













and eventually a flowered green van to travel the three days' journey to central Wyoming and eastern Idaho, where we would visit grandparents and cousins.

Peering from car windows at the large dark splotches on rolling Wind River hills (they were clouds--unusual to see--as we were used to wooded New England hills) we scanned the radio to listen for Grandpa Gee's booming weatherman voice, "It's a BEAU--tiful day in Fremont County!" He said this every day with conviction, rain, snow, sleet or Wyoming wind. And he meant it.
It was this grandfather who became the star of a story I heard from my father the summer before he died:
Dad told me about studying soil physics for eight years post high school. After finishing, he taught and researched at two universities on the east coast for seven years. During a good portion of these years, I remember watching him as branch president of a small congregation serve faithfully with my mom and a handful of children (his own and borrowed) delivering sacks of groceries to shacks in the mountains of Maine and New Hampshire, counseling teenagers surrounded by classmates in trouble, organizing and spearheading building fund projects for a chapel, selling shrimp on the beach, elephant ears at the county fair, handmade sewn items at bazaars, or going door to door to pedal corn on the cob and fire extinguishers.




(As these pictures taken years later indicate, dreams come true!)

I remember Dad's handmade poster toting the red thermometer as we went from rented building to building,
indicating how much was our portion of the funds necessary before funds from Salt Lake would be available to build our own chapel.





(As these pictures taken years later indicate, dreams come true!)
I remember counting out 234 personal pennies and hearing them clang in the tin for the "Penny Parade" (for the Primary Children's hospital) in a little upstairs room of an apartment with a pump organ in Sanford, Maine.
Which "vacation" sticks out in my memory? I have decided it is the summer that Daddy took a three month assignment with the United Nations teaching irrigation in an exotic island off of India,

I remember how good it felt to have given every penny.
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(Revisiting the place we attended Primary, nearly 40 years later) |






in Yellowstone National Park.
Having regularly seen such wonders of nature since we were small, our eyes reopened, just as they do when we attend the temple with a new friend or take a walk with babies
--the universe looms bright when observed with new eyes!

As Dad traveled far from home
in an unfamiliar land,


he found comfort in a book he had brought with him.


It was a race! And we all won. His invitation planted a thirst for truth that has rooted and bloomed into a seedbed of light, to beckon goodness each morning.
It was after this far away summer, that Dad became acquainted with more trial with a taste of a verse from Jeremiah 29:11, retranslated in the New Living Translation of the Bible:
"For I know the plans I have for you," says the LORD. "They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope."



He pondered relocating abroad, but accepted a position reclaiming fields and hills from strip-mining patches, this time amid frigid wind chill factors of North Dakota. After accepting another three month Sri Lanka assignment, he landed a position with a research laboratory positioned in the desert of Washington state, where he worked to protect and manage the soils affected by the creation of atomic bombs at the Hanford nuclear project. The job was not what he had imagined it to be. It was not his favorite science to generate funds or try to convince politicians and officials to fix a hazard they deemed innocuous. It was difficult work. He was discouraged.

Not long afterward, upon a visit to Wyoming, my Dad asked his father for a father's blessing.

In the blessing, Grandpa promised my father that Dad would one day be known throughout the world for his contributions to science. Dad said later, he could not fathom the promise. "But I believed that my father believed in me
--I went back to work, and things got better."
(Photo 1: Far left, a colleague from China heading a research station in Canada; Far right, a colleague from Richland who Glendon baptized. Photo 1: Brown jacket, right front, Dr. Daniel Hillel, Dad's friend from Tel Aviv, World Food Prize Laureate 2012, Dad behind him in blue floral shirt)
Living the dream his father "saw afar off."
Our own children may not believe what their parents see, but if they know that we believe in them, a few words may give them just enough courage to return to work and make things better.
Great message. Grandpa had amazing perseverance and it's clear from this story that he used his work for good.
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