Monday, September 24, 2018

FLINT

He died. 
She had him for a year. She scooped his poop. She fed him and watered him. She talked to him when she didn't have a friend. She played her flute to him and did her homework with him.  She loved him more than anyone could love anything. He took care of her. He was gentle with her. He was gentle with her brothers and sister. He helped her learn how to care for a giant animal. He is the only horse we would have trusted to care for our twelve-year-old. (Nate and I know nothing about horses and worse we have no desire to own, care for, or ride a horse. He was hers.) Who buys a horse and hands it over to their twelve-year-old and never checks on her or him again? We do. We trusted Sierra and Flint. 

He started losing weight rapidly, shortly after these pictures were taken. He was sick and we knew it. We started feeding him more grains and a senior mix. He was only fourteen years old. We didn't know how to help him. We called the vet. He came out and said Flint was fine. He recommended a few dietary adjustments, said he would be fine and left. A few weeks later he was worse. Sierra was worried about him all day.

She went out to his loafing shed and he was down and his breathing was shallow. She came to me and asked me what she was supposed to do. I flippantly said, "He is dying." I could see the anxious concern on her face. She wanted to call the vet. I didn't want to call in an emergency visit. The vet had just come to see him and said he was fine. I hesitated. She became super emotional. I called my friend Stacey who lives up the street. She told me to call another vet. She said he specialized in horses and would better be able to assess Fint. I called the vet. Stacey came over. She had just had a baby a few weeks earlier, but she came. She brought her son Rowdy. Flint kept laying down. We thought he had colic. Sierra walked him until the vet came. Rowdy is ten and Sierra is eleven. They worked so well as a team to keep that horse up. (Stacey and I were a little worried about him falling on one of them. We were right to worry. It was a tender mercy no one was injured.)

Thirty minutes later the vet arrived. He listened to Flint's heart and said he had a heart murmur. He was sick and he was dying. He looked Sierra in the eyes and said, "We have a stewardship over the animals that we love. When they are this ill. We put them down." You can talk it over with your mother and see what you would like to do. I saw tears starting to swell up in her eyes. I knew she knew what needed to be done. I said, "We don't need to talk about it. We will do the right thing."She ran into the house sobbing. Rowdy started crying. I told Stacey, "I am not an animal lover. I don't care if this horse lives or dies. I am a Sierra lover and this is killing me." I cried. The vet came back with a euthanasia shot in hand.  Sierra came up behind me. I said, "He had been a good horse. He doesn't deserve to die alone." She said through her tears, "Why do you think I came back?" 

The vet administered the shot. The horses head fell. Sierra fell. She laid on top of this majestic animal and wept. Her body convulsed huge heaving sobs. Stacey cried. Rowdy cried. I cried. 

The vet cried. He clipped a piece of Flint's hair and handed it to her. 

Rowdy helped her cover his body with a tarp. He was buried with a piece of her soul the next day. 

She has missed him deeply.






Wednesday, September 19, 2018

MY JAMES

 I love this sweet boy of mine. James had a friend over from school today. I fell in love with his mom at the school carnvival. There are just some people you meet and you just have an instant connection. I felt the spirit whispher to me over and over again to call her and invite her son over to play with James. (They are in the same Kindergarten class.) I finally had to put down the laundry and pick up the phone. She didn't answer. I left a message. She called right back. We talked and laughed, she finally had to go because she was in the middle of canning apple butter. I laughed and thought, don't only members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and Amish people still canned? I guess not.

Her son Easton came over today and played. I loved every minute of him being here. It was so fun to watch all three of the boys play. They were so kind to include Ashton in everything. Easton pushed Ashton on the swing for a long while. It filled my heart. James loved it. He has been missing his friend Ian. (He moved to Washington a few months ago and he has been so sad.) It was nice to have a new friend.

After he left, James spent the rest of the afternoon drawing this thank you book for him. James asked me to write some words in it. I thought it was so cute of him. Ashton is the boy with the spiky hair and James and Easton are the boys with their hair combed to the side. I had to take pictures because his artistic side is exploding. I love it so much.

Wyatt, my nephew is not doing well today. I didn't know until I got my brothers text but he texted about an hour before the text James came running in the house to tell me that he found a quiet place on the property and knelt down near a tree, just like the Lamanites, and prayed for Wyatt. Madison interrupted, "You mean Joseph Smith." James said, "Yeah!" I know he has a special bond with Wyatt. They were never really friends while he was well, but he senses him more than any other person in our family. He never lets us forget him in any prayer. He says the most beautiful heartfelt prayers for Wyatt at night.



James, Easton and Ashton playing on the dirt hills while the sprinklers were on.

James, Ashton, and Easton in our playhouse on the property.

Ashton and Easton by the fountain on the side of our house. It has never worked but James was pretending.

Ashton is inside the house watching James and Easton play cars.

Ashton and Easton running through the sprinklers.

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

CON's MISSION CALL



As most of you remember, my friend Leslie joined the church about two years ago. Shortly after, her nephew Con followed her into the waters of baptism. He submitted his mission papers. He is headed to the Washington, Everett mission. He took out his endowments in the Mount Timpanogus temple. Nate and I were able to be there with him. It was such a special, sacred experience. Leslie was worried about him being ready and able to take it all in, but he said it was amazing. He had a vision of sorts when he was a small boy about heaven. He said he felt and saw heaven in the temple. 

He received a father's blessing, in place of a father, from my dad. It was such a beautiful moment. The spirit was strong. I am grateful for a father who holds and honors his priesthood.