But every now and then, McGuire quipped, “we need to make a right turn.” Instead of that left turn toward town and work, make a right and go somewhere you’ve never been before. Go out into the country and meet people. Talk to farmers sitting on their tractors in the fields. Talk to shop owners and people in the streets. McGuire said if you really want to get to know people, become a bartender or a cab driver; that’s where you get a degree in life. He said, “If you really want to know what’s going on at a place, get to know the custodians.” In fact, when McGuire was diagnosed with leukemia, he said he went to a hospital, found a custodian, and asked, “What am I in for?”


I relate to that kind of grassroots wisdom. When I was growing up, my dad (a Marquette grad himself) was a television repairman and one day he asked if I wanted to come with him to Al McGuire’s house to return his fixed TV set. You bet I did! All I remember was that Al wasn’t home, but I did get to look at all the MU pictures on the wall, meet his kind wife, and get a feel that this was truly, a down to earth family.


Most teachers don’t get the opportunity to work with the custodians they see everyday, busily cleaning and maintaining a safe learning environment for the kids, but I did. I guess it was like taking that right turn, getting out of my everyday grind to experience another’s. My time as a custodian taught me many lessons, most notably work hard, work as a team, find a better way and have fun doing it. I guess, in a way, we were both custodians of education. And get this…I even got paid for it!

Survival

By Larry Shurilla

Invariably, when one is writing a memoir about a middle school teaching career, the subject of vomiting will come up. Okay, it’s not invariable and may never come up when middle school education is discussed, but if you ever did throw up in school, you will remember it for a lifetime. And if you had a classmate puke his or her guts out, you may be emotionally scarred from the close proximity to the bile blast.


Sure, I’ve had a handful of kids come up to my desk over the years and say, “Mr. Shurilla, I don’t feel so goo…” and then haul off to the waste basket to make a quick deposit, but there’s nothing special in that. It happens all the time. However, as I look back, there is one hurl episode that comes to mind not only for its ferocity, but also for its humanity.


It began as a school day like any other that year. Teach math, teach math again, teach science, eat lunch, teach science again, have a prep period, and then end the day with reading. This particular group of students was reading from a survival series that contained stories of mountain storms, inner city racial conflicts, and airplane crash landings. We could’ve added our own survival chapter titled: Upchuck, Stomach Macaroni, or for the high-brow readers, The Nemesis of Emesis.


Somewhere in the middle of the period, a skinny white kid with limited academic ability, but one who excelled in humility and guilelessness––in other words the type of kid the “cool kids” loved to pick on––happened to be sitting in the front row directly in front of me as I was teaching. Being the consummately observant professional educator that I was, I noticed that “Carl” was looking rather ashen. Instead of asking him how he felt, I did what any award-winning classroom teacher would do, I ignored my instincts and called on him to read aloud. This Carl did with instant obedience, but something was off. He began to stop reading intermittently and had a surprised look on his face, as if he was discovering a primordial urge, a repulsive yet basic human survival instinct. By the time I realized what was happening, it was far too late. Carl’s throat began a kind of rhythmic worm dance, not unlike the dinner scene from the first Alien movie, and then the first eruption began. Picture a vomit bazooka firing a deadly spread in a 180-degree arc around the front of the room. Simultaneously, every other student recoiled amid groans of horror, and shoved their chairs away from ground zero, leaving Carl alone, soaking in his vomit bath.


There was a momentary pause, allowing Carl to reload, and the second saliva salvo commenced. Ever a scientist, I recall being startled that so much vomit could come out of one individual. When the fallout settled and all bile batteries were emptied, I immediately came to Carl’s rescue by running to the call button on the wall, calling the office, and asking that a custodian be dispensed to Room N-9, ASAP!


Now for the humanity.


This particular group of students was known for picking on each other. I expected a lot of complaining and comments like, “You are so gross, Carl! Sick, Carl! Get out of here, man! That smells sooooo foul!” Much to my pleasure and surprise, a black kid I’ll call Zach, known to be one of the biggest teasers in the group, gently approached Carl from behind, put his hand on the one dry spot of Carl’s shoulder and said, “It’s all right, man. It’ll be all right.” The room was silent. It felt like a real life Willy Wonka was holding the everlasting gobstopper and saying, “So shines a good deed in a weary world.” And thus, it was.


The class remained quiet. The custodian came, spread, and swept up his magical tan powder as Carl was escorted by another student down to the nurse’s room. I never heard any of the kids make fun of Carl for that episode. Sometimes, even amid a crisis situation, the kids will rise above it all and teach us grown-ups about kindness and humanity.

Thanks, Zach. It doesn’t have to take a foreign battlefield or Super Bowl comeback to elicit our moral courage. Sometimes, all you need is a classroom of diverse kids, reading about survival and seeing a friend in need. Yeah, Carl, it really will be all right.

Happy Easter!

By Larry Shurilla

(Sung with Exuberance!)
“When First the glorious light of truth
Burst forth in this last age,
How few there were enrolled their names
Upon its sacred page!
Yet of those few how many
Have passed from earth away,
And in their graves are sleeping
Till the Resurrection Day!
Till the Resurrection Day!
And in their graves are sleepin’
Till the Resurrection Day!”

Brothers and Sisters, Happy Easter! I am so happy today! Forgive my break in protocol, as missionaries in Japan we used to sing that song, “When First the Glorious Light of Truth,” with the utmost zeal at our missionary meetings and today I feel a bit like Alma, and pine that I were an angel and could speak with the trump of God, with a voice to shake the earth! Would that I could stand on the housetops and proclaim: Shed no more tears! Prepare no more funerals! Death has lost! Life has won! Hope is eternally victorious! HE IS RISEN!

As we celebrate and contemplate the glory of our Lord’s Resurrection, please walk with me and the Savior through John, Chapter 11 and notice the true play on faith being acted out before our eyes. As you listen to the story of Lazarus, in what role do your see yourself today? Where does the Lord speak directly to us? Where is our faith?

1 Now a certain man was sick, named Lazarus, of Bethany, the town of Mary and her sister Martha.
3 Therefore his sisters sent unto him, saying, Lord, behold, he whom thou lovest is sick.

The sisters of Lazarus were full of faith! Mary had anointed Jesus with ointment, had wiped his feet with her hair. Mary did this in the house of a leper. The apostles thought she was wasting this precious ointment on the living, but Jesus said she was anointing him for his burial. He also said, “Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her.” (Matthew 26) These sisters believed the Lord could heal their brother. They sent for him in that hope, but Jesus, because of their faith had a greater miracle in mind. It was time for their faith to be tested, stretched, and fulfilled.

4 When Jesus heard that, he said, This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of God, that the Son of God might be glorified thereby.
5 Now Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus.
6 When he had heard therefore that he was sick, he abode two days still in the same place where he was.
7 Then after that saith he to his disciples, Let us go into Judæa again….
Our friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I go, that I may awake him out of sleep.
12 Then said his disciples, Lord, if he sleep, he shall do well.
13 Howbeit Jesus spake of his death: but they thought that he had spoken of taking of rest in sleep.
14 Then said Jesus unto them plainly, Lazarus is dead.
15 And I am glad for your sakes that I was not there, to the intent ye may believe; nevertheless let us go unto him…

Lazarus needed to die in order for the Lord to increase their faith. Surely once a person is dead, that is the end. Then we must let them go. Forever. Not so Martha. Not so Mary. Not so disciples. Oh, and not so US! Prepare yourselves for a leap in faith.


17 Then when Jesus came, he found that he had lain in the grave four days already.
20 Then Martha, as soon as she heard that Jesus was coming, went and met him: but Mary sat still in the house.
21 Then said Martha unto Jesus, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died.
22 But I know, that even now, whatsoever thou wilt ask of God, God will give it thee.


Martha still had a speck of hope! She has faith that the Lord could still do something, even though Lazarus had been dead four days.


23 Jesus saith unto her, Thy brother shall rise again.
24 Martha saith unto him, I know that he shall rise again in the resurrection at the last day.
25 Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live:
26 And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?
27 She saith unto him, Yea, Lord: I believe that thou art the Christ, the Son of God, which should come into the world.
28 And when she had so said, she went her way, and called Mary her sister secretly, saying, The Master is come, and calleth for thee.
29 As soon as she heard that, she arose quickly, and came unto him.
32 Then when Mary was come where Jesus was, and saw him, she fell down at his feet, saying unto him, Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died.


Mary had faith in the healing powers of Jesus. If only he had come earlier, but now?….


33 When Jesus therefore saw her weeping, and the Jews also weeping which came with her, he groaned in the spirit, and was troubled,


The only thing that usually troubled Jesus was the lack of faith he saw so abundantly all around him, but Martha believed Jesus to be the Christ. She still had hope He could perform a miracle.


34 And Jesus said, Where have ye laid him? They said unto him, Lord, come and see.
35 Jesus wept.

Why did He weep? He knew what was about to happen! The greatest miracle ever performed on earth! Perhaps he wept knowing that even though one rose from the dead, the faithless would still not believe and thus reject the eternal life He was offering them.


36 Then said the Jews, Behold how he loved him!
37 And some of them said, Could not this man, which opened the eyes of the blind, have caused that even this man should not have died?

Sarcasm-an enemy to faith. An attitude of skepticism. Negativity. How will these people ever believe?


38 Jesus therefore again groaning in himself cometh to the grave. It was a cave, and a stone lay upon it.
39 Jesus said, Take ye away the stone. Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh: for he hath been dead four days.
40 Jesus saith unto her, Said I not unto thee, that, if thou wouldest believe, thou shouldest see the glory of God?
41 Then they took away the stone from the place where the dead was laid. And Jesus lifted up his eyes, and said, Father, I thank thee that thou hast heard me.
42 And I knew that thou hearest me always: but because of the people which stand by I said it, that they may believe that thou hast sent me.


Jesus prayed aloud that there could be no mistaking the bond between the Father and the Son. Jesus came to do the will of the Father and to do the works of the Father. He truly was, the Son of God.


43 And when he thus had spoken, he cried with a loud voice, Lazarus, come forth.
44 And he that was dead came forth, bound hand and foot with graveclothes: and his face was bound about with a napkin. Jesus saith unto them, Loose him, and let him go.
45 Then many of the Jews which came to Mary, and had seen the things which Jesus did, believed on him.
46 But some of them went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done…


Having eyewitnessed this greatest of miracles, some believed and some wanted to narc on Jesus to the Pharisees.

Just a simple stroll through a few events in the life of our Lord and yet, how many acts of faith and lack of faith were presented! Where did we see ourselves? In Martha, Mary, the disciples, the skeptics, the mourning Jews? The Lord wants our faith! He wants us to believe! He wants to bless us, to open the windows of heaven and shower down blessings upon us, but we must act, we must ask, we must believe, we must trust, we must take the hand that is stretched out still, and behold the wonders reserved for the faithful!

(Alma 11:42-44)
Some believe the resurrection of Christ was for Him alone. Latter-Day scripture clarifies this misunderstanding.
The Prophet Alma taught:
42 Now, there is a death which is called a temporal death; and the death of Christ shall loose the bands of this temporal death, that all shall be raised from this temporal death.
43 The spirit and the body shall be reunited again in its perfect form; both limb and joint shall be restored to its proper frame…
44 Now, this restoration shall come to all, both old and young, both bond and free, both male and female, both the wicked and the righteous; and even there shall not so much as a hair of their heads be lost; but every thing shall be restored to its perfect frame…”

Ernesto Story
A week ago, Saturday, I attended the funeral service of Brother Ernesto Aguilar, a longtime member of the Milwaukee stake and a brother I was home teaching companions with, some 40 years ago. I can still remember him telling me this gem of truth:
“Little kids, little problems. Big kids, big problems.”

Brother Aguilar was a stalwart member of the church. An immigrant from El Salvador and Mexico, Br. Aguilar dedicated his life to Christ and raising a family in America. The Perez family shared the restored gospel of Jesus Christ with Brother Aguilar and opened the door to a flood of Gospel revelation to which Br. Aguilar stayed true to his death.

As I looked upon Brother Aguilar, dressed in his white and green temple clothing and paid my respects, the white reminded me of the atonement and how the Lord’s blood purifies our souls and the green made me think of new life and eternal growth. How appropriate that an Easter Lily has a pure white flower and rich green leaves. I felt peace and happiness for Ernesto and his family, for this was a righteous man who finished his earthly mission, who took care of the important things in life and has led his family into the blessings of eternity and exaltation.

Brothers and Sisters, Happy Easter! On this glorious Sabbath wherein we remember the resurrection of our Savior and extinguish forever the sting of death with the hopes of eternal glory,
Let us remember…

There were no orders that could stay Him.
There was no stone heavy enough to hold Him.
There was no legion of soldiers mighty enough to stop Him.
On the morning of the third day, as the suns’ dawning rays burst over the horizon, the stone was rolled away and the Great Jehovah fulfilled this final prophecy of His earthly mission and dug His heel into death’s depressive head forever and walked upon the earth once more-a resurrected being!

Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live.”
And why did He do it? Why suffer so for our sins? Why deal with the vipers and the faithless? Why hang on that barbaric cross? It was not just to do His Father’s will. Like with Martha, Mary, and Lazarus, He did it all, because He loves us.

(Sung softly)
“Why should we mourn because we leave
These scenes of toil and pain?
O happy change! The faithful go
Celestial joys to gain;
And soon we all shall follow
To realms of endless day,
And taste the joyous glories
Of a Resurrection day.”

-in the name of our risen Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Amen.

With Eve

By Larry Shurilla




With Eve by Larry Shurilla
(Wheresover she was, there was Eden – Mark Twain)

There was a time when the world was mine
And I named all the flowers and the trees
But something was missing and good God was listening
And sent me my beautiful Eve

The first time I saw her,
She was caressing a trembling lamb in her arms
From that very moment I fell in love forever
And knew why this garden was called paradise

Wheresoever she was, there was Eden
Whatsoever she touched, there sprang new life
Whensoever she wooed me, all the stars in the Heavens
Spun down to earth and crowned her with light

There was a time when our world was new
And we started to make a life together
But something was missing and good God was listening
And sent us a beautiful baby

Again I saw her. She was rocking a feverish child in her arms
At that very moment, I fell in love forever
And knew a mother’s love was greater than all

Wheresoever she was, there was Eden
Whatsoever she touched, there sprang new life
Whensoever she wooed me, all the stars in the Heavens
Spun down to earth and crowned her with light

There comes a time when our worlds fall apart
And beauty is taken from our eyes
But through clouds of tears and the passing of years
God promised I’d hold her again

When next I see her
Our kisses will touch like the first falling rain
At that very moment I’ll fall in love forever
And look into her eyes and we’ll be young again.

Wheresoever she was, there was Eden
Whatsoever she touched, there sprang new life
Whensoever she wooed me, all the stars in the Heavens
Spun down to earth and crowned her with light

Though I’m Ancient of Days, this I believe
My happiest days were, with Eve

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