Sunday, May 31, 2015

DAY 41 of 50 – Joseph’s Very First Prayer


Today in Sacrament Meeting I had the privilege to accompany the Ward Choir as they sang the hymn “Joseph Smith’s First Prayer.” As they sang it, I was struck with the realization that this really “twas the boy’s first uttered prayer.”
   Joseph Smith was 14 years old, and grew up in a religious home. But it was the era where the father always said the prayers. Joseph’s family didn’t have a little chart that said whose turn it was for Family Prayer or Scripture Reading. He went out into the woods that day to be alone, because he didn’t want anyone to hear him — because praying aloud was so unfamiliar to him.
   Later in that same meeting I gave the Closing Prayer. Sure, I’ve been praying my whole life — but I sat there through the meeting thinking about the messages of the day and quietly praying for inspiration. Even after a half-decade of praying both publicly and privately, there is still a moment of pause to shift to that moment where you are conversing with God.
   A few minutes later I was in Primary (again for the piano), and adorable Hyrum Baird got up and gave the prayer. Hyrum is 6-years-old, and he walked to the front, poised and confident — not needing any help. And it was very obvious that this was not his first uttered prayer either. This darling child prayed like he was talking to someone he knew very well — maybe not as casual as a “friend”, but most certainly a dear and cherished loved one.
   The rest of the day, these thoughts stirred within me. I looked at the stunning photograph one of my friends took in the Sacred Grove and wondered what it was like on that day for Joseph so many years ago. I thought about how hard it was for me when for 17 years during my marriage to not be able to pray — and how truly blessed I am to be able to pray any time I want to now. And I thought about how easily and comfortably I watched a 6-year-old speak to his Maker.

Saturday, May 30, 2015

DAY 40 of 50 – 10 Days to 50, and a Week to the Party


Don’t you just love Saturdays where you get to sleep in and lazily lounge around the house? Yeah, me too — but today was NOT one of those days.
   Up at 6:45am to shower, dress, and be on the road by 7:30am. First stop: back to a friend’s to return a few things — before the Oliveiras move away tomorrow. Then to run a number of errands — stopping at a few garage sales along the way. A baptism to do a musical number for the adorable grandson of dear friends. More errands, a few more random garage sales, and off to the party store in Salt Lake to get a few decorations for next week’s party. More errands, grab lunch, stop by my sister’s house. Then to my niece’s in Farmington to get my hair done (and, no, I don’t have any grey hairs — at least not any more!) Eventually, 75 miles of driving and 12-hours later, errands done — and now I can drive the 55-mile hour-long journey back home.
   Long day, yes. But energized at getting so much done — so instead of crashing at the end of the day, I decide to get more stuff done. Putting stuff away, a little clean-up, and then attacking the grill to find out why it won’t light. Uh oh — not a simple fix.
   Admittedly 8;30pm is a little late to start working on cleaning the grill, taking the grill apart, finding a broken piece, a fortuitous phone call gets me to a friend’s house to snag their grill, load the grill into my truck, and call the Home Teachers at nearly 10pm for help unloading the truck and getting the grill moved.
   A long day, but a great day. And with only 10 days until I turn 50, and only a week to my party — well, I love days when you feel like you got a million things done. And that’s an especially good thing when you have a million things to do!

Friday, May 29, 2015

DAY 39 of 50 – Meetings, Meetings, Meetings


It was one of THOSE days. Sure, Fridays are always the best day of the week — but a little less so when they start with a meeting first thing and end with a meeting that goes until nearly 5pm. Not to mention the additional meetings in between. Fortunately they were four very necessary and effective meetings, but meetings do tend to make days feel a bit longer — and they definitely make it tougher to get the rest of the day’s work done.
   When I worked at Franklin Covey, it seemed like the days were FILLED with meetings. In fact, there was an unwritten rule there: Never end a meeting without scheduling the next meeting. YIKES! Fortunately most of those meetings had very clear agendas, emailed out in advance, and that same agenda was used as the format for the meeting to keep things on track and on subject. And Robert’s Rules of Orders were pretty typically followed. But most importantly they ALWAYS started on time — even if you were alone in the room. Even 15 years ago, we had very well-equipped meeting rooms with whiteboards, pens, projectors, etc.
   Nowadays most meetings happen “virtually”. Although I often host meetings through my Adobe Connect (which I do love), I sit in my same desk chair at my same desk with my phone headset on for almost every meeting. Most of the time meetings involve us all staring at some Excel spreadsheet that someone is sharing from their computer desktop. For other meetings, it’s just a conference call — so some (certainly NEVER me) are multitasking, powering through emails and last minute reports while purportedly laser-focused on the conversation at hand.
   But by 5pm the only meeting I was interested in was heading home and meeting my dinner.