I was born to goodly parents who taught me to love the Lord.
From my youth I was taught to have faith in, pray to, and worship Jesus Christ.
I was taught about Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon. Our family held early
morning scripture study, weekly Family Home Evening and nightly family prayer.
My father, Mike, was a man of honor and integrity and was faithful to my
mother, to the LDS Church, and was faithful to God. Dad was a man without guile who had a solid
belief in the Savior and served his fellow man all his days. Dad was loyal to
the LDS Church and strove to help build up what he believed was the kingdom of
God on the earth. Even as “early on-set
Parkinson’s” ravaged his body for over 25 years he faithfully attended church
each week and studied the scriptures each day until he slipped into a coma just
before his death.
My mom, Trudy, first noticed my dad in ninth grade LDS
seminary when my dad bore his testimony of the Savior. Mom was smitten and their love story began at
that moment and lasted for over 56 years on this earth and is now continuing in
heaven. Mom sacrificed her mental, emotional and physical health to bring eight
children into this world. She struggled with fears, anxieties, and physical
ailments that plagued her and were difficult for her to overcome. Through it
all she never lost her devotion to the religious heritage her parents instilled
within her. She remained loyal to the Mormon Church and to Dad. For some reason
her faith and belief in Jesus Christ was not something she openly shared or
talked about with me. My parents passed away within one year of each other, my
mom on February 17, 2017 and my dad on February 22, 2018. I love and miss them.
My father was my hero. As a little girl I would wait at the
bus stop every night, anticipating his return from a long day of work. I had a
desire for him to be proud of me. I wanted to marry a man just like him. Since
my mom’s passing last year, I have been taking care of my dad as much as
possible. He lived at home until a bad fall last July and a subsequent hospital
stay of several weeks. We then moved him into an assisted living center in order
to have people who could be there to cook and clean for him and to help him
when he fell. He sustained more injuries, as he fell several times each day. I was feeling a great burden on my shoulders,
taking care of dad’s house, his finances and his health.
Last August, moving him into an assisted living center made my siblings and myself more aware of dad’s decline in health. My siblings were a great blessing to me and my father as they helped where ever and in what manner they could in his care.
On February 15 my dad was taken to a higher level care
facility because he was having a severe Parkinson’s episode which mimicked seizures.
Within 3 days he had slipped into a comma and never came out of it. He had a
huge lump on his left temple with bruising down to his collar bone. We believe he suffered a "bleeder" on the
brain. I was by his side as much as possible that final week. Hours before his
death I shared some private, final words with him. I worry that my parents felt like
they had failed me because of the journey I have been on to find Christ. This
journey has put me at odds with the LDS Church. In my parents’ minds, if I am
not active LDS then I am not following Christ. I asked my dad to trust me, that I
know what I am doing, that I know he doesn’t understand, but that I am seeking Jesus
Christ. I encouraged him to find mom and together to seek Jesus Christ, to not
allow the traditions of men to cause them to stop searching. I then read to him Ether
12:41, “And now, I would commend you to seek this Jesus of whom the prophets
and apostles have written, that the grace of God the Father, and also the Lord
Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost, which beareth record of them, may be and
abide in you forever. Amen.”
My dad passed away 30 years to the day of the death of his
own father and one week and one year after the love of his life, my mom. He was
surrounded by almost all of his children, his daughter-in-laws and son-in-law,
grandchildren and lots of love.