Besides the failure to lose weight, trek was hard physically and emotionally. While I'll never come away with my husband's enthusiasm for it (it was his 2nd time to trek like a pioneer), I did value the experience. When an experience touches you and brings new appreciation, it can also make you wordy. If you're willing to bear with me, I'll share what things I learned.
One of the first things my husband and I admired was the young people's help of each other. 14 to 18 year old kids are not always known for their selflessness or sibling camaraderie. When the going got tough, they banded tighter together. This was especially true of direct siblings. One brother got out in the pouring rain to help his sister's tent which was leaking. Brothers watched out for brothers and in the evenings sat close together. Coming from our stage in life, where are children are non-stop fighting with each other and will do anything to pick on each other, we greatly admired the siblings (and the parents who taught them) for their ability to willingly help each other, to offer encouragement and be there if they were needed.
Attitude can make or break the day. You cannot always choose what will happen to you, but you can choose how you'll respond. By the third day, I struggled and managed to find the giddy happy. I was almost done. It was mostly downhill and by flying (I put my arms out like a little girl for airplane wings and let gravity propel me down) I could laugh and be silly and encourage the girls around me to do the same. I could sing "Popcorn popping" and jump each time we said the word pop. I could just have fun. An infectious attitude can lift those around you. On the reverse, if you choose to say it's too hard and think it's the worst thing ever, you will fulfill your own prophecy. I'm certain that one of the youth in our group was told by parents that it would be worth it and encouraged (or made) to come. The youth set out to prove parents wrong. After the first hill, all was lost and the youth rode in the medical truck for the next 2 days. The last day, the truck was emptied of all persons and my husband had to encourage, cajole and finally drag the youth down the hill. They were the last to reach buses. I listened to the youth go on and on during the evening fireside. The rest of us shared stories of humor, fun, what we learned and the youth sat 2 feet from me and complained about every aspect of the trek from food, people, shoes, tents, etc. Everything was wrong. I felt sorry for the youth. I was exhausted and sunburned with a few blisters but my husband was beside me, some wonderful youth were beside me and I felt a new respect for my ancestors and commitment to live my faith as strong as they did. I'll not have their physical challenges but I can face the emotional ones with courage like theirs. I had a wonderful experience that tested me and made me stronger and the youth just had a hard walk. It was all in the attitude.
The most important aspect of the trek is that it gave me a profound respect for family--my spouse, my kids, my parents, my siblings and my ancestors. My husband asked me on the second day if I thought we should do a trek with our kids. I almost cried. He was thinking of this wonderful opportunity to teach them and I was thinking of ancestors sobbing inside as they had little food to give their children and no way to carry them but watch them struggle and walk to keep up and even leaving some in graves along the trail. As a mother, my heart breaks even thinking of what it must have been like.
During one part of the trek, they pull the men away for the women's pull. They leave the women at the bottom of the hill to pull the handcarts by themselves. We watched as they walked up the hill. It's meant to foster in youth how important men and women are for each other. It helps the young girls know they can do hard things and appreciate what men can offer not only for physical needs but spiritual ones. It's just as hard for the men who are use to helping and forced to watch as we struggled. While the boys try to be stoic, my husband admitted that it was just as wrenching the second time and he talked to the boys about appreciation of women and how important we are.
I'd grown up hearing about my pioneer ancestors. Moses Wade and Edward Wade joined the Mormon Battalion and left mother and sister to cross the plains and hopefully meet up in the West. Sarah, the mother, died in Winter Quarters leaving Minerva alone. I told myself as I tried to pull the handcart up the hill that Sarah would have given anything to have gone on with her daughter if she had lived and Minerva didn't stop. She met up with brother and father later. I could do that. But what really kept me going, besides new found appreciation and respect for my ancestors, was that my husband was at the top of the hill. I NEEDED him. Nothing physical or emotional was going to stop me from reaching him. Because of covenants made, nothing will ever part us. If some nasty turn in our lives parts us physically by death, I will stay my course in faith because I want to be with him forever. I want to be with my children forever. I want to live in love forever with my Savior and Father in Heaven.
The precious covenant to be sealed for time and all eternity is why my ancestors walked 1300 miles with every ounce of strength they had to give. They wanted their family forever and would sacrifice anything to make it possible. That one walk up the hill with only women beside me taught me a more profound and humble appreciation for the promises offered by the gospel. It's why the pioneers did everything they did and it's why we as latter-day saints do what we do.
No comments:
Post a Comment