Sunday, April 29, 2012

Primaryisms

Posted by: Lori Jacobsen


Yesterday, I was thinking it would be fun to do a post every so often of things that happen in Primary.  You know "kids say the darnedest things" type of posts.  Well, today in primary we had something that I thought I would share.  

So the topic was 
"I can feel the Savior's love when I follow Jesus Christ".  
Jesus Christ - Son of God 
The scenario that I presented was 
"Lisa was excited because her friend gave her an invitation to her birthday party.  When Lisa gave the invitation to her mom to read, her mom told her that the party was on Sunday.  
To be like Jesus, Lisa should:"
 

There were several responses like; 
Tell her you can't go because it is on Sunday, Celebrate with her by yourself on another day... 
Then we have a young boy who says matter-of-factually, "We could cancel church."  
I asked him if that is what Jesus would do.  
No response, so I said probably not. 
Then we get several more responses like; 
You could buy her a gift, but tell her that you can't go because it is on Sunday, Ask her if she can come and play with you on a different day to celebrate, ect.  
Then the same boy has his hand raised again, 
so I asked him if he had another idea.  
He responds, "We could have the party at the church." 

I guess he just didn't want to miss the party.  :0) 

Mary Lucinda Cole McDonald

Posted by: Sally DeFord

This is my great, great grandmother.  I have several women ancestors that I feel so connected to through reading their history. There are several things about Mary Lucinda that draw me to her.  After crossing the plains, she lived in Springville where Willie and I lived after we were married.  She also settled in the Heber valley where my mom lives and where I lived for several summers.  I studied Native American literature at BYU and she was an interpreter and friend of the Native Americans in Utah.

Sometimes I think I'm busy?  She had 13 kids, ran a farm, probably did all the cooking, made all the clothes, entertained and interpreted.  Though I know very little about Mary Lucinda, I know that she was smart, capable, a hard worker, a good mother, a friend to outsiders, and a woman of faith.  I also imagine how beautiful it was on their farm and all the stars they would see at night.


Mary Lucinda was born in Kirtland, Ohio in 1840.  When she was 10 when she crossed the plains with her family and settled in Springville, Utah.  In her youth she learned the Ute Indian language and became an interpreter.  She loved to dance and participate in the Native American dances.   She served with her father as an official interpreter and their home was headquarters for all Native Americans that visited Springville.  She was married when she was 16.  After 2 children and 5 years in Springville they moved to Heber, Utah.

For a time she worked as a cook for the men building the road through Provo Canyon.  She gave birth to 13 children!  She was a business woman and managed hired help on the farm and large bands of horses and cattle.

Her home in Heber was visited by Native Americans often.  At least once a year they would have a huge feast where she would prepare them the "best food the land could produce."  During these visits she would sit with Native Americans and speak in Ute and discuss their trials and tribulations.  Even when there was tension between the white settlers and Native Americans they would still come to her house.

Her family had the first shingled roof in the valley.  They raised sheep and sheared, spun and died the wool. She made the clothing for all her family members.  She had hair that was so long it reached her knees when let down.  She loved dancing.

She died giving birth to her 13th child at age 42.  The child also died and she was buried with the child in her arms in the Heber cemetery.  She outlived three of her other children that died at age 10, 14 and 3 weeks of age.

To quote the history written by her granddaughter, "She had health enough to make work a pleasure, strength enough to battle difficulties and overcome, charity enough to see good in all. She had patience and love enough to be always useful and helpful, and her faith was strong enough to  soften any and all hardships she was obliged to endure.  Hundreds of miles from any settlement or civilization, all they had with them was all they could get unless they created it."


Saturday, April 28, 2012

Posted by: Cheryl Wilson

After nearly 30 years I have learned how valuable keeping a journal really is. I have to admit, I haven't done it faithfully for  a couple of decades but now I know why the prophets say we should.

I was cleaning out my bookshelves yesterday, moving books around, taking some down to get rid of them; all part of my spring cleaning project.  I came across two journals from many years ago and decided to take a break and browse through them.  Two hours later I was still reading voraciously like this was the first time I had ever seen this stuff.  I found out things about my life I had long since forgotten; things that have made me who I am and formed many of my ideas and opinions.  It's important to stay in touch with who you are and why.  Thank goodness I have started working on my personal history and captured some very important events before they left my sometimes sketchy memory.  I have reached the time of life when I have become somewhat reflective about the things I learned from just living my life every day.  Some of it was wonderful beyond belief and others not so much but it did serve as learning and growing experiences.  Heavenly Father is wise in the things he asks us to do.  We can certainly benefit from taking those things seriously.

Friday, April 27, 2012

What I Save

Posted by: Cassa Fox


With Sean as a teacher and I as a private music teacher our income gets pretty slim and inconsistent.  It is a hobby and challenge to make our money stretch...one I kind of enjoy.  We DO live in a tight budget, we DO use the envelope system from Dave Ramsey, I DO buy name brand products, I DO shop at drug stores, I rarely shop at Wal-Mart, and we always have fun snacks.  How.....COUPONS!!!  I am that shopper with the 3 inch binder full of baseball card holders with little bits of paper that I like to view as cash.  It's always exciting to find $7 mascara marked down to $3 and I have a $2 coupon!!!  Wahoo.  I can still look good and save my family some money.  Other ways I save money: make a weekly menu based on the foods I already have in my kitchen, adjust my budget weekly, shop at the Salvation Army (they have free food), instead of cable we subscribe to hulu and netflix, and shop the sales.  It's not hard, it takes some time, but it is sooo rewarding.  Three blogs I follow daily are www.bargainblessings.com, www.thekrazycouponlady.com, and www.moneysavingmom.com.  These ladies take all of the hard work out of it.  They take the sales, let you know what coupon to use, and where to find that coupon.  I make my list, take my 3 inch white binder, and off I go!!!!  Let me know if you want to learn some of my tricks.  I would love to share more with you!!!

Love, Cassa Fox

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Anyone up for a Relief Society Blog?


We had our first presidency meeting tonight and Telicia thought it would be nice to start a Relief Society blog.  I love the idea, obviously, I came right home and started it.  Starting it is the easy part. We'll see if it will take hold.  I have a vision of a blog where we can record the voices of the sisters in our relief society.  We have so many wonderful voices among us.  We could tell stories of service, spiritual experiences, education, struggles, share pictures, anything.  The question is, do you want to contribute?  Email me something, anything and we'll get the ball rolling.  It's casual.  Don't over think it.   That's what is so fun about blogs, they are conversational.  Any thoughts?