I am going to start with a disclaimer, good things and bad things happen in threes. One of my threes is an amazing sinus infection that left me in bed for 3 days, fever for 7 and still stuffed like a thanksgiving turkey. The service that was rendered this week to me and my family, as hard as it was to receive, left me awestruck! I had hand sanitizer, vitamins, bread, meals, kids babysat, etc. I have been richly blessed and am praying to get better so I can start making my service deposits. While I wait I will reveal in the love that surrounds me through service and friendship.
This story took place not far away, not too many years ago:
As I sat down for sacrament meeting in an old building on the outskirts of town I looked around. Hmmmmm. It looked small and quant. Um, pretty sure most the congregation graduated the same year as my great grand parents. We felt like neon signs were flashing on our row, with children climbing under and over our pew. We juggled 1, 3 and a 5 year old and a pregnant belly, the best we could. Where had my husband moved me too!? How was I going to meet anyone? And I failed to mention we lived in Idaho Falls, Hell's winter cousin.
I can't express to you the depths of despair I fell into when we moved. I had moved states away to California and flourished there. Being four hours away from home, in the "armpit of Idaho", I felt millions miles away in my mind. My kindergartener and I would fight every day after school. My one year old pushed my limits daily. One day I found him butt naked on his bike pedaling to my neighbors for a popsicle. My husband would hold me when I cried myself to sleep at night for weeks.
Once I had Miss L I started a little ritual of walking in the mornings, just a mile before Craig had to be off to work. He worked long hard days. He'd leave early and arrive late at night. I felt like a single mom a lot that year. As I would make my way through the subdivision and take in all the beauty of aluminum siding and left over snow, I'd pray. I had many good chats, one stands out from all the rest. I remember praying that God would give me opportunities to make friends and serve.
It wasn't long that I got the first impression to phone a neighbor who was recently pregnant and super ill. I asked if I could bring in dinner. What!? I should have checked my fridge, because I was clean out of everything. Luckily, I had frozen rhodes rolls. I put them out and brain stormed how I would load 4 babies, 5 and under and make it thru Winco without dying. Time slipped by, Craig had to work late again. So I loaded my kids up and drove over to Little Cesar's and picked up a $5 pizza. I felt ridiculous as I walked up to the steps with rolls and a hot pizza, while my crazy kids screamed in the car. When she came to the door she began to well up with tears. "How did you know? I just got off the phone with my mom and she said, "Honey what does sound good?" and the only thing that came to mind was rolls. How could you have known?" I stood there and wanted to scratch my head and think how did I know? But I didn't, only the Lord knew.
Later that week I felt the need to bring cookies to a sister I had met once at church. I didn't know anything about her, but felt the desire to get to know her more. I went to make my families favorite chocolate chip cookies, nothing too fancy, but a crowds favorite. I went to grab the bag of chocolate chips only to find they had been eaten through, almost to the bottom. So I thought of trying snicker doodles; couldn't find any cream of tarter. By now your thinking, seriously go grocery shopping woman! But things were tight around our house and we were trying to make everything spread as far as it could go. So I ended up making no bake peanut butter chocolate cookies. I didn't even have a paper plate or ribbon or a cute little card; it was a good little home makers nightmare! I dropped them off on her doorstep, because no one answered the door. The following Sunday or should I say, Roller Derby, I ran into her. "Thank you so much for those yummy cookies. I haven't made those in years. They've always been my favorite." I noticed a theme. Do you?
Finally the last day of the week I decided to try making home made bread. I was feeling a little domestic, so I pulled out my kitchen aid. Now, I'd seen my mom do it a million times, she even invited me over to teach me. But here I was a couple hundred miles away attempting to venture down a road I'd only dreamed about. It took me all day, I ground the wheat, fed a baby, let the yeast rise, changed a diaper, mixed the ingredients, let it sit, picked up a kindergartener, put in oven to rise, all lopsided and funny. Presto! 50 min later a rather large loaf, if I dare call it that, was done. I quickly buttered the top and wrapped it with a paper towel and wheeled down the street in my stroller, to a lady who had just come home from surgery. I knocked, no response. I gave the knob a jiggle, it was unlocked. Dare I go in? Of course! I walked in, put the loaf on the counter, wrote a little note and dashed back out the door. A couple weeks passed when I bumped into her. She said, "Was that you who made the home made bread?" I sheepishly replied, "Yes." She went on, "It was soooo good. I had gotten home from the hospital that morning and was too drugged up to get the door. When I finally woke up I saw the loaf of bread. I devoured it. I think I ate the whole loaf in one sitting. You need to teach me sometime how you make it."
By this time I knew that it was all in the Lord's hands. He knew what these dear sisters needed. Were all three of this ladies good liars, just trying to make me feel good? Possibly, but I felt divinely guided. I lifted and inspired and in turn was blessed to see the Lord's hand. I made three good friends that week.
Below is a story President Monson told that is better expressed and close to my own I wanted to share:
Tiffany’s difficulties began last year when she had guests at her home for Thanksgiving and then again for Christmas. Her husband had been in medical school and was now in the second year of his medical residency. Because of the long work hours required of him, he was not able to help her as much as they both would have liked, and so most of that which needed to be accomplished during this holiday season, in addition to the care of their four young children, fell to Tiffany. She was becoming overwhelmed, and then she learned that one who was dear to her had been diagnosed with cancer. The stress and worry began to take a heavy toll on her, and she slipped into a period of discouragement and depression. She sought medical help, and yet nothing changed. Her appetite disappeared, and she began to lose weight, which her tiny frame could ill afford. She sought peace through the scriptures and prayed for deliverance from the gloom which was overtaking her. When neither peace nor help seemed to come, she began to feel abandoned by God. Her family and friends prayed for her and tried desperately to help. They delivered her favorite foods in an attempt to keep her physically healthy, but she could take only a few bites and then would be unable to finish.
On one particularly trying day, a friend attempted in vain to entice her with foods she had always loved. When nothing worked, the friend said, “There must be something that sounds good to you.”
Tiffany thought for a moment and said, “The only thing I can think of that sounds good is homemade bread.”
But there was none on hand.
The following afternoon Tiffany’s doorbell rang. Her husband happened to be home and answered it. When he returned, he was carrying a loaf of homemade bread. Tiffany was astonished when he told her it had come from a woman named Sherrie, whom they barely knew. She was a friend of Tiffany’s sister Nicole, who lived in Denver, Colorado. Sherrie had been introduced to Tiffany and her husband briefly several months earlier when Nicole and her family were staying with Tiffany for Thanksgiving. Sherrie, who lived in Omaha, had come to Tiffany’s home to visit with Nicole.
Now, months later, with the delicious bread in hand, Tiffany called her sister Nicole to thank her for sending Sherrie on an errand of mercy. Instead, she learned Nicole had not instigated the visit and had no knowledge of it.
The rest of the story unfolded as Nicole checked with her friend Sherrie to find out what had prompted her to deliver that loaf of bread. What she learned was an inspiration to her, to Tiffany, to Sherrie—and it is an inspiration to me.
On that particular morning of the bread delivery, Sherrie had been prompted to make two loaves of bread instead of the one she had planned to make. She said she felt impressed to take the second loaf with her in her car that day, although she didn’t know why. After lunch at a friend’s home, her one-year-old daughter began to cry and needed to be taken home for a nap. Sherrie hesitated when the unmistakable feeling came to her that she needed to deliver that extra loaf of bread to Nicole’s sister Tiffany, who lived 30 minutes away on the other side of town and whom she barely knew. She tried to rationalize away the thought, wanting to get her very tired daughter home and feeling sheepish about delivering a loaf of bread to people who were almost strangers. However, the impression to go to Tiffany’s home was strong, so she heeded the prompting.
When she arrived, Tiffany’s husband answered the door. Sherrie reminded him that she was Nicole’s friend whom he’d met briefly at Thanksgiving, handed him the loaf of bread, and left.
And so it happened that the Lord sent a virtual stranger across town to deliver not just the desired homemade bread but also a clear message of love to Tiffany. What happened to her cannot be explained in any other way. She had an urgent need to feel that she wasn’t alone—that God was aware of her and had not abandoned her. That bread—the very thing she wanted—was delivered to her by someone she barely knew, someone who had no knowledge of her need but who listened to the prompting of the Spirit and followed that prompting. It became an obvious sign to Tiffany that her Heavenly Father was aware of her needs and loved her enough to send help. He had responded to her cries for relief.
We too can go out of our way to serve in the tiniest of ways.
I probably could have made a grande meal with all the trimmings and it wouldn't have made any difference when all she needed was a roll. I could have made the best chocolate chip cookies and all she needed was a taste if home. We may plan out ways to reach out that take time, effort and energy. But many times people just want the time, a listening ear or someone who cares.
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