The twins kept begging to go back to school. I
think they craved the feeling of the “normal life” they had known when they
were there. The desire to let them go rustled in me . . . and yet, I was not
ready to send them off, out of my care. I knew eventually that day would come,
but I resisted, and put it off for as long as I could. I even considered home
schooling . . . but I knew I was in no state to be the sole provider for my
children’s education. The day inevitably came. As the car got closer to the
school, my thoughts turned back . . . to the last time I had spoken with their
teacher . . .
It was exactly one week before Emmett died. I found
a note in both of my daughters’ backpacks informing us that they had been in a
fight at school and had been sent to the office. My twins? The calmest, ‘chillest,’
most easy-going little kindergarteners anyone had ever seen? Those girls had
gotten into a fight? I needed to hear the details. So the next day, I loaded my
three youngest ones into the car and headed over to the school to pick up the
girls. I parked right in front of their classroom door so I could leave the
babies in the car while I went to talk to their teacher about the events that
had taken place the day before. I walked up to her and gestured for her to come
speak to me privately, away from all the kids who surrounded her. I asked her
what had happened. She recounted the story of the fight, informing me that a boy
had ‘messed’ with Bailey, and Bostyn had just taken him out! She literally
threw him to the ground, and he hit his head on the concrete. Then another boy
came over, trying to get in the middle of it, and Bailey punched him in the
stomach. I just looked at the teacher in amazement, like she was full of crap .
. . my mouth wide open.
My twins, the little girls who never even fought
with each other had taken on some older boys? I explained to her that I was
grateful for her patience with them, and then burst into tears. “We have some
stuff going on at our house right now . . . I am trying to figure it all out. …
Please just know that my girls are trying their best . . . and I just need you
to please be patient with them. This outburst of anger is not entirely their
fault.” Now she was staring at me like I was
making up stories. She put her arm around me and said, “If you need to talk to
someone, the school counselor is always available to help.” I realized I had
better stop making a scene, and I started to wipe my tears. “Thanks for
listening . . . sorry, I don’t know why I am crying, I just . . . I just don’t
know what is going on . . . and I don’t know how to make it all okay for them.”
I took the twins to the car, buckled them in their
car seats and pulled away from the classroom. When I came to another parking
lot at the school, I pulled into a stall and broke down. I was sobbing. What
the hell was going on? I could feel it, and the girls could feel it. What was
so wrong in our lives that my baby girl had pushed an older boy so hard that
his head had hit the concrete? Emmett and I had never used physical punishment—I
don’t think either of the twins had ever even been spanked!
In that parking lot that day, I texted about ten
members of my family, begging them to pray for us. Whatever was going wrong, it
wouldn’t hurt to have a few of the people I loved praying for our family. I don’t
think anyone knew how to respond . . . but the vagueness of my text clearly
freaked out everyone! They texted me back demanding more details, the very
thing I didn’t have: details about what was wrong. My brother Josh asked, “What
the crap is going on?” I texted him back, “I really don’t know. I think Emmett
is trying to figure out what he really wants in life . . . and I need him to
choose us!”
After I sent out those cries for help, we went home
and I put all the kids down for naps. I sat staring at the wall all during naptime.
What was wrong? Why did my whole body feel as if it were in a constant panic?
Around dinnertime, a fight broke out over a toy, and within minutes, Bailey was
nowhere to be found. I looked in every nook and cranny of the house. She wasn’t
anywhere. I started to freak out. I finally found her outside, around the side
of the house hiding behind the garbage cans. “Mom, I have been sitting out here,
thinking about running away. What is happening? … What is wrong with us? … Why
do I feel so scared?” I wished I had an answer for her. “I’m not sure, Bay,” I
answered, “but I’m trying to figure all this out too. I am scared too. I feel
it just like you do.”
I walked into the house, grabbed my car keys,
loaded all five kids into the car and drove away. I didn’t know where we were
going, but we had to get out of that house. I stopped at the home of my
brother, Jeff, praying someone would be there so we could go sit in their home
and feel the spirit that was always so strong there. I pounded on the front
door . . . but nobody answered. I didn’t want to leave. I just stood there with
my head against the door, holding onto the handle. I stood on Jeff’s porch
probably a good five minutes before I went back to join my crew in the car. I
went through every rational idea about what could be wrong . . . then I tiptoed
into the irrational parts of my brain, and began hallucinating about anything
and everything that these horrible feelings we were experiencing could mean.
By the time I snapped out of my daze and got back
into the car, the baby was screaming. I didn’t want to go back home and face
the turmoil stirring in the air there. So we drove. Within fifteen minutes, I
found my car parked in the parking lot of the LDS temple. The building looked
amazing. It was glowing. The kids were patiently watching a movie in the back
of the car, so I just soaked up the spirit I felt enveloping me. I offered a
silent prayer, “Heavenly Father, I know you are here. I can feel so much peace
just sitting and staring at this beautiful temple. My home is in a state of
turmoil. My kids feel it. I feel it. We are scared. I keep having dreams that
my baby boy will die. I can’t help but wonder if these dreams are preparing me
for something. Please help me to find answers about this disturbing power that
seems to be settling in on everyone in my family. What is going on?”
A feeling of calmness and quiet reassurance surrounded
me and seemed to say, “Be still . . .” I thought that reassuring feeling was an
announcement that everything was going to be okay. I didn’t realize it at the
time, but that encouragement to be calm would be the most important message
that would ever come to my mind.
The kids began to get restless. Bostyn had the idea
that we should all walk around the temple. We looked like a crew of homeless
beggars, but I didn’t care. It was nice to be surrounded by the calm feelings
that were so strong on the temple grounds.
My mind returned to the present as my mother drove with
me to take the twins to school. Now, we knew exactly what had been wrong that
day just a few weeks ago. But on this day, the girls were excited and nervous
to go back to their classroom. They had missed class pictures a few days
earlier, but they couldn’t wait to have the photo of their classmates—a
photograph without them in it. There were not there standing alongside their
friends. It was a photo they would later hang up in their room . . . and every
time I passed by, it was a constant reminder that life had stopped for them. They
had missed a part of their childhood. They weren’t there smiling on that
picture day. No, that day, they were home recalling how happy their lives used
to be.
We finally pulled up to the school. My heart dropped
. . . I couldn’t send them to school. The thought crossed my mind to just turn
around and keep driving. Back to our house . . . the house which no longer had
that lingering feeling of some unknown anxiety. The only feeling in our house
now, was one of emptiness. But at least in that empty house, I felt that my
children were safe from the rest of the world. I could protect them from the
hurtful words that would be spoken. I could shelter them from the information
about their father’s murder, which just a short time later, their classmates
would share with them: exactly where the bullets had entered Daddy’s body, how
many bullets were fired, exactly where the shooting took place in the Walgreens
parking lot . . . that he was on a date with the “bad guy’s” wife. These were
not the descriptive details I would have shared with my five-year-old girls,
but they were details they would come to learn once they were back at school.
We sat in the car for a minute, in silence. How
could I let them take this step back into reality? Why did they seem excited
and insist that they would be okay? I knew this day would be hard for all of
us. What if a bad guy came and took them away? What if people were mean to
them? What if they felt alone, and I wasn’t there to hold them when they cried?
Finally, the car door opened and I somehow found
myself unbuckling my girls, grabbing their hands, and slowly making our way up
to the front doors of the school. My eyes burned with tears that threatened to
fall down my face. I was shaking and squeezing their hands so hard. We walked
into the office and I checked them in. They gave me kisses and headed off to
class. Why were they being so brave?
The tears started to fall as I exited the school,
and headed to my car. I walked towards it slowly, and then looked up. Parked
right in front of my car was a police car! I freaked out. My mind automatically
went into a state of shock. Even though I could hardly breathe, I began
screaming and I ran as fast as I could back into the office. I was hysterical! “What
is . . . going on? Is there . . . someone . . . in the . . . school? Is there
an emergency? Did someone . . . come . . . here with a . . . gun?” Every
possible scenario raced through my mind and expressed itself through my frantic
screams.
The woman in the front office helped to calm me
down. Then a police officer came inside to explain to me why they were there.
All of the students at both schools—where our children were enrolled and where
Rob and Kandi’s children attended—were having a very difficult time. Since the
shooting, the police officers had been stopping by the schools daily to check
up on everyone, provide reassurance, and hold assemblies to help the children
understand and help the kids from both families who would be returning to
school. As angry as I was that all of this was actually real, I was also relieved
to know that the students were being prepared to help support my grieving
daughters.
A few hours later, I got a call from the school. My
girls were in the counselor’s office and couldn’t be consoled by anyone. I raced
back to the school to pick them up. They didn’t want to talk in the office, so
I checked them out and we returned to the car.
The car was silent for the first half of the drive.
I kept looking back at them, but they just stared at their feet. Finally,
Bostyn decided to speak. “Mom, I’m sorry we didn’t stay at school.” I tried to
be strong. Oh how I wished Emmett were here to protect her, to help me protect
her. I thought about the time when Bostyn had been in the hospital because a
cut on her eye had become infected. Emmett had stayed with her every minute she
lay in that hospital bed. For almost three weeks, he missed school and work and
held her while the doctors tried to figure out how to get her better. He had
always been there to protect her when she was hurt. Now, it was just me. “Baby
. . . it’s . . . okay. I am glad you are with me now. … I don’t know that I was
as ready as you two . . . for you to go back to school.”
“Mom . . . everything was good. It seemed like a
normal day for a while. Then at recess . . . some boys came over and started
telling us how they saw our dad on the news. They were all laughing and saying
how cool it was that Daddy got shot in the head. … Did he really get shot in
the head and the heart? Those boys are stupid. They don’t know anything. They
think our life is like a movie. They think that guns are awesome and that we
are lucky. We aren’t lucky, Mom. The world didn’t stop, Mom . . . but why does
it feel like it stopped to me? This isn’t something fun! Why are they so
stupid? They don’t know anything. I never want to go to school again!”
All the horrible things I had wanted to protect
them from . . . over! “Baby . . . I can’t imagine how hard that was for you. I
know you probably don’t feel like you ever want to go back again . . . and that
is okay for today. People can be mean. Our
world felt like it was not moving . . . but everyone else has just been going
on with life. Maybe those boys weren’t trying to hurt you. I think maybe they
probably didn’t know what to say to you. They haven’t been where we are right
now. They don’t understand how real this has been for you. To them it was like in a movie. They saw it on TV .
. . but they didn’t have to feel how it felt for you.”
We sat in the driveway for a while and talked about
the world. How unfair life seemed. How unreal the past few weeks had felt. That
day—the week before their daddy died—that we had spent at the temple. We talked
about other people’s words and how they can make us feel. We spoke about the
words we have said to others . . . that may have hurt them.
“Can’t we just go back and touch the temple? Maybe
we can live there?”
And so we went back to our spot on the side of the
temple. We held our hands on it again . . . and felt the power that was inside.
We didn’t move in, we didn’t stay forever . . . but we did see the hand of the
Lord comfort us in that moment, reassuring us that no matter what happened in
the world . . . He still loved us.
We have to be in
the world . . . but we don’t have to be of
the world. There are times when darkness surrounds us. Maybe it’s in the words others
say, maybe it’s just a feeling in our hearts that something is wrong. The world
tells us we have to be ruthless . . . that we have to fight to the death. We
were suffering the aftershocks of that approach . . . and it hadn’t brought
happiness to anyone. The world cries at us to seek revenge, to find others’
mistakes and magnify them . . . and never let them go. The world tells us to
hang onto all our pain.
We can’t wrap ourselves—or our children—in a plastic
bubble of protection. Trust me, I have tried. We are here on earth to go
through pain. It sucks. It hurts. It tries to tear us down. We just want to
shelter ourselves and our little ones from anything that goes against light,
but even when we try with all of our might, darkness will find us. But, we can’t
just sit silent in the darkness . . . we have to fight to get back into the
light. We can teach our children about faith. We can teach them to be stronger
than the hurtful words of others. I wanted to go sit those boys down and scream
at them at the top of my lungs. But if it wasn’t the ignorance of those boys
that day . . . it would have been something else. Each day, we have struggles.
It wasn’t my job to make those boys suffer for the pain they caused my
daughters. It was my job to comfort
my babies and help them see that, although the hardness of the world is all
around them, there is also beauty and peace to be found. We need to teach our
children to be strong . . . not to be mean. They will be wronged, and our job
is to show them how to forgive. They will be hurt . . . and we must teach them
the ways to find freedom from their pain. Clouds will rage around them . . .
and we must have the strength to show them how to stand strong in the storms.
We need to teach them to find goodness in the motives of others . . . not to seek
a bad guy in everyone they meet. “Bad guys” will teach them that the world is
ugly. . . we will have to lead them to a world where only God can be their
guide. We need to show them to trust . . . but also to follow the silent
whisperings that will speak to their hearts when they are not safe. We have to
allow our babies to be in the world . . . but we want them to rise above the
darkness and be pillars of light to the world.
Until we have walked in others’ shoes, we cannot
truly understand how they feel. We have no way of seeing the pain they carry.
Their struggles are unique, and only they
know what it is that weighs them down. We all have our own challenges to bear.
We crave the love and support from those around us to help us make it through the
next step on our path. It is easy to be afraid when we feel we are doing it all
alone, and sometimes, we feel like we need to just sit down and stop trying. We
cannot make the world support us, even when are seeking the light, but we can look for others who also need what
we are seeking. And we can make a
difference. When you encounter others around you who are struggling . . . find
ways to serve them through their grief. As we try to help lighten the load of
their burdens . . . we might start to feel less alone as we bear our own. If someone
is facing the difficult blessing of raising a special needs child day in and
day out . . . find a way to lighten that ongoing burden. Maybe your neighbor is
suffering from cancer . . . lend him your shoulder for strength. Maybe your
co-worker just got dumped by her longtime boyfriend . . . find a way to be
there for her. In our words and through our actions, we can always make a
difference.
You are not alone in feeling the weight of the
world. My little girls felt the unknown darkness of the world when they got
into a fight with those older boys who didn’t understand the burden they were
carrying. They felt it again when their load was too heavy for them to bear
alone, and careless children tore them down. Every single person you meet is
carrying his or her own cross. Some of those burdens can be seen, and others we
will never be known. Isn’t the best solution for us to all carry them together?
It is not our job to find answers for other people
in their struggles, it is not theirs to find answers in ours . . . but I can
promise you that when we are there for each other . . . life here on earth can
be blessed with light. We can be the Angels that Heaven is pleading for us to
be for each other. Then when the storm clouds come, we can stand—hand in hand—reaching
together for the peace we seek . . . like the love and reassurance my family
found as we clasped our hands together and leaned against the House of the
Lord. As each of us takes each other by the hand and let Him guide us, we will all
stand on sacred ground.
Thank you from Arizona.
ReplyDeleteyour posts are inspiring! I have been checking every day for another one. I really hope there is a happy ending for you at the end of this. I find it hard to believe anyone could come through what you and your children have suffered and be so positive and uplifting. Truly, you are amazing.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading this I had a feeling and just KNEW that because of your amazing attitude and how you are dealing with this.......your kids are going to be better than OK. You are instilling in them some amazing and life long ways to cope with this tragedy. They are so very blessed to have you in their life. Not all mothers would be able to deal with this in such a way. You watch...you will see...one day the influence you are sharing with them will produce outstanding children of God. I am amazed with how you write. You have a great talent. I hope you continue to blog because I love hearing how incredible you are and the faith you have blows me away. Thanks. Thanks for sharing something so HARD with the rest of the world.
ReplyDeleteI too have found strength upon the Lord. Our family has been touched by the "bad guys". Our son, our only son is in jail. He has been in Jail for three years now his trial is pending for July. Our son had gotten involved in something that was on beyond his control. At his arrest our home was filled with media, cameras, phone calls. The outside world was seeping in to our quiet home. He was (supposedly) married and had four beautiful children. He lived in another state. I had no idea that at 6 in the morning I would be inundated with the media. As the case unraveled before our family there was lies, deceit and secrets that was perpetrated by his wife and in-laws. It was like a huge giant smelly old onion that was dropped in our laps. I remember distinctly rolling over to get out of bed with a prayer in my heart that I could make it through the day when peace came to my soul. The question was "Am I going to be another VICTIM ?" My answer was loud In my soul that I might had vocalized the answer.NO. After that declaration. I started to pray, ponder, and research what I needed to do to not be a victim of the "bad guy" The first step ( I pray daily for strength) is to forgive. The second step is to serve. The consequences of the actions of the "bad guys" are still resounding. But the buffeting power of testimony, gospel and above all the infinite atonement make us able to face what we need to face. Thank you for your example and wisdom. You are sharing a difficult task writing difficult experiences. Through this I feel inspired. I am very grateful.
ReplyDeleteYou are simply amazing. Thank you for sharing and putting into words such hard things. May you always find strength through the temples of God. Thank you for being so inspiring!
ReplyDeleteI found your blog through another blog and have been finding myself checking and re-reading your posts daily. Your strength - your faith - your ability to share is amazing.
ReplyDeleteYou're truly amazing! I've been reading your blog since couple days ago. I don't know you but I want you to know that your words has been inspired me. Your kids are blessed to have you as their mom so they can be sure that they're still safe and loved and have hope.
ReplyDeleteI have been reading your blog ever since Ashley Sullenger shared a link for it. I don't personally know you but I wanted to thank you for reminding me that forgiveness can be the most powerful weapon in a conflict. I will start today to teach this to my sweet children. You are so wonderful and strong for letting us all into your world and letting us strengthen out testimonies through your story.
ReplyDeleteDon't have much to say but thank you. I am learning great things from your example. I look forward to and appreciate each post. I pray for your family.
ReplyDeleteMy heart goes out to you and your sweet children. I love reading your posts. Prayers & hugs to you all. Thank you for your amazing perspective.
ReplyDeleteA few months ago, my daughter was asked by a teacher to be a special friend to a girl whose father was in jail for abuse. after a few weeks, this little girl punched my daughter in the stomach. My daughter said she felt so bad because she knew that her new friend was probably hurting inside and asked what more she could do to help. I was so thankful for her pure heart and PRAY that I will to my best to learn from her example. it is amazing what our kids can teach us.
ReplyDeleteThank you again for helping me start my day with the motivation to be better.
Ashlee, you are one incredible woman! What an amazing testimony you have. It is so beautiful to read. You write so well, and I enjoy reading your blog. So glad I found this on Facebook. You are such an inspiration. Thank you for sharing your experience with us. I agree with others who have said you should write a book. Sending love your way. :)
ReplyDeleteAs an inactive member in the Church, you make it come back to me. You are strong. Thank you
ReplyDelete