Tuesday, January 4, 2011

The U.S. Army

The US Army - A Refining Fire
It was snowing, big white fluffy crystals at least as large as a quarter in diameter.  This is the kind of snow that falls in the Spring in Utah; it piles up quickly, but melts away even more so.  The sound of flakes colliding with the windshield at freeway speed was almost audible; little explosions decimating each snow-puff at the moment of impact.

I focused on one of the larger flakes as it began to instantly melt on the warmed glass before the wiper swiped it away, leaving a clean, pristine surface behind.  I was grateful for this small distraction as Dad and I made our way along the recently plowed Salt Lake City streets to the MEPS (Military Entrance Processing Station) at Fort Douglas, Utah.  I’d be lying if I denied the palpable anxiety I felt, expressed by my stomach doing flip-flops.  He didn’t say, but I think Dad felt anxious as well, making small talk that didn’t require much effort to stay engaged in.

We arrived and I took my two small bags of clothes and toiletries out of the rear seat of the Explorer after a brief goodbye.  I had enlisted in the US Army a month earlier and was on my way to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri for Basic Training.

The last year of my existence in Hermosa Beach, CA had been filled with ups and downs.  A series of tickets, including a speeding ticket issued for going 82 mph in a 25 mph had certainly not helped my situation.  I wasn’t focused at school either and my sub-par grades proved it.  In fact, I’ve often said that I hit rock bottom at this point in my life; a 36 hour stint in the LA County Jail was further evidence of this.  I was definitely ready for a change.
After three and a half years in Los Angeles, I was heading back to Utah.  I was certainly unsure about what my future had in store for me, but it felt right. I vividly remember driving across the Nevada Desert, on the 16th of January of 1991.  It was late at night and I had an AM radio station on which blared news of the conflict in Iraq.  The first air attack had been launched against Hussein’s Republican Guard (incidentally shortly after I began my drive) and the bombing had continued into the night.  My drive was accompanied by live coverage from network reporters and faint but unmistakable thudding sounds which manifested US missiles exploding in Baghdad.

 My appearance in Utah sparked a short, but logical soul-searching session of “What next?”  I wanted and needed to continue my college studies, but was faced with the question of how to pay for it.  The GI Bill and SLRP (Student Loan Repayment Program) seemed to be the right answer to the question.  Before the month was even out, I had enlisted, taken the ASVABS (Armed Services Vocational/Aptitude Boards), and qualified for my chosen MOS (Military Occupational Specialty) of Combat/Still Photography with a score of 98.

From Fort Douglas, I traveled via a short bus ride to the SLC International Airport and boarded a flight to St Louis.  In St. Louis, another bus took me approximately 135 miles southwest straight into the jaws of hell, Fort Leonard Wood (aka, Little Vietnam).  Just like the oft-disguised temptations of Satan, it wasn’t immediately apparent that I had arrived in hell.  The weather in mid-April was pleasant enough.  Upon our arrival, we were ushered into somewhat shabby, but ammonia clean barracks.  This was our holding company.   It was necessary to wait for three days for the rest of our company to arrive before we could begin our 10 weeks of training.  We cleaned, raked leaves, pulled weeds, and picked up garbage 12 hours a day, but it was certainly bearable.  Having been gainfully employed and cut off from financial support since the age of 13, I was accustomed to this kind of work.  This kind of hell was familiar to me - I used to have to rake the forest!
After the three days had expired, we were transported on cattle trucks to another part of the base and ordered to exit when the transporter had rolled to a stop.  We were greeted by no less than a dozen screaming drill sergeants barking orders which couldn’t be heard above the din of their own combined voices.  In vain, I decided reading lips was my best option and finally determined that they wanted me to hold my duffel above my head for some reason.  I complied and others in my company quickly followed.  Before long, we were all high-stepping in place with our army duffels high above our heads.  Ultimately, our effort was futile and, like a fine cigar, we were “smoked” by our drill sergeants; this was physical discipline that utilized a combination of up/downs, pushups, and sit-ups done at a feverish pace until muscle failure.  Little did we know, this would become at least a daily ritual.

I was in hell.  I was Shadrach being tossed into an Industrial Grade Electric Arc Furnace and there was NO ministering angel to deliver me.

A psychotic training cycle of at least 18 hours a day ensued.  If you pulled Guard or KP (Kitchen Patrol) duty, that would require an additional 3-4 hours, leaving only a couple of hours for sleep.  We spent our days learning how to march, identifying wounds, learning first aid, physical training, memorizing our chain of command, reciting general orders, how to properly wear our uniform, cleaning the barracks, conquering obstacle courses, BRM training (Basic Rifle Marksmenship), map reading, communications, bayonet training, preparing ourselves for NBC (Nuclear, Biological, Chemical) warfare, cleaning our weapons, throwing grenades, firing Anti-Tank weapons (AT4s), braving the gas chamber, hand-to-hand combat, night fire exercises, tactical strategy, squad movement, uniform inspection, and everywhere we went we RAN; and when we ran, we yelled cadence.

During the first week of training, I couldn’t even begin to finish my meal.  We were fed enormous quantities of food three times a day at the mess hall.  Not finishing your meal was punishable by extra pushups, so we resorted to stuffing uneaten rolls and potatoes into our “empty” milk cartons.  However, after 3 weeks, I was asking fellow soldiers for their extra food.  Even considering this huge caloric intake, I was losing weight at the rate of 2-3 pounds per week.

With only two weeks remaining, the climax of our training was an FTX (Field Training Exercise) that dragged on for 6 days.  During this period, we would live in the “field” (aka, The Jungle) and conditions would simulate combat as closely as they safely could.  We slept on the ground and used our Kevlar helmets for pillows.  Sleep was rationed in small doses; we would be dismissed at 2:00 a.m. and be awakened by 3:00 – 3:30 a.m.  Showers weren’t available and relief could only be had by changing into clean socks and underwear.  To make matters worse, it was 90 degrees every day and close to 100% humidity.  One example of “training” we experienced during this time was to march through the jungle in the heat wearing all the layers of our chemical suits until one of us puked in their gas mask.

All good things must come to an end and we were told one early morning that our FTX was over; we had passed and would be returning that day.  Furthermore, we learned First Sergeant McCutchen, a tough old Vietnam Vet, would be leading us in a 10 mile forced road march back to the barracks.  Even though this wasn’t good news, most of us were excited at the prospect of finally taking a shower.

First Sergeant McCutchen set a brutal pace that was only possible at a run.  All of us were carrying full packs and weapons at ready.  The poorly maintained gravel road was felt through the non-cushioned, thin soles of our combat boots.  At the 3 mile mark, I could feel large blisters developing on both my heels.  I compensated for this pain by attempting to land each footfall on the balls of my feet.  At 5 miles, the pain was unbearable; my blisters had burst, lending to a sticky wet feeling in my boots.

I was desperate and began to plead silently in my mind, “God, please help me,” over and over.  After earnestly repeating this phrase about 20 times, a wave came over my body.  Starting at my head, it coursed through my body, bringing relief.  My body was completely renewed; I no longer felt any pain, I wasn’t sweaty or hot, my breathing was normal and not labored!  My attention turned immediately to those of my platoon suffering around me.  I grabbed two of their arms and dragged them along, encouraging them to continue.

Five miles later, we arrived at the barracks.  Most of us were in ragged shape and the First Sergeant knew he’d put us through a serious pace.  Taking pity on us, he gave us the order, “At ease!”  Next, he commanded us to lay down on the ground and put our feet on our packs in front of us, elevating our legs.  I felt fine, but followed the order anyway.  After about 5 minutes of elevating our legs, he ordered us to put on clean, dry socks.  As I unlaced my boots and pulled them off, I was shocked to see that my socks were soaked with blood to the top of my boots.  At that moment, my pain, my weariness, and all my suffering returned to me.

It was then that I recognized I had the Spirit of the Lord with me.  He had protected me, strengthened me, and buoyed me up when I needed Him most.  My prayer had been answered!  Later, I considered my worthiness to have His Spirit with me.  I had not attended church in years and had many unresolved sins.  In no way was I worthy of this blessing.

However, I know that He knew my heart at that moment.  Since then, He has blessed me to know that when we are physically weak, we can best receive guidance from Him.  I have a strong testimony of this.
Furthermore, along with other experiences during this time, I learned to identify when I felt His Spirit with me.  This was monumentally important to me because I could remember this familiar feeling in my childhood and in my early teenage years.  Like a bamboo plant that takes 3 years to develop its root system before growing shoots, my own testimony had developed similarly and was ready to grow.

I couldn’t deny that I had felt His Spirit and slowly began to take steps to repent and return to church; I was converted!  Most people that don’t know me well assume I went on an LDS mission.  When they ask me where I went, I just reply, “Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.”

Oscar, the Toyota Landcruiser

Oscar

We had just returned from Window Rock, Arizona.  A week spent in a bleak, windowless (but air conditioned) conference room; lined with tables.  The Quality Inn had played host to a number of new employees of Navajo Allied Asbestos for the purpose of training to receive their OSHA certification; Marc and I included.

In 1988, it was adventure enough for us to be on our own, away from the parental units, regardless of the nature of the coursework we endured; understanding the fibrous element of asbestos, how to prepare to handle it to minimize exposure, historical application of asbestos and identification of it, etc.  Sufficient incentive in the form of a promised $18 hourly ($27 hourly overtime) wage guaranteed our diligent studying of the material – we earned high marks.  At other times in our youth when proper motivation was absent, we would often stray.  I’m reminded of a time when free tickets to the Utah Symphony somehow landed us at a nearby downtown movie theater for a screening of the much acclaimed “Beverly Hills Cop.”  However, that’s another story altogether…

At any rate, we were only too happy to be walking away with OSHA certification in hand and leaving Window Rock.  A short tour of the local, government-run grocery store to obtain some forgotten and much needed toiletries confirmed that; we contemplated the locked cabinets with clear glass doors that housed the mouthwash.  Marc posed the question, “Why would they lock up the mouthwash?”  We scratched our heads, puzzled.  Hmmmmmm…

Now, two weeks later, we were hitting the road in our trusty 1974 Toyota Landcruiser, affectionately named Oscar (taken from our prepubescent days gone by of Sesame Street and the uncanny similarity of Oscar the Grouch’s green fur and the green paint on the Cruiser).

A side note about Oscar; it had already taken its trip down the gully across the street from our house on Fawn Lane.  With its parking brake failing, Dad had left the Cruiser idling at the top of the driveway while he ran into the house to get something.  The parking brake let go and Oscar rolled backwards down the driveway, across the street, over the curb, and down the steep hill.  Providence kept it from flipping over when it struck a small tree and kept it upright.  The dent from the tree in the driver front fender was the only casualty from the mishap.

So, we cruised (literally) south on I-15, merging carefully with the traffic heading west on I-80.  Marc shifted into the top gear (3rd) and feathered the throttle to maintain a constant speed of about 63.  Because it only had 3 gears, freeway velocity resulted in the engine speed pegged at a mind-numbing 4,000 RPM.  The straight six put up a racket; I had the feeling that it was more comfortable climbing a steep hill in 4 low with low revs.  Because Marc was pilot, that left my responsibility as navigator and music man.   In an effort to drown out the engine wail, I reached up my left hand and felt for the cassette opening.  The stereo was mounted in a metal tray between the top front and middle roll bars (not mounted conventionally in the dash like most vehicles).  I found it, popped in a u2 cassette, and we roared off down the freeway.  Our destination was Elko, Nevada…

We were both excited about the opportunity in Elko; we could put our OSHA training to work and earn the high wages promised us.  Marc was saving for his upcoming mission and I couldn’t pass on the prospect of the financial windfall.  The general feeling was one of optimism and adventure.

As we approached an overpass just past Salt Lake City International Airport, I noticed a forlorn figure with his thumb stuck out.  I pointed him out and Marc dragged the wheel to the right as he pushed the throttle in to slow us down.  We met Joe and he explained he was on his way to Sparks, NV.  We consulted with each other quickly and decided to take him; we had an empty back seat with plenty of room.  Joe was in his sixties and gingerly climbed in the back seat of the Cruiser.  Although not very talkative, he responded to our questions and explained that he had been in Salt Lake City undergoing prostate surgery.  He had spent all of his money on his medical expenses and travel there.  We enthusiastically offered him some sandwiches in the blue Playmate cooler located next to him in the back seat and he gratefully accepted.

Four hours later we arrived in Elko and parted ways with our friend, Joe.  He thanked us for the sandwiches and we wished him luck.  We met up with the rest of the NAA crew (Charlene, Linda, Leo, Mark, and others) at the Red Lion Casino and sat down to discuss the  impending project over dinner.  It turns out there had been some miscommunication and the equipment wouldn’t be arriving for a few more days.  Everyone was disappointed that we couldn’t get started right away, but Frank agreed to pay us for the three days anyway.

After our equipment arrived, we were able to start work at the maximum security juvenile detention facility just northeast of town.  After a slow start to the project and working doing prep work all week, Marc convinced me to attend church that Sunday.  After priesthood, he excitedly told me, “Ben, I met a member that offered to let us stay in his trailer while we’re here!”  This was great news as we had been forking out $50 a night to stay in a barely habitable motel near downtown Elko.

Later that night, we followed the member’s instructions to his house and arrived after dark.  There, in his field, was parked an extremely small towable trailer.  About the size of a pop-up tent, there were two small sleeping bays on each side with thin foam mattresses.  But we didn’t care; we could pocket the money we had been spending on motel rooms.  We slid the windows open on each side of the trailer to create a cross breeze; as you can imagine, the trailer would get stifling hot during the day in the hot Nevada summer.  It would only cool off long after we had fallen asleep on top of our sleeping bags.  When it was windy, we would wake in the morning with gritty sand in our teeth and spit mud.

The project was poorly managed and went slow, but we enjoyed getting to know our Navajo co-workers.  Charlene taught me a decent amount of Navajo; now I remember only a few curse words and how to count to ten.  On weekends we would head up the canyon to the Humboldt National Forest to the southwest of town and camp with the Indians.  This afforded us two benefits; 1. We were able to escape the heat and 2. We were able to avoid staying in a motel for a couple of nights.  Most weekends, Marc also convinced me to attend church.  After one particularly late night, I staggered to Church with Marc, wishing I was still back in bed.  About 20 minutes into Sacrament meeting, I decided to go back and sleep in the car.  I only made it about halfway.  Just outside the front doors of the meetinghouse, I was found by an embarrassed Marc.  As people were leaving church, they actually had to step over me.

Weekday nights were spent cruising down Idaho street, eating a cheap meal at Taco Bell.  After paydays, we would splurge at the Red Lion Casino and have the buffet.  The Cruiser served us well during this time.  We were used to its idiosyncrasies.  When you turned right, the driver door would open wide.  We coped with this by threading a bunjee cord through the door handle and then around the vertical roll bar.  The door would still open, but only about 6 inches; it would then slam shut as the bunjee cord overcame the centrifugal force.

Only one mishap occurred.  One day we started the car and the throttle stuck open.  The engine immediately revved to its maximum and we were afraid we’d blow the engine.  We strategized and decided that we could start the car and put it in gear long enough to get us where we needed to go.  If we got going too fast, we could turn off the ignition and just let it coast.  This plan worked well enough to get us to the nearest mechanic, who was able to fix the stuck throttle cable and send us on our way.

A total of about 5 weeks was spent in Elko, NV that summer.  Even though we didn’t know it, Marc and I would soon be traveling to Southern California – me to finish my senior high school year and Marc to continue working to fund his mission.  We made memories we’ll never forget, but most of all, we’ll never forget our Landcruiser, Oscar.

White Shag Carpets



White Shag Carpets
By Marc Alley
Christmas 2007 (i.e. January ’08)

The good memories of that room, the majesty and pure unadulterated “let the good times roll” (thank you Ric Ocasek of The Cars) feeling . . . a je ne sais quois of childhood bliss.  It was truly a room from a not-so-long-forgotten decade, the wild sixties, and who knows how it survived to 1976, in prim-and-proper Salt Lake City on the East Bench.  It was a psychedelic trip just looking at the wallpaper, a combination of pinks, oranges, golds, browns . . . If you stared long enough at the swirls, dots and wavy lines it was like you could visualize a Buddha or interpret some secret code. It was kind of like staring at the album cover of Sargent Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band  and trying to figure out the meaning of all the weird little things contained therein.  The sense of funkadelic didn’t stop there, as it was outfitted with the deepest ivory-white shag carpet that could easily swallow a small animal or snack.  Rounding out the combo was a couch that was a horrifically-close shade of the same colors in more of an august harvest palette. 

This room was very unlike the rest of our Mom-inspired “country Baron broadsides Euro 80s chic” décor that was the rest of our Sugarhouse bungalow.  But that was the beauty of it . . . Mom and Dad were too cheap to remodel any basement rooms, so it fit the logic that it was ours to destroy, by default.  Even so, we treated it with a fairly high degree of respect, even though it was only “unofficially” ours.  To vacuum the acres of carpet, though, was not for the faint of heart, a Friday chore I did even back then.  You had to really know your vacuum head height settings.  Only by setting it on the highest “Austin Powers” adjustment could you prevent the Farah Fawcet-long shag from sucking into the roller and burning out the rubber belt and motor assembly.

The stark white knobs on the closets and drawers looked so purposeful against the shockingly-bright colors, like touching one would unlock a space capsule from Space Odyssey 2001.  No, they just opened into closets full of well-used board games and “educational” toys.  By “educational” I mean “wooden”.  Mom thought that anything that you had to actually build or create from natural matter really broadened your horizons, thus she provided wooden blocks, Legos, indestructible puzzles and Lincoln Logs.  It’s pretty hard to build anything sinister out of Lincoln Logs, unless it was Lincoln’s wife Mary’s sanitorium.  And build and create we did. 

Sometimes the closet did reveal some amazing finds.  One time Mom found a pair of “mystery panties” in one of the drawers and accused us of procuring them. The great meaning or portent of this find was kind of lost on us as we had no clue as to why one would want them. We never did find out whose they were, but you’d think that from the motif of the room that Mom would’ve figured out that they probably belonged to the previous homeowner.

 It was a surprising long and deep room (almost the width of the front of the house), perfectly suited for quick rugby-like “Smear the Queer” sessions and a Nerf football.  You could really get good traction in bare feet and the deep shag provided quite a bit of padding for hard falls.  A little rug-burn on the face never hurt anyone and was totally unnoticed by the “injury cops” (Mom and Dad).  I can’t remember a whole lot of injuries, but I do remember Ben throwing a heavy steel Tonka truck at my head one time. The deep carpet absorbed sound well. Injuries and fights had a self-containment feature, as any revealed tradecraft or secrets to Parents would result in disciplinary measures by “the company”.

The room also had a great location.  It was far away from the much-frequented kitchen and parental bedroom areas, with a quick access stairway to an escape route front door and shielding alcoves on the side.  What the builders in 1930 were thinking for the purpose of these small hiding spaces I’ll never know, but Brandon was able to utilize them well during one of his special “missions” to run outside bare-ass naked, touch the Peugeot station wagon, and run back.  Alas, he was betrayed as we had locked the front door; although we eventually had to let him back in as he had completed his assignment well.

The room also had the advantage of excellent southward upper-ground placement & slope away from the dreaded “water bucket”.  The infamous water bucket was courtesy of Dad who decided that he really didn’t have the time/expertise to replace the air conditioning condensation pump, which pumped the collected water back up into the old cast iron plumbing.  Therefore, to demonstrate to us the frailty of mortality and importance of military schedules, an everlasting and hellish water clock was created.  It was a ticking time bomb, and failure to empty the bucket on your allotted hour meant a flooding of the grey commercial basement carpet, wet socks, mildew and chastisement from all “bucket crew” members.  We were like a doomed Sisyphus condemned by Zeus to roll the rock up the hill, only to escape our slippery hands and roll back again.  Sure, summer meant long, sweet outdoor nights, but it also meant the dreaded water bucket rotation and 7 pm bedtimes under a still blazing sun.

The shag carpet room offered a respite from these various tasks and served as our headquarters for many ventures and purposes.   Ben often would set up shop in the western area of the room on Fast Sunday, where he could ply his tempting wares at escalating and lucrative drug dealer-like margins.  Nacho cheese Doritos and bite-size Butterfingers started out at only a nickel, but as supply diminished and demand increased, that same Dorito might fetch as much as twenty-five cents.  We would curse his name, and then sadly pay out more of our hard-earned change, whilst Ben would lovingly pet his large collections of erasers, rocks and rolls of pennies.  Somehow I never had the gumption or brains to plan ahead and buy supplies from Emigration Market and transport them home via bike BEFORE the lean times occurred.  I somehow suspect that Ben had stolen his master plan from a certain Great Brain book in which Tom sells candy to all of the beleaguered boys at the Catholic Jesuit School and makes a fortune, hiding the booty and loot in a statue of a Saint. Although, Ben was quite an entrepreneurial capitalist at such a young age, and you had to admit that he had great strategy and commitment to his malevolent principles.

During the winters, we were generally in a calmer mood and we’d read or play games together. Monopoly was one of our favorite board games.  In terms of Monopoly, we never did follow the correct rules.  Somehow we misinterpreted the entire point of the game, and allowed any player to buy houses for any card that they had without owning all cards of that color.  It was a brutal way to play, and we actually went out to a game supply store and bought extra houses, hotels and money.  We didn’t limit how many hotels you could have either, and when you landed on Broadway with 10 hotels, the game was definitely over.

When bored with that, we even created our own games.  I remember starting a massive, months-long game of pencil war, although maybe it was a combined effort . . . I don’t exactly remember.  The game was a popular offshoot of a popular “church” game. We taped a large, circular piece of paper (about 2’x2’) to a small, round pine table.  Then, we used our plastic stencil sets to draw a “home base” on each side of the paper with “tanks” of various sizes and abilities. We also drew rocks and other marks to symbolize parts of the battlefield and terrain.  The rules of the game were pretty basic: You would pick a tank and announce your intention to either move or shoot.  You would then place the tip of the pencil near the front of the representative tank symbol and with one hand, place the pointer finger on the top of the eraser.  With the right pressure and skill, you’d gently push the top of the pencil and it would fall away, drawing a straight line, symbolizing the “shoot” or “move” turn.  If any of the line passed through an opponent during a “shoot” turn, your enemy would blow up, represented by scribbled lines, and be erased forever with one of Ben’s massive erasers.

With the masses of tanks we each possessed, and difficulty to navigate such a large area, rates of attrition were low. So to combat this, we devised an ingenious “smart bomb” limited to a few per player, per game. This meant you could drop the pencil from the air at a height of about a foot, holding the end, and if you did it just right a small mark from the end of the #2 would make a small dot.  From the center of this dot the stencil would be used to create a massive explosion, destroying anyone in the radius. The greatest faux pas was to push too hard and tear the paper, resulting in total destruction of an area of the battlefield.  But that was the genius of the taped-down, thick poster paper.  I don’t think we ever tore the paper or finished the game . . . it was such a large “tank world”.  It was really fun to play with such simple objects, and I can still perform a “pencil shot” to this day, and I’m sure Ben and Brandon can too.

Our modus operandi eventually became more sophisticated as the world entered the VCR/Betamax age.  Mom and Dad had a pretty strict policy on any non-Sunday, non-Disney TV watching.  Any requisitions for TV usage had to be submitted for approval.  Mom had ensured Dad had installed a hardened steel coaxial lock to prevent any unauthorized watching in our shag carpet room.  We devised a clever bypass that ran through a hidden cortex, while still displaying a dummy cable that passed through the lock.  All the Love Boat, Chips and Brady Bunch we could handle was full access, baby!  Provided Mom and Dad weren’t at home, that is.

We fought hard and played hard and we had a great room to do it in. Much has been made of our fighting, but I think it’s pretty typical for any family with three boys, now that I’m older and a bit wiser.  And I also think we all loved each other a lot and felt like we had a little slice of real estate to do it in.

It was our room, the White Shag Carpet room, and sometimes I wish we still had it. Smear the Queer or Pencil Tank, anyone?!



Monday, January 3, 2011

Memories from the Curb

Memories from the Curb
by Marc Alley
Christmas 2006
What began in one house on Princeton Avenue ended in another, 1773 South Princeton Avenue to be exact. Lots of things were changing in the neighborhood but we were still too young to know that our Sears Toughskin jeans were low on style, but high on knee-rip-out value. That incredible Christmas all of us boys got 3 shiny Schwinn maverik one-speeds. What possessed my parents to actually get us a cool gift like that instead of Sombreros, leprechaun socks and lederhosen from the Alps? I’ll never know. Maybe we were driving them so nuts with our stir-crazy cabin fever. Summer seemed so far away as we took our first spins around the block in the frigid weather. I know I somehow learned to ride a bike, but once you know how it’s as if you’ve always known; walking anywhere after that becomes so plebeian.
Sure, we’d had some experience with moving contraptions. The thing I’d really previously wanted was a toxic-waste colored Green machine . . . all the cool kids had them and the fact that you could actually steer a conveyance with a black knob on a stick seemed like a completely legitimate and practical idea at the time. And come on, it was so cool-looking, like a combination of Steve Mcqueen’s mustang and the Joker’s rocket- powered sled combined. The marketing guys at Mattel really had me pegged. However, later testing with friends’ Green Machines and other Big-Wheel products showed that an injected-molded, 1-inch wheel keeps sliding down a hill even if you stop peddling and hold it in place; and steering with said knob is really counter-intuitive at 25 miles-an-hour on the steep grades. The Big Wheel’s downhill handling was clearly superior if you kept your feet off the pedals, although a good pull on the yellow, right-wheel brake would generally induce a heart-pounding, skin-removing tail slide.
In contrast, the Schwinn could actually take you places (other than downhill) and I immediately recognized it as a symbol of freedom. It’s weird because I can’t seem to remember the colors of the bikes, the colors morphing in my mind from silver to black and gold. It didn’t really matter when you’re a kid, although I seem to remember that one of my brothers’ was gold. In those days, nobody but retards and lame-os wore a helmet, but I distinctly remember Ben’s thick helmet-shaped hairdo; it probably saved his life a few times when his head was bouncing on the curb. Kids nowadays sure are wimpy with all their elbow pads and protective gear. A common toy in my day was a steel, pencil-shaped dragster that you’d insert a plastic pull string into a gear and pull. The dragster would take off at Mach 1, shooting a beautiful arc of real sparks that would probably end up in a pile of greasy rags. Looking back it really makes you understand how lawyers have wrecked our country.
You see, my brothers and I were preternaturally creative and no longer just satisfied with riding back and forth from Emigration Market for Doritos. We were ready to take our bikes to the next level. The drag-style banana seats of the seventies were no longer fashionable, and BMX was emerging on the scene. I clearly remember saving up money to vaingloriously switch out my Banana for a little rubber BMX-style seat, with Ben following suit. I seem to remember that Brandon, always the penny-pincher, stayed with the sturdy and time-tested Banana design.
We were ready to fly, maniacally pedaling down the street toward a piece of particleboard propped up on a few bricks. The first contestant hit the particleboard and it immediately shattered, causing my front wheel an unsatisfying whump as it hit the pile of bricks sending me in a vicious endo. Ben ate some gravel as well, with Brandon whipping around the collision in an evasive maneuver and a Parthian shot, “Ha HA!.” It was back to the drawing board to build a new jump ramp, one that would handle that first explosion of monster-truck force when your front tire hits the apex of the board. We all put our heads together to utilize our best skills. I, leader and rogue thief would kaife the needed building materials. Ben and Brandon would stack the two bys and lend engineering know-how.
Brandon was demoted from Assistant Engineer to Chief Stacker when the jump fell apart every time you hit it. Brandon loyally stacked the two bys and propped the board many times until Ben accidentally hit the jump too early while Brandon was still stacking and propping. With sage adjudication I resubmitted my petitions to Engineer Ben that the jump needed a redesign and he must pay a stiff penalty for Brandon’s head wound. He must hug the aggrieved party and cleanse the wound with the hose. The cut was hidden under his hair and mother needn’t know of the injury. Ben returned with the fresh idea of nailing the two bys together and then nailing the board to the top. Twenty minutes later, a nest of snarled undriven nails protruded but the lump stuck together. It was ugly, but oh joy! . . . it worked. We could now concentrate on jumping dynamics and physics.
The trick was to pull back on the handlebars at the right moment. Beginners would inevitably go rigid in fear, lock up their front arms and spasmically jerk the handlebars too late. This would end in a bone-jarring endo as the full impact of the jump would shiver through your front tire, making you lose control and stability, spectators rolling their eyes in scorn as the moment of anticipation was wasted, like a black cat dud that never explodes. Getting your weight back in the saddle and staying loose was all-important. With an extra bit of juice on the back tire, you could really rotate the front of the wheel up and land with back tire down first, like the BMX kids jumping their bikes in the movie E.T., in momentary wheelie-flight with control and power. It was really awesome when you got the timing right.
Finally, something macho we could do better than the other neighbor kids who would endless harass and beat on me for playing the violin or going to bed early. Flying through the air you felt like Evil Kneivel rocketing over the Grand Canyon. It wasn’t always roses, however. We’d get more and more daring trying to get more air, and it was easy to over-rotate and land on your back or your head. All of your senses are really alive when you knock out a tooth on the curb or crash into a 100-year-old oak tree.
Those twin-welded steel Schwinns were so tough though and the frames never got bent or twisted even if you bent a wheel. It was really amazing that the only maintenance they really needed was a spray of WD-40; and the chains never came off like the ten-speeds.
I also remember riding down the sloping east bench to the 7-11 by East High to get a slurpee. Sometimes we’d even ride all the way to Crossroads Mall with the wind in our hair, gently snaking left and right, never pedaling. The simple reverse braking never needed adjustment either, unlike the modern cable brakes. You could really whip out the rear of the bike and do a cool stop in the dirt.
Those bikes gave us such a high degree of freedom and independence and yet it gave us something that we could do together as brothers. I’m sure Brandon and Ben loved them as much as I did. I knew that Brandon appreciated the egalitarian nature of bikes, because he could easily keep up with us on a bike whereas he’d always be last in line as a land-lubber. I’m sure they eventually got donated to Deseret Industries, but I’ll never forget them. It was a golden time for me of endless summer days and cruising under the tree-lined streets.

The Ledger

The Ledger (dah, dah, dah!)
Ben Alley, Christmas 2008

Circa, 1980

Just like the Big Bang, I remember the day that the ledger was born into existence (ripples were felt throughout the universe). Dad took a white, vinyl covered three-ring binder; he neatly lettered “Ledger” on a piece of lined paper, which was slipped under the clear cover. On lined paper punched for a three-ring binder, he created four columns of varying widths by drawing vertical lines from top to bottom. The columns were labeled:
  • Date
  • Description
  • Amount
  • Total
Pages of the ledger were separated into three distinct categories:
  • Income
  • Missionary
  • Tithing
Marc, Brandon, and I each had a page for the three sections (totaling 9 pages in all). As weeks and months passed, the pages of the ledger were filled with various descriptive entries for work completed, jobs skillfully done, blood, sweat, and tears sacrificed.
I believe Dad’s intention of the ledger was to wisely teach his sons responsibility in fiscal matters. He explained to us that he would act as the “bank” and the ledger would be the “passbook.” We could “withdraw” and “deposit” funds by making a direct request to Dad. Furthermore, we would learn the principal of tithing by contributing a tenth of our earnings to the church. Finally, we contributed an additional tenth to a missionary fund which would allow us to start saving for our missions at an early age.
There were clear advantages to this arrangement for all parties involved. In addition to learning valuable information about money in general, we could easily track how we earned, saved, and spent our earnings. It also served as a vehicle of credit for our parental units; they didn’t need to have cash on hand to pay us for our toils. Just make an entry and you were as good as paid.
We felt good, responsible, and mature. We quickly adopted the system and trusted it implicitly.
Unfortunately, when the ledger was created, we weren’t apprised of some of the non-financial institution disadvantages we would be subject to. Namely, the practice of anti-income. I don’t think any of us realized that money earned could be just as easily taken away. And, by the way, the ledger was not FDIC insured; these funds had no guarantee.
I was looking through the ledger one day after school to record some income earned from the previous Saturday. The last entry stood out as if displayed in Broadway lights. “Socks on floor” was the description and $1.00 had been deducted from the total column. I was appalled, I quickly turned to Marc and Brandon’s pages and they too had amounts deducted for clothing items not put away. Mom was fed up with the condition of our rooms and decided to punish us where it hurt most – our pocketbooks.
Even after much protest, we were informed that deductions would continue for chore infractions. Horrified, we watched as our hard-earned money dwindled away due to perceived sub-par performance of our chores.
The last straw came one day as I returned home from basketball practice. Marc was ranting and raving about some issue in the ledger. “It’s not fair!” he yelled. “How can you deduct the value of something that I just borrowed?” Mom’s ice-cold calm reply was, “You should’ve asked permission.” I realized that another punishment deduction was handed down and went to the bookcase where the ledger was kept to assess the damage. There, in the description column was the entry, “Took Megan’s stereo without permission.” In the amount column an entry for $30 had been deducted.
I felt hollow inside. I went back to the kitchen and witnessed Marc making the futile argument that if the purchase amount had been deducted then he should be able to keep the stereo. No such luck.
I resolved at that point that I would no longer be subject to the arbitrary and unforeseen consequences of the ledger. That week, I withdrew as much money as I could from the ledger without drawing too much attention. I looked up the closest bank (located on 1300 South just east of the Top Stop) and opened my own savings account. Here, I could only access my savings on weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., but it was safe from forced withdrawals.
I knew that income earned from Mom and Dad would be subject to sacrifice, but outside earnings (from mowing lawns, gardening at Sister Sutton’s, and re-inking printer ribbons) could be protected.
Eventually, we began to negotiate cash payment in return for jobs completed and stopped using the ledger altogether. I believe both Kristen and Megan used the ledger at some point, but it was after we were free of it. Both Brandon and Marc were able to utilize their carefully earned missionary funds as documented in the ledger.
Where is it now? I like to think that my missionary fund went to help fund the missions of my siblings, but ultimately, it was sacrificed on the ledger altar as well. I sometimes imagine it tucked away on a shelf, dusty; full of yellowing pages chronicling the earnings and financial endeavors of the Alley brothers.

The Raffle

THE RAFFLE
It was the Spring of 1967 and, except for the specter of the Viet Nam War, it was the best of times and it was the BEST of times. It was an era saturated in Doo Wop music (The Platters, the Temptations, etc. of like ilk), knee socks /penny loafers (mine were penniless), plaid skirts/white button down blouses. I didn’t feel worried, stressed or anxious about being single even though I was the only one of our group yet unengaged. Susan was in love with Keith, Anne, engaged to Clark, Brenda to Roger, Jane to Gary and Gretchen to Ken. But I had my life-plan. I had already spoken to Bishop Bankhead about a mission, had obtained my passport for my BYU Singers trip to Europe (where we won all kinds of gold ribbons and kudos for our rich choral sound), and had signed a teaching contract with the Jordan School District. Yep, I was pretty much booked for the next year. Also, I had lightened my social burden quite a bit, having taken on a new personal policy of “no more blind dates...no, not ever”. I was weary of spending time with college strangers and exhausted by trying to master the art of chit chat, for which I have never had a talent. It was in this frame of mind, frame of “being” that I answered a phone call from Ray Goodwin, the VP of Culture, BYU. He was a friend of mine from the halls of music and we shared that passion as well as lunch at the cafeteria. He, in his naiveté, was asking me to accept a blind date with one of his unattached friends. I took care of his request with heightened commitment: “absolutely NOT, Ray…sorry, very busy with end of term finals and VER Y NOT interested, but thanks for thinking of me”. Why wouldn’t he think of me? I was entirely unattached, and viewed as the blind date queen of byu: safe, polite, focused on my degree, having dated every Neanderthal available on campus.
Next day with the intention of diving into a research paper, I was on approach to the Education Department at the McKay Building (my home away from home) and was blindsided by a niggling feeling that I should change my mind about the blind date. I pushed it away since it wasn’t within the constraints of my newly established personal policy. It persisted and I went on with my research paper. After finishing the outline for my paper, I found my mind still battling the prompting to change my mind about the date with a certain Stephen Alley. I was so numbed by test preparation and my research paper, it didn’t occur to me that this was the same name as my college Dean, Dr. Stephen Alley. That would have piqued my interest but I was too sidetracked to make the connection. About 5:00 at end of day, I found myself dialing Ray. Crow, served up to the young, isn’t all that bad.
Meanwhile, at the Provo, Utah residence of 600 East Sumac Avenue, a great deal of emotional pressure was being brought to bear upon this aforementioned Stephen Alley. His parents, namely his mother, had grown sufficiently concerned regarding his unmarried status, that she had single-handedly decided upon a solution, intending to yield immediate, if not satisfactory results: a raffle, with Stephen Alley as the prize. A small basket was used, holding papers with the names of all women who had survived four years at BYU without becoming romantically encumbered. After cousin Dale had written the names of “any girl, half decent” on tiny paper fragments, they were tossed importantly into the basket. Stephen interrupted their merry-making with the tea leaves, saying, “As long as you’re all being silly and ridiculous, add the name of Marcie Conn; we have a blind date next week.” The blind date’s name was added. The papers with portent were then stirred around with Mom’s pointy finger and Steve, at the jovial urging of all, drew a name. Mom insisted that: “we don’t care what she looks like, or really anything else, only that we shall all be nice to her, court her and do whatever it takes to conclude in a marriage for our (implicitly, poor) son. ‘ My name was drawn to the sound of jeers, cheers, heckling and general chaos. The charge was to “go get her.”
Meanwhile, my reluctantly eaten dinner of crow devoured, the date was scheduled for 7:00 the following weekend. That night I began the pre-date ritual hair-washing /drying event by sitting under the plastic bonnet (see attached illus). The use of such a hair dryer with multiple parts and limited-length power cord, obviates any other activity, with the exception of reading. After nearly an hour of heavy whirring and light reading, my hair still wet, I heard the doorbell ring and realized I couldn’t possibly be ready on time. I sent a message to the door via Susan that my hair was still wet and that the plans had changed. My former roommate from my SLC student teaching days had the lead in the byu-produced opera, Aida. I wanted to hear her in that difficult role instead of just hanging out in the apartment, eating muesli, as Steve had planned. Susan instructed Steve to change into jacket and tie for the opera and meet back at the apartment to give me extra “drying time.” Steve demonstrated a great deal of flexibility, gentlemanliness and adaptability when he happily agreed.
We arrived at the opera just before the curtain went up. The entire opera was interwoven with very strong and unmistakable feelings that this man I was with, would figure very importantly in my life. I thoroughly reveled in the rich performance of Christine Politis as Aida, but more compelling was the thought that I had met the man I was to marry.
In the conversation on the way home, we were discussing contests, winning the lottery and other shallow topics, when I remarked off-handedly, that I had NEVER won anything. Steve nearly ran off the road. I was always struck that he experienced such a strong reaction to my unfertile luck, when all the while he was inwardly screaming: “….You’ve won me!!”
Marcie Alley, Christmas 2008
Bountiful, Utah

Motab Mishaps

MoTab Mishaps
December 2009
The ignominies of choir travel are sometimes as striking to the Tabernacle Choir travelers as are the great choral moments on stage and the compelling human experiences off stage.
The meticulous and often madcap planning involved in traveling via bus from country to country in a day is daunting. As soon as the bus arrives at the destination hotel, the performers disembark immediately to rush to sound check at the performance hall, return to bolt down dinner, and then beat the clock removing wrinkles from performance clothing and organizing concert music. Immediately following the performance, we spend thirty minutes greeting audience members, handing out pass along cards and the occasional Book of Mormon. One then arrives at the hotel at midnight with a few minutes to assemble the gear needed for the next day’s travel, including an exhaustive list of necessities. Not the least included, are one’s best curling iron and “Freeze & Shine.” This is a special product combusted in a laboratory that can immediately immobilize ANY hairdo for 72 hours running, no matter the liters of sweat emitted from the pores of any one perspiring singer, the temperature of the stage lights, nor the antiquity of the venue: (i.e. The Muzikverein or the Bolshoi Theatre , bereft of the graces of air conditioning. ) The list also includes: undies, rubber-lined dress shields, #7 Hanes panty hose, polyester, double-paneled full slip laced with lead-impregnated nylon fibers & triple-faced full length dress with three drapes, standard issue earrings, 3-strand necklace and 3 inch black patent leather pumps and an all-weather coat. The above mentioned items, along with one’s music, are in addition to what one needs for the night and the next day’s bus travel. Post-concert and post haste, one bursts through the hotel door a bit after midnight, with only 15-20 minutes to assemble the lists of things needed for the night, the next day’s travel and the next evening ‘s performance. Not wanting the added weight of a nightgown/ robe in our hand-held luggage, by design, we often slept in our undies only. One night after a performance, my roommate and I, on top of our game, clothed only in our garments and in perch-on-all-fours-push-luggage-out-the-door-form, stealthily opened our door, glancing left and right to make sure the coast was clear during that small window of time when pushing luggage into the hall dressed in our underwear would make us vulnerable to any passerby. We heaved all six bags into the hall, then looking up from the exertion, we saw two tenors directly across the hall from our room, dressed only in their “whites” engaged in the same activity. It was a moment of embarrassment and humiliation, but there wasn’t even a wink or nod of recognition at the lineup for the next concert; who says the tenors don’t allow altos their dignity. The luggage handlers, a special group of temple-recommend-holding thugs, hit the floors to pick up our luggage precisely at 12:30 a.m. One could detect them in the halls by the hysterical screams heard from some of the rooms (most likely a soprano) who were not quite ready to slide their 3 large luggage bags into the hall for pick-up. One could also tell the thugs were afoot by the thunderous roll of the pickup carts, heavy burdened with enough clothing to open a small Italian Clothing Boutique and enough eyeliner, lipstick and hairspray to camouflage a battalion of green berets. The meticulous planning didn’t always work though because I can remember poor Walt Boyden, the most fastidious dresser in the Choir, (we called him Dapper Dan behind his baritone back) having forgotten his concert shoes, was seen the next evening lining up on the risers for a performance to a large audience of Spaniards. Walt was dressed to the nines in his black tux and fuzzy brown bedroom slippers. He sang the entire concert, the world’s most respected literature, in his fuzzy browns.
A beloved alto who had forgotten her blouse, was seen wearing her sunny yellow blazer with a lovely understated tank underneath. It wasn’t until 8 hours later at a bus stop that I saw her queing up in the restroom and it dawned on me that she had reversed her garment top and refitted it as a tank under her blazer. I looked at her in recognition of her resourcefulness and she hugged me in a wrestler’s grip and hissed into my ear: “Marcie, don’t say a word.” Before my oxygen supply was entirely cut off, I promised .
Sometimes things happen that are, in the moment, intimidating or humiliating, but in retrospect, they are funny in the remembering. One such thing happened to me in Sydney, Australia. We had been given one evening of free time and a friend had bought tickets to see “Les Miserable”. I had never been to live musical theater and jumped at the chance. My roommate, Peggy Lambert, known for her addiction to reading, wearing mittens and turtlenecks no matter the weather, opted to stay home and finish her new read. I grabbed for my room key and she assured me she’d still be up reading and would let me in. I left for the performance excited and happy that she’d be awake to let me in and more importantly , would be alert and eager to hear me spill over in my blow by blow account of my first live musical theater experience. At 11:45 p.m. my elevator door opened onto floor 23. Our hotel was very posh, located just a few blocks from the Sydney Opera House on the Bay. I recall taking an entire roll of pictures of the bathroom with it’s marble shower and shiny brass fixtures. At the end of the hall was a very naked, I mean completely naked man, holding his hand gingerly and precisely over his privates. He was skulking along the corridor walls, seemingly disoriented, but cogent enough to be beckoning toward me and calling for help. He continued to balance himself against the wall with one arm and alternately, lift the “protecting” hand, using it to beckon me. I was confused, a little frightened and had only one object: to arrive at my room BEFORE he arrived toe-to-toe with me. I ran for my hotel door and began calling for Peggy to let me in. I should have known that she would be and WAS RIGHT NOW, in a COMA, a deep, unrelenting REM-sleep coma. I was now yelling to draw her out of her dream sleep to let me into the room. I removed both my shoes and began banging their heels deeply into the lovely mahogany door to add decibels to my histrionic plea to get in. Just as the beckoning man reached to touch my hand, I burst past a sleepy, bewildered Peggy, knocking her to the floor in my anxiety to get on the other side of my hotel door. I immediately called security and to this very day, I am sure that the man was helped to his room. (I didn’t follow through on that missionary opportunity) In a later discussion we concluded that the corridor streaker had probably been a little inebriated, was trying to find the bathroom and had mistakenly opened the exit door instead (they were, of course , spring loaded to close immediately). What I remember most about that evening though is the unspeakably stirring story of Victor Hugo’s chronicle of the French Revolution and the glories of the music in Les Miserable.
Marcie Alley, December 2009

Tabernacle Choir Postludes & Miracles

TABERNACLE CHOIR POSTLUDES-Miracles
1. The Church in it’s wisdom, has used the power of music to member and non-member alike to soften, stretch and change hearts. Participating in choral music has had the power to change my heart. While the Tabernacle Choir has always been a good will arm of The Church, my true inner motive for singing has always been music’s power to deepen my faith and increase my testimony. The text of the scriptures and the praise of God, set to rhythm and melody has helped me retain, and reflect on their meaning and has provided me with personal therapy and needed truth. Bach said it best: “Where there is devotional music, God is always at hand with his gracious presence.” Music, for me is a purveyor of joy. My life’s joy derives primarily from my relationships: those with God and from bonds with other human beings, especially my husband and family. Joy also comes from the capacity to enlarge the boundaries of my soul. My own experience has taught me that joy is generally derived IN TANDEM with or maybe in spite of personal struggle. Music, especially great choral music, has been an important bridge to enlarging the boundaries of my soul. The immense satisfaction of mastering beautiful text, set to complex musical passages, has brought into an ordinary life, all the beauty, wisdom and learning that I have the capacity to hold. It has provided a rich and vast range of spiritual and emotional experience, beyond my deserving. I believe that there is a special repository in the soul where music lives to tutor and heighten the impact of the senses on the soul . I know this is true for everyone and that great music embraces all and alienates none. I think of GRANDMA ALLEY (Oma) in the advanced stages of Alzheimers. She often didn’t know me or where she was, but could sing in full voice along with any hymn, word and note-perfect. As she was dying, when we were singing hymns around her bedside, she opened her eyes to correct a word and asked us to sing it again, even though she had been laying nearly lifeless for days. One day I was making a drop-off at the Deseret Industries and had my choir study tape on, trying to memorize notes.. My windows were down and It was going full bore. The worker at the loading dock, who was clearly mentally disabled, but his soul alive and vibrant as anyone’s, handed me my receipt and said with tears streaming, “Ma’m I sure like your music!” The compliment belonged to M. Lauredsen, composer of the sublimely beautiful “O Magnum Mysterium”. Simply put, the power of music is the genesis of many miracles.
Grounded at the airport in Melbourne, AUSTRALIA by a dense fog, we were laid out on the floor, head to head, toe to toe, purses for pillows, coats for blankets. A prayer had been offered to temper the weather so we could sing our concert in --------------------that night. Adding increased sincerity to our prayer we broke into “Holy Radiant Light”, a Choir favorite. Our chartered plane was the only one that lifted off that night, as the fog parted only momentarily to allow our departure. And it seemed to me that we departed on a slim trail of “Holy Radiant Light.”
Assembled in front of The DRESDEN TEMPLE for a concert to dignitaries and important opinion leaders of the area, we were keenly aware of the history of the temple there and we knew there was much at stake. Right before the downbeat it started to rain….pour; it was coming in sheets. We had our umbrellas up, poking each other in the eyes, trying to keep dry. It was a disaster. As soon as Jerry (Ottley) raised his baton for the downbeat, the rain ceased…midstream, like in Sylvester and the Magic Pebble. (Kids, you remember that one). It seemed as though the water droplets just hung in the air until we were done and resumed on cue precisely at the conclusion of beat 4 of the last note. The rest in history.
Another miracle happened at CHECKPOINT CHARLIE as we were trying to enter Poland. The entire Eastern Bloc (Russia, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Poland, Hungary) was in the throes of divesting itself of Communism. The Berlin Wall was being chipped away, the glass shards lining the top of the wall going to the boldest of the scramblers, and Gorbashev was just about to be kidnapped during our stay. On our choir bus, it was discovered that two of our male singers were missing their passports. Without discussion, spontaneously, seamlessly, we began singing while the border guards, guns brandished, came aboard the bus to check identification. We reached into our bags to retrieve recordings and pass-along cards to share with them. Even the Communists are zealous music lovers. In the meantime, two tenors, one straddling the toilet, the other in a fetal postion against the tiny corner of the bathroom wall, had stopped breathing so they wouldn’t be detected. The distraction worked and the performance there was history-making. For me, breath control took on a whole new meaning.
Each of us has claim on those experiences when we feel the Lord propelling us beyond our own limitations to accomplish something worthwhile. In 1989 during the flurry of activity surrounding President George Bush Senior’s INAUGURAL, sleep deprivation was fierce. I was sick and my voice was shot. Approaching the risers at Constitution Hall, I was weak, daunted by the task of reaching row 8. At the conductor’s cue I tried to push off from the riser to stand but couldn’t. I said a silent prayer at warp speed and in an instant, rose to sing with renewed physical strength and vocal power. As if to remind me that the Lord is my strength, I was allowed to experience both the complete emptying and renewing of strength between each of the numbers. I also knew that the blessing was given, not because of my own merit, but because the Lord wanted us to sound good in the nations’s Capitol. In awe of the experience, I shared it with another singer who offhandedly commented: “You haven’t been in the Choir very long, have you?”
At the NAUVOO TEMPLE DEDICATION, a lovely and intimate space, yet too small to accommodate the size of the Choir, we divided into four small groups. At each rehearsal we sounded puny, shallow of sound. We lacked the usual depth and richness of sound. We were discouraged, all of us, and wondered along with Dr. Jessop, if we could or should sing. During the first dedicatory session, in which I sang, if I hadn’t had the discipline to “keep my eye on the stick:, I would have been sorely tempted to turn around to see who else had joined us in producing an angelic, rich sound with the depth we had been missing.
The whole gamut of human endeavor is open to us when we align ourselves with
God and his holy purposes. I have seen that truth reinforced time and time again as a participant and a bystander. I am profoundly grateful for my calling to sing in the Tabernacle Choir and express my love to you, my children for the many sacrifices that enabled me to honor that calling. Despite the challenges, some benign neglect, and being abandoned on an occasional Christmas, you grew into high-functioning, wonderful adults. I appreciate the good parents you are and the consistent striving to please your Heavenly Father that I’ve observed in every one of your homes. This Christmas, though we are separated by oceans of water and more land than I ever dreamed, I hope you will feel my love and prayers across the miles and know how grateful I am for you and your children, all of whom are a wonder. I love you dearly, Mom
(Sister Alley, Asia Area China Mission)